Daniel Vettori asks for IPL window in FTP

With the IPL once again putting to test – and with largely one-sided results – the debate of club versus country, Daniel Vettori believes that an official window for the IPL in the sport’s annual calendar could settle the argument. One alternative for smaller boards would be to then go down the path that Vettori hopes New Zealand cricket will take when signing in on the Future Tours Programme for the next few years.Speaking to ESPNcricinfo in Delhi, Vettori said the controversies such as Chris Gayle’s spat with the West Indies board, and the discussions between the Indian and Sri Lankan boards over the early release of Lankans from the IPL for the England tour, would not arise if the IPL found its way into the international calendar as well.”For me, there’s a simple solution – you create a window for the IPL and all these probems go away, all the discourse and the conversations about it stops instantly,” Vettori said. “A number of people have been talking about it for a long, long time. That would be great, otherwise people will continually be put into these situations and it’s a tough decision.”A long-standing captain of New Zealand until he stepped down following the World Cup, Vettori leads the Royal Challengers Bangalore in the IPL. He pointed out the dilemma faced by international cricketers when having to choose between country and the IPL. “Everyone wants to play for their country,” he said. “But if you understand the amount of money that’s involved and its pressures, and sometimes the lack of certainty around your place in the team, it can make it [the decision] difficult. Like I said you can take all those things away by creating a small window around the IPL.”Vettori said New Zealanders had “missed big chunks” of the IPL in the first three seasons, because the team at the time was involved in New Zealand Cricket’s (NZC) previous FTP commitments, though they had largely been supportive of their players. He said NZC were looking to accommodate the IPL in their plans when the new cycle of the FTP comes around.”I think New Zealand is going to try in earnest to make sure that it [players missing out on IPL] doesn’t happen in the future and we hope so,” Vettori said. “We hope that that window is cleared out because the guys enjoy playing here and there’s financial security as well, which helps a lot.”West Indies and England have their international calendars directly overlapping with the IPL’s March-April schedule, but it is not yet certain whether the other ICC member boards would want to create their own tacit ‘windows’ when formulating their FTP arrangements in the coming months.Vettori’s position in the IPL is a unique one: he has stepped down from the New Zealand captaincy and retired from Twenty20 Internationals, but in the IPL he is leading a T20 outfit. His decision to quit Twenty20 internationals came from his desire to focus on his Test cricket. “It [retirement from T20Is] may not be a permanent thing,” he said. “At this point in time I would prefer to concentrate on Test cricket and be ready for it, we don’t actually play a lot of international Twenty20s so I’m not missing out on too much.”After captaining the team for such a long time, in some ways it is better to let the new captain find his feet without having the ex-captain in his face the whole time,” he said. “I think it will be a little bit easier for him coming in.” New Zealand are yet to name his successor with the two candidates for the job being Brendon McCullum and Ross Taylor. Vettori, however, refrained from naming his choice.”My opinion is irrelvant because I don’t have any say; I’m good friends with both the guys and enjoy their captaincy styles. They’re both quite aggressive captains,” he said before correcting himself, “Well they’ve been aggressive vice-captains and I think they’ll do a really good job on the field.”The amount of time that is taken up outside of cricket and the pressures that come from there,” Vettori said, would be an “eye-opener” for the new captain. “That is always going to be the hardest thing to deal with, but they are both mature young men. So I think they will be good for New Zealand whoever they choose Ross or Brendon.”Bangalore have won two of their first six matches and Vettori has found the job of leading a team made up of a diverse group of players “probably more of a challenge” than captaining an international team. “In your national team you know everyone well, you know what to expect pretty much in a given situation,” he said. “In IPL, you are getting to know the guys all the time, you are learning all the time, as you have never seen some guys play before. You have to find out different things, so it’s probably more of a challenge captaining an IPL team than captaining an international team.”On Tuesday, Vettori will lead Bangalore against his old team the Delhi Daredevils, with both teams trying to climb up the points table. Vettori said the IPL remained “fluid” in the sense that “one man on his day” could decide games. “Your whole concept of where you are as a team changes so quickly,” Vettori said, referring to the impact of Chris Gayle’s century against Kolkata that took Bangalore up from second-last to fifth. “So if we win this next one, I think we are up to second or something like that.”Barring table-toppers like Mumbai Indians, Vettori said it still remained difficult for sides “to get a real grasp of where you are as a team, because the competition is so close”. He predicted that as the IPL drew closer to the semi-finals, there was a good chance that there would be “close to seven eight teams with something like seven wins and seven losses, or eight wins and six losses. It’s really hard to know where you are.” For the next eight hours or so, Vettori and Bangalore would just like to be on top of their game.

Leeds: Hay calls for Bamford to be risked

Leeds United may have to take a ‘gamble’ on Patrick Bamford in the final few games of the season, The Athletic’s Phil Hay has said.

The lowdown

The 28-year-old last featured for the Whites in the 3-2 victory over Wolves back on 18 March. He was forced off 23 minutes into that game with a foot injury and has missed the five matches since.

Jesse Marsch’s team fell into the relegation zone on Sunday after they lost 2-1 to Arsenal and positional rivals Everton won at Leicester City. Their final three fixtures against Chelsea (Wednesday), Brighton (Sunday) and Brentford (22 May) are now set to decide their Premier League fate.

As it stands, Bamford and Liam Cooper are Leeds’ only short-term absentees, with Stuart Dallas, Tyler Roberts, Adam Forshaw and Crysencio Summerville all ruled out for the season.

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The latest

Taking to The Athletic’s matchday discussion board on Sunday, Hay said that Marsch may have to rush Bamford back in order to address a lack of goals in the Leeds squad.

The journalist admitted: “To be quite honest, I feel like they’re going to have to gamble on Patrick Bamford in the last couple of games. It doesn’t feel like Leeds have enough goals in them at the moment.”

The verdict

How have Leeds fared in this most recent five-game stretch without Bamford?

They have picked up five points courtesy of a win at Watford and draws with Southampton and Crystal Palace, but they’ve only managed to score five goals in that time, backing up Hay’s concern.

The 28-year-old has only been fit enough to start seven games over the season as a whole, and that has seen Daniel James and Rodrigo each play 14 matches as a centre-forward. The pair have managed to score just 10 goals between them, whereas Bamford managed 17 on his own in 2020/21.

Leeds would appear to have far more firepower with the £74,000-per-week former Chelsea marksman in the line-up, but the question is whether he will be in a condition to make a difference given his injury woes in recent weeks and months.

Hailed as a leader by team-mate Jack Harrison, the striker himself may be itching to come back and try to save the Whites from relegation.

In other news, Danny Mills dropped this big claim on Bamford

Newcastle predicted XI vs Man City

Newcastle United return to action today as they travel away to face Manchester City at The Etihad in the Premier League.

The Magpies have won four of their last five games in the division and are in with a shot of finishing the season in the top half of the table.

Eddie Howe’s men lost their last outing, however, as they were beaten 1-0 by Liverpool at St. James’ Park. Naby Keita scored the only goal of the game as he found the back of the net shortly after Fabian Schar was caught by a challenge from James Milner.

How many changes will Howe make to the team from that loss? Here is our predicted XI…

Martin Dubravka; Javier Manquillo, Jamaal Lascelles, Dan Burn, Matt Targett; Joelinton, Bruno Guimaraes, Jonjo Shelvey; Miguel Almiron, Chris Wood, Allan Saint-Maximin.

We are predicting that he will make three alterations to the side, with Manquillo, Lascelles and Wood all coming into the XI.

Starting off at centre-back, Schar may miss out after the head coach confirmed on Friday that he had not trained during the week. Howe said: “We haven’t seen him this week. We hope he’ll be back to be available but he’s not trained yet. He got a knock on the top of his foot so he went for a scan after the Liverpool game because it was swollen. Fortunately, there was no fracture.”

Lascelles should come in for him at the heart of the defence. The Magpies skipper came on for him against Liverpool and started in his place against Norwich as he helped the team to a 3-0 win – winning 100% of his ground duels and making six clearances in the process – and this shows that he is a reliable option for the boss to call upon.

At right-back, Javier Manquillo, who Steve Bruce once described as “terrific”, may come in for Emil Krafth to round out the back four.

The Swedish defender, who Ian Wright previously said was “out of his depth”, recorded a dismal SofaScore rating of 6.2 against Liverpool, losing five of his nine duels and completing 63% of his passes – and Howe may opt to rest him to give the Spaniard a chance to impress.

Finally, we are predicting that Wood will come in at the top end of the pitch. FFC published an article explaining why the striker should come into the team and may replace Joe Willock – with Joelinton dropping back into central midfield.

AND in other news, Imagine him & Bruno: Howe must land NUFC swoop for £17.1m gem who “radiates calmness”…

Former SL shadow coach Hathurusingha to emigrate to Australia

Chandika Hathurusingha, the one-time shadow coach of the Sri Lanka team, who was suspended by Sri Lanka Cricket on disciplinary grounds in June, has decided to migrate to Australia with his family

Sa'adi Thawfeeq07-Dec-2010Chandika Hathurusingha, the former Sri Lanka Test opener and one-time shadow coach of the Sri Lanka team, who was suspended by Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) on disciplinary grounds in June, has decided to emigrate to Australia with his family, after he was found guilty by an inquiry and expelled.The decision to suspend Hathurusingha was taken after he had disobeyed orders from SLC chairman DS de Silva, in a telephone conversation, to not abandon the team and return home ahead of the one-day tri-series final in Harare, where Sri Lanka was scheduled to take on Zimbabwe.However, at the inquiry held in connection with the incident, Hathurusingha stated that both team manager Anura Tennekoon and head coach Trevor Bayliss had permitted him to return early to take up a coaching study course in Australia.”What I fail to understand is there was no official complaint by the manager and there was no official request for me to stay back with the team from SLC, until I left,” Hathurusingha said. “I only had a verbal discussion with the chairman that’s all. The decision taken by SLC to sack me came as a surprise. I never expected it because I still don’t think I have done anything wrong,” Hathurusingha, who is a Level 3 qualified coach in England and Australia, said.”I had come back to Colombo to follow a study course in Australia which was approved and funded by SLC. I returned to Sri Lanka with the consent of the authority I was under at that time – the manager and the head coach, who both gave me permission. They had duly informed SLC and there was no official request from anyone for me to not return early.”From the results you can see that my leaving early didn’t affect the team because we won the final. The two coaches were there to handle the final and the one practice session. My work with the team was done prior to that. The coaching course was going to benefit not only me but SLC as well. The bond I had signed with SLC said that I had to work for three years which I was willing to do.”Sri Lanka beat Zimbabwe comprehensively by nine wickets to win the one-day tri-series, which also included India.Hathurusingha was being groomed for the assistant coach’s position in the national team when he was appointed shadow coach in 2009 as understudy to head coach Trevor Bayliss and assistant coach Stuart Law. Hathurusingha was appointed shadow coach at the same time Kumar Sangakkara was elevated to captain his country. He served in the capacity for one and half years (his contract was till the 2011 World Cup) before his sudden exit. During that period Hathurusingha played an integral part in the players’ development. Although he was asked by Bayliss to look after the batting, plan for the opposition and formulate game plans, he also played a big role in the players’ mental make-up which has made them become successful cricketers at international level.Kumar Sangakkara, the Sri Lanka captain, also personally wrote to SLC requesting a lenient punishment for Hathurusingha considering his value to the team especially ahead of the World Cup.Hathurusingha represented Sri Lanka first as an opening batsman and later, in the middle-order from 1991 to 1999, in 26 Tests and 35 ODIs. He was head coach of UAE for a year and also coached the Sri Lanka ‘A’ team before his appointment as shadow coach in the national side.

Gavaskar turns down IPL governing council role

Sunil Gavaskar has turned down the BCCI’s offer to be part of the IPL’s governing council, saying he felt that the league was a commercial enterprise and those working for it should be remunerated. The Indian board had said on Wednesday that members of the reconstituted council would no longer receive a salary.”I have been contacted and I have declined because after yesterday [Wednesday] I had second thoughts,” Gavaskar told NDTV. “The IPL is a commercial enterprise and non-BCCI members, former cricketers included, should be remunerated for the expertise, experience and time that they bring to the table.”Gavaskar had, on Wednesday evening, said he was willing to work in an honorary capacity but said this was not a turnaround. “Let me tell you for Indian cricket I am always there, but the IPL is a commercial enterprise.” Under the old system, the three former cricketers on the council – Gavaskar, Ravi Shastri and Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi – were paid Rs 1 crore (approximately $220,000) for their services.Doing away with salaries was only one of the wholesale changes the BCCI made to the governing council at its annual general meeting in Mumbai on Wednesday. It dissolved the existing body and set up a new one with Chirayu Amin as the chairman. The council also included five other members – Arun Jaitley, Ranjib Biswal, Anurag Thakur, Ajay Shirke and Rajiv Shukla – and two former cricketers, one of whom was Shastri, who had agreed to work in an honorary capacity.Shashank Manohar, the BCCI president, had said that he needed to check with Gavaskar and Pataudi whether they were willing to serve on the council without remuneration.

Leeds: Marcelo Bielsa reportedly speaks with Fenerbahce

Leeds United boss Marcelo Bielsa has reportedly held talks with Fenerbahce ahead of a possible summer move.

The Lowdown: Possible Bielsa successors named

Bielsa and Leeds are used to dealing with 12-month contracts at Elland Road, and now is the time of year where his future is being spoken about in the media.

Recent reports have name-checked Ernesto Valverde, Jesse Marsch and Carlos Corberan as possible successors to the Argentine, who has had to deal with numerous injury issues in his Leeds squad this season.

The Whites have struggled to replicate their first season back in the Premier League and are now flirting with the relegation zone with 15 games remaining, and shock reports have emerged ahead of their clash with Manchester United on Sunday.

The Latest: Meeting held

According to both Sabah and Fotomac, relayed by Sports Witness, Bielsa has held a meeting with Fenerbahce president Ali Koc.

The Leeds boss is thought to be on a list of candidates to take over in Turkey in the summer alongside Joachim Low, Jorge Jesus and Roger Schmidt.

The Verdict: Unlikely

As Phil Hay mentions, Bielsa is unlikely to show his hand in regards to his future until the Premier League is over, so these reports of a meeting with another club are hard to believe.

His time in Yorkshire may well be coming to an end this year, but until that is decided by all involved, it’s crazy to think he will be lining up his next move.

Hopefully, Bielsa will be able to get key players back over the coming weeks and drag the club clear of the relegation zone, cementing his legacy as a Leeds legend in the process.

In other news: Reliable Leeds journalist shares positive Stuart Dallas injury update ahead of Manchester United. 

Ponting philosophical over future

Ricky Ponting might have played his last Test in England, but he still hasn’t ruled out one final attempt to win the Ashes on enemy soil

Brydon Coverdale25-Jul-2010

Ricky Ponting leaves the field, possibly for the last time in a Test in England, after being dismissed for 66 at Headingley•Getty Images

Ricky Ponting might have played his last Test in England, but he still hasn’t ruled out one final attempt to win the Ashes on enemy soil. Ponting flew out of London last September freshly hurt by the loss of the urn and keen to return in 2013, but a year later he has become more philosophical about his chances of being part of the next Ashes battle in England.The country has been troublesome for Ponting. It has reduced him to mortal status as a batsman – he averages 41.79 in 20 Tests in England – and Australia have won only three of their 12 Tests in the British Isles under Ponting’s captaincy. Pakistan’s victory at Headingley levelled the series 1-1, so he has still not won a Test series in England as leader.By the time Australia return for an Ashes tour Ponting will be 38, and he knows that his chances of still being in the Test side depend not only on his desire but also on whether he retains his reflexes and ability. On that front, the signs for Ponting are slightly worrying. In the past 12 months he has averaged 39.81 in Tests and the powerful pulls and hooks that have been his trademark have at times brought his downfall.His 209 in Hobart in January was made possible only because Mohammad Aamer dropped a sitter at fine leg when Ponting had not yet scored. At Headingley this week he made 66, but he could easily have been sent on his way first ball when he padded up to an Aamer delivery that would have clipped the top of off stump.”I honestly don’t know [if I’ll play in England again],” Ponting said after the Leeds loss. “It’s all going to be down to how well I play. I love playing for Australia. I cherish every moment that I have to captain the side and represent my country. If I get back here in a couple of years time then so be it, but if I’m not good enough then there’s nothing I can do about that.”If there was a hint of self-doubt in that statement, it would be a rarity for Ponting. He is not keen to concede vulnerability by giving up the pull shot, or by shifting himself down the order. Even when Australia were trying to claw their way back into the game at Headingley, Ponting tried to be attacking against an excellent group of swing bowlers.”I don’t think I played any more defensively than normal,” he said. “Over the years I’ve always had that fairly aggressive intent to go out there and put it back on the bowlers. I still felt I had that in the second innings but they bowled pretty well.”Combating the moving ball will be even more difficult at 38. For now, Ponting will focus on the Ashes at home and a World Cup defence on the subcontinent early next year. Whether Australia’s captain will push on beyond that is anyone’s guess.

Martinez: Wolves’ biggest transfer regret

Wolverhampton Wanderers have gone under the radar when it comes to astute signings in recent times.

It’s easy to overlook the fact that their last five arrivals, including loans, have all been signed for under £10m. It’s even more impressive that four of those are consistent first-team players, with Yerson Mosquera the only exception, although he has made one appearance for Bruno Lage’s first-team and would surely have more were it not for a long-term hamstring injury.

Nevertheless, their business over the past year has been nothing short of sensational, especially in today’s market, which is why it comes as even more of a shock that Wolves once failed to acquire the permanent signing of Emiliano Martinez, who is now a Premier League regular elsewhere in the Midlands at Aston Villa.

Back in the 2015/16 season, the Argentine played for the Old Gold amid a loop of loan moves and fringe appearances, although his initial opening months at Wolverhampton Wanderers sought to end that pattern.

In 2015, Martinez made 13 appearances for Wolves in the Championship and despite only keeping four clean sheets, he conjured up a rather impressive 71% save percentage. For context, in his breakout season for Aston Villa in 2020/21, his save percentage was 77%, so for that time in his career it was a very impressive metric.

Ultimately it was the thigh injury that kept him out of contention for several months which cost both Martinez and Wolves the chance to work together long-term.

On one hand, you can understand the caution that Wolves expressed, as the ‘keeper was unable to regain his starting place after the injury. However, with the underlying stats that he displayed throughout those 13 appearances for the Old Gold, it remains a mystery as to why Martinez was never given the chance to win back his place between the sticks.

Despite finding a gem in former Olympiacos ‘keeper José Sá, the reluctance to sign a goalkeeper dubbed by Dan Rolinson as “unreal” and who would go on to earn the highest of plaudits from Lionel Messi must serve as one of the biggest transfer regrets at Molineux.

To rub salt in the wounds of the Wolves pack, the 29-year-old who has shone for club and country is now worth £28.8m in today’s market. Had the Old Gold pounced for a permanent deal six years ago, they may have got him for as little as £1.35m judging by his Transfermarkt valuation at the time, instead of leaving him return to his then-parent club Arsenal for nothing.

In other news – Lage could finally unearth Wolves’ new Diogo Jota in “unpredictable” £33m creator

Maidana exalta chegada ao Galo como 'novo ciclo' de sua carreira

MatériaMais Notícias

O zagueiro Maidana não demorou a dizer suas primeiras palavras como jogador do Atlético-MG. Em seu perfil oficial no Instagram, o jogador de 21 anos agradeceu ao São Paulo, onde atuou nas categorias de base, e ao Paraná, onde atuou na temporada passada:

“Muito feliz e motivado para o novo ciclo que se inicia na minha carreira num dos maiores e mais tradicionais clubes do Brasil! Fica a minha gratidão e agradecimento ao São Paulo pela oportunidade de ter vestido e honrado essa camisa, fui campeão da Copa RS e da Libertadores sub-20, e graças ao Tricolor paulista tive a oportunidade de poder mostrar meu potencial no Paraná e conseguir um acesso histórico que sempre ficará na minha memória e coração”.

Em seguida, exaltou a diretoria do Atlético-MG pelo desejo de contratá-lo para esta temporada:

“Agradeço muito ao presidente Sérgio (Sette Camara), ao Alexandre Gallo e a todos da diretoria do Atlético-MG por terem me dado a oportunidade de lutar em campo por um clube que merece sempre ser campeão! Não vou decepcionar, sei do meu potencial e vontade de vencer, na minha carreira só faltava essa oportunidade no elenco profissional de um clube com a estrutura e da envergadura do Atlético!”.

أوين يتغنى بـ محمد صلاح: إذا كنت بحاجة إلى هدف ابحث عن مو لتسجيله

أشاد مهاجم منتخب إنجلترا السابق، مايكل أوين، بما يفعله جناح الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بنادي ليفربول ومنتخب مصر، محمد صلاح، في الموسم الحالي.

ونجح محمد صلاح في قيادة ليفربول للفوز بمباراة مانشستر سيتي في الأسبوع الماضي بهدف نظيف، بعد فترة من الغياب عن التسجيل في الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز.

اقرأ أيضًا | ماهر همام: لاعب الأهلي سيندم الفترة المقبلة.. وأحيي كولر بسبب تغيير مركز كريم فؤاد

وتحدث أوين عن رأيه في محمد صلاح هذا الموسم في تصريحات لصحيفة “ميرور” البريطانية، وقال: “حسنًا، أعتقد أنه إذا طلبت من أي مشجع للنادي أن يتوقع من هو هداف ليفربول بحلول نهاية الموسم”.

وتابع: “سأكون مندهشًا للغاية إذا قال الكثيرون أي شخص آخر غير، محمد صلاح”.

وأضاف: “محمد صلاح مصدر ثابت لتسجيل الأهداف، لقد كان منذ بضع سنوات كذلك، ربما تفاجأت عندما جاء في البداية وسجل كل هذه الأهداف، لكني أعتقد أن التشكيك في قدراته من قبل الجماهير أمر قد انتهى منذ فترة طويلة”.

وواصل: “لذلك فهو بالنسبة لي، هو أكثر الهدافين ثباتًا في الدوري الإنجليزي، أمام مانشستر سيتي عندما تحتاج إلى لاعب قادر على التسجيل واستغلال أي فرصة سيكون، محمد صلاح، ليمنحك الفوز”.

وأتم: “لقد أظهر شخصيته في تلك المباراة، العقلية الرائعة التي يمتلكها، لا يزال محمد صلاح بالتأكيد الشخص الوحيد، إذا كنت تفكر بأنك بحاجة إلى هدف، فأنا ما زلت أبحث عن مو لتسجيله”.

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