Outshone by Curtis: Martin must axe "non-existent" Rangers dud after UCL

Glasgow Rangers navigated an error-laden first-half performance to secure a brilliant 2-0 victory over Panathinaikos in the first leg of their second round Champions League qualifier.

Jack Butland had to be called into action to make a series of fine stops to keep a clean sheet in the opening 45 minutes, before goals from Findlay Curtis and Djedi Gassama sealed the win in the second half.

Despite the nervy moments defensively that were littered throughout the 90 minutes, there were some impressive individual performances for Russell Martin’s side, as Curtis grasped his opportunity with both hands.

Findlay Curtis' performance in numbers

The academy graduate was given the nod to start on the left flank, with Gassama unfit to start and Thelo Aasgaard out injured, and stepped up to the plate with a fantastic showing.

It was an all-action and forward-thinking display from the 18-year-old starlet, who ended the game with four tackles and one interception made, which shows the hard work that he put in defensively.

As you can see in the clip above, Curtis also opened the scoring with a stunning goal, brilliantly taking the ball inside on the run before bending a shot, via a slight deflection, into the bottom corner from distance.

The teenage whiz attempted three dribbles and had two shots on goal, one of which was his goal, and this shows that he was constantly probing and looking to put the Gers on the front foot in the match, which the supporters at Ibrox were loving.

Performance in Numbers

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Whilst Curtis shone on one wing, Kieran Dowell started on the opposite flank and was only able to show why the Gers must replace him with a new forward before the end of the window.

Why Rangers must replace Dowell

The left-footed flop has only produced two goals and two assists in 33 appearances for Rangers as an attacking midfielder or wide player, and was sent out on loan to Birmingham City in January because of his disappointing performances.

However, Martin has seemingly seen something in him because he selected Dowell to start on the right wing against Panathinaikos, but it was not a decision that was backed up by the performance.

Vs Panathinaikos

Kieran Dowell

Minutes played

75

Shots on target

0

Big chances missed

1

Key passes

0

Big chances created

0

Duels won

5/7

Stats via Sofascore

As you can see in the table above, the former Norwich man, who was outshone by Curtis, did put himself about to win duels but he was ineffective at the top end of the pitch, once again in a Rangers shirt.

Dowell, who was described as “non-existent” in the first half by the Heart & Hand Podcast, does not impose himself on matches in the final third, hence his lack of goal contributions throughout his Gers career, and that was the case against Panathinaikos, notably taking fewer touches (29) than Butland (31),.

Rangers midfielder Kieran Dowell.

Rangers have lost Vaclav Cerny, who was on loan from Wolfsburg last season, and the 12 goals and four assists that he provided in the Scottish Premiership from a right wing position.

This means that the Light Blues need to find another right-sided attacker who can score and create goals at an impressive rate, and Dowell’s performance on Tuesday, coupled with the rest of his career at Ibrox to date, suggests that he does not fit the bill.

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Therefore, Rangers should be looking to replace the English flop with a new right winger, who can contribute in the final third on a regular basis, to start week-in-week-out for Martin this season, before the summer transfer window slams shut.

Even more exciting than Kyogo: Birmingham City set to sign "silky dribbler"

Birmingham City are not slowing down in the summer transfer window in their attempt to bolster their squad ahead of a return to the Championship next season.

The Blues recently confirmed the signings of James Beadle, Tommy Doyle, Bright Osayi-Samuel, and Demarai Gray to improve their options across the pitch.

They are not done there, though, as L’Equipe recently reported that Rennes striker Kyogo Furuhashi is closing in on a move to Birmingham for a fee that could rise as high as £10m, which is how much the French side paid to sign him in January from Celtic.

Kyogo, who failed to score in six matches for Rennes, is not the only player who is reportedly on the verge of making the move to St. Andrew’s to join Chris Davies’ squad.

Birmingham City set to complete double deal

A fresh claim from GIVEMESPORT backs up L’Equipe’s news that the Japanese striker is closing in on a transfer to the Championship side this summer.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

The report adds, though, that the League One champions are also set to sign attacking midfielder Kanya Fujimoto on a free transfer, following his exit from Gil Vicente.

GIVEMESPORT claims that both Kyogo and Fujimoto are ‘expected’ to join the club before the end of the weekend, as the Blues close in on a big double deal.

The outlet reveals that Birmingham kept tabs on the former Gil Vicente star throughout the 2024/25 campaign, and they are now making their move for him.

Why Fujimoto is even more exciting than Kyogo for Birmingham

Despite Kyogo being set to sign for £10m and Fujimoto due to arrive on a free transfer, the latter looks to be the most exciting signing out of the two players.

Birmingham are signing Kyogo off the back of a very difficult season for him. As aforementioned, the striker did not score in six league games for Rennes before being immediately sold six months after joining.

The 30-year-old forward also only scored ten goals from 14.14 xG in a dominant Celtic team in the Premiership during the first half of the season, which shows that he significantly underperformed in front of goal.

This shows that Birmingham are spending a huge fee on a player who is declining and heading into the latter stages of his career, which is a big risk because there is a chance that his form does not improve.

xG

4.00

Top 4%

Goals

5

Top 3%

Shots on target

13

Top 5%

xA

2.77

Top 14%

Assists

5

Top 3%

Chances created

35

Top 8%

Successful dribbles

19

Top 16%

Whereas, as you can see in the table above, Fujimoto is arriving at the club off the back of a very impressive season with Gil Vicente in the Portuguese top-flight.

At the age of 26, he is coming into the prime years of his career and appears to be at the top of his game, ranking highly among his positional peers as both a scorer and a creator of goals in Portugal.

Fujimoto was once described as a “silky dribbler who’s dangerous in the pockets behind the striker” by analyst Ben Mattinson, and his statistics back that up, as he ranked highly as a dribbler to go along with his goal contributions.

The Japanese ace is a midfielder who can score and assist goals efficiently, outperforming his xG, and has the performances to suggest that he can hit the ground running at St. Andrew’s.

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This is why he is an even more exciting signing for Birmingham than Kyogo, who is coming off the back of a poor year in France and in Scotland, and is not in the prime of his career anymore.

Despite defeat, Kapp focuses on learnings with ODI World Cup in India next year

She said there were lessons to pick up from Wolvaardt not getting enough strike in the final stages of the second ODI

Srinidhi Ramanujam20-Jun-2024To get close to chasing India’s 325 and fall short just by four runs is a massive confidence booster for South Africa, according to Marizanne Kapp, one of the four centurions in the second ODI in Bengaluru. She said this was the brand of cricket they wanted to play, looking ahead to next year’s 50-over World Cup in India.This was after South Africa were reduced to 67 for 3 inside 15 overs on Wednesday. Even the series opener saw them having a collapse upfront, where from 33 for 3, they were eventually bowled out for 122. But unlike Sunday, South Africa fought back hard in the second game but Pooja Vastrakar denied Laura Wolvaardt – who top-scored for the visitors with 134 not out – and South Africa a series-levelling win with a sensational final over.”There were a lot of positives today,” Kapp said after the game. “To get that close is obviously a massive confidence booster especially moving forward, we know we can reach that total. But in saying that, probably after that first four in the last over, it was our game to lose. It’s definitely something we would speak about, but in the future, if we could have maybe tried to get Wolfie [Wolvaardt] on strike a bit more, then maybe… there are a lot of things we could have done differently. But again, to come that close, after starting a little bit slower today, we have a lot of positives to take forward, given that we have a World Cup next year.Related

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“It’s [the intent] something we’ve been speaking about. We had a meeting with the batting coach after our first ODI. He said that if we had scored 100 in 20 overs in that ODI, he would have been happy even if we got bowled out. But to score 122 off the 37 overs, it’s not the brand of cricket we want to play. Definitely happy with the way we scored today and got close to the target.”During the chase, Wolvaardt crossed 4000 ODI runs and became the highest run-getter for South Africa in 50-over cricket. Kapp also touched the 3000 mark to be fourth on the list. Kapp, who played as a specialist batter in these two matches because of workload management, has visibly upped her batting in the last 12 months. Since 2023, she has smashed two centuries and four half-centuries in 15 innings to average 68.20 in this format.Coming in at 67 for 3 when the team needed a big partnership, she thrived under pressure and shared 184 runs off 170 balls with Wolvaardt to take South Africa closer to the huge target.”If you look at myself and Wolfie, it’s been a few times now that we have been out in the middle,” Kapp said. “The way my batting has gone in the last couple of years, I have been striking at close to 100, so it’s just a little bit more natural for me. I have found that If I am being positive, I usually score runs more often than not. Whereas she likes to take her time, set herself on and then go after the bowlers. We don’t even have to speak about it. It naturally worked out that way that I am going to be the aggressor, and she takes her time.”At the end of the day, this is why I play cricket for,” Kapp spoke of playing under pressure. “I believe usually in those situations, I perform, and I pride myself in that. Wolfie and I, we enjoy that. Sometimes, you get a bit annoyed or upset if you are tired, but look, no. It’s a team sport, and the two of us enjoy batting together. I feel like games like this, situations like this probably bring out the best in myself and Wolfie.”

He'd be amazing with Gibbs-White: Forest want to sign "phenomenal" striker

This summer is a huge one for Nottingham Forest if they are to sustain the success they’ve enjoyed throughout the 2024/25 campaign under Nuno Espírito Santo.

The Reds are still in with a huge opportunity to secure Champions League football, whilst also reaching the FA Cup semi-final for the first time since 1991.

Such achievements would’ve been laughed at during the start of the season, especially after the club only just managed to stay in the Premier League in the two previous campaigns.

Nottingham Forest managerNunoEspirito Santo is seen before the match

However, signings are needed in all areas of the pitch to hand Nuno the depth and quality he needs to balance the side in the league and in European competitions next season.

With the transfer window rapidly approaching, numerous names have already appeared on their radar, with multiple being strongly linked with a summer switch to the City Ground.

The latest on Forest’s hunt for new signings this summer

Wolves star Matheus Cunha was Forest’s main target during the January transfer window, with his name remerging as a possible target for the summer market in recent weeks.

However, a deal for the Brazilian now looks unlikely, with the attacker now looking almost certain to move to Manchester United after they held positive talks with his representatives.

Wolverhampton Wanderers' MatheusCunhacelebrates scoring their first goal

Such a move has seen the Reds’ hierarchy shift their attention to other targets, with Ipswich Town’s Liam Delap the latest player they’re targeting, according to Football Insider.

The report claims that he’s seen as an excellent option in forward areas, potentially a cheaper alternative to other targets given his £30m relegation release clause.

It also confirms that Nuno’s side could offer regular minutes in Europe, which could hand them an advantage in the race to land his signature – but will have to work tirelessly given the interest from elsewhere.

Why Forest’s £30m target would be perfect with Gibbs-White

Over the last week or so, Forest fans have all been on edge after journalist Fabrizio Romano confirmed that Manchester City were positive about completing a deal for Morgan Gibbs-White’s signature this summer.

Morgan Gibbs-White for Nottingham Forest.

However, the Reds are said to have placed a £100m price tag on his shoulders, showcasing how highly the club rates the star who cost them £44.5m in the summer of 2022.

Given his tally of 12 combined goals and assists this campaign, it’s no secret that he’s been one of the club’s most important players within attacking areas.

His underlying stats are just as impressive, creating 1.7 chances per 90 this campaign, along with 1.1 successful dribbles per 90 – subsequently able to progress the ball into forward areas.

He’s also completed 80% of the passes he’s attempted, whilst also completing 61% of his long passes – as seen by his extraordinary assist to Callum Hudson-Odoi against Pep Guardiola’s men.

Ipswich Town'sLiamDelapapplauds fans after the match

Such figures could fall perfectly into the hands of Delap next campaign should he complete a switch to the East Midlands, potentially building on his excellent debut year in the Premier League.

He’s managed to achieve 1.2 shots on target per 90, whilst also completing 1.4 successful dribbles – able to play off the shoulder of the backline, handing the Reds an added dimension at the top end of the pitch.

Liam Delap’s stats for Ipswich in the PL (2024/25)

Statistics (per 90)

Tally

Games played

34

Goals scored

12

Shots on target per 90

1.2

Successful dribbles

1.4

Fouls won

1.8

Aerials won

2.1

Duels won

5.5

Stats via FotMob

The 22-year-old has also won 1.8 fouls per game, along with 2.1 aerials won per 90 – handing the club the perfect all-round option in attacking areas to help balance the load between current talisman Chris Wood.

Delap, who’s been labelled “phenomenal” by teammate Jens Cajuste, has the ability to progress under Nuno’s guidance, potentially being the club’s main centre forward for many years to come.

His pace and power are a real bonus for the Reds, handing them an option they’ve desperately lacked throughout the majority of the campaign despite their success.

If they are to be in Europe throughout 2025/26, they will need added quality, with Delap certainly providing that – but if they are to secure a deal for his services, they will need to act quickly to avoid losing him to a rival.

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Pep loves him: Man City now keen on signing £42m former Man Utd "revelation"

Manchester City are now keen on signing a former Manchester United player this summer, with Pep Guardiola looking to strengthen his defence, according to a report.

Man City targeting new left-back

Man City’s rebuild commenced in the January transfer window, with the likes of Omar Marmoush, Abdukodir Khusanov and Nico Gonzalez being brought in, and more reinforcements will be needed this summer, with Kevin De Bruyne set to leave.

Guardiola is also keen to bolster his options at left-back, given that Josko Gvardiol is one of the manager’s only options, and City are said to be in constant contact with AC Milan’s Theo Hernandez, who may now be available for just £30m this summer.

Tottenham Hotspur’s Destiny Udogie is also of interest to the Sky Blues, with new sporting director Hugo Viana pushing to sign the Italian, who he has been tracking since 2021, although it is unclear whether Spurs would be willing to strengthen a direct rival.

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According to a report from Spain, Man City have identified six targets at left-back, including Benfica’s Alvaro Carreras, who has enjoyed an outstanding season in the Liga Portugal.

Given his impressive form, Carreras is now among the City coaching staff’s favourite targets at left-back, indicating that Guardiola is a big fan, but a significant bid may be needed to prise him away from Benfica, given the 22-year-old’s importance to the Portuguese side.

Amid links to Liverpool earlier this season, it was revealed the left-back has a £42m release clause included in his Benfica contract, but it is unclear whether the Sky Blues would need to fork out the full amount to get a deal done.

Carreras impressing in the Champions League

There are clear signs the full-back could be able to make the step-up to a club of City’s stature, having put in some top performances in the Champions League this season, with reporter Alvaro de Grado describing him as one of the competition’s “revelations”.

The Spaniard made ten appearances in Europe’s elite competition, providing two assists prior to his side’s exit at the hands of Barcelona, while he has also impressed defensively over the past year, ranking highly across some key metrics.

Statistic

Average per 90

Assists

0.20 (86th percentile)

Interceptions

2.0 (99th percentile)

Blocks

1.50 (84th percentile)

Not only that, but the former Manchester United man has been indispensable for Benfica in the Liga Portugal, scoring an impressive goal in his side’s 4-1 triumph against FC Porto earlier this season.

It is clear that Guardiola will need to bring in a new left-back this summer, with the manager lacking options in that area of the pitch, and Carreras could be a fantastic long-term addition to the squad.

Chelsea already have their own Livramento with Maresca's “outstanding” star

Chelsea managed to beat Tottenham Hotspur 1-0 at Stamford Bridge, starting their last push for UEFA Champions League football in the right way. Enzo Fernández scored the only goal of the game, heading it home after a lovely ball was whipped in by Cole Palmer.

Enzo Maresca’s men face Brentford on Sunday, just three days after their clash with Tottenham, where another three points will be key. Their victory against Spurs took the Blues back to fourth in the Premier League, sitting one point ahead of Manchester City in fifth and two points ahead of Newcastle in sixth.

Chelsea’s final eight Premier League fixtures

Date

Fixture

06/04/2025

Brentford (A)

13/04/2025

Ipswich (H)

20/04/2025

Fulham (A)

26/04/2025

Everton (H)

04/05/2025

Liverpool (H)

10/05/2025

Newcastle (A)

18/05/2025

Manchester United (H)

25/05/2025

Nottingham Forest (A)

With fifth place believed to be enough for Champions League football this season, Chelsea’s primary focus will be on gaining as many points in their final eight games as possible, in order to qualify.

Maresca will continue to make the tactical tweaks he deems necessary in order to give his side the advantage in games, and this usually stems from his fullback usage.

Tino Livramento's rise after leaving Chelsea

One fullback Chelsea used to have on their books, who is currently smashing it for Newcastle, is Tino Livramento. The English defender was sold by the Blues back in 2021, joining Southampton for a fee of around £5m. Just two years later, Livramento completed a £40m move to Newcastle, where he is now truly showing his class.

Since joining the Magpies, Livramento has made 71 appearances, scoring once, providing one assist and totalling 4,542 minutes played. The 22-year-old has shown versatility to start on both the right and left sides when needed, putting in an exceptional display against Liverpool in the Carabao Cup Final, playing on his wrong side as a left-back.

Livramento has shown he can be a versatile tool for his managers, playing both sides as a fullback, having the ability to overlap and underlap, tuck inside as a third centre-back when needed and even carry the team forward through central zones.

Alexis Mac Allister challenges Tino Livramento

This is something Maresca wants from his full-backs and something we are starting to see more and more with one man in particular.

Chelsea's answer to Livramento

Alongside captain Reece James, Chelsea have Malo Gusto, who was signed in the 2023 January transfer window, joining from Lyon for around £26.3m and earning around £45k per week.

Since arriving at the club, Gusto has made 67 appearances for the Blues, providing 11 assists and totalling 4,331 minutes played.

Malo Gusto vs Tino Livramento comparison

Stats (per 90 mins)

Gusto

Livramento

Goals + Assists

0.10

0.00

Progressive Carries

2.36

2.22

Progressive Passes

5.33

4.80

Pass Completion %

86.6%

84.6%

Key Passes

0.88

0.67

Crosses into Pen Area

0.22

0.22

Shot-Creating Actions

2.53

1.24

Tackles

2.25

1.87

Interceptions

1.02

0.79

Ball Recoveries

5.55

6.36

Stats taken from FBref

When comparing the underlying metrics of both Gusto and Livramento, you can see how both compare, both offering good progressive qualities from fullback areas, both putting up good defensive numbers and both having the ability/athleticism to counter-press effectively, helping to aid the teams’ ball recoveries.

Former England defender, Micah Richards, praised Gusto, labelling him an “outstanding” fullback, specifically pointing out his energy and 1v1 defending. The Frenchman has had to learn some new roles this season under Maresca, which has taken its toll on the 21-year-old’s form.

Whilst Gusto has struggled so far this season, we have seen him play multiple roles under Maresca, overlapping to provide width as both a right back and left back, inverting into midfield from both sides and even playing in the pockets on both sides.

This is the versatility Maresca wants in his fullbacks, allowing for plenty of tactical changes when necessary. And so, while it might sting to see Livramento shining elsewhere, the Blues no doubt have their own sparkling full-back in Gusto.

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It's 4am, do you know how high your ceiling is?

We love using real-life metrics to understand our beloved game better

Alan Gardner16-Sep-2024How high is Josh Hull’s ceiling? These are the sort of questions that keep the Light Roller up at night. And not just ones related to home improvement. Is Sam Billings an air-fryer convert? Does Ravi Bopara own a ride-on lawn mower? Never mind averages and strike rates, this is the good stuff.But anyway – just how high is Hull’s ceiling? It has been the talk of English cricket since Hull, a 6ft 7in left-arm seamer from Leicestershire, was picked for a surprise Test debut a couple of weeks ago. If he’s that tall, you’re probably thinking, then he a high ceiling. Quite likely a “massive” one, as his captain, Ollie Pope, put it in the build-up to his first England appearance.Does it have any nice cornicing, though? And what about the paintwork? Presumably an ornate light fitting is out of the question, with headspace at such a premium.Related

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You might be wondering what this has to do with Hull’s potential as a Test cricketer – let’s just have a look at his numbers and decide whether he’s any good. But this isn’t how the game works in England anymore, not under Brendon McCullum’s Holistic Cricket Wellbeing Programme (Golf Module optional). Selection is now about attributes and moments. Zak Crawley is our guy to open – it, brother! Shoaib Bashir is a tall spinner with huge hands – get him on a plane to India!Now we have Hull, who had taken two wickets at 182.5 for his county this season, but has size 15 feet and a massive ceiling. And to be fair to Rob Key, McCullum and Co, this Jedi mind-trick stuff seems to be working out: Hull now averages 30.33 in Test cricket, compared to 84.54 in the County Championship.So what’s next? It turns out that, despite his enormous ceiling (as previously mentioned), Hull’s release point is slightly lower than Stuart Broad’s was – somewhere around the level you would hang a nice portrait in your hallway. England do like their raw data, so this will have doubtless been spotted. A plan may already be in place, involving yoga and visualisation techniques. Or maybe some time in the nets. You know, whatever works.And then it’s onwards and upwards, hopefully accompanied by statistics that go through the roof in the right way. Because only in the fullness of time will we come to know whether Josh Hull has the fixtures and fittings to accompany his truly stratospheric ceiling.Won’t even try to think up a joke about Pakistan here, because the PCB will always outdo us•AFP/Getty Images

****

Of course, despite all the attributes and moments, not to mention scintillating entertainment for Joe Public when Pope opted to bowl spin for a bit when the light was bad, England lost the Oval Test to Sri Lanka. Afterwards, Joe Root explained the team’s failure in the following terms: “Coldplay can’t be No. 1 every week.” Which seems to betray a fundamental misunderstanding of how the music industry works, as well as provide an interesting insight into Root’s musical tastes (are such bedwetters even allowed on the Baz boombox?) And, as far as analogies go, it also fails to explain why England have spent exactly zero weeks at No. 1 (on either the ICC rankings or the World Test Championship table) since McCullum took control of the playlist two years ago.

****

Elsewhere on the charts, meanwhile, Pakistan are still playing the old hits: dysfunction, hubris and farce. Barely a year on from Mickey Arthur minting “The Pakistan Way”, his replacement, Jason Gillespie, is discovering that the only way is down, as a 2-0 home defeat to Bangladesh extended their losing streak under Shan Masood’s captaincy to five Tests in a row. Afterwards, Masood attempted to put his team’s struggles into a context everyone can understand. “You can’t prepare for science and then sit a maths exam,” he said. “If you’re being tested for maths, you study maths. To play red-ball cricket, you must play red-ball cricket.” The PCB’s response, meanwhile, has been to come up with an entirely new curriculum in the form of the Champions Cup – proving themselves once again to be top of the class in shambling ineptitude.

Why T20 hitting is not just a more risky version of batting

And how Pakistan have not quite caught up with the other international teams when it comes to going on the attack

Kartikeya Date02-Oct-2022Batting is the art of accumulating runs safely. Its measures of merit say that a longer innings is better than a shorter innings, a bigger score better than a smaller one, a higher average better than a lower one. In terms of ESPNcricinfo’s control measurement, a higher rate of control is better than a lower rate of control for the batter.Hitting is different. It is the art of plundering each delivery for as many runs as possible. Its measures of merit must be different from those for batting. The hitter’s technique is designed to make it possible for them to consistently hit the ball to the parts of the boundary that are not defended by a fielder. Among batters, if two score at the same speed, the one who averages more is the better batter. Among hitters, if two score at the same speed, the one who averages less is the better hitter, because this player achieves the said speed earlier in their innings.Ruturaj Gaikwad described the distinction between hitting and batting recently: “[In T20] you have to be ready for each and every ball and have three particular options in your mind for each ball. Then, all of a sudden, to come [into] red-ball cricket, where you don’t really have to look for runs, you have to focus on staying on the wicket.”Related

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This is why hitters play innovative and unusual shots. Given the point is to score as quickly as possible, the hitter’s orthodox shot is one that evades the fielders. Batters try to defend the top of off stump as well as possible against three slips; the orthodox shot for a batter is one that avoids dismissal.This distinction between hitting and batting lies at the heart of what has been described in several excellent articles in these pages as the Indian T20 squad’s attempts to be “more aggressive” under their new leader, Rohit Sharma. Batters need to survive and are highly selective about the balls they choose to attack. Hitters attempt boundaries as often as possible and consequently are more likely to score a boundary off the average delivery, but they are also more likely to get out on the average delivery.Does this mean that hitting is simply a riskier version of batting? The answer is yes in one trivial sense – hitting results in dismissal far more frequently than batting does. In the last 20 years a Test wicket has fallen, on average, once every 62 balls, while a T20 wicket has fallen once every 18 balls. The average Test innings lasts about 100 overs; a T20 innings lasts only 20 overs.In this article I suggest that something more basic is at play in the distinction between batting and hitting. To consider it in terms of risk is to privilege the batter’s orthodoxy, and to describe what hitters do through the lens of batting.If all batting is about selecting the right delivery to score from so that runs are made safely, then there should be evidence in the record for players trading run-scoring speed for survival at the wicket. This relationship – the more a player prefers to play shots, the more frequently the player is dismissed – should be viable in all forms of cricket, including T20.One way to measure this is to count how often a boundary is attempted, for that is where the risk of dismissal is maximal. Hitting the ball to the boundary typically involves swinging the bat harder, meeting the ball earlier, committing to the shot earlier, playing further away from the body.A measure available for this is the one that describes whether or not an attacking shot has been attempted. But this is distinct from whether a boundary has been attempted. For example, if the bowler has both long-on and long-off positioned relatively straight, and fine leg and third man up in the ring, then hitting the ball hard straight down the ground is an attacking shot but it cannot really be called a boundary attempt. Given this field, an attempt to send the ball behind square is a boundary attempt. To say whether or not a boundary has been attempted requires considering the placement of the field.In the absence of direct measurements, let’s consider two indirect measures. First, look at how often a player scores a boundary by calculating the balls faced per boundary. Second, consider how often a player is dismissed per boundary scored by calculating the boundaries scored per dismissal. Note that a boundary is a four or a six.The chart below shows the relationship between these two measures for all players. (To qualify for a format in this chart, a player must have at least 4000 runs in that format between 2003 and 2022; T20 figures include those from T20Is too.)Kartikeya DateIn Test cricket (blue dots), a greater range of boundary-hitting prowess is viable. Even if one thinks that Kraigg Brathwaite (24.6 balls faced per boundary) and Virender Sehwag (7.9 balls faced per boundary) are not equally good players, consider that Shivnarine Chanderpaul averaged 20.5 balls per boundary, Azhar Ali 24.0 and Cheteshwar Pujara 18.6. At the other end of the spectrum are Chris Gayle, with 9.9 balls per boundary, David Warner (11.1) and Brian Lara (8.2).The less frequent the boundary-hitting, the fewer boundaries per dismissal, and in Tests and ODIs, the longer the player’s average innings in terms of balls. In Tests, Sehwag was dismissed once every 60 balls and Chanderpaul once every 124 balls. In ODIs, Jos Buttler, Adam Gilchrist, Sanath Jayasuriya, Sehwag and Gayle scored boundaries once every six to eight balls, and were dismissed once every 33-42 balls, while at the other end, Joe Root, Ross Taylor, Kane Williamson, Babar Azam and Virat Kohli score boundaries every 10-13 balls and are dismissed once every 56-63 balls. Being more selective in Tests and ODIs produces a longer stay at the crease, because scoring runs in smaller denominations is useful in Test and ODIs (scoring rates are typically slower than a run a ball).In T20, as the chart shows, this relationship between the frequency of boundary-hitting and the frequency of dismissal is weakened. There are only six players in the T20 record who average five or more boundaries per dismissal. Their frequency of boundary-hitting ranges from 4.6 balls per boundary for Gayle to 6.8 balls per boundary for Mohammad Rizwan. At the other end of the spectrum are nine players who achieve fewer than three boundaries per dismissal. Their frequency of boundary-hitting ranges from five balls per boundary (Shahid Afridi, Thisara Pereira) to between seven and eight (Shakib Al Hasan, Mahmudullah, Ravi Bopara). At both ends of the T20 spectrum there are, essentially, players who are better (Gayle, Warner, at the top end) or worse (Rizwan) at scoring boundaries. In T20 the room to attempt alternative approaches to run-scoring simply does not exist. With the result that there are essentially more or less selective boundary hitters, and among these, the better ones manage more boundaries per dismissal and the less able ones manage fewer boundaries per dismissal. The more selective players score slower than the less selective ones. In a fast-scoring format like T20, this is not viable in the same way that it is in Tests and to a lesser extent in ODIs.Readers should note that in T20, the players considered in this article score 60% of their runs in boundaries. The corresponding figure for ODIs is 47%, while for Tests it is 50%. Further, in Tests these players have hit one in every 15.5 balls to the boundary. The corresponding figure for ODIs is one every 10.7 balls, while for T20s and T20Is it is one every 5.8 balls. Brathwaite and Azhar have scored 40% of their Test runs in boundaries, while Sehwag scored 63% of his Test runs in boundaries. Among T20 players this range goes from 48% (Bopara, Steve Smith, Mahmudullah) to 75% (Chris Gayle and Andre Russell).A second way to consider this idea is to look at the modal over for players for each format – that is, the over in the innings in which the player is at the crease most often. In any innings, a batter is at the crease in a specific range of overs. Considering all innings by a batter, we can calculate the over (or overs) in an innings in which the batter is most frequently at the crease. This is the modal over. In Hardik Pandya’s brilliant 71 off 30 balls in Mohali recently, his modal over was the 15th, in which he was on strike for seven balls.For example, in ODIs the modal over for the No. 3 batter is the tenth over. For No. 4 it is the 19th, for No. 5 the 27th, for No. 6 the 37th, for No. 7 the 43rd, for No. 8 the 45th. In T20s, the modal overs are: No. 3, 5th over; No. 4, 10th; No. 5, 14th; No. 6, 16th, No. 7, 18th; and No. 8, 19th.The graph below displays this data for all formats in the ball-by-ball record for players batting in positions three through eight. Note that the T20 and T20I curves are nearly congruent. Openers are ignored because they always start their innings in over 1, and so for them that is the modal over, the one in which they are guaranteed to be at the crease.Kartikeya DateThe horizontal axis plots the over of the innings as a percentile rank. For Test cricket, the first 100 overs are considered, since this is approximately the length of the average Test innings (a Test wicket falls once every 62 balls). When that scale is applied to T20s and T20Is, the 90th percentile over is the 18th over. In ODIs, the 90th percentile over is the 45th over, and in Tests it is the 90th over. The vertical axis shows the frequency with which each over is the modal over.In Tests (and to a large extent in ODIs), the frequencies flatten out. After the first 15 or so overs of the innings, any over is roughly as likely as any other to be the modal over for Nos. 3 to 8. In T20s this is not so. The later in the innings we are, the modal overs are bunched closer together (from the No. 5 position onwards). This is because in T20 batters run out of deliveries faster than they run out of wickets.The essential distinction between Test cricket and T20 is that in Test cricket, wickets are the scarce resource. There is a relative abundance of deliveries, accommodating a range of batting approaches, while in T20, deliveries are the scarce resource, since there is a relative abundance of wickets (ten) over only 120 deliveries. This is not a particularly counterintuitive insight but its implications have been resisted in T20 international cricket and in the way T20Is are discussed.Two recent high-profile games involving Pakistan that featured two of the six players above who managed at least five boundaries per dismissal by being significantly more selective than average about the balls they choose to hit – Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan – show the problems with this approach. In the T20 World Cup semi-final of 2021, Pakistan batted first and made 176 for 4. They got to 47 for 0 in the powerplay but in the next seven overs managed only 45 for 1, despite having ten wickets in hand. In the 2022 Asia Cup final Pakistan, chasing 171 to win, got to 37 for 2 in the powerplay. In the next seven overs they managed 54 for no wicket – less than eight runs an over.From a batter’s point of view, 45 for 1 and 54 for none are both excellent returns in a seven-over period because wickets have been preserved. But under the hitter’s orthodoxy, these scorelines reflect bad play. The hitter’s orthodoxy says that team that had wickets in hand should have scored more runs if they didn’t lose wickets, or lost more wickets if they didn’t score more runs. Forty-five for one (one four, one six) and 54 for none (five fours, zero sixes) in the middle third of a T20 match in which about 170 runs were made in each innings reflect excessively selective attempts at scoring boundaries. The contrast between Pakistan’s approach and that of their opponents in these games is evident in the table below. What marks Pakistan’s play is an unwillingness to take chances; if they had taken chances, it would have manifested itself either in quicker runs or more wickets.

Unlike T20 franchise leagues, which feature teams designed to be more or less equal (due to salary caps), T20 international tournaments, with their lopsided, unequal squads and winner-take-all knockout matches incentivise this conservatism to some extent. Saqlain Mushtaq’s defence of his players after the Asia Cup final reflects this. India and Pakistan are both very successful T20 international sides. In T20 internationals among the nine teams in the table below, India (29-13 win-loss record), and Pakistan (20-12) have the two best records in the 2020s.On the face of it, this calls into question India’s recent efforts at discarding the batter’s orthodoxy in favour of the hitter’s. But this record is deceptive. It is built on a lopsided success rate in chases (12-2 for India, 14-2 for Pakistan). Eleven out of Pakistan’s 16 chases have involved targets under 175, eight have involved targets of 152 or less. India’s median score in their 14 chases has been a similarly modest 165. England’s 14-12 record in chases during this period has involved a median chase of 180. Their head-to-head record against Pakistan (3-2) and India (3-5) during this period does not suggest that India and Pakistan have been better T20I sides than England. Australia’s record tells a similar story.In matches where they bat first, Pakistan’s caution stands out. They lose, on average, only 1.2 wickets in the middle third of the innings, while nearly all other teams lose about two wickets or a little under on average, and yet, Pakistan are mid-table in terms of the number of runs scored. They have lost ten out of 16 matches batting first during this period. Above and below Pakistan in this table are teams that have spent more wickets than them in this period, with greater or lesser success. Pakistan are unique in that they have been unwilling to spend wickets at the same rate.International teams seem to be embracing the hitter’s orthodoxy in T20 to varying degrees. Pakistan seem to be the last holdouts for the old way. What stands out is the number of potential runs they forego because they’re conservative about risking dismissal. While India have declared that they want to attack more, the line-ups and batting order they select suggest an element of caution in their approach.A key element in embracing the hitter’s orthodoxy involves the use of the anchor. India insist on playing Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma and KL Rahul in three of the top four positions in their line-up. To be a genuinely hitting XI, they will need to drop two out of those three down the order and promote their power-hitters – Suryakumar Yadav, Rishabh Pant, Hardik Pandya, and probably Dinesh Karthik – up the order. In a good hitting line-up, the anchor offers insurance in case of a collapse rather than blocking one end from the start. To embrace such a theory fully, India would have to pick the most aggressive T20 opener available to them – Prithvi Shaw. That they haven’t done so, and their line-up positions their hitters below their anchors, suggests that there is a step in the direction of hitting that India are not yet prepared to take.Nevertheless, T20 international cricket is, at long last, moving towards the approach the franchise leagues have already embraced. T20 is a hitter’s game. Hitting is a distinct art and needs to be described on its own terms. It is not a riskier version of batting. Rather, it is a response to the unique circumstances of giving teams ten wickets to use over only 120 balls.

Jayant Yadav looks on the bright side

He made a fairy-tale Test debut and then fell out of favour, but he’s taking it all philosophically

Saurabh Somani29-May-2020Jayant Yadav looked set for a long stint in the Indian team when he broke into it in 2016, taking four wickets and making 35 and 27 not out from No. 9 against England on debut. In his next Test, he was handed the ball ahead of the front-liners, R Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja, in the first innings, made 55 the only time he batted, and took four wickets. Better still, at the Wankhede, in his third Test, he became the first Indian batsman to hit a Test century from No. 9, and shared a 241-run stand with Virat Kohli. Then, one Test later, in which he took two wickets but didn’t make an impression with the bat, Yadav was dropped from the XI, and hasn’t made it back.If he doesn’t play again, he will end with Test batting and bowling averages of 45.60 and 33.36. The difference between the two, over 12 runs, puts him in the top-allrounder category (albeit with low barriers to entry: ten wickets and 100 runs).That last Test was in Pune, when a Steven Smith masterclass pulled the rug out from under India’s feet on a dustbowl. “I didn’t pick up enough wickets, and neither did I create enough pressure from one end,” Yadav says. “I was thinking, ‘Turning wicket , turning wicket , you should get more wickets.’ALSO READ: Yadav’s search for fun after freak injury”That was the first time in international cricket I was put under a lot of pressure by not doing well, and I think I just let that get to me. In hindsight, if I could change one thing, it would be to not think about wickets, just think about bowling good balls, creating pressure and a bowling partnership. Because on any wicket, seamer or turner, you need to put pressure to get good batsmen out. I think I just let the pressure go from one end.”It’s the sort of admission you don’t often hear from professional sportsmen, but what Yadav say is more remarkable. True, he didn’t have a good outing in Pune, but though he wasn’t in the XI for the rest of that memorable series, his showing against England kept him in the frame for the national side. However, a freak injury sustained shortly after the Australia series meant that the next time he bowled in a first-class match was more than a year later.

“You can’t always think about getting into a particular team. Only 15 people are selected. It’s a very competitive sport.”

India’s bench strength is perhaps at an all-time high, and it is easier to stay in the squad than to get in. Yadav’s time out of the game in 2017-18 meant that he fell out of the reckoning for the third spinner’s role. The injury, a stress fracture of the finger, took a while to diagnose, treat and rehabilitate, because it was uncommon, and even after he was physically fit, it would be a while before Yadav was “bowling fit”, physically and mentally.At the time, he was naturally downcast. But a couple of seasons on, his view on that roller-coaster year is philosophical. “I’ve had incredible highs and incredible lows in the past two-three seasons. But that’s just part and parcel of life, you know? It just depends on how you take it,” he says. “You can’t do much about injuries. I’ve maintained this always – it’s not about getting to one point or getting somewhere. It’s all about enjoying that particular moment.”Yadav refuses to blame the injury for him not being within striking distance of the Indian Test team.”I think I had decent opportunities. I played Ranji Trophy, I played a good one, one and a half years in the A team regularly,” he says. “I have had opportunities after that. I went to England, I played Sri Lanka [both for India A]…”See, I feel you can get disturbed by each and every thing, and you can get disturbed by nothing at all. Take this lockdown, for example. This is unprecedented. That’s just Mother Nature telling us to live in the present and not think too much about the future. I think this is a very good wake-up call for everyone, because you never know what is going to happen.ALSO READ: Jayant Yadav shows value of quiet application (2016)”You can’t always think about getting into a particular team. Only 15 people are selected. It’s a very competitive sport.”To make a comeback in the Indian Test team you have to be relentless and keep knocking on the door. I think one good Ranji season will get me back in the reckoning. Everybody has seen what I can do, the pros and cons. I’ve been there. It’s about having that good season, getting into the India A set-up again, starting from scratch. If you do well in Ranji Trophy and then do well in India A, then only you get into the Test team. It’s a very good filter.”Yadav played two matches for Mumbai Indians in the IPL in 2019, and picked up the wicket of Suresh Raina in the first qualifier, against CSK•BCCIWhat was it like when he was in that Test side? Particularly, what was playing alongside and under the captaincy of Kohli like?”Virat never let the pressure get to me,” Yadav says, of batting with the captain in that Mumbai Test of 2016. “He was telling me, ‘Play however you are doing. Don’t think too much about getting runs, or what will this bowler bowl in his next spell. Just play every ball. Build it, build it.’ It was like things just fell into place. Actually I was out, I don’t know at what score [when he was on 28 off 72 balls, in the 139th over] but I nicked the ball off Moeen Ali. But they didn’t have a review remaining…”Batting with Virat was fun. They kept putting fielders back because Virat was hitting boundaries at will. That helped me as well. He is such a dominant personality on the field and off it, it makes life much easier for his batting partner.”The Wankhede Stadium, which holds fond memories of that innings for Yadav, has since gone on to figure prominently in his life. He was traded to Mumbai Indians before the 2019 IPL, after a longish stint with Delhi Daredevils. In that team’s spin-heavy set-up, he played only ten games across four seasons, so the move was welcome. He would have been playing right now if it weren’t for the lockdown in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic – “I know, man!” – but Yadav is looking to accentuate the positives.”I had never been part of a knockout in the IPL, and the first year I went to Mumbai, we won the championship. I got to play the qualifier in Chennai, and it was a completely different experience. It was great. The franchise is amazing.”At the time of the lockdown, Rahul [Sanghvi, the Mumbai Indians manager] called to check on us. It’s a good call to receive. Mumbai takes care of their players very well.”For training, we have a Mumbai Indians app called Team Builder, and we get workouts every day in the app, which you can do at home. Like, I have very basic, minimal equipment at home, so the workout is modified according to what you have. That one and a half to two hours you spend is really good.”In times of crisis, whether brought about by personal events or by worldwide ones, Yadav has learnt to smile at adversity. It may yet prove to be his pathway to better days.

إندبندنت توضح السبب الرئيسي لانقلاب سلوت على محمد صلاح في ليفربول

تحدثت صحيفة ذا إندبندنت اليوم الأحد عن تطورات وضع محمد صلاح مع ليفربول، والتصريحات النارية التي أدلى بها الدولي المصري تجاه النادي الإنجليزي.

محمد صلاح تواجد في آخر ثلاث مباريات لعبها ليفربول في الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز، ولم يشارك في أي دقيقة خلال لقاء الريدز مع ليدز يونايتد بالدوري أمس السبت، حيث تعادل ليفربول 3-3.

وخرج محمد صلاح عن صمته بعد نهاية المباراة، وأكد أنه محبط من وضعه الحالي في ليفربول، مشيرًا إلى أن علاقته مع المدرب آرني سلوت قد تدمرت وأنه لا يشعر بالتقدير من قبل إدارة الريدز.

وذكرت الصحيفة، أن ليفربول من المتوقع أن يكون له رد فعل تجاه ما قاله محمد صلاح، حيث لن تمر هذه التصريحات مرور الكرام على النادي الإنجليزي.

وأضافت أن محمد صلاح قد تفاجأ كثيرًا بما حدث معه حيث اهتز كبرياؤه وأدلى بتصريحات لم يكن للاعب بهذه المكانة أن يدلي بها في إنجلترا، منذ أسطورة مانشستر يونايتد وريال مدريد، كريستيانو رونالدو.

وأوضحت أن مستوى محمد صلاح هبط بشدة خصوصًا على الصعيد البدني، حيث لم يسجل هذا الموسم سوى خمسة أهداف في 19 مباراة بكافة المسابقات.

اقرأ أيضًا.. جيمس بيرس مهاجمًا محمد صلاح: ليفربول يلعب أفضل بدونه.. وتصرفه غير محترم

وأردفت أن محمد صلاح ليس هو اللاعب الوحيد في ليفربول الذي تم إجلاسه كبديل، وإنما هناك فلوريان فيرتز، على الرغم من سعره الكبير البالغ 116 مليون جنيه إسترليني، والذي ضمه الريدز قادمًا من باير ليفركوزن.

لكن فيرتز بات في آخر فترة بديلًا مع ليفربول حيث لم يقدم المستوى المطلوب، قبل أن يعود للعب أساسيًا في آخر مباراتين للريدز.

وأكدت أن محمد صلاح محق في عدم تحميله للمسئولية في كل مباراة يخسر فيها ليفربول هذا الموسم، لكن الدولي المصري بحسب الصحيفة لم يكن محقًا في التصريح عن ضمانه باللعب بشكل أساسي مع الريدز باستمرار.

وأوضحت أن المباراة التي جعلت سلوت يبقي محمد صلاح على دكة بدلاء ليفربول كانت أمام بي إس في آيندهوفن في دوري أبطال أوروبا، والتي خسرها ليفربول 4-1.

وأكملت أن آينهدوفن سجل في مباراة ليفربول من جهة محمد صلاح في الجانب الأيمن، حيث لا يقدم الدولي المصري الدعم الدفاعي كثيرًا، مما جعل سلوت يفكر في التعويل على دومينيك سوبوسلاي في مركز الجناح الأيمن بدلًا من الملك المصري.

وألقت الصحيفة باللوم على سلوت، في ظل تبريره في المقابل لسوء مستوى بعض لاعبي ليفربول، وعلى رأسهم كوناتي وجاكبو.

وواصلت الصحيفة قولها، أن إدارة ليفربول بقيادة ريتشارد هيوز، المدير الرياضي، والرئيس التنفيذي، مايكل إدواردز، قد كسروا سياسة التمهل في التجديد للاعبين كبار السن وجددوا عقد محمد صلاح العام الماضي لمدة سنتين.

وواصلت أن إدارة ليفربول رفضت بيع محمد صلاح إلى الدوري السعودي قبل عامين، حيث رغب اتجاد حدة في ضم اللاعب مقابل 150 مليون جنيه إسترليني، وهو مبلغ يصعب على الريدز الحصول عليه حاليًا إذا أراد بيع الدولي المصري.

واختتمت ذا إندبدنت قولها، أن ليفربول من الممكن أن يقوم بيع محمد صلاح، حيث اقترب عهد الفرعون المصري في آنفيلد من نهايته.

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