Wolves eyeing Enzo Fernandez move

Wolverhampton Wanderers are reportedly interested in signing River Plate midfielder Enzo Fernandez this summer, according to Jornal de Noticias.

The lowdown: Rising star

A product of the youth system at the Buenos Aires club, Fernandez has enjoyed a rapid rise to prominence in his homeland and is already an established member of the senior team.

Despite his tender years, the 21-year-old has already flourished in Argentina, having amassed 80 first-team outings across spells for his parent club and on loan at Defensa, directly contributing to 23 goals in the process.

Recently linked with a move to Manchester United, it now appears as though a switch to the Black Country could be on the cards for the cultured midfield ace…

The latest: Wolves ‘very close’ to Fernandez

As per Jornal de Noticias, Wolves are believed to be ‘very close’ to signing Fernandez this summer.

It’s claimed that Benfica and AC Milan are also in contention but it’s the Old Gold who have now emerged as the frontrunners for the Argentina under-20 starlet.

The report suggests that Wolves have sent a representative to South America to tie up a deal for the youngster, who was dubbed an ‘orchestrator’ by football talent scout Jacek Kulig, as Bruno Lage prepares for life after wantaway midfielder Ruben Neves at Molineux.

The verdict: Superb business

Completing a swoop for Fernandez this summer would be a sensational piece of business from Wolves’ ownership group Fosun and Jeff Shi, particularly in the face of competition from some European giants.

The specialist playmaker has scored nine times and provided six assists in 24 appearances across all competitions so far this season. In the current Libertadores Cup campaign, he has earned an astonishing 7.77 Sofascore rating whilst winning five duels, completing one dribble and hitting the target with 1.8 of his shots per match.

Valued at £13.5m and under contract until 2025 (Transfermarkt), signing Fernandez for the mooted £17m release clause would be a wholly worthwhile outlay for Wolves and would see Lage supplement the squad at Molineux with a seemingly ready-made Neves successor.

Asensio could be Man United’s next Mata

Manchester United have been linked with Real Madrid ace Marco Asensio recently and the Spain international could be the ideal man to replace Juan Mata in Erik ten Hag’s side at Old Trafford.

What’s the word?

According to reports from Spain, Asensio’s agent Jorge Mendes wants to bring his client to Old Trafford this summer as he eyes a move away from the Santiago Bernabeu.

Ten Hag will surely be in the market for attacking reinforcements given the departures of Edinson Cavani, Jesse Lingard and Mata so far this summer, as well as Mason Greenwood’s absence, and Asensio could provide some much-needed quality in attack.

The Red Devils managed just 57 goals in the most recent Premier League season and finished with a neutral goal difference, so the signing of Asensio would perhaps take some of the pressure off Bruno Fernandes as the chief creator in United’s midfield.

Mata 2.0

Mata joined United from Chelsea in January 2014 and went on to make 285 appearances during his time at Old Trafford, contributing 51 goals and 47 assists.

The Spaniard was capable of playing on either wing and as an attacking midfielder, which is where Asensio has mainly been deployed during his time at Madrid, so the similarities are clear to see.

WhoScored suggests that both Mata and Asensio’s strengths include their ability to pass and hold on to the ball, while the Madrid man is also adept at shooting from range.

Transfermarkt currently values the 26-year-old at £36m so he wouldn’t come cheap, but Madrid may be keen to move him on given that his contract is set to expire at the end of next season.

Last season saw the former Mallorca man make 31 appearances in La Liga for Carlo Ancelotti’s side, in which he contributed ten goals.

The Champions League-winning manager was full of praise for Asensio after his winning goal against Granada last season, saying:

“Asensio is very important for us. He has quality and commitment. He’s a very important player for us and we’ve won tonight via his greatest quality, his shooting.”

Given that recently departed interim manager Ralf Ragnick was critical of a number of players’ commitment at United, Asensio seems like exactly the sort of player Ten Hag will need if he is to improve his side’s fortunes next season.

Although Mata didn’t feature too much in his final season at Old Trafford, he will certainly leave a hole in the squad and Asensio might just be the man to fill it.

And in other news… United in ‘direct contact’ with former ten Hag favourite 

Palace can replace Ayew with Rak-Sakyi

Crystal Palace’s game against Manchester United was special. Not just because it was the Eagles’ first victory at Old Trafford in the Premier League era, but because of a highly-rated youngster’s much anticipated debut.

Jesurun Rak-Sakyi has been running riot in Premier League 2, racking up an impressive 18 goals and five assists to make 23 goal contributions in 25 appearances.

His form has been consistently excellent all season and did not go unnoticed. The 19-year-old was recently named Crystal Palace’s U23 player of the season and consequently, was presented with a well-earned opportunity to make his full Premier League debut against an out of shape Manchester United side.

On the chalkboard

Rak-Sakyi made sure to carry out the basics in his debut, and whilst it did not go exactly how he would have wanted it to, there were promising signs.

It was his desire to win-back possession that stood out most, with his five recoveries demonstrative of his work rate in the out-of-possession phase a key strength.

Although Ayew, who has been dubbed “rubbish” by David Law, has reportedly triggered a contract extension, his original contract was set to run out this summer.

At the age of 30, with limited attacking participations, Vieira’s hesitancy in signing the player indicates that the Palace boss would be open to a more direct option on the right wing.

That’s why the future bodes well for Rak-Sakyi, who offers a more direct and inverted approach in the half-space and chips in defensively just like Ayew.

The future is bright for Rak-Sakyi and the Palace faithful will surely be anticipating big things from a player who has forced his way into the team at the age of 19 and is “holding his own” in the words of BBC reporter Alex Howell.

In other news: Forget Zaha: Crystal Palace talent who won 83% duels stole the show vs Man Utd 

Manchester United make contact over Victor Osimhen move

Manchester United have asked for ‘official information’ regarding a possible mega-money move for Napoli striker Victor Osimhen.

The Lowdown: Cavani set to depart

Erik ten Hag looks set to be extremely busy this summer when it comes to incomings and outgoings and appear to be in the market for a marquee forward.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/latest-man-utd-updates/” title=”Latest Man Utd updates!” poster=”” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

A number of players are out of contract at Old Trafford at the end of June, including Edinson Cavani, who looks set to leave after two seasons in Manchester.

Osimhen, who former United striker Odion Ighalo described as ‘the future’, seems to be a forward on Ten Hag’s radar, but it could be an expensive transfer.

The Latest: Osimhen update

Sports Witness relayed an update from Corriere dello Sport regarding United and Osimhen. They claim that United are in the lead for the Nigerian’s signature and have now asked for ‘official information’ on a figure.

Napoli have reportedly told United that there is a €110m (£93.6m) starting point, with the Serie A side not willing to go below €100m (£85.1m).

The Verdict: A lot of money…

United are reportedly willing to hand Ten Hag a £100m budget and are keen on looking at potential free agents. Therefore, spending a large percentage of his budget on Osimhen may not be the best idea.

Barcelona midfielder Frenkie de Jong is expected to be a major target, and while Cristiano Ronaldo could be the only centre-forward available to Ten Hag when he arrives, should Cavani depart, splashing the entire remaining budget on Osimhen would leave the squad bare in other areas.

A major rebuild at Old Trafford is required and the club are seemingly extremely keen on signing de Jong, so pursuing someone like Paulo Dybala on a free transfer instead of Osimhen for £90m+ could be a wiser move.

In other news: Man Utd now working to sign ‘underrated’ defender in £38.5m move; offer ‘imminent’

Vote for your men's cricketer of 2010-2019 (semi-finals)

Four semi-finalists. One men’s cricketer of the decade picked by ESPNcricinfo’s readers. Make your vote(s) count

ESPNcricinfo staff04-Jan-2020And then there were four. The quarter-finals threw up two one-sided contests: AB de Villiers, with 88% of the votes polled, trumped his long-time team-mate Dale Steyn; while India captain Virat Kohli (73%) beat England’s World Cup and Headingley hero Ben Stokes (27%). But the excitement in the round lay elsewhere. Just 12 percentage points separated Kane Williamson and Steven Smith. The epic contest, though, was the subcontinent tussle between MS Dhoni and Shakib Al Hasan. Over 1.65 million votes were clicked, as fans on both sides battled it out to get their icons into the semi-finals. In the end it was neck-and-neck, and perhaps deserved a tie, but the India and Chennai Super Kings superstar prevailed “by the barest of margins”.Now it’s time to you to pick again, with the two winners making it to the final showdown. Will Williamson triumph in another Fab Four battle, will it be a reunion between RCB team-mates, or will it be an all-India contest? The ESPNcricinfo staff pick will be revealed in a few days too.Note: The voting for this round closes at 10am GMT on January 5, 2020.How our readers have voted so farESPNcricinfo LtdMore in the decade in review, 2010-19.

Digested Ashes: England stand firm

A bite-size breakdown of the key action from day one of the first Test in Brisbane

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Nov-2017The (expected) early blow
Having won the toss, Joe Root was never likely to do anything other than opt to bat – despite sweaty skies in Brisbane. There was nothing as calamitous about England’s start as Steve Harmison’s wide in 2006-07 or Andrew Strauss’ third-ball duck four years later, but it still did not take long for Australia to strike. In his second over, Mitchell Starc got rid of England’s most-experienced batsman, Alastair Cook drawn into nicking to slip. Cue the first bout of night-time nerves: “It was just starting to look like the quietest start to a Gabba Test since 1998-99 … but instead, it’s taken just 16 balls for Australia to make their mark!”The (unexpected) counter
A major focus during the build-up had been on England’s 5-0 whitewashing in 2013-14 and the supposed “scars” that Australia would look to open up. An early score of 2 for 1 (or 1 for 2) hinted at trouble to come, but the promised onslaught from Australia’s fire-breathing quicks failed to materialise. Mark Stoneman and James Vince went into the Test billed as Poms to the slaughter, yet the pair of Ashes debutants made themselves at home at the “Gabbatoir” while adding a 125-run stand for the second wicket. That was better than England’s highest partnership during the 2013-14 series.The watery intervention
Pat Cummins fired a warning shot for the series when he dragged Root across his crease before swinging the ball back to trap him plumb in front (via the help of a review). He called it “the dream wicket” and, coming less than 10 overs from the close, it prevented England from taking the day. But Australia might have enjoyed more success with the old, reversing ball if Vince had not hit it into a puddle beyond the boundary rope shortly after tea. The umpires initially refused to change the ball but eventually did so after its condition deteriorated further – enabling Cummins to strike.The stat
Vince, whose technique was considered by some to be too fragile to succeed at No. 3, enjoyed a control percentage of 92% against pace bowling during his Test-best 83.ESPNcricinfo LtdQuote of the day“If he didn’t know who we were before the game, he probably does now. Reading comments like that gives you the motivation to go out there and make a statement.”What’s next?
Australia had just armed themselves with the new ball when the umpires decided to call a halt due to bad light, having lost their first review (which will no longer be topped up) over a failed lbw appeal against Dawid Malan. That fresh Kookaburra will still be only three deliveries old when Starc resumes in the morning – play will begin half an hour early to make up lost time – with Australia looking to rattle England’s lower order out quickly. That was one of the major advantages they enjoyed over the tourists in 2013-14; Malan, Moeen Ali and Jonny Bairstow will be the batsmen charged with preventing a repeat.

Dynamo Wright aiming to re-energise Sussex

Entrusted with the captaincy in all three formats, Luke Wright will demand high standards and unstinting effort to make the sun shine again in Hove

David Hopps07-Apr-2016Feed off Luke Wright’s energy and optimism and it is tempting to believe even at your lowest moment that anything in life is possible. Donald Trump could be nice to women, Panama would still be famous only for its canal and, yes, Sussex are about to emphatically arrest a decline which last season saw them relegated in the Championship, finish bottom of their group in the Royal London Cup and fail to reach Finals Day when David Willey gave them a pummelling in a home quarter-final.Sussex’s recovery, it has to be said, is by far the most likely of the three, but even this possibility is far from automatic. Worcestershire, Essex, perhaps even Kent, all have potential to question their favourites’ rating in a Championship Division Two season where only the top side is promoted.Sussex face questions. An ambitious cricket budget last summer brought failure and a heavy loss. A fine stalwart, Mike Yardy, has retired and James Anyon has followed with the season only a few days away, an always vulnerable fast bowler’s body unable to take any more. Most jarring to all at Hove was the tragic death of Matthew Hobden in Scotland as he celebrated New Year, robbing the county of a promising fast bowler and a fine companion.Time then for one of county cricket’s most positive figures to take charge: a man who openly accepts that “selfishness” can naturally take hold when a player is trying to forge an international career or make decent money in IPL or the Big Bash, but when that career is as good as spent it can be replaced by a powerful desire to return the favour to the county side that provided their opportunity. As with Ian Bell, skipper of Warwickshire this summer, it is good to see England players make this transition.Wright is already asserting himself, so critical of Sussex’s weak fielding last season and the excessive sense of entitlement amongst some younger professionals that it can be seen as a tacit criticism of the faltering later period under Mark Robinson’s 11-year reign as head coach.An abiding memory of Wright: a training session somewhere up country in India; a sultry day, a low point of the tour, the coach Duncan Fletcher ignoring the media in the lift, yet always Wright’s sheer exuberance in training. Chase this; catch that. Find the most enthusiastic ball-chasing dog on the planet and his tail would droop with exhaustion long before Wright would be spent. Sussex, valuing such energy, have made him captain in all three formats – quite rare these days – inviting the suspicion that even he could be weary by September.

“People moaning about not playing when they are averaging 30 in the seconds – that’s not good enough. Come to me when you’re averaging 80 in the second team”

“I think my kids will break me before these boys break me,” he said. “It’s going to be something I’ve got to manage but I try to move on quite quickly and even as a player I’ve never been a kit thrower or anything like that. I’m pretty good at letting things go once I get home. Glass of red and move on.”Ed Joyce, his predecessor, a heavy county run-scorer and international with Ireland and England, probably found it harder to let go as Sussex’s marked decline in Robinson’s last season as coach took hold. “Ed’s a deeper thinker,” Wright smiled. A mid-season defeat against Durham at Arundel, when Ajmal Shahzad’s comeback lasted only four overs, and a loss against Hampshire at Hove – the team who eventually condemned Sussex to Division Two – were two critical junctures.”Talking to Joycey when we were struggling I knew potentially he might step down, but I wasn’t exactly encouraging the lads to nick off so we went down,” he said. “I knew that if the captaincy came up, I was willing to listen if they wanted to talk to me and luckily they did.”County cricket is packed with off-season New Zealand players this summer, some identified as T20 joy bringers such as Brendon McCullum and Mitchell McClenaghan at Middlesex, some like Tom Latham around in all formats for Kent for the bulk of the season. Ross Taylor is in the second mould, signed until late July after Steve Magoffin, the veteran Australian metronome, secured a UK passport and freed up an overseas spot. Wright expects Taylor to be an influential figure.”It’s my first time of really doing it full on, and I’m learning on the job as well. Ross Taylor is one of the best people to learn off and I think bowlers should be setting their fields most of the time anyway. If I’ve got to set them then it’s a bit of a worry to be honest.”Another Kiwi, Stephen Fleming, coach of Melbourne Stars’ in the Big Bash, has also had a major influence on Wright’s approach. “He was amazing: in terms of a T20 coach, he was almost the best I’ve ever worked with. He was so relaxed but with man management and planning for games he was very, very good.”But to propose a player who could have most influence on Sussex’s cricket this season it is hard to look past Danny Briggs. While Wright exudes energy, Briggs floats around, a gentle, slender surveyor of the scene. If there is bitterness about his move from Hampshire, he is not one to show it. Hampshire were variously taken by the all-round talents of Liam Dawson (so, too, were England in naming their World T20 squad) and the legspin promise of Mason Crane, Briggs lost his place in all but T20 and had the nerve to request a move a year before his contract ended.There was a time when Briggs’ graceful left-arm spin would have been predicted to figure in the World T20 that has recently departed India’s shores; he postponed his wedding in 2012 to join England’s squad for the tournament in Sri Lanka. But the last of his six T20Is came in Hobart more than two years ago – a young player not quite battle-hardened enough to make it.

Danny Briggs on…

Leaving Hampshire
“The second half of the year was fairly frustrating – I missed 50-over games and four-day cricket on pitches I thought I could have bowled well on. I was playing T20 cricket and not a lot else. I had a year left with Hampshire but I spoke to them and they were happy for me to look around and luckily Sussex came in pretty much straightaway.”
England aspirations
“It is such an amazing feeling to play for your country and you want more and more of that but it is also good that in county cricket I have had time in the last couple of years to improve. I know that if I can put a few good years in and contribute as much as possible with the ball and hopefully a bit with the bat then hopefully I can stake my claim again and second time around it will be a lot more successful.”
The secret of T20 success
“A lot of it is momentum. In the group stages you find a formula – who is bowling when and who is batting where. I think with Hampshire we probably found that most years. You still have to be a little bit flexible when things don’t go quite right but when you have momentum you tend to win the close games. Our aim at Hampshire was to get through to a quarter-final and back ourselves. And then if someone performs you are through to a finals day. Get to finals day and anything can happen.”

For all that, he has colossal experience, at 24. Hampshire have figured in six successive Twenty20 Finals Days and Briggs has been at the heart of that record. Wright is convinced that Sussex have signed a bowler who can change the shape of their season.”Danny is a great signing. He’s one of those players that I have found an absolute pain in the backside playing in white-ball cricket. He’s hard to get away… he’s just smart. You forget he’s 24 – he’s like a 30-year-old bowler in a young man’s body, because he just knows what to do, and makes you take tough options.”At Hove, you target down the hill a lot and whoever has to bowl that end has the tough job and he managed always to deal with that. I think Hampshire will miss him. They’ve had a lot of white-ball success and a lot of that has been down to Danny’s bowling. Even watching him going about his four-day bowling, he’s smart, you know he’s going to go at two per over on any wicket, but I think he’s got more than that.”He’s given up more money to come here and play. It shows his desire to improve and play. It would have been easy to just sit there and play white-ball cricket but he’s wanted to learn, especially in four-day cricket. He’s one of those guys I’ve wanted to play with again for a long time so as soon as the chance came up, we took it.”The retirement of Yardy, influential not just as a batsman but as a defensive left-arm spinner in limited-overs cricket, was another consideration. “When we’ve done well, Yards has been a huge part of it so to get a like-for-like was massive for us.”Wright’s demands with regard to personal fitness will be unyielding. This is part of his own make-up, but it is also a reminder of his time as a young professional under Sussex’s then director of cricket, Chris Adams, who supervised one of the most productive periods in the county’s history, skippering them to three titles between 2003 and 2007. Adams’ star has waned – Sussex resisted his return in a coaching capacity despite his unhidden enthusiasm for the role – but his influence on Wright lives on.”We are going to have to look at younger guys and they will have to improve because on the financial side – you see what money we lost last year – we can’t go out and there like Surrey and others and just sign people,” Wright said. “We will have to produce better within.”I’m happy to play youth, as long as they’ve earned the right to play. In the second team, the results weren’t good enough. People moaning about not playing when they are averaging 30 in the second team. Sorry that’s not good enough. Come to me when you’re averaging 80 in the second team.”I’ve had huge issues with this. I was brought up on the idea that you had to churn massively to even get a look in. Knock on Grizz’s [Adams’] door and ask if you can play and he’d laugh at you if you were averaging 40. It’s not good enough. Going into club cricket, asking around who’s done what and people saying I got 20 or 30 – that’s not what we are trying to breed.”Wright’s condemnation stretches to Sussex’s fielding. Only Magoffin, a senior seam bowler whose skill is extending his career beyond the norm, will be partially exempt from high expectations. “Fitness and physicality is important. Our fielding has been awful, and it’s hard to win things if that’s the case. Sometimes you naturally get athletes coming through your academy and sometimes you don’t. But it’s about making yourself as good as you can be.”As a club we’ve always driven massively on work ethic and making you the best you can be and I didn’t think we had done that for the last few years. In fielding everyone can improve – you’re not going to suddenly turn everyone into Jonty Rhodes but for young lads coming through we’ve said it’s not acceptable to be a passenger.”The captaincy has come at a great time for me. The majority of my career was just spent hunting down an England place, or preparing for the next tournament or the next series, and you’re always quite selfish when you’re doing that. When you’re not involved with England for a few years you look for that next thing to get you going and captaincy was good for me last year. I loved it. The club has given me everything I could have dreamt of, and now I want to get us back fighting where we should be.”

No-balls, and a no-run

Plays of the Day from the IPL match between Sunrisers Hyderabad and Kolkata Knight Riders in Vizag

Sidharth Monga22-Apr-2015The overthrow
At the start of the third over, Shikhar Dhawan opened the face to an offbreak from Johan Botha, guiding the ball to short third man. There was no real attempt to sneak in a single, but Yusuf Pathan did what irks many old-timers: just let rip a throw for no reason. What’s more, it wasn’t accurate, and it allowed an easy overthrow. To rub it in David Warner, who shouldn’t have been on strike, danced down to the next ball and drove it over extra cover for four.The field placement
When Botha came back in the 13th over of the game to finish his quota, Warner mis-hit a low full toss. The moment it left the bat it looked like it would find long-on to perfection. Astonishingly, though, this lobbed, in all likelihood, the tallest man in the city, Morne Morkel, and didn’t even go for a six. The thing was, Morkel was stationed wide at long-on, and quite a few yards in, which meant he was left in that embarrassing position. Gautam Gambhir, the captain, didn’t look too exasperated, which might suggest it was his placement and not that Morkel had wandered off, but it still was a strange position: wide long-on with an offspinner bowling to a left-hand batsmen.The no-balls
In the last over of Sunrisers’ innings, Umesh Yadav produced what he would have thought were two wickets, but the third umpire had to check on no-balls on both occasions. The first was a front-foot call when he bowled Naman Ojha, and you couldn’t say for sure he had a part of the foot behind the line. The third umpire, though, stayed with the original on-field call, and sent Ojha on his way. Two balls later, KL Rahul hit a full toss to long-on’s hands, but he was asked to wait while the third umpire checked how high the ball was. Rahul had met the ball in front of his body, it was on its way down, he was crouched a little and he met the ball a touch higher than the waist. This was clearly less a no-ball than the previous one, but this one was called. Hopefully this was not vintage Indian justice, keeping both parties happy.The no-run
In all amateur cricket, the last ball of a limited-overs innings always ends in a run-out unless the ball has been hit to or over the fence, or unless a wicket has been lost already. The idea is, if the ball has not become dead, you keep on running. Don’t worry about your wicket, you never know what misfield or overthrow might occur; give yourselves a chance of that extra run. In the transition from amateur cricket to international variety, a worryingly high number of cricketers forget the principle. Rahul played the last ball of Sunrisers’ innings, and premeditated a shuffle away from the stumps. Yadav cleverly bowled one wide of off stump and wicketkeeper Robin Uthappa looked desperate to not allow them a bye, getting ready with an underarm flick almost before he had collected the ball, but when he looked up, he saw Rahul and Moises Henriques were not even running. Not sure what happens during the transition from amateur to professional cricket, but we amateurs will never be able to get this resistance to risking the wicket for that one extra run that could prove crucial in the end.

Clarke remains to seek one-day solace

A number of high-profile names are missing the one-day series, but Michael Clarke is not one of them despite his bad back

David Hopps05-Sep-2013Why are you still here? For Michael Clarke, seeking to recover Australia’s pride at the start of the NatWest Series, the question was not just implied, it was asked directly. Look, you’ve got a bad back, you’ve lost the Ashes, you deserve sympathy. Shouldn’t you be resting up at home?If anything is designed to get Clarke’s back up, as it were, it is dollops of sympathy from English cricket journalists. He has remained on what now must seem an overlong tour, knowing he must leave England with a one-day trinket or face the back-biting. As two unproven one-day sides face up to other in a best-of-five series, nobody can confidently predict the outcome.Clarke now seeks solace, as well as the never-ending need to communicate to the Australian public that the decline hurts him just as much as it does them. Or maybe that is not the case anymore. Perhaps he needs to persuade the Australian public that he cares more than they do, to lead an Australian side which performs so well it shocks the public into sharing the responsibility for doing something about it.It is one of the ironies of Australian cricket that many suspect their captain for being a little too urban, too capable and cool, for their tastes, when for many in the cities the café latte culture cannot grow fast enough.He insisted at Headingley, ahead of the opening ODI, that England (not just the trendier parts of London) is where he wants to be. “It’s important that I’m here,” Clarke said. “I didn’t take any part in the Champions Trophy because of injury, I really enjoy one-day cricket and it’s important that I’m here with the team, perform and lead from the front. I want to see this one-day team get back to where it belongs: the top of the tree. We are going to try to play our full-strength team whenever we can and have some success.”Every game you play for Australia is just as important. It was a no-brainer for me to stay here. I will prepare for this series just as if it was the first day of the Ashes series.”But what about your back, Michael, your chronic condition? Suggestions that Clarke would prolong his Test career by following his retirement from T20 internationals by stepping down from the one-day game were quickly discounted.”Right now I haven’t even thought about it. I love Test cricket and one-day cricket and I am enjoying leading both teams. With my body I don’t know if standing down from one-day cricket would make much difference. Look at my preparation for the Champions Trophy: I had time off, I didn’t go to the IPL so I could get myself ready, my preparation was outstanding then five days after arriving in England I did my back. I don’t know what the perfect preparation is for my back, I just know I love playing Test and one-day cricket and I think I can manage my back.”

If Australia’s obsession with short-form cricket is harming their status at Test level then the fallout from T20 theoretically should not be as harmful in the 50-over game. It did not seem like that during the Champions Trophy.

As the Australian cricket writer and novelist, Malcolm Knox, perceptively wrote last month, England “has a superhuman belief in the powers of Australian sportsmen.” Indeed they do. It would be possible for England to whup Australia for the best part of the 21st century and deep in the English psyche would be the belief that something rather wonderful and unexpected had happened.It stretches into other sports, too. The British Lions might have beaten Australia at rugby union, but for a confusing collection of nations, simultaneously supportive and rebellious towards each other, behaving with the complexity of combative lovers, to gather together such unity is a short-lived phenomenon, achieved alongside the awe-struck, deeply-held conviction that Australians, all sinew-strong and brazen-eyed, are imbued with sporting excellence from birth. Nowhere is that sense stronger than in cricket.Perhaps one explanation for the lack of enthusiasm in some sections of the media for England’s Ashes victory was nothing to do with the belief that England had won without style, but a sub-conscious disbelief – dejection even – that Australia were defeated so easily, and that England could even risk a strut or two without entirely earning it. Everybody had turned up for Batman v Superman and what they got was Batman v Clark Kent. Come to think of it, Clark Kent is the perfect name for a middling Australian cricket professional.(Apologies, incidentally, to India for the comparison. India can be Dr Manhattan if it so wishes. Dr Manhattan is invincible, immortal and is capable of destroying entire worlds if it wants to so that seems about right).That reference to Batman v Clark Kent, which was a bit of a cheap shot, was deliberate. If England win this series as comprehensively as the Tests, it will be fast reaching the point where English observers are reduced to vaguely goading Australia into playing better. When England’s cricket was suffering Ashes thrashing after thrashing, this writer was once grabbed around the neck by an Australian journalist, shades of Charles Saatchi, and impassionedly told: “At least tell them to throw a punch occasionally.” It is finally becoming possible to understand how he felt.Australia are ranked No. 2 in one-day cricket, for those who take such rankings seriously. Clarke could not quite remember Australia’s Test ranking at Headingley – it has fallen to No. 5 – but he knew that the one-day ranking was quite a bit better. From that he draws hope that he can find consolation.If Australia’s obsession with short-form cricket is harming their status at Test level then the fallout from Twenty20 theoretically should not be as harmful in the 50-over game. It might even help, although it did not seem like that when Australia put up a sub-standard performance in the Champions Trophy. And the Australian media seems to have done a runner; if one-day cricket is now dominant nobody seems to have persuaded the media moguls to spend any money on covering it.The one fact England cricket lovers know about Australia’s side for the NatWest Series is that David Warner has gone home. Warner blundered into trouble in the Champions Trophy and was rightly condemned for it, but at least England knew he was up for a fight.Add the leakage of several fast bowlers because of injury and casual cricket supporters are not entirely sure which players are left. The job of Clarke, and his players, is to let them know. Announcing a squad is one thing. Demanding that people take notice of it is quite another.

'I respect my wicket a hundred times more now'

No more just the T20 biffer, David Warner has made it to the big leagues, and he has made sure the mental and technical aspects of his game have kept pace

Daniel Brettig24-Dec-2011″I reckon if you get into a verbal contest it’s excellent. You mean business, you want to get under their skin, and make them hate you for that day”•Getty ImagesYour new opening partner at the top of the order is Ed Cowan, and when you batted together against New Zealand it looked like a very good, very natural combination.
The type of player Ed is, he definitely does see the ball off. He’s the type of player who works the ball around, and when the ball is there he hits it for four, but he is definitely one of the players who will see off the new ball and do his job for the team and then capitalise after. We know as an opposition that we have to try to get him out early. [It’s fantastic] he’s playing here to open the batting on Boxing Day. I see Ed as a great partner to open with. He can do his role and I’ll do mine – not to score as fast as I can but keep the run-rate going as well.It is a bit like batting with Shane [Watson] in T20s and one-dayers. He always says because we know how each other work, it’s a good combination, and over this Test there is a great opportunity to show that Ed and I are a good combination.Your backgrounds are somewhat different. How do you get along?
Ed grew up going to a private school, I went to a public school. He played at my junior club and then went on to Sydney University and I stayed at Eastern Suburbs and am still there now. We’re two totally different people. I’m, I wouldn’t say the prankster but I do certain things in different ways to how Ed would. Then, I’m not saying I’m dumb, but he’s very smart, he’s got a degree and he’s one guy who loves reading books. I’d prefer to watch movies, he loves writing – certain things like that. But he’s one of the nicest guys I’ve met in cricket.Some of your batting partners have commented that you talk a lot in the middle and can be a bit edgy. It seems a contrast to the confident person we see from the boundary.
When you’re out there, you try to keep as relaxed as you can. Some guys like to talk in the middle, some don’t like to talk, and just listen to what you say and don’t have much to say. One of the things I like to do is talk about what’s going on, where we can look to get off strike… Certain things if we’ve got bogged down – how we can get through the tough periods, little things like scoring options, whether a fielder is left- or right-handed in each position. I like to be very observant with what I’m doing and how I’m going about my business, and it is something that has helped me. If I can help the other person at the other end, it is fantastic, but if it doesn’t the boys are more than welcome to say they don’t want to hear it if they don’t want to. It is good to get communication going in the middle.Descriptions of you as a tough, combative, cheeky character are common. You’re never short of a word on the field. Where do you think that stems from?
When I’m out there, I’m there to do the business, to score runs, to help my team and to play hard. Any time you put on a team shirt or you’re out there for your country, it is pride. You’ve worked so hard to get to it and you don’t want anyone to stop you. You want to stamp your authority and say, “Mate, you know what? Stuff you, you’re going to have to get me out, and if you want to get into a verbal war as well, you’re not going to beat me verbally, because I thrive on that and love it when someone comes at me.” Some people are aware of that and try to play on the player’s ego.

“I used to just go in there, have a hit and say, ‘I’m satisfied with that’, but I look at that now and say, ‘What was I thinking? That was a load of crap’

I’m definitely the kind of player who would chirp back a lot at the bowlers when I’m in a battle, because I like a bit of banter when you’re out there. But obviously when it is quiet it is perfect as well, because you know you’re knuckling down and there’s no energy or presence coming from them out in the field, so you’ve almost won a battle as well.You’ve often referred to Shane Warne as your hero, and you bowl legspin yourself. Was there much chatter going on between you at the MCG the other night?
There was a little bit but not much. I’ve got a lot of respect for Shane, and he’s the type of guy who I don’t think I’d ever sledge in a game.You just let your bat do the talking. It was a good night. I felt all right to take the strike, because as a left-hander it is easier for me to face a legspinner. There was more provocation with Jade Dernbach more than anyone, because he’s an Englishman, and everyone knows I like a little bit of banter, and he gave me a bit of cheek and I bit back at him as well. At the end of the day I won that battle, so maybe next time I play him he might get me.Those are the sorts of things you try to create when you’re out there, because I think it is good for the game and I actually like it. When you play Shield cricket, everyone knows each other and everyone’s mates, but you’re playing for your state and you’ve got to go out there and put it all on the line, and I reckon if you get into a verbal contest it’s excellent. You mean business, you want to get under their skin, and make them hate you for that day. But at the end of the day you come off, and you’re mates again.Now we come to another hero of yours, Virender Sehwag, who has been quite influential in encouraging you to strive for Test cricket. How do you feel about lining up against him on Boxing Day?
It is going to be fantastic. I spent a couple of years now with him over in Delhi, and he’s helped me a fair bit as well, not just in my T20 stuff but with my Test stuff as well. He’s always had faith in me and told me, “I reckon you’ve got the game for Test cricket.” He’s one guy I look up to as well because we’re similar players. I don’t think I go as hard as him, but definitely what he was saying to me made sense – there’s a lot more scoring options in Test cricket. But then the ball’s moving a lot, swings and seams, so you’ve still got to adjust. A lot of his dismissals are caught in the slips or caught behind, because he’s playing that line and going for his shots. That is one thing I’ve got to be cautious of when I’m out there. I tend to like to leave a lot of balls out there, but sometimes we all make mistakes.During his BBL hundred: “I was so balanced and still and capable of hitting any ball in my zone over the fence or in the gaps”•Getty ImagesOne of Sehwag’s great innings was his 195 on Boxing Day in 2003. A lot of the Indian batsmen have had some great days in Australia over the past couple of tours. Were you watching that day?
I didn’t watch that. I was in year 11 at school, I think, and was making the most of Christmas. But you look at all those guys who’ve played here – people talk about how Sachin averages high 80s at the SCG. These guys are world class players. You look at their line-up and you can think, “Oh, how are we going to get these guys out?” but we know when they’re in Australia, the wickets are different, we think their mental approach is a bit different to when they’re in India. We think they automatically know they’re going to win series in India because the wickets turn and it is all in their favour. And it is probably similar to when they come out here – we think they might not be able to adapt to the bouncy wickets. They’re one of the best line-ups in the world, and capable of scoring big runs on the wickets we’re producing here. We’ve got to be spot-on with our lines and lengths with our quicks, and when we’re batting we need to put on as many runs as we can… I reckon we’re in for a good series.So your end of the bargain will be to keep India in the field as long as possible, tire them out and post those big totals?
I definitely think the longer we keep them out there [in the field] the harder it’ll be for them, mentally as well. We know a couple of their players don’t like being out in the field for too long, and their fast bowlers are under injury clouds as well, so the more overs we can get out of them, the better for us going into the second innings and also the upcoming Tests. If we can do our damage early in the series, it’ll hold us in good stead.The MCG has been good to you. You made your startling international T20 debut there. A 99 there was your first Sheffield Shield score of note, and there was another century for the Sydney Thunder the other night. How much do you enjoy the ground?
Anytime you walk out onto the MCG it is an amazing feeling. I still remember when I walked out there on debut [in the T20 against South Africa in 2009]. I didn’t know what to expect, but now it is one of my favourite grounds to play on. I just think the stadium itself sets the bar. You look up at the stands from the middle of the pitch and just say “Wow”. Where else would you want to be? On Boxing Day you’re playing for your country, there’s going to be thousands of people there, and you’ll be there with a big smile on your face.That first match turned you into a one-man circus for a time, and the hype seemed to affect how you batted. What lessons have you learned from that now that you’re playing Test cricket?
I’ve learned a lot in the last two years. When I first came onto the scene I felt rushed. It felt like I had to go in T20 mode all the time, I had to hit every ball out of the park. Now in South Africa it put me in a good frame of mind playing over there, and it is going to help me. The four-day stuff I played for NSW helped me as well, as with the one-day stuff – building an innings and knowing that you can capitalise at the back end. I’ve showed with the T20 innings in India [Champions League] and the other night that I’m starting to get myself in and then finishing it off.It seems you’re thinking a lot more deeply, maturely about the game.
My mental side of the game has changed massively. Sometimes in the past I might’ve gone out there and just lost my head or just thrown my wicket away. Now I respect my wicket a hundred times more. Even in the nets it is the same thing. I used to just go in there, have a hit and say, “I’m satisfied with that”, but I look at that now and say, “What was I thinking? That was a load of crap.” Now I’m in there, focused, switched on, and it is like a game to me now when I’m in there. When I get out I really kick myself because you only get one chance in the middle.

“You want to stamp your authority and say, “Mate, you know what? Stuff you, you’re going to have to get me out, and if you want to get into a verbal war as well, you’re not going to beat me”

You carried your bat in Hobart in a fairly traumatic defeat. You were helped by a little bit of a technical tweak from Mickey Arthur?
In the second innings I changed my stance. Mickey just said to me the way to get my weight and balance to move forward and go forward was to close up my stance a little bit. I did feel like I was too wide in my stance, and every time I went to drive I was collapsing my back leg, so he just said to me to adjust my stance, come a bit closer and make sure we’re all about moving forward, and that’s what I did. It felt really good, and good again the other night as well, in the T20. I was so balanced and still and capable of hitting any ball in my zone over the fence or in the gaps. It is a massive thing, like changing your run-up – something that doesn’t happen overnight – but it just felt right.What about the emptiness of scoring a century in a defeat, and a bad one at that?
That’s the second time I’ve scored a hundred and been on the losing side. It doesn’t happen too often, but it is gut-wrenching to get so close. Credit to Nathan [Lyon] because he hung in there at the end as well. I backed him 100% and we got down to eight runs. We look back now and people ask “Why didn’t you take the strike?” We needed 42 runs to win when he came in, so if I’m going to war and there’s two of us, we need each other. He felt like he let the team down, but it wasn’t his job to be out there at the end. It was a milestone for me, but we lost, and we have to move on from there.As a T20 batsman you’ve now shown the ability to do a lot of damage with “switch-hitting”. What chance is there of seeing that in a Test match?
It is more of a pressure release and something you would do at the appropriate time – if I’m a hundred or if we’re 300 for 2 or something. Sometimes you have to back yourself to do it. It’s like a forward defence. If I’m practising that in the nets and doing it to perfection, you can do it out in the middle. But if you play a shot like that and you get out, people will start saying things. You have to pick the right time to do it. In Test cricket you’ve got to score runs, but you’ve got so much time to do it, you don’t need to play those shots, unless you’re at the back-end of your innings and you want to start firing. Eventually it will come in if I’m settled, but definitely not early in my innings.Cricket can be a very visually striking game. Is there an image or picture that you remember vividly or recall as a favourite of yours?
The one that always stands out for me is the Steve Waugh picture when he raises his bat when he’s on the ground after he’d done his calf. You look at that and people who wouldn’t know cricket would go, “Well, he scored a hundred.” But he did it with a torn calf, so it just shows you how courageous he was to go on and score that. That’s one image that sits in our change room at NSW Cricket. We have that under “courage”, and that always comes to mind when I look at that image.Lastly, I was intrigued to read that your favourite film is , the tale of an intellectually disabled man’s fight for the custody of his child. Can we detect from that a more emotional, sentimental side to you?
Everyone’s got a soft spot. That’s one little movie, but it builds from there. A lot of my mates say, “You’ve got a soft spot in you”, and we all do. At the end of the day it is a thing I like to do, to sit down and spend some time by myself watching some movies here and there. I always like to watch my favourite ones, and a couple are sad ones. A lot of the other guys are more inclined to like comedy movies and like to recite one-liners and stuff, but I like ones that sometimes touch your heart.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus