Everton transfer news on Onana

Everton are reportedly now interested in a move to sign LOSC Lille defensive midfielder Amadou Onana.

The Lowdown: Midfielders wanted

It has been reported that the Goodison Park outfit are now preparing a new bid for Wolves midfielder Morgan Gibbs-White, while it is thought that they also hold an interest in Jesse Lingard.

It is clear that Frank Lampard wants to strengthen in the middle of the park, and that could mean bringing in more than one player in that area – perhaps one attacking and one defensive-minded.

The Latest: Onana interest

As per Het Laatste Nieuws (via Sport Witness), the Merseyside club, as well as both West Ham United and Leicester City, are now showing an interest in Onana.

The Hammers have already had a bid turned down for the Belgium international, as Lille’s president, Olivier Letang, does not want to let him go for less than €40m (£33.8m).

The Verdict: Difficult

After recording consecutive losses in their financial accounts, it is unclear how much money the Toffees will be able to spend this window, even with the sale of Richarlison to Totenham Hotspur.

They may not be able to afford both Gibbs-White and Onana, and so may have to pick between the two.

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The latter, who has been dubbed a ‘huge talent‘ by talent scout Jacek Kulig, was a mainstay in Lille’s team last season, featuring in all eight of their UEFA Champions League matches (Transfermarkt), while his average of 1.5 tackles per game was the sixth-best in the squad (WhoScored).

Nonetheless, he is only 20 years of age, and so the Blues can really benefit from his development over the next few years, should they choose to sign him.

Aston Villa: Sergio Gomez most likely left-back signing

Sergio Gomez may be the most likely left-back signing at Aston Villa this summer, judging by insight from Birmingham Live journalist John Townley. 

The lowdown

Villa have already spent £49m on four signings this summer – Diego Carlos, Philippe Coutinho, Robin Olsen and Boubacar Kamara – but Steven Gerrard is now intent on signing a left-back who can provide cover and competition for Lucas Digne.

Villa did have Matt Targett on their books but they have now sold him to Newcastle United, where he spent the second half of 2021/22 on loan.

Gomez plays for Anderlecht in the Belgian Pro League.

The latest

Townley wrote for Birmingham Live that the 21-year-old, who has been ‘mooted as a possible target’, could ‘provide solid back-up’ for Digne at Villa.

The Spaniard stands out among other left-back options because of his ‘cheap price tag and high upscale’.

By contrast, Villa’s other targets – such as Calvin Bassey of Rangers and Aaron Hickey of Bologna – may be deemed too expensive given that they’ll only be playing ‘limited minutes’ at first.

The verdict

Transfermarkt value Gomez at a moderate £9m. By contrast, Bassey would cost at least £20m, while Hickey is likely to be twice as expensive as the Anderlecht youngster.

The Spaniard certainly looks like he would be good value for money at £9m. He impressively recorded 12 assists in the Belgium league, and three more in the country’s cup competition, last season and chipped in with seven goals as well.

Only three players in the entire division – Genk’s Junya Ito (15), OH Leuven’s Xavier Mercer and Zulte Waregem’s Jean-Luc Dompe (14 each), all of whom are attackers – set up more goals in 2021/22, testifying to how effective Gomez can be as an attacking outlet.

It might be hard to hit those numbers in the Premier League, but they certainly suggest that the 21-year-old could augment Villa’s attack effectively whenever Digne is absent.

Aston Villa: Frank McAvennie reacts to John McGinn exit rumours

It would be a ‘big blow’ if Aston Villa were to lose John McGinn this summer, Frank McAvennie has told Football Insider.

The lowdown

The Daily Mail’s Sam McEvoy reported earlier this month that Tottenham Hotspur, who are bound for the Champions League next season under Antonio Conte, are lining up a move for the 27-year-old.

The same publication had also reported in May that West Ham have identified the Scotsman as a potential target.

McGinn joined Villa in 2018 in a £2.8m move from Scottish Premiership side Hibernian. He has since gone on to make 147 appearances for the Midlands club, scoring 16 goals and providing 23 assists.

Valued at £28.8m by Transfermarkt, he still has three years left to run on his £70,000-per-week contract.

The latest

McAvennie, who played for Villa in the early 1990s, believes that the loss of McGinn would hurt the club but is confident that his fellow Scotsman is happy in the Midlands, where he has been given a platform to excel.

The 62-year-old told Football Insider about McGinn: “It would be a big blow if he left. Is he going to go? A player starts playing well and you see them linked with every club.

“I haven’t seen too much about it myself. John is happy, from what I can gather. He is playing in the Premier League, he is playing every week and he’s doing very well.

“There aren’t many people who have gone down to England and done that. He has done brilliantly. He’s shining week in and week out even though Grealish isn’t there anymore, they were great together.”

The verdict

Would McGinn jump at the chance to move to Tottenham?

On the one hand, he would have the opportunity to work under a five-time league title winner in Antonio Conte, who may be plotting another title bid in north London.

He’d also have the opportunity to play in the Champions League, which is an undeniable draw, particularly for a player who has yet to sample the competition.

On the other hand, McGinn would be competing with the likes of Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg, Rodrigo Bentancur and new £25m signing Yves Bissouma for midfield places at Tottenham.

Is he willing to potentially drop down to a rotational role to improve his prospects of winning silverware? That’s the key dilemma that he may have to confront.

In other news, Dean Smith wants to sign this Villa ace

Spurs want Prem titan after Eriksen blow

Tottenham Hotspur could turn to Yves Bissouma after suffering a blow to their chances of sealing a sensational return for Christian Eriksen…

What’s the word?

According to LondonWorld, Spurs will renew their interest in the Brighton and Hove Albion midfielder if they cannot bring the Danish playmaker back to Hotspur Way.

Well, as per Sky Sports reporter Michael Bridges, that does appear unlikely in a gutting blow to supporters. He recently told GIVEMESPORT:

“I did the Brentford Q&A awards last Thursday, and he kind of gave me the impression that [Tottenham] is a non-starter.”

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It’s not the first time that the Seagulls powerhouse has been linked with a switch to north London and after another impressive campaign in the big time, it could be time to make a bid, especially after missing out on Eriksen.

Midfield powerhouse

Spurs have plenty of priorities this off-season, including the additions of a new left-sided centre-back and a stronger right wing-back option. However, with the team in the Champions League next term, then strength in depth will be required.

There won’t be many better candidates to add steel to the engine room than Bissouma, who has proven his worth in the big time over the past 18 to 24 months.

As per WhoScored, he ended the 2021/22 campaign as Graham Potter’s highest-rated player (with 20 starts or more) on WhoScored, averaging a more than respectable 6.99.

His defensive output was pretty remarkable, having averaged 2.9 tackles and 1.9 interceptions per game, something that exceeded all of Antonio Conte’s current squad in the Premier League.

Not even stalwart Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg (2.2 tackles and 1.3 interceptions per game) could match the Mali international’s numbers. The Italian head coach would love a player of that calibre, given his work rate and brute strentgh.

It’s evident that Bissouma, once lauded as a “wonderful talent” by ex-manager Chris Hughton and a “Champions League level” talent by Potter, is an upgrade on what Spurs currently have in defensive midfield and considering his valuation of £31.5m, he should be a very attainable target indeed.

He may be a vastly different style to Eriksen but if anything, that’s a better fit for Conte’s current system, where there is no room for a no.10. Bissouma just makes sense, so sporting director Fabio Paratici must look to pounce when the transfer window reopens.

AND in other news, Spurs now eye £54m-rated “phenomenon” after Perisic, he’s Conte’s dream summer signing…

Key update on Mane’s LFC future emerges

Liverpool will offer Sadio Mane a new contract this summer but he won’t be offered extortionate wages, according to a fresh update on the situation.

The Lowdown: Mane saga goes on

While Mohamed Salah’s future is dominating a lot of the headlines at the moment, there is also constant speculation surrounding Mane’s.

The Senegalese sensation is out of contract at Liverpool at the end of next season, and as of yet, his representatives and the club haven’t reached an agreement over an extension.

Now, another key update has surfaced regarding Mane’s next chapter.

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The Latest: Offer incoming

According to Football Insider, a Liverpool source has informed them that a fresh contract offer will come Mane’s way at the end of the season.

It is stated that FSG won’t ‘break the bank’ to keep hold of the Senegal superstar, however, which has the potential to be a stumbling block if another club offers more.

The Verdict: Simply have to keep him

Assuming Mane wants to stay at Liverpool, giving him a new deal is an absolute no-brainer this summer, with the attacker hailed as ‘world-class’ by Jurgen Klopp.

He has scored 15 Premier League goals in 31 starts this season and is already flourishing in the new central role he has taken up since Luis Diaz arrived.

It would be a massive blow to lose Mane at this point in his career, with the Reds legend more than capable of remaining at the very top for several more years, with the likes of Robert Lewandowski and Karim Benzema still at their peak in their mid-30s.

In other news, Liverpool have been linked with a move for a big-name player. Find out who it is here.

Mohammed Shami's heart makes him a captain's dream

We might not know what Shami has personally gone through over the last year, but what we know is he’s bowling through discomfort, with that seam beautifully upright, and is bowling more than anyone

Sidharth Monga in Sydney05-Jan-2019There was a time before the England tour last year when you wondered if we would get Mohammed Shami back as the bowler he was. He was going through domestic trouble, the BCCI had withheld his annual contract, he was not fit to play during the IPL, he didn’t want to go home. It must have been a tough time for Shami, not always known for his fitness but for a lot of heart. The next few months were going to test that heart.Shami’s heart is what every coach of his praises. His club coach in Kolkata says he used to take the new ball in every nets session, bowl the first ball, and the last one too. WV Raman, at one time his Bengal coach, remembers him bowling through illness. In Kolkata in 2016-17, he bowled for India while his 14-month-old daughter was in the ICU. For someone who grew up in rural Uttar Pradesh, he is not the naturally fittest player, but he has vast amounts of heart for bowling.Shami comes from a village called Sahaspur. Its literal translation is “land of courage”. It is debatable whether all this crosses the line between courage and other things, but the obsession for cricket and fast bowling is beyond argument. Whether cricket is his escape or whether it is his true love, Shami in the end is a captain’s dream.At the end of this overseas cycle, as India go through the final formalities in the way of their first-ever series win in Australia, a slow rain-interrupted day is as good a day as any to celebrate their unsung hero. The Man-of-the-Match awards and the five-fors might have gone elsewhere, and Shami’s big hauls have not come in wins except for Johannesburg, but he has bowled a lot of pretty and an equally high number of dirty overs for India. Since the start of their tour of South Africa, which is pretty much the start of the last year, no fast bowler – not just from India – has bowled more balls than Shami. That is a number not to be scoffed at just because he has played at least one more Test than any other fast bowler. It is a big tribute to him and India’s support staff that he has been on the park all along.ALSO READ: India’s fast bowlers make the big leapShami has been there for India every match, every time, every desperate session the ball has been thrown to him. Except for the Test against Afghanistan and one against West Indies, Shami has played every Test for India since the start of 2018. No Indian – fast bowler or slow – has bowled as much. He has bowled 2399 deliveries, 25 ahead of team-mate Jasprit Bumrah. He has done so even as part of two-man pace attacks, he has done so with all his intensity. The seam has forever been upright; if there has been any movement to be found, he has found it; and he has made a big correction to his earlier bowling style.Shami earlier could be accused of straying to leg once too often, searching for wickets. Now he has shifted the line of attack to the left ever so slightly. When he bowls in the channel, he really does bowl in the channel. There are no easy leaves, which Ishant Sharma can sometimes be accused of offering.A Test after Shami bowled with his daughter in hospital, his captain Virat Kohli paid him a big tribute. “Shami is someone who is a character in the change room,” Kohli said then. “On the field you won’t see him coming out in the open and expressing himself too much. But he is someone everyone loves in the team. He is someone everyone gets along with. Whatever might be happening with him, we won’t know. I had no clue that his daughter was in the hospital.”What Shami has gone through over the last year we don’t know much about, but what we know is that he is bowling through all discomfort, with that seam absolutely and beautifully upright, and he is bowling more than anyone.

Shy underachiever Panchal finally carves his identity

After eight years in the domestic circuit, Priyank Panchal, who debuted as an 18-year old full of self-doubt, is on the cusp of Ranji Trophy history, and he does not want to stop there

Shashank Kishore in Nagpur05-Jan-2017He holds a post-graduate degree in financial management. He wants to pursue a course in sports management. He works with the Income Tax office during the off-season. He is a science geek, who is fascinated by artificial intelligence, robotics, algorithms on how stock markets work and how air fares rise and fall.He’s a big fan of the Golden State Warriors and the NBA. Reading is his passion – he can reel out what he particularly enjoyed from books on Steve Jobs, the former Apple CEO, Elon Musk, the co-founder of Tesla, Sheryl Sandberg, the COO of Facebook, and Arianna Huffington, editor-in-chief of Huffington Post. Amidst all this, he can play cricket too.Welcome to the life of Priyank Panchal, the 2016-17 Ranji Trophy’s highest run-getter, who has transformed from an underachiever to a promising opener, and after eight years of domestic cricket, has finally forged an identity. His previous best season tally was 665, in 2015-16, “far from enough” by his standards. This season, he’s nearly doubled that courtesy five centuries, the most by a Gujarat batsman.With Gujarat having entered their first final in 66 years, Panchal will have possibly two shots at surpassing VVS Laxman’s 1415 runs – the most in one season in the tournament’s 83-year history – which he tallied in 1999-00. Panchal needs 146 more to set the new record. Only Vijay Bharadwaj, and Shreyas Iyer, who topped the charts during Mumbai’s title-winning run in 2015-16, have scored more in a season.Understanding his game, Panchal says, has been the biggest difference, and it wasn’t always the case. His game awareness stood out, most notably in Lahli against Railways. In conditions that have traditionally assisted swing and seam bowling, he made a 138-ball 101 to set the tone for Gujarat’s 294-run win, in just their second game. “Survival would have been tough, so I had to go after the bowling,” he says of the knock.Then, Panchal became Gujarat’s first triple-centurion in first-class cricket when he made an unbeaten 314 against Punjab. On a seaming track in Nagothane, against a quality Madhya Pradesh attack, he made a defiant 62, a knock he values highly amidst the big scores. He missed out on a century in the quarter-final, but top-scored with 149 in the semi-final against Jharkhand in Nagpur.What has led to this change? “The focus is not that much on technique now, personally,” he says. “I have confidence that if I spend time at the crease, I will score runs. When I spent time at NCA in my junior days, there was a lot of emphasis on change in technique, but it wasn’t working. My reasoning was if I spend so much time on technique, how will I be able to focus on runs? I’ve felt I need to hone my natural ability. Apart from that, the mental aspect is important – which bowlers do you line up, which bowler you try and play out? The situational awareness has helped me.”When Panchal debuted as an 18-year old in 2008, he was so shy and overawed by being in the Gujarat dressing room that interactions with his team-mates were restricted to the field. Off it, he was full of self-doubt if cricket alone would guarantee him a future, because of circumstances – he lost his father at the age of 15 and had to “financially settle” to ease the burden on his family. It showed in his performances too. The odd spark of brilliance was surrounded by a run of low scores.Seven years on, the man who could hardly mumble a few words to his captain, is now often consulted and merits respect as a senior player. The confidence and assurance he possesses today are a result of some conscious changes he has made to his game over the years. The changes are visible now. They have come about because of greater awareness of not just cricket, but life and developing of interests that stretch far beyond the 22 yards.More than working on his technique, Panchal says developing situational awareness has helped his game•ESPNcricinfo”On tours, I’m free after we are back to the hotel. I realised very early that it was important to have other interests besides cricket,” he says. “When I was 19, I was an introvert. Talking to people was a big problem, so my mother enrolled me in a personality development course where I was taught about the need to develop interests. I couldn’t move beyond a page then. I was hardly into science, but over the years, it has just changed the way I look at things. I feel empty if I don’t have books by my side.”Reading apart, Panchal also maintains a diary – he’s nearly filled nine of them since he first started writing in 2009. It’s very personal to him, one he digs into when in doubt, or just to feel good about himself. It’s a mix of his dismissals, his highs, his lows, and how he wriggled out of different situations. “I write about journalists, and recently about interviews too,” he laughs. “What were the kind of questions I was asked, was I comfortable answering and all those things.”Basically, I felt I needed to have something which I can look back years later, something that would give me joy. So I wanted to capture moments in my diary along with photographs. My coach kept asking me to write a diary, just to record my thoughts about life in general. I did it for three-four months, and slowly, it became part of my life. Sometimes, when I’ve been stuck in tough situations, I open my diary to see what I did when I was in a similar situation previously. That boosts me from within.”Panchal’s tryst with competitive cricket came in 2008 when he went to Mumbai on a sports scholarship offered by Indian Oil Corporation. He wasn’t guaranteed too many games in the competitive times, but Ajinkya Rahane’s late pull-out from a game gave him an opportunity. He made 60, and coach Sulakshan Kulkarni was impressed. Later in the season, he made his Gujarat debut.”The pitches were such that, as an opener, you had to work hard for your runs,” he says. “There was spongy bounce and the bowlers were pretty quick. At that age, it was a big match for me. It showed me how to build an innings and how Mumbai cricket was. They play aggressively, but at the same time can slow down the game too. It was great to interact with a legend like Wasim Jaffer.”He was also attracted by Rahul Dravid’s routine and match preparation, which he has tried to bring to his game. “I met him during the Under-15s and Under-17s at NCA because he used to train there. At the time, there was only general talk with him, no personal talk as such. I was very shy then, and would get nervous approaching him.”But I saw how he practiced. He replicated a match situation. He stayed there from 9 to 4, scheduled his lunch and snacks as per the match timings. That attracted me a lot. I haven’t written this in my diary, but it is in my mind. The picture is crystal clear.”Despite being in the limelight, Panchal doesn’t want to get carried away. His next target is India A, one that is firmly in his path should he continue scoring runs. Given the season he has had, a place in Rest of India’s squad for the Irani Cup against the Ranji Trophy champions can’t be ruled out either, if Gujarat lose the final. For now, he’s simply living in the present, and not thinking of selection calls. “I try to ensure it doesn’t affect my game,” he says. “One thousand is a lot of runs, I actually didn’t realise when I crossed the landmark. I can say that my hard work is paying off now.”For Panchal, there wouldn’t be a better way to top off a bumper season than with a historic Gujarat win, one he is willing to trade his runs for because “that is the ultimate high” as far as Indian domestic cricket goes.

Dhoni 20, Kohli 20

Statistical highlights from India’s 22-run win over South Africa in the second ODI in Indore

S Rajesh14-Oct-20151:49

By the Numbers – Virat’s lean patch, and Axar’s best

4-0 India’s ODI win-loss record at the Holkar Cricket Stadium in Indore. They’ve beaten England twice, and West Indies and South Africa once each. Three of those four wins have come when they’ve batted first.17-7 South Africa’s win-loss record when chasing targets between 230 and 260 since the beginning of 2005. India have a 7-9 win-loss record when defending totals between 230 and 260 in ODIs during this period.107 MS Dhoni’s strike-rate in this innings (92 off 86 balls); the other Indian batsmen had a combined strike rate of 66 (142 off 215).20 Man-of-the-Match awards in ODIs for MS Dhoni. The last time he won one was in the final of the Tri-Nation Series against Sri Lanka in Port of Spain in July 2013, when he scored 16 off the last over. Dhoni has equalled Kohli’s MoM tally, and is now joint fifth among Indians – only Sachin Tendulkar, Sourav Ganguly, Yuvraj Singh and Virender Sehwag have won more awards. (Dhoni has won 19 MoM awards when playing for India, and one when playing for Asia XI.)4 The number of sixes Dhoni struck in his unbeaten 92. The last time he hit as many sixes in an ODI innings was two years ago, in November 2013 against West Indies in Visakhapatnam. In between these two innings, he struck only 19 sixes in 26 ODI innings.3-39 Axar Patel’s bowling figures, his best in ODIs; his previous best was 3 for 40, against Sri Lanka in Hyderabad last year.12 Number of successive ODI innings in which Virat Kohli hasn’t reached 50; he has averaged 27 in these innings. His previous longest ODI streak without a 50 was seven innings.10 Number of times, out of his 14 fifty-plus scores, that Rahane has been dismissed between 50 and 75. In nine of those ten innings, he has either opened the batting or come in at three. His last three 50-plus scores have been 63, 60 and 51.4.47 Imran Tahir’s economy rate in ODIs in 2015. Among the 26 bowlers who’ve bowled at least 100 overs this year, only three – Daniel Vettori, R Ashwin and Trent Boult – have a better economy rate.146.6 AB de Villiers’ average in his last nine ODI innings in India before today, at a strike rate of 121. He scored five centuries in those nine innings, of which four were unbeaten ones. His lowest score in those nine innings was 25.10 Number of times the No. 6 batsmen from both teams have been dismissed for zero in an ODI – Suresh Raina and David Miller were both out for ducks in this match. The last time this happened was almost seven years ago, in an ODI between Pakistan and Sri Lanka in Lahore.

England miss the muscle

The opening T20 did not present new problems for England, just old ones rehashed at other venue. Misjudging selection can be fixed, but the batting needs to find a way of combating spin in the shortest format

George Dobell in Barbados10-Mar-2014Out-thought, out-played and out-gunned, England endured a chastening start to the T20 series against West Indies in Barbados.It was not just that England were well beaten that will disturb them. It was that they were well beaten largely due to their enduring struggles against spin bowling. Bearing in mind that they will be playing the World T20 on Bangladesh pitches where spin is expected to dominate, then it is hard to be optimistic about their chances.It would be an exaggeration to suggest that this match was decided before it even began. But not much of an exaggeration. While West Indies’ three spinners bowled 10 overs and claimed 6 for 46, England selected four fast-medium bowlers who bowled their 12 overs for 128 without taking a wicket. They picked only one spinner and he was, by some distance, their best bowler. They simply misread the pitch.But even if England had stacked their side with spinners, even if they had bowlers to compare to the quality of Sunil Narine, they would still have to have batted far better to have given themselves any chance of victory.As it was, they batted like schoolboys. While Ben Stokes, head in the air and swinging like a punch-drunk boxer, might be forgiven on the grounds of inexperience, Luke Wright, playing his 100th international and becoming the second England player (after Stuart Broad) to reach 50 T20I caps, has no such excuse. He has now failed to reach double-figures in his last eight international innings and, on this tour, his scores have been 1, 0 and 0. That is not a sustainable record for a specialist No. 3 batsman. While Wright might have a future on quicker surfaces in Australia, it is hard to see how he will flourish in Bangladesh.In the three ODIs in Antigua, England were largely able to see-off the spinners. They were able to accept that Narine would deliver his overs frugally and simply play him out and plunder the weaker bowlers. But here, in the shorter format, they were further burdened by the presence of the top-spin of Samuel Badree and knew they could not afford to simply accumulate for eight overs. Had Narine been able to complete his allocation of overs – he was obliged to leave the pitch after sustaining an injury in the field – then the margin might well have been even larger.

While the likes of Dwayne Smith and Chris Gayle were able to thrash fairly decent deliveries over the boundary, England are more reliant on bowler error to match such strokes. They have come to a gunfight armed with a catapult

It is far from the first time that England teams have looked clueless against spin bowling. Perhaps due to the largely one-dimensional character of the pitches that dominate in county cricket, or perhaps due to the inflexible attitude that endures towards ‘mystery’ spin in the UK, young England players react to exposure to bowlers such as Narine with something approaching horror. It has been a long-standing weakness in the English system.There have been improvements in recent years. But there are few members of the Test squad that triumphed in India in this limited-overs squad, so it appears that, each generation, England have to return to square-one in their struggle against spin. In the longer term, they would be well served allowing more turning pitches in the County Championship and encouraging more unorthodox bowlers to develop their art. At present, the cleft foot of the puritanical action-police continues to hold England back in this regard.England did not bowl badly. While West Indies recorded their highest T20I score at the venue – only Sri Lanka and Australia have scored more here – it was more of a result of a true pitch almost perfect for this form of the game and a batting line-up blessed with power than it was poor bowling. England simply lacked the slow-bowling options that might have made life more difficult.Indeed, had James Tredwell accepted a chance – a chance somewhat harshly described by Broad as “a dolly” – offered by Marlon Samuels when he had 43, West Indies might have restricted to something around 150. As it was, Samuels thrashed the final five deliveries in the same Jade Dernbach over to the boundary and West Indies were all but out of reach.England have little such fire-power in their own batting. While the middle-order of Eoin Morgan, Jos Buttler and Ravi Bopara, must be considered dangerous, their line-up does not compare to the power present in the West Indies’ top seven. While the likes of Dwayne Smith and Chris Gayle were able to thrash fairly decent deliveries over the boundary, England are more reliant on bowler error to match such strokes. They have come to a gunfight armed with a catapult and may well have missed a trick by overlooking powerful T20 batsmen such as Darren Stevens and Steven Crook, whose skiddy pace might also have proved especially effective in Bangladesh.There was even worse news for England at the end of the game. Broad announced that he will not play the final two T20s in order to rest a knee problem that might be described as chronic, while it emerged that Morgan’s knee injury is continuing to bother him. The England camp deny it, but both must be considered doubts for the World T20 and Broad, who is having a “fourth or fifth” injection on his troublesome knee, is clearly in need of some time off. Whichever way you look at it, England are facing an uphill struggle in Bangladesh.

Dhoni creeps up on Ganguly

Victory against England in Mumbai would draw MS Dhoni level with India’s most successful Test captain

Sidharth Monga22-Nov-2012This Test is right up MS Dhoni’s alley. This is – and it needs little reminding – Virender Sehwag’s 100th Test. While all eyes will be on the maverick, who debuted with a hundred in seaming Bloemfontein and will want to join Gordon Greenidge and Javed Miandad as men with centuries in both their first and 100th Tests, if Sehwag does continue to steal the limelight it will only help Dhoni quietly sneak up as the joint-most successful Test captain for India. And that’s the way Dhoni likes to operate. Quietly.Ahmedabad was Dhoni’s 20th win as India’s Test captain. Sourav Ganguly led India to 21 wins. Ganguly captained India in 49 Tests, Dhoni has taken 40. It will of course be mentioned here, and reminded again and again, that under Dhoni India have won just three Tests outside Asia, and have endured two of the worst series defeats. If you take out Zimbabwe, even under Ganguly India won just three Tests outside Asia. However, this cannot be a direct contest of numbers. Ganguly was building a team and a new culture; Dhoni is carrying it on.These things, though, hardly bother Dhoni now. He famously lives in the moment. Dhoni’s mind right now is focused on enjoying the upper hand at home, and also warding off some criticism alleging he wishes to “doctor the pitches”.Dhoni was neither apologetic about his criticism of the Ahmedabad pitch nor was he going to revisit his stance. “I was just trying to take the equation of the toss out,” Dhoni said. “I was doing the good part, but different people have different opinions.”Unsure if he will ever get a pitch with turn and bounce, Dhoni said he will resort to public criticism again, should the one at Wankhede Stadium behave similarly to the one at Sardar Patel Stadium in Ahmedabad. “The wicket looks good,” he said. “As it is the case in reviewing the decision, I have delayed it by five days. If this pitch also does not help our spinners, then I will again come and criticise it. But it looks like a good wicket to start off.” This is one area of his captaincy where he has chosen to take an aggressive stance, and there must be good reason for his doing so.Dhoni said teams might have a problem with his demands for pitches with turn and bounce because they have become used to flat tracks in India. “People talk of different challenges when it comes to playing in England, New Zealand, West Indies, Australia and South Africa,” Dhoni said. “When they come to India, they get flat wickets. So maybe that is why they don’t like it when the ball turns.”All this he said with a wide grin on his face. This is a far cry from the days in Australia when his comment that he will have to retire from one format of the game before World Cup 2015 drew the ire of, among others, Ganguly. Dhoni was at pains to explain how he meant his body might not be able to take the stress of all formats until Australia 2015, and he didn’t mean to suggest he wasn’t committed to Test cricket, but the timing of that comment remained questionable, coming as it did during India’s worst year in Test cricket.At some time during this home season – there are seven Tests to go still – Dhoni should join Ganguly at the top. However, Dhoni will want to make sure he does it to double the series lead, and not to regain it or level a series. He doesn’t want to take England lightly after their fightback in Ahmedabad, despite their first-innings failure.”The fact remains that the start of the second Test is always a fresh day,” Dhoni said. “You have to start from scratch. There will be quite a few positives that the English side will take out of the last game. They will be coming with a positive mindset. I don’t think it is very difficult to get out of the loss now because the T20 format has taught us to be in the same state of mind irrespective of whether you have lost or won the game.”

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