Alex Hales half-century edges rain-affected chase for Nottinghamshire's first win

Nottinghamshire 100 for 3 (Hales 50*) beat Worcestershire 141 for 6 (Hose 43) by 1 run – DLSAlex Hales helped Nottinghamshire celebrate their first win of the summer in the Vitality Blast after overcoming Worcestershire Rapids by one run under the Duckworth-Lewis Method at Visit Worcestershire New Road.The Outlaws had lost their opening five matches in the competition including the meeting with the Rapids at Trent Bridge nine days ago. But a disciplined bowling performance by their seamers restricted the home side to 141 for 6 under heavy skies.Then Hales batted responsibly to ensure there was little threat of Notts falling behind the Duckworth-Lewis Method. He scored 50 not out from 37 balls to guide his side to victory by the narrowest of margins.For Worcestershire it was a third successive defeat.Nottinghamshire captain Joe Clarke won the toss and elected to bowl first on a fresh hybrid pitch which was two-paced in nature. He persevered with all-pace during the powerplay and was rewarded with three wickets.Ben Lister made the first breakthrough when Worcestershire Club captain, Brett D’Oliveira, top-edged a catch to third man. Josh Cobb was then trapped lbw by Matt Montgomery working to leg and Matthew Waite pulled Olly Stone into the hands of deep mid wicket.Worcestershire were restricted to 27 for 3 in the first six overs and it became 42 for 4 when Ethan Brookes went to cut and was bowled.The Rapids broke the shackles in the 15th over from Lyndon James which yielded 15 runs with Nathan Smith smashing a six over long off.Adam Hose and Nathan Smith added 69 for the fifth wicket with the latter striking maximums off Lyndon James and Calvin Harrison. But Harrison brome the stand when Smith perished on the deep midwicket boundary.Hose battled away to make 43 off 35 balls before he holed out to long on in the penultimate over from Ben Lister.Worcestershire’s new ball attack of Smith and Tom Taylor bowled accurately and the latter made the breakthrough when Joe Clarke (26) lost his middle stump.Run-scoring was again not a straightforward process on this surface and the increasingly leaden skies meant Nottinghamshire had one eye on Duckworth Lewis.Hales ensured they moved comfortably ahead with two sixes in the opening over from Cobb. But West Indian spinner, Hayden Walsh, struck in his first over when he bowled Will Young to leave the game again in the balance.Walsh made it two wickets in two overs as Haynes went for a reverse-sweep and was lbw.But Hales again wrestled the initiative for his side with two enormous pulls over the midwicket boundary at Walsh’s expense to edge Notts in front.

Burnley could sign "outstanding" Esteve replacement who's like Tarkowski

Burnley’s intimidating defence last season in the Championship was one major factor behind why Scott Parker’s men sealed automatic promotion on 100 points.

Whilst the Clarets did score a reasonable 69 strikes across the 46-game marathon, they amazingly only gave up 16 goals across that same period, culminating in the Lancashire outfit losing just two second-tier contests all season long.

Burnley have been known to be a well-drilled machine in this regard for many a year, with Sean Dyche the first notable manager to make the Clarets a hard-to-beat unit when he was situated in the Turf Moor dug-out.

Throughout his well-known stint at the Clarets, Dyche regularly called upon the likes of James Tarkowski to ensure opposition attackers knew they were in for a tough fight when attempting to break down Burnley’s rock-solid defence.

Tarkowski's defensive heroics at Burnley

Now lining up for Everton at 32 years of age, Tarkowski has Burnley to thank for initially kickstarting his career at the very top.

In total, the imposing veteran would go on to make 219 appearances for the Clarets, with his reputation throughout his stay at the club centring on his no-nonsense approach aerially.

His breakout season in the Premier League for Burnley would come about during the 2018/19 campaign, with the centre-back scoring three goals when putting his towering 6-foot-1 frame to good use, alongside winning a ridiculous 7.8 duels per league clash.

No longer at Turf Moor, he is certainly ageing like a fine wine. He secured ten clean sheets in league action across 2024/25 and most famously scored that thunderbolt of a goal in the dying embers of Goodison Park’s last Merseyside derby.

He’s a man for the big occasion and as Parker and Co go about strengthening their ranks, they’ll certainly be hoping to find their next Tarkowski.

Burnley's "outstanding" new Tarkowski

Unfortunately, it looks unlikely that Burnley will be able to keep all the components of their robust defence together past this transfer window, with CJ Egan-Riley and Maxime Esteve both reportedly heading for the exit door.

Therefore, a new, strong defender will surely be high up the Clarets’ shopping list, with rumours coming to the surface now from journalist Graeme Bailey suggesting 6-foot-4 brute Chris Mepham be on Parker’s radar as they aim to add numbers at the back.

Burnley are already well aware of how tricky a defender Mepham can be to get the better of, having clashed with him last season when he was out on loan with eventual playoff winners Sunderland.

The Welshman stood out as a powerful centre-back throughout that loan spell, and with plenty of Premier League experience in the tank at 61 top-flight games and counting, he could be just what Burnley desire in trying to land an up-to-date Tarkowski.

Games played

38

Goals scored

1

Assists

0

Touches*

65.7

Accurate passes*

45.2 (87%)

Ball recoveries*

3.6

Clearances*

6.1

Total duels won*

4.9

His similarities to Tarkowski are even more striking when glancing at the table above, with Mepham both a defensive option that is comfortable with the ball at his feet and joining in with attacks, but also a figure who will valiantly throw himself into duels for the cause, like the ex-Burnley captain.

Black Cats skipper Dan Neil would even herald Mepham as “outstanding” for his brave efforts during Sunderland’s promotion story, with Parker hopeful he could make a similarly quick impact at the heart of the Clarets’ defence if signed.

Burnley won’t want to just roll back the years in winning themselves a gritty defender like Tarkowski, however.

Even more so, the Lancashire underdogs will pray they can become a Premier League regular again, with Mepham joining potentially strengthening their chances of immediately staving off the drop.

Burnley can land dream Esteve replacement by signing £12m "warrior"

Burnley would immediately bounce back from Maxime Esteve’s potential departure by snapping up this Premier League-calibre warrior.

ByKelan Sarson Jun 8, 2025

£202k-per-week forward "top" of Berta wishlist with Arsenal talks opened

Arsenal sporting director Andrea Berta has placed a marquee forward at the “top” of his transfer target list ahead of the summer window, and the Gunners have responded by opening talks between all parties.

Arteta makes "clear" Arsenal transfer claim

Speaking ahead of their final Premier League game of the season against Southampton on Sunday, Mikel Arteta was asked about the club’s recruitment drive, Berta’s crucial role and the type of player he wants to see his club try and go for.

Viktor Gyokeres' message to close circle amid Arsenal agreement claims

The Portugal has admitted something to teammates.

1 ByEmilio Galantini May 22, 2025

Kai Havertz has returned to action already, after coming back from what was initially thought to be a season-ending hamstring injury blow, making his first appearance since February during Arsenal’s 1-0 win over Newcastle.

19/20 – winter

£0

20/21 – summer

£81.5m

20/21 – winter

£900k

21/22 – summer

£156.8m

21/22 – winter

£1.8m

22/23 – summer

£121.5m

22/23 – winter

£59m

23/24 – summer

£208m

23/24 – winter

£0

24/25 – summer

£101.5m

24/25 – winter

£0

The German, who’s still managed to score 15 goals in all competitions in spite of his injury woes, also looks physically transformed after months of work in the gym. However, while Havertz’s return ahead of next season comes as a boost for Arteta, he sent a “clear” message to the Gunners hierarchy that more firepower is required if they’re to mount a more successful title challenge.

“What is clear with the amount of injuries we had in the front line is that we need a goal threat, we need the firepower out there, and understanding that the context can change tomorrow,” said Arteta in a pre-match press conference.

“We cannot rely just on the numbers we had before. We have to add goals, we have to add creativity, we have to add numbers and that will be in different positions.”

Arteta was also asked about their links to Real Madrid star Rodrygo, following recent reports he could well join Arsenal.

The 43-year-old didn’t get drawn in to named targets, but categorically refused to rule out a move for the Brazil international either, who’s bagged 13 goals and a further 10 assists from the right-wing, left-wing and at centre-forward this term.

Rodrygo "top" of Berta list with Arsenal talks opened

Sky Germany’s Florian Plettenberg shared news of Arsenal working on a deal for Rodryho behind-the-scenes earlier this week, and that same reporter has now provided a further update.

Plettenberg reports that Rodrygo is actually at the “very top” of Berta’s transfer list at Arsenal too, and negotiations have begun at all avenues, presumably meaning that they’re in talks with both the £202,000-per-week forward and Real.

Arsenal are not without competition in the race for him, though, with Chelsea also reportedly holding talks with Rodrygo’s representatives ahead of the mini-transfer window from June 1 to June 10 – which would allow them to sign him before the Club World Cup.

Davide Ancelotti set to follow Carlo to Brazil in huge blow for Rangers

A Madrid journalist has now dropped a significant new update regarding Davide Ancelotti’s chances of becoming Rangers’ next manager this summer.

Rangers manager search rumbles on

A host of candidates have been mentioned as options to take charge at Ibrox at the end of the season, at which point Barry Ferguson’s spell as interim manager is expected to reach its conclusion. Steven Gerrard has long been a front-runner to come in and enjoy a second stint at Rangers, having won the Scottish Premiership title in 2020/21, but Ancelotti has also emerged as an intriguing option recently.

Davide Ancelotti

The 36-year-old is currently the assistant manager to his father Carlo Ancelotti at Real Madrid, going through a disappointing season at the Santiago Bernabeu, with the European giants going trophyless.

He has been hailed by the Madrid boss though, who has said of his son: “Davide is a competent, disciplined, professional and very calm assistant coach. He works alongside Francesco Mauri, who is very young too. Luis works with the goalkeepers, Pintus with his experience on the physical side of things. I have a young and very competent coaching team. We combine their enthusiasm with my experience well.”

It was thought that that the Italian is contemplating moving into management on his own, taking on a head coach role and moving away from his father, but now a significant update has dropped regarding Rangers’ pursuit of him.

Ancelotti set to join Brazil instead of Rangers

Taking to X on Friday morning, Madrid journalist Alberto Pereiro revealed Ancelotti won’t become Rangers’ new manager, instead deciding to follow his father to be his assistant with Brazil’s national team ahead of the 2026 World Cup.

This is an update that will stun Rangers given all signs pointed towards the Italian moving out on his own, with the Madrid assistant standing out as one of the more exciting candidates to be their next manager.

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Granted, he hasn’t yet been a head coach in his career, which would make the Gers hiring him a risk, but he will have learned so much from his father and would bring a winning mentality with him, having helped both Bayern Munich and Madrid achieve so much success down the years.

Davide Ancelotti’s 12 trophy wins

Club

Year

Bundesliga

Bayern Munich

2017

German Cup

Bayern Munich

2017

German Cup

Bayern Munich

2018

Champions League

Real Madrid

2022

La Liga

Real Madrid

2022

Spanish Cup

Real Madrid

2022

Club World Cup

Real Madrid

2023

Spanish Cup

Real Madrid

2023

Spanish Super Cup

Real Madrid

2023

Champions League

Real Madrid

2024

La Liga

Real Madrid

2024

Spanish Super Cup

Real Madrid

2024

Now, the Scottish giants will have to look elsewhere at options, however, and it could be that Gerrard ends up being the man to come in, with the Liverpool legend feeling he has unfinished business at Ibrox.

West Ham positioned to sign £44m Bayern star they've "come knocking" for

West Ham United have now “come knocking” to sign a £44m midfielder, and they stand a good chance of tempting him into a move to the Premier League, according to journalist Christian Falk.

West Ham in need of summer rebuild

The three promoted Championship teams have been way off the pace in the Premier League, which means West Ham are in no danger of relegation, but performances this season indicate a big rebuild could be needed in the summer.

The latest poor display came against already-relegated Southampton on Saturday afternoon, with Niclas Füllkrug launching a scathing attack on his teammates in the wake of the 1-1 draw, and Graham Potter has since admitted he sympathises with the striker.

It remains to be seen whether Potter is given a chance to turn things around next season, but the manager may need to oversee some major changes in the summer transfer window, if his side are going to be competitive.

One area in which the Hammers are looking to strengthen is central midfield, according to BILD reporter Falk, who has recently revealed that Joao Palhinha is of interest, amid doubts over the Portugal international’s Bayern Munich future.

Bayern Munich's JoaoPalhinhalooks dejected as he walks off after receiving a red card

Falk said: “Fulham are among the interested parties. They know what they have, but according to our information, West Ham has also come knocking.

“He (Palhinha) says he’s giving his all for the club, but he doesn’t know what will happen. And, uh, if Bayern say he won’t have better playing time next season, I think he would consider, if an offer comes in, whether it makes sense for him to perhaps return to the British Isles.”

"Iron man" Palhinha could be statement signing

Since arriving at the Allianz Arena for a fee of £44m, the former Fulham man hasn’t exactly set the world alight, having often been benched or utilised as a late substitute, but his previous exploits in the Premier League indicate he could be a top signing for West Ham.

During his time with the Cottagers, the 6 foot 3 maestro was extremely impressive in the defensive side of the game, as underlined by his tackling and intercepting ability.

The Lisbon-born midfielder has always been solid defensively, having been hailed as an “Iron Man who never turned his back on a fight” by former youth coach Luis Nunes, and he ranks in the 97th percentile for tackles per 90 over the past year.

The move to Bayern may not have worked out, but Palhinha is clearly a top defensive midfielder, and it is exciting news that West Ham could lure him back to the Premier League this summer.

Tottenham make contact with former manager as Levy hatches transfer plan

Tottenham Hotspur have made contact with a former manager, as chairman Daniel Levy and co begin to hatch a new transfer plan for this summer window.

Tottenham 1-1 Eintracht Frankfurt with Europa League tie level

Thanks to the heroics of goalkeeper Kaua Santos, who made a series of excellent saves on Thursday night, Ange Postecoglou is set to tackle their Europa League second leg against Eintracht Frankfurt with the aggregate score all level.

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2 ByEmilio Galantini Apr 10, 2025

Hugo Ekitike opened the scoring for Eintracht with their first attack of the game on Thursday night, adding to his impressive 24/25 tally of 20 goals in all competitions this season, before right-back Pedro Porro grabbed Spurs their deserved equaliser with an improvised back-heeled finish.

Tottenham’s next five Premier League fixtures

Date

Wolves (away)

April 13th

Nottingham Forest (home)

April 21st

Liverpool (away)

April 27th

West Ham (away)

May 3rd

Crystal Palace (home)

May 10th

Both Lucas Bergvall and Rodrigo Bentancur smashed the crossbar, with Santos pulling off a series of impressive saves in the Eintracht net, so the Lilywhites can feel slightly hard done by the result.

“I couldn’t ask for anything more from them,” said Postecoglou on Tottenham’s performance against Eintracht.

“We hit the crossbar three times, their keeper made some amazing saves. We had a couple of other good opportunities as well. On any other night we would have a comfortable victory. If we can perform like that over there, and there is no reason why we can’t, then we still give ourselves a good chance.

Tottenham Hotspur manager AngePostecogloureacts

“I think the guys coming on today made a difference and injected some energy. It could be tight next week, it could go into extra time, and we are going to need everyone ready to go and the beauty of things at the moment is we have a squad ready to go and that will be important next week.”

A good run in the Europa League has been described as crucial when it comes to Postecoglou keeping his job (Fabrizio Romano), amid mounting pressure and reports of Tottenham contact made with Crystal Palace boss Oliver Glasner this week.

Tottenham contact Jose Mourinho over signing Fenerbache defender Yusuf Akcicek

Now, it has been reported that Tottenham have contacted former boss Jose Mourinho, but not to offer him Postecoglou’s job.

Indeed, Turkish news outlet A Spor (via Sport Witness) claim that Spurs reached out to the Portuguese to ask for information about 19-year-old defender Yusuf Akcicek, with Levy and co apparently planning to make a move for him at the end of the season.

This follows a glowing report on the teenager from Lilywhites scouts, but Fenerbache aren’t expected to let him go on the cheap. Spurs also face stiff competition from the likes of Manchester United and Lille, though it appears Postecoglou’s side are laying the most groundwork as things stand.

The 6 foot 3 starlet has started six Europa League games for the Turks, performing impressively and even getting on the scoresheet, with Mourinho also beginning to hand him more chances in the Süper Lig this year.

His displays also earned Akcicek a first-ever senior international cap for Turkey against Hungary last month.

£20m+ per year Man City star now holds positive talks to join shock club

One Manchester City star has now held positive talks to join a shock club, according to a new transfer update.

Players who could leave Man City this summer

After a busy January transfer window that saw five new players brought in, Pep Guardiola looks set to shake things up again over the summer as he continues his Etihad rebuild.

A plethora of players are out of contract at the end of the 2024/25 season, and there have been claims on a number of Man City stars being sold.

Man City players out of contract in 2025

Kevin De Bruyne

Ilkay Gunogan

Scott Carson

Jack Grealish, who scored against Leicester City in midweek, may well be one who the club decide to cash in on, whereas Bernardo Silva has been linked with a move to PSG.

As we know, Kevin De Bruyne is one of three who can leave and the Belgian has now announced his departure this summer. Releasing a statement on Friday De Bruyne said: “Dear Manchester. These will be my final months as a Manchester City player. Nothing about this is easy to write but as football players we all know this day eventually comes. That day is here – and you deserve to hear it from me first.

“This city. This club. These people … gave me EVERYTHING. I had no choice but to give EVERYTHING back! And guess what – we won EVERYTHING. Whether we like it or not, it’s time to say goodbye … Every story comes to an end but this has definitely been the best chapter. Let’s enjoy these last moments together.”

It looked as if De Bruyne was on course to move to the MLS with San Diego FC, however, now, it looks as if he could be heading elsewhere.

Kevin De Bruyne holds positive talks to move to Saudi Arabia

Previously, De Bruyne claimed he’d be open to the possibility of moving to Saudi Arabia to earn an “incredible” amount of money.

“At my age, you have to be open to everything. We are talking about incredible sums of money for what could be the end of my career. Sometimes, you have to think about it.”

Already on more than £20m per season with Man City, De Bruyne has now held positive talks with Neom SC, a club who play in the Saudi second division. Described as a powerful and extremely wealthy team by Foot Mercato, Neom SC are serious about signing De Bruyne, who also has interest from River Plate, Galatasaray, and Fenerbahce.

After moving to Man City in 2015, De Bruyne looks likely to leave the Etihad after 10 successful years where he has made more than 400 appearances and scored over 100 goals.

Would cost £0: Man City hatch plan to sign "deadly" PSG striker for free

The Sky Blues have set their sights on a forward who could join on a free transfer this summer.

ByDominic Lund Apr 3, 2025

He’s picked up 18 honours in Sky Blue and will be hoping to add another FA Cup title to his name before potentially heading to Saudi Arabia.

The Ashes before the Ashes: the Aussie farmers who beat the English pros

The tale of a Goliath-slaying by two dozen Davids of Castlemaine, Victoria, in 1862

Geoff Lemon and Adam Collins16-Nov-2025We tell a lot of Ashes stories. But Australia and England faced each other on five Test tours before the Ashes legend was created, and earlier still, before the Test era, three other teams from England visited the colonies. Let’s go back to the first of these, and one of the biggest upsets of them all.Cricket in the 1800s was mostly public entertainment offered by private operators. The modern spectator might not part with their cash to watch a few gents batting with twigs scoring one run per over on a rural shitheap, but in that era there was rarely much to do except catch the plague and talk to sheep. So teams travelled all over, partly made up of working-class professional players, partly of upper-class supposed amateurs, who were usually discreetly paid “expenses” that greatly exceeded their team-mates’ wages. If crowds turned up and paid entry, tours were lucrative. If not, they lost money heavily.Nor was touring specific to cricket. Musicians, actors, sideshows, demonstrations of strength or skill – all sorts of performers traipsed from town to town looking for their next payday. And with international maritime transport having become commonplace, big attractions from England could make big money elsewhere.This earning potential drew the interest of two Melbourne restaurant owners, Mr Spiers and Mr Pond. It was 1862, the gold rush was ending and a depression was on the way. These two wanted to diversify. Originally they invited novelist Charles Dickens for a speaking and reading tour. He was interested but the plan fell through. As they cast around for alternatives, they heard a story from 1859, when cricket touring had first gone international. An All-England team went to North America, including a chap whose name offered classic English floridity: Heathfield Harman Stephenson. The tour had made bank. Spiers and Pond were down. They offered Stevo a gig.Our bloke had a long all-round career bowling what was recorded as “round-arm fast”. Make of that what you will: we guess that his pace was pedestrian at best, but the ratty pitches of the day made it do all sorts. He played for nearly 20 years, a lot for Surrey with a bunch of other sides thrown in, including England representative teams against county opponents. With international cricket not yet born, that was the highest you could go: an England player without a Test cap. He did allegedly get bought a fancy hat once, by crowd donation, after taking three wickets in three balls, which is one of the unproven theories about why we call it a “hat-trick”. And he definitely umpired the first Test ever played in England.Spiers and Pond made a good bet. When Stevo’s team of Englishmen arrived, it was huge news. Melbourne’s population was 125,000, and an estimated 10,000 of them came to the docks to greet the team’s ship. For the opening match against a Victorian side, 15,000 showed up, and the estimate over four days was 55,000. That included the governor, the premier, and cabinet ministers. It was a carnival, with one lunch break including the country’s first ascent of a hot-air balloon.Related

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Described by English player William Caffyn, the scene on morning one sounded no different to Boxing Day morning now: “The National Anthem was played as we entered the field, amidst the silence of the vast concourse of spectators. When the band stopped playing a tremendous burst of cheering rent the air. The weather was so hot as to fetch the skin off some of our faces.”The Vics got pumped, their second innings including ten ducks and a nought not out. Does that mean they didn’t make any runs? No, they made 91, because they had 18 players. This was the other factor. The touring team was made of hardened county players, and a money-making trip needed the promise of competitiveness. So teams like these would travel to any town, field their best 11 and let the hosts play 15 or 18 or 22. A sporting handicap let the pros show off their skills without a mismatch ending the game too quickly.The team went all over: Ovens District, Geelong, Bathurst, Hobart, Ballarat, Bendigo, and several bigger games in Melbourne and Sydney. As the far more powerful side, they kept playing against teams with more players and kept beating them, often by an innings. They lost twice all tour. The first took a combined team from the best of Victoria and New South Wales, fielding 22 players to the English 11, that still barely scraped over the line. Ending at 35 for 9 in the chase, with nobody having passed single figures, the colonial team probably would have lost if chasing 30 more.The other loss, though, was right at the other end of the scale for supposed advantage. Yes, it was still to 22 players, but they were 22 farmers and knockabouts, residents of the small Victorian town of Castlemaine, who made their fortress at the local ground named Wattle Flat.Everyone was there. “On the occasion of the grand match yesterday, business was almost entirely suspended in the town, and most of the surrounding districts were similarly affected,” reported the . England got bowled out for 80, but that wasn’t a bad score in that era. A feller from down the road at Fryers Creek named John Webster Amos took 7 for 13.But as soon as England took the ball, Stevo nabbed the first wicket, and boy did it roll on. For a sequence on a scorecard, try reading this aloud. 0, 5, 0, 17, 3, 2, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0, 10, 1, 0, 1, 0, 2, 3 not out, 1, 0, 1, 0.So that’s ten ducks and five ones, out of 22 batters, in a score of 54. George Griffith for the tourists took 13 wickets for 18 runs, and while the scorer might just have got lazy noting down catches, the card suggests that 12 of them were bowled. It must have been a brutal effort to be subjected to, and on that showing, a deficit of 26 for Castlemaine might as well have been a thousand.

Our research might be faulty, but apparently teams of 22 players didn’t just have a longer batting order; they were allowed to have them all fielding at the same time. These English pros would have been trying to work the ball into the smallest gaps or hit over thickets of fielders

But the local lads were not discouraged. Our friend Amos only added one wicket in the third innings, but his team-mate John Brooker cleaned up with 6 for 6. That kept the English to a manageable 68, and Stevo was pissed. The skipper, reported the local paper, spouted off at the lunch break: “in explanation of the bad fortune that had attended the Englishmen in that day’s play, [Stephenson] said that he attributed it entirely to the bad ground”. Sure, classic – blame the facilities.Picture the chaos of this match. Our research might be faulty, but apparently teams of 22 players didn’t just have a longer batting order; they were allowed to have them all fielding at the same time. These English pros would have been trying to work the ball into the smallest gaps or hit over thickets of fielders. In the meantime, the whole third innings happened on the Saturday, so the entire town and district would have been down there cheering every wicket. The home team would have merged into the home supporters near the boundary line, an indistinguishable and claustrophobic mass of humanity surrounding them.Even so, when normal service resumed in the fourth innings with the regulation 13 players on the pitch, the scores in the match and Castlemaine’s first showing with the bat suggested that 95 was too many to chase. But by stumps on Saturday, they were still in the game at 40 for 4. In the circumstances, first drop Robert Manning making 11 was a significant score. More importantly, Charles Makinson – who would later play twice for Victoria – was 19 not out. The town sat through church on Sunday daring to hope.On Monday, Makinson went on to 36, including the only boundary of the innings, before being bowled. The card proceeded much like the first innings: 4, 0, 3, 2, 3, 1, 1, 2, 0, 0, 1, 3. But, crucially, there were fewer ducks. Each tiny score brought the target closer. Between times they kept hustling, taking byes and leg-byes, the extras total mounting past 10, past 15, up towards 20. But the wicket column was doing the same. Castlemaine had already been hurt up top by Griffith again, then saw a run of wickets through the middle for Charles Lawrence, who went on to emigrate to Australia and would later captain the Aboriginal XI tour to England of 1868.Lawrence bagged the 14th wicket, the 15th, the 16th. Nerves jangled. A tiny partnership of 6 or 7 saw the score creep within a few runs of the target. Then another wicket for Lawrence, dismissing the player for 3, and another for Griffith, a duck.Castlemaine had their No. 20 at the crease, with two left in the sheds. Being carded at 21 or 22 would not do wonders for the confidence. Those three players collectively had scored one run in the first innings. But out there with them was the fabulously named Joseph Dolphin, ready to launch a Flipper rescue. Sure, his innings totalled 6 not out, but it was a 6 not out that would reverberate through the life of the town. With the winning strike, Dolphin carried Castlemaine past their target, not to 95 runs but to 96. Like Forrest Gump, he just kept on running.Affirm PressSo the boys from Castlemaine won the match at Wattle Flat, defeating England’s finest by making 150 runs across two innings. Griffith added 9 for 28 in the second dig, another seven of them bowled, so had match figures of 22 wickets for 46, but the locals were still the ones who got to celebrate.”It has been reserved for the Castlemaine district to achieve a victory which other much more pretentious districts failed to win,” crowed the . They were less happy about the English blaming the deck. “It strikes us that this mode of accounting for the victory of the Castlemaine men sounds very like twaddle,” the paper continued. “No doubt it is annoying to be defeated by a number of amateur cricketers, but… whatever might have been the demerits of the ground, it was played on by both sides.”Ding ding ding, cricket cliché jar. A hundred years later, the people of Castlemaine were still sufficiently pleased with themselves to put up a plaque commemorating the win, which England’s then-captain Colin Cowdrey agreed to unveil. He was the fifth touring skipper to visit Castlemaine, because such was the respect given to Wattle Flat following Stevo’s trip that three later touring sides also played matches there, the little ground hosting some of the greatest to play the game.WG Grace took his team there in 1874, and his key bowler was England’s first Test captain, James Lillywhite, who took ten wickets in each innings. Ivo Bligh’s team played Castlemaine during the first Ashes tour in 1882, and in 1887, cricket’s great party boy AE Stoddart walked away with 8 for 27, and we can only hope that Castlemaine then gave him a good night on the tiles.The team continued to hold its own, with Grace’s team winning narrowly and the other two matches drawn. Eventually, Wattle Flat cricket ground became a pony club and a recreation area, and there is no longer an oval where those games were played. But they say that some ghosts may be heard when you pass by the cricket ground: mostly Heathfield Harman Stephenson complaining about the pitch.

Versatile Kohli provides another mini-classic in dodgy conditions

Back in South Africa, and arguably batting the best he has ever done, Kohli is still making adjustments to his game

Sidharth Monga04-Jan-20241:26

Manjrekar: Respect for ‘great man’ Kohli has grown immensely

Long after the dust is settled on his career and we are done celebrating his hundreds and his theatrics, we will someday sit and talk about Virat Kohli’s mini classics against great attacks in dodgy conditions.There is the 81 in the third innings in Vizag where he whipped proper shooters for fours through midwicket. The 45 against New Zealand on an Eden Gardens track with turn, seam and uneven bounce all available was especially pristine. Who can forget the flawless 74 before the 36 all out in Adelaide? That there are so many will reinforce the difficult conditions and attacks Kohli has faced throughout his career and yet maintained an average around 50 while being an absolute king in another format and an equivocal great in the third.Since Kohli’s debut, among the 18 batters who have scored 500 or more runs in Tests in South Africa, the toughest place to bat in this era, only three average more than Kohli’s 51.7: David Warner, AB de Villiers and Ben Stokes. One of them is an all-time great, although the other two are not nearly as versatile as Kohli. In matches that Kohli has played in South Africa, a more accurate gauge for the conditions he has played in, no batter has been nearly as successful as him.Related

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South Africa will always hold an emotional place in Kohli’s heart. This is where, in India’s first Test after Sachin Tendulkar, he batted at No. 4 and nearly scored twin centuries in Johannesburg in 2013-14, never to leave that spot, or the one in Indian hearts, again. This is where, on his next trip in 2017-18, the first big test of his ambition, he led a beleaguered side with a century and a half-century, and registered that one Test win that they needed to believe in themselves and start a magical cycle of away tours.South Africa it was where Kohli captained in his last Test, sledging, well, the broadcasters. South Africa took it his all, gave him a lot of it back, but eventually broke his heart.And yet, two years later, Kohli is back in South Africa, arguably batting the best he has ever done. Not only is he emotionally fresh once again, but he is also still working on his game. On this trip, he has batted differently to the previous South Africa tours. The stance is narrower, he is not itching to get on the off stump and outside, and he is not walking at the bowlers. He is less likely to play at balls that should be left alone.Also, he has taken away from the bowler that back-of-a-length ball that he was forced to play at without any rewards because he had committed too far forward. Now he is square-cutting them gloriously, a shot he had sacrificed in order to cut down the movement but one he has reintroduced at such a late stage in his career.Back in 2013, Virat Kohli nearly scored two centuries in Johannesburg•Associated PressIn a series that is a nightmare for the batters, Kohli is the only one who has got starts in all of his three innings. His lowest score has been 38. Nobody can approach perfection in these conditions, but Kohli has looked comfortable every time he has batted. It has never been more apparent than during his 46 on the first day in Cape Town on a day when 23 wickets fell. Of the 27 individual innings that started on the day, only four went past 20, and none past Kohli’s 46.This innings had all the certainty needed to succeed in these conditions: either don’t push at balls outside the line of your head or go hard if you do. He will be disappointed that when India’s collapse of 6 for 0 started – just when he had become a little loose to try to score more quickly – he edged one and was caught.Yet Kohli won’t let the dismissal bog him down. Something has been unlocked in him in the past year and a half. He is at peace with what happens. He appreciates the vagaries of the game and life perhaps more than he previously did. Apart from still looking for any small improvement he can make in his game, Kohli carries with him the confidence of having scored runs in his best format – the ODIs. During his worst period in international cricket, when Kohli went three years without a century, he played hardly any ODI cricket: nine in 2020, and three in 2021.Day two of the Cape Town Test could be Kohli’s last day of Test cricket in South Africa. India don’t go there again in this FTP, which ends in 2027, by which time he will be 39. As a team man, Kohli will hope he is not even needed to bat, and that India go on to draw the series without incident. With three second-innings wickets down, South Africa still need 36 runs to make India bat again. On a Test pitch unlike any seen in South Africa, it’s hard to predict which way the Test goes.However, even a small or a middling chase can prove to be tricky on this devilish pitch. There could yet be another Kohli mini classic in store for South Africa, who, in turn, will hope to break his heart again.

England's 'game-changer' Sophia Dunkley inspiring others to chase their dreams

First Black woman to play a Test for England spent milestone build-up thinking of cricket, not race

Valkerie Baynes14-Oct-2021The beauty of Sophia Dunkley’s most famous achievement to date lies in the fact she never saw it coming.Dunkley, a batting allrounder of exceptional talent and maturity, became the first Black woman to play a Test for England when she lined up against India in Bristol in June. As a powerful hitter, legspin bowling option and excellent fielder, she took a big step towards re-establishing herself in the England side. Race hadn’t entered her thinking in the build-up and it wasn’t until after she received her cap that she fully appreciated the broader significance of the occasion.Ebony Rainford-Brent had been the first Black woman to play cricket for England when she made her ODI debut in 2007. She earned 22 one-day caps and seven in T20Is but never played a Test before her last international appearance more than a decade ago. She remains the only other Black woman to have represented England.Related

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“It was an incredibly special day, to make my Test match debut,” Dunkley tells ESPNcricinfo. “In the women’s game Test matches don’t come around very often so it made it even more special.”Then to hear that I was the first Black woman to play a Test for England was incredible. It was something that didn’t cross my mind initially. It’s not until you sit back and look over it that you realise what an achievement it was – an incredibly special time and it was a dream to make my Test match debut.”Dunkley had already played 15 T20Is prior to her Test appearance, including her international debut at the 2018 T20 World Cup aged 20. She spent 18 months out of the side but, after featuring at the tail end of West Indies’ tour to England last year and playing three more T20s on the winter tour to New Zealand, Dunkley was back, having forced her credentials through sheer weight of runs in the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy.Now she looks forward to a day when a player’s race isn’t noted at all, when all Black cricketers can enjoy the same “nothing but positive” experiences of the sport that she has.”It’s rapidly changing and hopefully in the future, in a few years, it won’t be, ‘the second Black person to do this’, it’ll just be, ‘so-and-so has made their debut for England’,” Dunkley says.Dunkley’s maiden Test appearance sparked a breakout summer in which she set about securing her place in England’s middle order and finished as the third-highest run-scorer in the Hundred, with 244 runs at a strike rate of 141.86 for Southern Brave.Dunkley says she was always accepted at school – she attended Mill Hill School in North London on a sports scholarship – and in teams she played in. But she recognises that there are many whose experiences have been very different.

“Girls on the [ACE] academy, they’re looking up to her and seeing what is possible. That visibility is a game-changer”Ebony Rainford-Brent

A host of Black players have spoken out about discrimination in cricket, including Michael Carberry who last year claimed that cricket was “rife with racism” shortly before Rainford-Brent and Michael Holding gave powerful and heartbreaking accounts of their battles with racism in and beyond the sport.”I didn’t feel excluded or like I didn’t fit in, I felt pretty comfortable within all the environments that I’ve been in,” Dunkley says. “It wasn’t really until I made my T20 debut at the World Cup that someone said, ‘you’re the second Black woman to play T20 cricket for England’.”I didn’t even have any clue. Since then it kind of dawned on me how much of a big thing this is. It’s only been really the last two or three years that I’ve thought about it and it’s something that I want to help change and bring positivity to. Hopefully my positive experiences help with that, to show that not everyone can feel excluded from those kinds of environments.”Dunkley believes a key to increasing inclusion and diversity is creating a sense of belonging, and that role models such as herself have a part to play.”People feel like they don’t belong in a certain environment because it’s kind of dominated by certain parts of society,” Dunkley says. “I suppose only having two Black females play for England, it doesn’t give you a wide range of role models to look up to.”Hopefully the more the game develops… more role models are going to come along and people feel like they’re going to belong more and are a part of a group.”Dunkley points to the African Caribbean Engagement (ACE) programme as a source of rapid, positive change. ACE, run by Rainford-Brent, aims to address a 75% decline in participation among Black cricketers since 1995 by providing grassroots opportunities, talent pathways and elite programmes for young Black players while developing a diverse coaching and volunteer scheme.Dunkley is an ambassador and while Rainford-Brent has encouraged her to be involved where she can, her advice was to simply be a role model through her cricket – like her Test debut, which she described as “massive”.Sophia Dunkley celebrates hitting the winning runs in the third T20I vs New Zealand•Getty Images”It’s massive because there’s two sides to it,” Rainford-Brent says. “She is a young kid just chasing her dream, and what’s really interesting about Dunks is she’s not aware, or wasn’t prior to this milestone, of colour so much, she was just fulfilling her potential.”Dovetail that with Test match cricket, which as we know in women’s cricket, it’s still the pinnacle of the game. For there to not have been a Black Test player in the female game up to that point is kind of crazy.”I’m just proud for her as an individual, chasing her dreams and the beauty that she wasn’t as aware of what the significance was about colour, that’s kind of what you want, is kids just to chase their dream.”But it’s a real breakdown of the pinnacle of the game in terms of Test cricket and the fact that a Black female has broken on to the stage and done it in such a powerful way, the way she went about her business, the way she changed it.”She inspires so many kids. Our young girls who are on the academy, they’re looking up to her and seeing what is possible. That visibility which is now there is a game-changer. It’s game-changing for her, it’s game-changing for the community. It just says that there’s doors now that have all been blown open, that it is really possible.”What I hope is more kids actually go through the experience she does, which is less about colour and more just about purely chasing your dream.”For someone who only recently turned 23 and who is still finding her way at the elite level, does being a role model weigh heavily?”It doesn’t take very much out of my day to try and speak positively about it and to try and make a little bit of a difference,” Dunkley says. “I enjoy speaking about it and hopefully making a positive change, so it’s all for the greater good, I suppose – it really isn’t much for me to do.”Heather Knight, the England captain, sees Dunkley as potentially filling a void within the limited-overs sides as an accomplished finisher. Her power, poise and shot selection suit the role and, more than once over the summer, Dunkley was called upon to lift England out of trouble.She followed an unbeaten 74 in the Test with a match-winning 73 not out in only her second ODI, also against India, at Taunton. She then hit the winning runs as England sealed a 2-1 victory in their T20I series against New Zealand, and struck 33 off just 25 balls as England emphatically beat the same opponents in their final ODI. She won the Cricket Writers’ Club Women’s Cricket Award and was shortlisted for the PCA Women’s Player of the Year Award.”Dunks has put a lot of hard work into her mentality and the skill side of her game in the last year or so and I’ve been hugely impressed with her maturity and how she’s gone about things,” Knight says.”It’s been a huge summer for her, and I forget she’s only got so few caps. She won that game for us down at Taunton, played a really mature innings. She’s young, she’s bound to have bumps along the road but the signs are really good.”It’s been a spot that we haven’t quite nailed in previous years so if we can keep investing in Dunks, she keeps improving and keeps putting in the sort of performances that she has done and keeps working on her composure and being that finisher role, yes there’s really good signs.”Sophia Dunkley’s maiden Test appearance was a history-making moment•Getty ImagesDunkley says the time she spent out of the England side was crucial to reinventing her mental approach, focusing on match situations rather than selection. By the time she was recalled to England’s squad for the series with West Indies, Dunkley says she was in a better place mentally and technically.While she impressed in training however, Dunkley still had to wait until the final two fixtures for an opportunity, scoring a duck in the first and 3 not out in a rain-reduced game. She wasn’t required to bat in the first T20I in New Zealand then made nought not out and 26 off 33 in next two, all the while building up to the home season, ahead of which she was awarded an England central contract.”You always have to have a little bit of hope and I was quite positive that I could turn it around,” Dunkley says. “But it is hard in those moments. You do obviously have quite a lot of doubt and it’s hard because the batting line-up in this team is world-class so it really takes a lot to break into that and to get a chance.”You always have that on your mind but I just kept going and you do have to have an element of resilience, just to keep fighting and working hard and know what your goals are.”Getting back into that team to play West Indies in Derby was a massive achievement for me because it came after that year-and-a-half out of the team and that felt like a big stepping stone. I was so pleased that I got myself back into the side and since then it just gave me a confidence to keep going.”From a player making her way at the highest level to someone just wanting to get started, Dunkley has some advice.”Cricket is a great game, it’s exciting, it’s fun but it offers so much more than just playing,” she says. “It’s the people that you meet, the experiences you have and where you get to travel, all those different kinds of things.”If you’re looking to play cricket and you want to get involved, I’d 100 percent encourage you, because you just don’t know how it’s going to change your life. It’s been nothing but positive for me and I hope a lot of other young boys and girls have the same experience and see how much it can change your life for the better.”

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