Unconvincing Australia settle for draw

A flat final-day performance has given Ricky Ponting few signposts as to the composition of his best attack

The Bulletin by Alex Brown at Hove27-Jun-2009Australians 349 for 7 dec (Haddin 69, Hauritz 65*) and 379 for 7 dec (Hughes 78, Clarke 75, Ponting 71) drew with Sussex 311 and 373 for 7 (Hopkinson 115, Yardy 67)
ScorecardNathan Hauritz took 1 for 158 in the match•Getty ImagesThese are worrying times for the Australians. A flat final day performance on a flat Hove pitch has given Ricky Ponting few signposts as to the composition of his best bowling attack 11 days out from the first Test in Cardiff. Only seven Sussex wickets fell on Saturday – a concerning development for a team containing five specialist bowlers – as Carl Hopkinson, making his maiden first-team appearance this season, raised a stirring century that ensured a draw, and almost forced a famous victory.The only comforting thought for Ponting ahead of the practice match against Ian Bell’s England Lions on Wednesday is the availability of Mitchell Johnson, the ace in Australia’s pack. Peter Siddle will almost certainly partner him in Cardiff – Tim Nielsen, the Australian coach, described him as a “lock” selection on Saturday – but the make-up of the attack thereafter remains unclear and, in the absence of strong performances in Worcester, could be determined by conditions on the day.Nielsen adopted a brave face after the final day’s play in Hove, choosing to focus on the acclimatisation benefits of the Sussex encounter rather than the 373 runs conceded on Saturday. He did, however, issue a thinly-veiled warning to his players that no such leniency will be extended their way in Worcester from Wednesday, and left open the possibility of playing four pacemen in the Ashes opener from July 8.”I really am pretty open to the idea of waiting to see what we get in Cardiff as far as a wicket is concerned,” he said. “The more I’m reading about it, maybe it’s not going to be the spinning nightmare everybody’s talking about.”The acid test will be this week with England A leading into the Test match. We can get better, there’s no doubt about that, but I’d rather we’re getting better with another tour game to go rather than heading into the first Test match. I’m really comfortable with where we’re at, we haven’t played the longer version of the game for three months.”Ponting had described the tour opener at Hove as an opportunity for Australia’s bowlers to press their cases for Ashes selection, but few took up the captain’s challenge against a Sussex batting line-up without veterans Murray Goodwin and Matt Prior. Stuart Clark and Brett Lee threatened intermittently in their first extended hit-outs after surgery, while Ben Hilfenhaus conceded runs at more than six-per-over in a spell that netted the late-day wickets of Hopkinson and Robin Martin-Jenkins. The low, slow Hove pitch did not help the fast bowlers’ cause but neither, presumably, will the Sophia Gardens surface in less than a fortnight’s time. Clearly, there is much to ponder.”There’s no doubt the four quick bowlers who had a run around in this game would have loved to get six wickets in an innings and almost think they’re putting (the Ashes selection debate) to sleep,” Nielsen said. “But we’ve been at pains to explain to them that this week is all about getting back into the swing of things and finding some consistency as well. I was pleased this was such a good batting wicket and such a fast outfield because it made them realise you can’t be off your game and get away with it.”Australia’s spin-bowling strategy is proving similarly confounding for Ponting. Nathan Hauritz impressed on either side of the lunch break, varying his pace and beating the outside edge on numerous occasions, but could not make the breakthrough Australia so desperately needed. He was unfortunate to have had Hopkinson dropped on 69 – Ponting the culprit – and was eventually rewarded with the wicket of Luke Wright. That, however, was his sole breakthrough in the match, and his figures of 1 for 158 from 35 overs hardly inspire confidence ahead of the first Test.”He can bowl better, there’s no doubt about that,” Nielsen said. “He got into a good rhythm at times and then unfortunately he’d have an over where he would have a couple of bad balls that went for four.”Australia’s most prolific spinner on the fourth-day Hove pitch was North, who was overlooked by Ponting in the first innings. North claimed two wickets – an achievement matched only by Hilfenhaus in the second innings – but came in for some heavy treatment from Hopkinson and Michael Yardy (67), the latter of whom he dismissed for a well-compiled 67. Still, the prospect of North heading a makeshift spin attack alongside Simon Katich and Michael Clarke in Cardiff is increasing.Ill-discipline is another factor the Australians will need to address promptly. Lee, Hilfenhaus and Hauritz were each guilty of over-stepping on five occasions in the second innings – one of which cost Lee the wicket of Chris Nash in the first hour of play – bringing Australia’s no-ball tally to an unacceptable 37 in the match. Ponting’s dropped catch and Clark’s missed run-out were among the other disappointments from an Australian fielding unit that appeared to be suffering from ring-rust and a hint of fatigue in their first multi-day match since the tour of South Africa.Unquestionably, the star of the day was Hopkinson, who in 55 first-class matches for Sussex has averaged a modest 26.30, including one century. Australia’s push to field 12 players in this match denied it first-class status, but Hopkinson’s 115 – raised with a blast to the midwicket boundary off North – was well worthy of official recognition.”A hundred against Australia in an Ashes summer is what you dream of really,” he said. “I had a little bit of luck today (with Ponting) dropping that catch – quite an easy catch – but sometimes it goes your way like that. I was always looking to score boundaries … and trying to be as positive as I could.”

Mitrovic stole the show vs Swansea

With Marco Silva’s Fulham side heading into Wednesday night’s Championship clash in rather poor form, as the Cottagers’ had picked up just seven points over their last five league fixtures, the 44-year-old manager would have undoubtedly been hoping for a positive result against Swansea City, in order to get the west London’s side promotion push back on track.

And that is exactly what Fulham did, with Aleksandar Mitrovic’s hat-trick securing a highly impressive 3-1 win over Russell Martin’s side, a result which fired the Cottagers up to third place in the Championship table, just two points behind both West Bromwich Albion and AFC Bournemouth in first and second respectively.

Aside from the victory, the performance of Mitrovic will have also been a major boost for Silva, as the 27-year-old once again demonstrated that he is a player who has the ability to fire Fulham up this season.

Two key passes

Indeed, over his 69 minutes on the pitch against Swansea, Mitrovic reinforced his position as one of the top centre-forwards in the Championship with an incredibly dominant display.

The £14.4m-rated man scored three goals, hit the target with all four of his shots at goal, completed his one attempted dribble, made two key passes and created one big chance for his teammates.

The player Silva claimed an “important” player in his side also completed 100% of his 12 attempted passes, his one attempted long ball, won three of his four duels and made one interception against the Swans.

These returns saw the striker earn a near-perfect SofaScore match rating of 9.8, with no player from either side coming anywhere close to receiving a comparable rating to the Serbia international on the night.

As such, if Mitrovic can keep up this show-stopping level of performance for the remainder of the Cottagers’ campaign, the club will undoubtedly be there or thereabouts concerning automatic promotion come the end of the season.

In other news: Big blow: Silva confirms Fulham injury setback, fans will be gutted

Sheff Wed fans hail Adeniran award win

A number of Sheffield Wednesday supporters have been praising Dennis Adeniran after he won the club’s Player of the Month award for September.

The Owls suffered a very disappointing day at the office on Saturday, losing 2-1 at home to Oxford United after another late goal was conceded.

It was a huge blow after the midweek win at Wigan Athletic, with question marks now starting to be asked of Darren Moore.

September was a largely below-par month for Wednesday, but one positive was the form of Adeniran, with the midfielder winning the Player of the Month award on Monday, as confirmed by the club’s official Twitter channel.

The 22-year-old earned 47% of supporters’ votes as his impressive start to life at Hillsborough continues following his summer move from Everton, netting in the recent draw against Ipswich.

He was once compared to French World Cup-winning midfielder N’Golo Kante by Wycombe Wanderers reporter James Richings for his midfield industry, summing up his vast potential as a player.

Sheff Wed fans laud Adeniran award win

These Owls fans took to Twitter to show their support for Adeniran, praising his individual triumph in the process after a “great month” for him.

“Fully deserved”

Credit: @WTIDPOD

“Well done Dennis, you had my vote, you richly deserved it”

Credit: @Enigma1867

“Well done mate. Great month”

Credit: @StevenW28575393

“Congratulations Dennis! Well deserved!”

Credit: @DPaggiossi

“My brudda”

Credit: @ED6ixx

“Deserved tbf, could’ve won it either month IMO, but what a player. Remarkable how he’s managed to stay under the radar and not be picked up by a Prem or Championship side”

Credit: @jackdoona

In other news, some Sheff Wed fans have slammed one player’s performance against Oxford. Find out who it is here.

Patel expected to be fit for Sri Lanka tour

The offspinner had been assessed by New Zealand team physio Kate Stalker in England

Cricinfo staff03-Jul-2009New Zealand Cricket (NZC) has said that Jeetan Patel’s injury is not serious and that he should be available for selection for next month’s tour of Sri Lanka.Patel suffered a minor knee injury while playing for Warwickshire in the English County season, and will return to New Zealand next week.Dave Currie, the team manager, said Patel would regain fitness soon and added that the spinner had been assessed in England by New Zealand physio Kate Stalker. “Jeetan just needs a couple of weeks to recuperate after suffering a sprain to the medial collateral ligament of his right knee,” he said.”He will rest the knee for a short while but will resume training within a couple of weeks and should be bowling in the nets soon thereafter. We are confident that he will be back to full fitness in time to be available for the Sri Lanka tour.”New Zealand begin their tour of Sri Lanka on August 18 and will play two Tests, five ODIs and two Twenty20 internationals.

Liverpool linked with move for Kessie

Despite having a healthy number of central-midfielders in their current squad including the likes of Naby Keita, Thiago Alcantara, James Milner, Jordan Henderson, Curtis Jones and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, it seems as though Liverpool have their eye on securing a new midfield star to add to their ranks in the near future.

What’s the latest?

It has been recently reported by Spanish media outlet El Nacional that Liverpool are weighing up a €25m bid (£21.1m) for AC Milan midfielder Franck Kessie, who was once described as “devastating” by former Milan striker Antonio Cassano.

Milan originally signed Kessie on a loan deal from fellow Italian side Atalanta back in the 2017 summer transfer window before securing him on a permanent deal in the 2019 summer window.

Wijnaldum replacement?

Overall, the 24-year-old, who is currently valued at £49.5m according to Transfermarkt, has made a total of 191 appearances for the club in which he has managed to score 30 goals and provide 15 assists along the way.

So far this season, Kessie has played in all but two of Milan’s games across all competitions, including playing 90 minutes in the 3-2 defeat against Liverpool in the Champions League.

In terms of a potential move to Liverpool, we feel that Kessie could provide Jurgen Klopp with a suitable replacement for Georginio Wijnaldum who left the club on a free transfer in the summer.

Given how the midfielder has managed to rack up a passing accuracy percentage of 91.3% in Serie A so far this season, it shows striking similarities with the Reds’ former Dutchman who completed a percentage of 92.7% last season in the Premier League, a tally that was higher than any other Reds player.

A review from Vincenzo Montella, his former manager, also paints him with vibrancy. He once dubbed the Milan star “an extraordinary player” with “sublime intelligence.” That last passage certainly resembles Wijnaldum in some regard.

Considering the age of some of Liverpool’s midfield options such as Thiago (30), Milner (35) and Henderson (31), Kessie could well be a good long-term midfield option for the Reds, especially if they manage to sign him for the fee mentioned in the report.

However, with Kessie’s current contract at the Italian club set to expire at next summer, perhaps Liverpool could be better off potentially signing him on a free transfer then instead of having to pay a fee for him if he doesn’t sign a new deal at Milan.

In other news: Liverpool could secure next Mane with move for £23.4m-rated “diamond in the rough” – opinion

Wanderers regains international status

The Wanderers Stadium in Johannesburg will host international matches this summer after the resolution of a month-long dispute between Cricket South Africa and Gauteng Cricket Board (GCB)

Cricinfo staff12-Aug-2009The Wanderers Stadium in Johannesburg will host international matches this summer, beginning with the three matches during England’s tour to South Africa later this year, after the resolution of a month-long dispute between Cricket South Africa and the Gauteng Cricket Board (GCB).”CSA agrees to reinstate all the England tour games for the forthcoming tour in November, December and January,” read a joint statement from both parties.The GCB had levelled allegations of mismanagement during the 2009 IPL held In South Africa in April-May, against CSA chief executive Gerald Majola, the BCCI and the tournament organisers soon after the tournament ended. The South African board responded to this by stripping the Wanderers of its international status.Gauteng had requested sports minister Makhenkesi Stofile to intervene in the stand-off, and both parties agreed to mediation in late July. Wanderers stood to lose out on the proposed matches – a Test, an ODI and a Twenty20 – during England’s tour in November-December.One of the mediators appointed by Stofile, advocate Brian Currin, announced on Wednesday that the matches had been restored to Johannesburg as part of the dispute resolution. Stofile appointed Currin along with another lawyer, Khabo Mamba, to help resolve the dispute when it became apparent the two parties were unable to reach an agreement.The two parties also agreed on a programme aimed at the transformation of Gauteng Cricket, including the drafting of a revised constitution for the GCB, as well as a transformation charter.”Cricket is an asset of South Africa – it does not belong to CSA or GCB,” Stofile said. “Neither CSA nor GCB are the winners in this settlement – South Africa is the winner.”At a news conference last month, CSA president Dr Mtutuzeli Nyoka, had stated categorically there would be no international cricket under the auspices of CSA until the GCB had apologised for allegations made against CSA and Majola. However, Nyoka was glad an agreement had been reached.”Things got out of hand,” Nyoka said. “I’m very relieved we have managed to undo the damage that was done. They were always aware that their hosting of the three matches depended on the outcome of the mediation process. Holding an international cricket tour in South Africa without the Wanderers would be like ‘Hamlet’ without the prince.”Subsequent to the initial dispute with GCB a number of further developments took place which pointed quite clearly that the problem in Gauteng is a leadership problem. This is why parties agreed that the reconstitution of the GCB board will be a solution to a number of these attendant problems and quite frankly some of the demands of the CSA would invariably fall away.”The GCB through its president apologised to the CEO and CSA, which apology was accepted by us in the good spirit in which it was made. For us this demonstrated a willingness on the parties to resolve this matter and as a result signed the detailed agreement.”Barry [Skjoldhammer, GCB chairman] and I are good friends, I have known him for 10 years and I respect him. At some point in the process we reached out to each other. Wanderers is the Mecca of South African cricket and you have to have matches there when you play in this country.”Skjoldhammer echoed Nyoka’s sentiments, and was happy with Wanderers’ reinstatement as an international venue. “The ceiling isn’t high enough to hold me,” Skjoldhammer said. “We had issues that we felt strongly about, CSA had issues they felt strongly about. Yes, we’re satisfied with the things we have agreement on, and we’re very relieved for the stakeholders of Gauteng Cricket, for the Johannesburg public, suite holders and cricket clubs that the Wanderers is back on the map.”

Younis has 'burning ambition' to beat India

Younis Khan, the Pakistan captain, has a “burning ambition” to beat India in the Champions Trophy, where the two sides clash on September 26 in Centurion

Cricinfo staff26-Aug-2009Younis Khan, the Pakistan captain, has said beating India will be one of his top priorities in the Champions Trophy, when the two sides clash on September 26 in Centurion. His remarks echoed those of team-mate Umar Gul from Sunday, and underline Pakistan’s poor record against India in ICC events.”The fact that we lost twice to India, in the inaugural World Twenty20 in 2007 and then also in that World Cup match in 2003 in South Africa still hurts,” Younis said. “India is a very good one-day side but it is my burning ambition to set the record straight against them and defeat them this time in the Champions Trophy in South Africa.”The only time Pakistan have trumped their arch rivals in ICC tournaments was in the 2004 Champions Trophy. “It would be a big moment when we play India in the Champions Trophy pool match in Centurion on September 26 as we have not played against each other for a while now,” Younis said. “It will not be easy but we have some extra incentive to beat India given our track record in South Africa.”Relations between the two countries have been strained after the terror attacks in Mumbai last November, and they haven’t played each other since meeting in the Asia Cup nearly a year ago. A huge crowd turned up at The Oval in June when India and Pakistan faced off in a warm-up game ahead of the World Twenty20.The other two teams grouped with India and Pakistan in the Champions Trophy are Australia and West Indies. The top two sides from the preliminary phase progress to the semi-finals.

Sheff Utd fans slam Olsen vs Millwall

Many Sheffield United fans have been left slamming Robin Olsen for his role in Millwall’s opening goal in Tuesday night’s clash in the EFL Championship.

Jed Wallace scored what looked to be a cross as the ball looped over the Sweden international and into the back of the net to put the Lions 1-0 up at Bramall Lane early on in the first half.

Olsen should not have been beaten from that kind of angle, and Slaviša Jokanović will certainly view it as a very cheap goal to give away.

Nonetheless, it is no surprise at all to see so many Blades supporters voicing their anger and frustration at the goalkeeper for letting that one past him, and he will no doubt be hoping that he can make amends in the second half.

Sheff Utd fans on Olsen display

These SUFC fans slammed Olsen as the goal was conceded on Twitter, with one even going as far as to claim that he is ‘awful’:

“Olsen has got to do better. Full of mistakes for us so far him”

Credit: @tomjackson2511

“Literally was saying after Stoke match not sold on Olsen whatsoever”

Credit: @sufcgaz

“Awful awful there from Olsen.”

Credit: @RedSheffield

“I’m sorry but Olsen is not good enough”

Credit: @Parf23

“Shocking start this Blades. Olsen. Wow.”

Credit: @AshleyBranche

“What on earth is Olsen doing there?”

Credit: @Redwood0114

In other news, find out what international incident involving one of their players had Blades fuming here!

Afghanistan faced with mountain to climb

Peter Borren led Netherlands with a determined knock of 63 on a rain-affected second day at Amstelveen, leaving Afghanistan with an uphill struggle in their ICC Intercontinental Cup clash

Cricinfo staff25-Aug-2009
ScorecardPeter Borren led Netherlands with a determined knock of 63 on a rain-affected second day at Amstelveen, leaving Afghanistan with an uphill struggle in their ICC Intercontinental Cup clash. Borren’s half century helped to set Afghanistan a challenging second-innings target of 207, on a bowler’s dream pitch, despite four-wicket hauls from Shapoor Zadran and Mirwais Ashraf.In reply, Afghanistan posted 39 for 2 at stumps, with Edgar Schiferli taking both the wickets of Ahmed Shah (4) and Mohammed Shahzad (1). This left Noor Ali at the crease with 25 and Nowroz Mangal unbeaten on 7. The visitors require another 168 runs with eight wickets to spare, on a surface that has so far favoured the bowlers.Rain halted Netherlands’ progress in the morning however, when only four overs were bowled before lunch. The first ball of the day did get Afghanistan off to a flyer though, as Zadran had Nick Statham out leg-before, a disappointing way in which to end his innings having battled so hard first time round for 35.Once the covers were removed again, Zadran continued to dismantle the Netherlands top order, taking three wickets in quick succession. Bas Zuiderent was trapped in front for nine and both Daan van Bunge and Tom de Grooth were bowled with second-ball ducks, which left Netherlands struggling on 22 for 4.Zadran’s destructive spell brought Borren to the batsman’s graveyard, where a captain’s innings was desperately required to steady the ship. This is precisely what followed, as he built a partnership of 41 with Wesley Barresi before the rain enforced an early tea interval.The pair added a further 20 runs before the wickets began to tumble once more. Barresi was bowled for 34 by the debutant Ashraf with an off-cutter which moved significantly. Ashraf then sent Atse Buurman straight back to the pavilion having faced two deliveries, with the added humiliation of watching his off stump flying from the ground. Hamid Hassan joined in soon after, bowling Mudassar Bukhari without scoring, with the board displaying 84 for 7.Borren stuck around in difficult conditions; some balls reared up at batsmen, while others scuttled along the pitch. He scored a well-earned 63 before getting stumped by Shahzad off a flighted delivery from Mohammed Nabi.Without the captain’s presence at the crease, the Netherlands tail had very little hope of adding many more, and Ashraf cleaned up Schiferli (16) and Pieter Seelaar (2) to claim his fourth wicket of the innings.However, that the home side reached the heights of 132 has managed to set their inexperienced opponents a total comfortably higher than the three innings so far, and the onus is on their middle-order to produce something special.

Hutton talks up Leeds’ interest in Barkley

Ross Barkley has the ability to be a superb signing for Leeds United if they complete a move for him, according to former Scotland defender Alan Hutton.

The Lowdown: Barkley linked with Leeds move

The 27-year-old has been linked with a move to Elland Road, as he continues to struggle for regular playing time back at Chelsea following his loan move to Aston Villa last season.

Barkley has appeared for just 27 minutes in the Premier League so far in 2021/22, so it could be that a switch elsewhere makes sense in January or next summer.

[freshpress-quiz id=“375277″]

The Latest: Hutton talks up Barkley move

Hutton thinks that Leeds could be an ideal destination for the Chelsea midfielder, telling Football Insider: “He’s a fantastic player.

“I actually felt sorry for him at Aston Villa because he started really well and the injury he got really hampered him and he struggled after that. If you can get the best out of Ross Barkley, I think any team would want him.

“We’ve seen flashes of him coming on for Chelsea – he’s looked good, passing nice and sharp and he’s looked fit.

“If Bielsa can get him through that door, he comes in and does well for Leeds. The way they play with the high press, get him high up the field and let him make things happen – it would be a brilliant addition to the team.”

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The Verdict: A gamble worth taking?

Barkley isn’t getting into Chelsea’s team for a reason, so it is understandable to feel some trepidation about a possible move to Elland Road.

In terms of natural talent, he could be a star at Leeds, but too often his game lacks substance – he has only scored one league goal for Chelsea since the summer of 2019 – failing to produce consistently strong performances.

A manager of Marcelo Bielsa’s class could possibly get the best out of Barkley, though, and a January transfer or loan could help give the Whites an extra spark in midfield. Indeed, the Leeds boss has already got a tune out of one Stamford Bridge cast-off in Patrick Bamford, so he might yet be able to repeat the trick if Barkley rocks up in Yorkshire.

In other news, one Leeds player has provided a key injury update. Find out who it is here.

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