Lionesses prospect Ruby Mace swaps Leicester for WSL rivals Everton in club-record transfer

Everton Women have pulled off one of the boldest moves of the summer, breaking their transfer record to prise Ruby Mace away from Leicester City. While the club haven't disclosed the exact figure, reports speculate that the deal dwarfs the £100,000 bid Everton saw turned down earlier in the window. The Toffees were determined to get their player, and under ambitious new ownership, they’ve finally landed their marquee signing.

  • Everton break record for England midfielder
  • Mace targets Wiegman recall after transfer
  • Derby debut against Liverpool on the horizon
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Mace, who has signed on until 2027, had just 12 appearances under her belt in Leicester colours following her permanent switch from Manchester City last year. Her rise, however, truly began during her earlier loan spell at the Foxes, where her dynamic style and eye for controlling games in midfield drew admiring glances from scouts across the Women’s Super League. With a year left on her contract at Leicester, Everton moved decisively, ensuring they secured one of England’s brightest young stars before rivals could pounce.

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    WHAT MACE SAID

    Speaking after sealing the move, Mace admitted the whirlwind nature of the deal had barely registered.

    “It hasn’t really sunk in yet. It all happened so quickly but I’m really happy to be here,” she told

    The midfielder revealed that conversations with Everton boss Brian Sorensen were instrumental in her decision.

    "When I spoke to Brian Sorensen, it was about the style of play and the ambition of the club," she added. "Also, just being able to showcase what I can do in a team that, feels to me, like it could be a level up. That's what I need in this point in my career to push forward."

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Mace has already worn the Three Lions shirt, making her England senior debut in December 2024 in a narrow win over Switzerland. But she was left out of Sarina Wiegman’s triumphant Euro 2025 squad, a snub she now intends to turn into motivation.

    "I want to make my game better. I still have so much to work on but to be given the opportunity to come here and work with amazing players, hopefully that can elevate me," added Mace. "My main focus is on club football now but if that [England] comes too, I'd be really grateful. It's something I want to happen. I have to work hard and really earn my spot there because it is not easy."

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  • DID YOU KNOW?

    The move for Mace marks Everton’s ninth signing of the summer, a clear statement of intent from The Friedkin Group, who took control earlier this year. Determined to push the club forward both on and off the pitch, the owners have backed Sorensen with fresh talent to build a squad capable of competing with the WSL’s elite.

    Mace’s journey has already seen her wear several storied shirts. She rose through Arsenal’s academy ranks, breaking into the senior side during the 2020-21 campaign. Stints at Birmingham City and Manchester City followed, before Leicester gave her a stage to truly showcase her potential. Now, the midfielder arrives on Merseyside with added expectations.

'It’d go berserk if we won a trophy' – Chris Richards, Crystal Palace have chance to make history as USMNT star preps for huge FA Cup final against Manchester City

The defender is set to play in one of the biggest games in club history – and one for him that is about much more than just a trophy

Chris Richards knows exactly what's at stake. He also knows how unlikely all of this is. It's been nine years since Crystal Palace last had this much at stake. The time prior to that? 1990. The club has never lifted the FA Cup. And while every trip to Wembley Stadium is sacred, it means all that much more to a club such as Crystal Palace.

So, as his team prepares to stare down Manchester City with the FA Cup on the line, Richards can't help but wonder: what if Palace pull this off?

“It’d go berserk if we won a trophy,” he told the Athletic recently. “It’d be insane. Regardless of the results we’ve had during my time here, the Palace fans are always there for you trying to pick you up. We’ve had some tough results but you wouldn’t know it from the way they’re there for you. It’s amazing.

“The Palace fanbase may be comparatively small but it’s selective. I’ll be in the city and they come up to me and are, like, ‘Keep going. We appreciate you’ and that means a lot. So being able to give back by winning a trophy would be special.”

It's a special game at a special time for Richards, who has spent this season proving that he's the U.S. men's national team's only Sharpied-in center-back. As the race for positions on Mauricio Pochettino's side heats up ahead of the Gold Cup – and, more importantly, the World Cup – Richards has elevated his game, finally taking a leap forward many believed was possible when he first burst onto the scene.

Palace have needed that, and they'll need him to reach an even higher level this weekend in the FA Cup final, which kicks off at 11:30 a.m. ET on Saturday. Richards and Palace are on the brink of what would be one of the biggest moments in the club's long history.

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    Making meaningful progress

    Since his debut with Bayern Munich during the 2018 International Champions Cup, Richards has been in the spotlight. It's natural when you're with a club like Bayern. Just 18 years old, Richards was anointed as the USMNT's next starting center-back, but his path there serves as a reminder that progress is almost never linear.

    Since arriving at Palace three years ago, he's progressed each season. The 25-year-old center-back has stepped up massively this season, however, becoming a mainstay alongside Maxence Lacroix and Marc Guehi in Palace's back three.

    According to FB Ref, Richards is in the 90th percentile in tackles when compared to central defenders in the top five leagues. He's in the 93rd percentile in blocks, too. He's above average in clearances and aerials won, while he's right about average in interception numbers. All of those stats point to one conclusion: Richards has become a steady, reliable Premier League defender.

    This season, with Richards helping anchor the defense, Palace sit 12th and – while they might not best last season's 10th-place finish – they're equal to last season's point total with two games left in the Premier League season. That's all secondary, though, as the club take on City this weekend.

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    A long-awaited chance

    When he arrived as manager last February, Oliver Glasner made a relatively quick impact on Crystal Palace. They won six of their final seven games of the season, finishing in the top 10 for only the second time in the Premier League era.

    Now, though, Glasner has the club on the precipice of something special – winning an FA Cup. Glasner knows the stakes. He insists, though, that nothing will look or feel different in these days leading up to the biggest Palace game in recent memory.

    "We can't do something different," he said. "It also makes no sense [to do that]. It's [about] showing what we can [do], who we are on our best level, and this is how we will enter the final, and then let's see. Then, it's football and everything can happen.

    “But the worst thing that we could do is now changing many things, because we can't teach the players something different in four days – it would just make them dizzy! So, business as usual.”

    Of course, this is anything but business as usual. In the club's 119-year history, Palace have never won a current top-division trophy. The closest thing they have is the 1990-91 Full Members' Cup, and that competition was discontinued one year later.

    This is only their third FA Cup final – and surprisingly, it's been relatively smooth sailing to get there. The club beat up on lower-division sides Stockport County, Doncaster Rovers and Millwall to reach the quarterfinals. In goal for all three of those matches was Richards' USMNT teammate, Matt Turner, who handed back starting duties to the club's No. 1, Dean Henderson, from the quarterfinals.

    “I talked to both goalkeepers today and I took a decision that Dean will start tomorrow,” Glasner said before the quarterfinal. “On one side it was a tough decision, on the other side it was a very good decision for me to take because I had to choose between two great goalkeepers with everybody having 100 percent confidence and trust in us.”

    With Henderson in goal, Palace smashed Fulham 3-0, at Craven Cottage to reach the semifinals, where they in turn crushed Aston Vill, 3-0 – and for good measure, won at Wembley to book an even bigger game at the famous venue.

    “Yeah, yeah, it’s sick, you know,” Richards said in the video posted by Crystal Palace after the win over Villa. “I think something that we want to be able to do is to give back to the club. Not just the people in the club, the fans, you know, because they’re an extension of us. So again, love, like, today, it makes us fight even harder. So again, we want to be able to bring something back to South London and hopefully, it’ll be a big trophy.”

    They'll need to defeat a big team to get that big trophy, one that has their very own reasons to be hungry for silverware.

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    The team in the way

    By Manchester City standards, this season has been a disaster. They have relinquished their Premier League title to Liverpool. The club's Champions League run ended far too early, as they fell to Real Madrid in their first knockout tie. They lost to Tottenham early in the EFL Cup, too.

    So this match will be massive for Pep Guardiola's team. Making matters more difficult for Palace? The return of Erling Haaland. The Norwegian star has missed time due to injury, but has been cleared to return, having started this past weekend's draw with Southampton for his first appearance in two months.

    "It was horrible to be injured, but what can you do?," he told ESPN. "You have to recover as quickly as you can and to come back as fit as you can. Now I'm back with loads of energy. I'm feeling good and moving good and I'm ready."

    That's one big problem for Richards. Haaland missed City's recent 5-2 win over Palace, one that did include a goal by Richards. The American, meanwhile, did not feature in the prior matchup, a 2-2 draw back in December that included a Haaland goal. These are the tests Richards needs, both for club and country.

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    USMNT impact

    There are several positions that will be giving Pochettino headaches on the road to the World Cup. The goalkeeper position is full of questions, largely due to Turner's role – and lack of playing time – at Palace. So, too, is the striker spot. Center-back is up in the air, too, with multiple players vying for a chance.

    Right now, it seems Richards might just be the answer to one of those questions. Given the level he's played at this season, Richards is currently the best candidate to hold down one of the two center-back spots for Pochettino. The question of who starts next to him is more murky.

    But the current concern is Man City. If Richards, Turner and Palace do lift the FA Cup, the two Americans will be in illustrious company. The only other American to win that trophy is Tim Howard, who started in the 2004 FA Cup finale as Manchester United took down Millwall.

    Other Americans have reached the finale. John Harkes and Sheffield Wednesday fell to Arsenal in 1993. Christian Pulisic's Chelsea fell in the finale in three consecutive years – although the Blues' Champions League triumph in 2021 will ease the pain of that a bit. Brad Guzan watched on from the bench in 2015 as Aston Villa were thumped 4-0 by Arsenal.

    All of that is to say that Saturday is a chance at something remarkable. A Palace win would make history for the club, as well as for the Americans on the squad. And for Richards, it's a chance to both give back to the passionate Palace fans, and give himself greater security as a starter for the USMNT with the World Cup on the horizon.

Man Utd confirm squad for first pre-season friendly of the summer against Leeds with Matheus Cunha included while Red Devils outcasts are left out

Manchester United have named their squad for Saturday's pre-season clash with Leeds United, with no room for Ruben Amorim's five outcasts.

  • Man Utd face Leeds in Stockholm
  • Signings Cunha and Leon included
  • Five exiled players absent
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    United have confirmed their squad for the fixture on their official club website, with both summer signings Matheus Cunha and teenager Diego Leon included. Andre Onana and Joshua Zirkzee are absent due to injury, though both are said to be joining up with the squad for their Premier League Summer Series fixtures in the USA.

    Amorim's five exiled players – Marcus Rashford, Alejandro Garnacho, Jadon Sancho, Antony and Tyrell Malacia – were not included in the squad list or even mentioned at all in the announcement. The fixture against Leeds takes place on Saturday at 14:00 BST at the Strawberry Arena in Stockholm.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    United's squad announcement shows the work which still needs to be done this summer. Not only is there the obvious predicament of having five well-paid players on the books whom the manager has no desire of playing, there were also several untried youth-team players included in the squad and an overriding majority of defenders.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    In United's 29-player squad for the fixture, just a combined total of eight senior midfielders and forwards were named. This underlines the urgency of making sales to fund new arrivals this summer, as with several big-name players absent the squad is thinner than Amorim would like.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR UNITED?

    It is hoped Bryan Mbeumo will be within the ranks by the time the Red Devils begin their Summer Series fixtures on July 27 after a £71m deal with Brentford was agreed for the Cameroon forward. Goalkeepers Emiliano Martinez and Senne Lammens have also been linked with a move to Old Trafford.

Bartlett, Fraser-McGurk star as Australia win with record 259 balls remaining

The visitors lost 9 for 48 in a dismal batting display in Canberra with Australia’s inexperienced attack impressing again

Tristan Lavalette06-Feb-2024Lance Morris’ spectacular return was cut short by a side strain injury, but Xavier Bartlett continued a strong start to his international career with four wickets as Australia thrashed a hapless West Indies at Manuka Oval to sweep the ODI series.Openers Josh Inglis and Jake Fraser-McGurk raced toward the low target by smashing 67 runs within five overs. They had struck Australia’s fastest team 50 in men’s ODIs since 2002.Their eight-wicket victory with 43.1 overs to spare was the shortest men’s ODI ever played in Australia. The match lasted just 31 overs and was completed in three hours, including the innings break.Related

  • Comparisons with Warner: Ponting backs Fraser-McGurk to become a Test player

  • Stats – The shortest completed ODI ever in Australia

  • Sean Abbott's all-round show helps Australia seal series

  • No rest on Abbott's mind: 'Hard team to get in, even harder to stay'

  • Short ruled out of final ODI with McDermott called up

Bartlett had starred with 4 for 21 as West Indies were embarrassingly bowled out for 86 in 24.1 overs in their fifth lowest ODI score. Playing their 1000th ODI, the second nation to do so after India, Australia were almost flawless following comprehensive victories in Melbourne and Sydney.Inglis raced to 22 off seven deliveries as he played gorgeous orthodox shots, but was quickly overtaken by Fraser-McGurk who muscled three sixes in four balls off seamer Matthew Forde.Fraser-McGurk was on track for a rapid half-century, but holed out to mid-on to end his 18-ball 41 and dashed Australia’s hopes for a 10-wicket win. Aaron Hardie made just two before Australia passed the target after 6.5 overs.Australia recorded their 12th straight victory in the 50-over format, but were aided by a shoddy West Indies effort with a number of batters dismissed in tame fashion.It wasn’t all rosy for Australia with Morris, who returned to the side along with Bartlett in place of injured Matthew Short and a rested Josh Hazlewood, coming off the ground midway through his fifth over with a left side strain. He will have a scan and faces a nervous wait ahead of Australia’s tour of New Zealand.Steven Smith elected to bowl under bleak skies with Bartlett looming as a major threat in seaming conditions. After having a breather following his stunning four-wicket debut at the MCG, Bartlett was immediately on the money with the new ball and he had opener Kjorn Ottley lbw in his second over.Ottley trudged off after a short discussion with Alick Athanaze, but replays showed he had inside edged the ball. Bartlett continued to showcase his prowess for swing bowling and he bowled an unrelenting line and length to finish with 1 for 11 off his opening five-over spell.Jake Fraser-McGurk gave a glimpse of his potential•Getty Images

But Athanaze and Keacy Carty held firm as West Indies’ fortunes momentarily seemed to turn with the sun emerging and they eyed a decent total on the traditionally batting-friendly Manuka Oval surface.West Indies avoided the early collapses that marred their opening two games, but the introduction of Morris in the 11th over soon left them in familiar woe.Morris had his first international wicket when Carty was brilliantly caught by a flying Marnus Labuschagne at backward point. Captain Shai Hope unsuccessfully reviewed an lbw decision off Sean Abbott in the next over before Morris clean bowled debutant Teddy Bishop with a searing full delivery that rattled the stumps.In contrast to when he took the new ball at the MCG, Morris enjoyed being held back in a role he usually relishes with Western Australia at domestic level. He bowled consistently in the mid 140kph and a threatening short of a length before going off the ground.Athanaze had held the innings together until he threw away his wicket with a rash sweep stroke against legspinner Adam Zampa that was caught deep backward squareSmith went on the attack and brought back Bartlett, who on his first delivery nicked off Romario Shepherd. Bartlett soon became just the sixth men’s bowler to record four-plus wicket hauls in his first two ODIs.West Indies’ woeful performance was summed up with a comical run out of Forde, who bickered with batting partner Roston Chase on his way off, as their 27-year ODI drought against Australia in Australia continues.

'Even if we’re rivals now, I’m happy to have you here' – Monterrey's Sergio Ramos welcomes longtime Real Madrid teammate and new Pumas star Keylor Navas to Liga MX

Navas has officially joined Pumas and is expected to make his debut today against Querétaro in Matchday 3 of the Apertura 2025.

  • Together, Ramos and Navas won three consecutive UCL titles with Madrid
  • Ramos, Navas are set to face each other in Matchday 13
  • There are now six former Real Madrid players competing in Apertura 2025
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    Keylor Navas might make his Liga MX debut sooner than expected, as he is in contention to start for Pumas Friday against Querétaro in Matchday 3 of the Apertura 2025 – just a day after being officially unveiled by the club on Thursday.

    The Costa Rican’s arrival sparked a wave of reactions across the football world, with one of the most notable coming from his former Real Madrid teammate, Sergio Ramos. Now playing for Monterrey, Ramos reposted Navas’ announcement video on social media and sent him a heartfelt message:

    "Even if we’re rivals now, I’m really happy to have you here. Welcome and pura vida, brother!" he wrote in his post.

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    WHAT KEYLOR NAVAS SAID

    During his official presentation with Pumas, Navas revealed that Ramos played a key role in helping him decide to join Liga MX. The Costa Rican goalkeeper also highlighted the league’s growth and the influence of other well-known players who have arrived in recent years.

    “Sergio told me a bit about his experience in Mexican football. Players like James Rodríguez have come here, and the level of the league is growing a lot,” Navas said.

    He also mentioned his national team coach, Miguel Herrera, also thought it was a good move.

    “'El Piojo' also told me he knows the league well, and that I was definitely joining a big club. He shared a bit with me, and having him with the national team helped me make this decision.”

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    DID YOU KNOW?

    Ramos, Navas, and Rodríguez shared the locker room at Real Madrid from 2014 – when both James and Navas joined the club – until 2019, when the Costa Rican goalkeeper departed for Paris Saint-Germain. James, however, left the club for two seasons to play with Bayern Munich.

    During their time together, the trio helped Real Madrid win eight titles, including two UEFA Champions League trophies, two FIFA Club World Cups, one La Liga title, and a pair of Spanish Super Cups. Notably, Ramos and Navas were part of the squad that won three consecutive Champions League titles.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR NAVAS AND PUMAS?

    The Universitarios visit Querétaro tonight in search of their first points of the tournament.

A good venue for spin

Hobart has been a good ground for Australia, who have never lost a Test here

S Rajesh16-Nov-2005


Shane Warne: 24 wickets in five Tests at Hobart
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  • West Indies haven’t had too much fun on their tour to Australia so far, and they won’t be very pleased to find out that the home side have never lost in six Tests at Hobart, the venue of the second Test. In fact, apart from New Zealand – who have managed to draw twice, in 1997-98 and in 2001-02 – no other team have come away from a Test at Hobart with anything other than a defeat.
  • The average runs per wicket in the first innings here is 41, while for the next three innings they are 24.8, 41.9 and 33.1. That might suggest that it’s a good wicket to bat first, and while that might not be incorrect, the numbers look the way they do also because Australia have batted first five times out of six – thrice after winning the toss, twice after being put in. The only match in which Australia didn’t bat first here was against Pakistan in 1999-2000, when Steve Waugh chose to field and then watched as his bowlers bundled them out for 222.
  • That match, of course, was the one in which Adam Gilchrist announced himself to the world for his special batting abilities. Chasing 369 for victory, Australia were tottering at 126 for 5 when Gilchrist, playing only his second Test, walked in and with Justin Langer put together an extraordinary partnership of 238 as Australia stole a four-wicket victory.
  • Thanks to that magnificent unbeaten 149 he scored in that Test, Gilchrist averages 97 at the Bellerive Oval. For Ricky Ponting, though, it’s been a mixed bag here – in his first three innings, he only managed four runs, including two ducks, but he set that record straight with an unbeaten 157 against New Zealand in 2001-02. The dominance of the Australian batsmen at this venue can be gleaned from the fact that out of 14 hundreds here, 12 have been scored by the home team. (Click here for the Test match stats at this ground.)
  • Among the Australian bowlers, Shane Warne’s stats stand out – 24 wickets in five matches at 19. The 179 overs he has bowled here is almost 9% of all deliveries bowled in Tests at this ground, and 18% of all balls bowled by Australian bowlers. Glenn McGrath’s stats are as usual impeccable – 13 wickets at 21.
  • Hobart is clearly a good venue for spin bowling – they’ve taken 64 wickets at 24, while the fast bowlers’ 100 wickets have come at a rather costly 41.81 apiece. Even if you take Warne out of the equation, the rest of the spinners have taken 40 wickets at 26.88. Stuart MacGill hasn’t yet played a Test here but expect him to get a bagful over the next five days.
  • Calling the men in white coats

    The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questions about (almost) any aspect of cricket

    Steven Lynch28-Aug-2006


    Umpires have never been far from the headlines during the past week
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    I was surprised to see that Darrell Hair had written an
    autobiography. How many other Aussie umpires have done this?

    asked George Thompson from Melbourne
    Hair’s book was called Decision Maker, and came out in 1998. It
    starts with the story of how he no-balled Muttiah Muralitharan for
    throwing in the Boxing Day Test at
    Melbourne in 1995-96 (“I feel his action was diabolical,” he wrote
    of an ODI in which he stood earlier that season). Before Hair’s book
    came The Umpire’s Story (1972), by Lou Rowan, who stood in the
    1970-71 Ashes series Down Under, followed in 1974 by Bodyline
    Umpire
    , the memoirs of George
    Hele, who stood in all five Tests of the fractious Bodyline series in
    1932-33. English umpires who have penned autobiographical books include
    Frank Chester, Frank Lee and David Shepherd … and of course Dickie Bird, whose 1997
    autobiography was a huge best-seller. The New Zealander Steve Dunne has
    also written a book.What is the most lbws in a Test match asked David Shorten from Australia
    The record for a Test is actually 17, in the first Test between West Indies and Pakistan at Port-of-Spain in 1992-93. For the record, the umpires were Dickie Bird and Steve Bucknor. There have been two Tests with 15 leg-befores, and three with 14 – and the match at Kandy that you mention is one of four Tests which included 13 lbws. The record for a Test innings is seven – five of them by Richard Johnson – inflicted on Zimbabwe by England at Chester-le-Street in June 2003.During the 1921 Ashes series, Australia’s wicketkeeper Hanson Carter apparently advised his captain Warwick Armstrong that the England captain was trying to make an illegal declaration. What was illegal about it? asked Chris France from Australia
    This happened in the fourth Test of 1921 at Old Trafford, when The Hon. Lionel Tennyson, captaining England, wanted to declare late on the second day of what started as a three-day match. However, as the first day had been washed out, it had become a two-day match: and under the rather strange regulations in force at the time, any declaration had to be timed so that the side about to go in could have 100 minutes’ batting. Prompted by Carter, his astute Yorkshire-born wicketkeeper, Armstrong pointed out to the umpires that the declaration was illegal. After an interval of around 20 minutes, while the matter was discussed (Wisden‘s match report calls it “an unfortunate and rather lamentable incident”), England carried on batting, and declared first thing next morning. After the break, Armstrong mischievously bowled the next over, having bowled the last one before the interruption too.What unusual event delayed the start of the fifth Test between South Africa and England in 1930-31? asked Terence Frederick of London
    This was the fifth Test of that series, at Durban, and the reason for the delay is one of Test cricket’s most unusual ones: the bails were the wrong size, and the umpires had to make a new set! It’s not as incompetent as it sounds – not quite, anyway – as the laws had recently been changed to increase the size of the stumps to the current size of 28 inches high by nine inches wide (previously it was 27×8). The stumps at Kingsmead were the right size, but the bails weren’t. Gerald Brodribb, in Next Man In, his excellent study of the evolution of cricket’s laws, reports that a new set of bails had to be made on the spot, and adds: “England, who had won the toss and put South Africa in on a drying wicket, made a strong protest at this annoying delay.”Inzamam-ul-Haq was out “obstructing the field” against India last winter. How often has this happened in Tests and ODIs? asked Rahul Shetty from Bangalore
    Inzamam’s unusual dismissal in the first one-dayer against India at Peshawar was only the third instance of a batsman being given out obstructing the field in ODIs. The first was another Pakistani, Rameez Raja, against England at Karachi in 1987-88. He knocked a fielder’s return away when trying to complete the second run which would have taken him to 100 from the last ball of the match. Two years later, India’s Mohinder Amarnath was the second man to go this way. He kicked the ball away from the bowler to avoid being run out against Sri Lanka at Ahmedabad in 1989-90. The only man to be out obstructing the field in a Test match is England’s Len Hutton, against South Africa at The Oval in 1951. Hutton top-edged a sweep against the offspinner Athol Rowan, and the ball looped upwards. Worried that the ball would bounce onto his stumps, Hutton knocked it away, but in doing so prevented the wicketkeeper, Russell Endean, from making a catch. In a weird coincidence Endean, who was making his Test debut at The Oval, was also involved in Test cricket’s next peculiar dismissal: he was out “handled the ball” against England at Cape Town in 1956-57.

  • Ask Steven will return fully on September 11.
  • Mover and shaker

    Worrell inspired, stirred, roused. And therein lay his greatness

    Telford Vice07-Aug-2007Frank Worrell bought me plenty of coffee during the 2007 World Cup. That’s odd because he died 40 years ago. But in Barbados the going rate for a double espresso is $4.50 in the local currency, and the face that beams with easy dignity on a $5 bill is that of Worrell. “Go on,” his slight smile seemed to suggest as Australia ground towards their umpteenth victory, “it won’t feel so bad if you have another.” So I did, often, and in the midst of a caffeine buzz it didn’t seem to matter quite so much that Ricky Ponting’s custard column was marching unhalted through another World Cup, or that one-day cricket had marked time since Steve Waugh had lifted the trophy at Lord’s in 1999. What might Worrell have said about all that? “Stop moping and find a way to beat them,” probably.It is for real and imagined reasons like this that Worrell is my favourite player, despite the fact that I was but a year old when he succumbed to leukaemia in 1967. Among the more real reasons is that Worrell donated blood to help save the life of Nari Contractor after Charlie Griffith had bounced Contractor into hospital in 1962.I can easily forgive Worrell’s well-meant but silly insistence that guilty batsmen should walk. That lapse into unreality is more than made up for by his decision, in a match against Yorkshire, to pack the leg-side field and to instruct his bowlers to gun for the batsmen. When Douglas Jardine had employed similar tactics, he had been vilified outside of England as a darkly calculating figure. But no one anywhere accused Worrell of being other than a creative captain who was merely trying to win the match in question, which his team duly did. Was this because Worrell was by all accounts an infinitely better human being than Jardine?Another reason why Worrell is at the top of my list is that he was prone to nodding off in the dressing room, particularly in the middle of a batting collapse. Yes, sometimes cricket really is a boring old business. Interest in the world beyond the game by the more abject professionals who play it for a living would seem to extend only as far as the nearest golf course. Worrell, by contrast, crammed as much life as he dared to into his 42 years.After retiring as a player, he became a warden at the University of the West Indies, and he graced the Jamaican Parliament as a senator. Who would want Kevin Pietersen for an MP? Who would entrust the tertiary education of their children to Shane Warne?Worrell was born in Barbados, spent much of his adult life in Trinidad, and saw out his days in Jamaica. Those are three of the most disparate societies in the West Indies. “He saw the many diverse elements of the West Indies as a whole, a common culture and outlook separated only by the Caribbean Sea,” Learie Constantine wrote in Worrell’s obituary. Worrell propagated his views earnestly enough to berate Barbados for inviting the international community to celebrate the country’s independence. A nation bristled, and for weeks afterwards the newspapers fairly rustled with harrumphing. Worrell was a cricketer who demanded to be so much more than only that.

    I wonder what difference Worrell and his team might have made to the history of South Africa had they spent just one summer playing here

    And, of course, he was no mean cricketer. Neville Cardus wrote that “he never made a crude or an ungrammatical stroke”. For CLR James, Worrell’s late cut was “one of the great strokes of our time”.Worrell’s finest hour at the crease was West Indies’ tour to England in 1950, where he scored 539 runs at 89.83. But his two stands of over 500 – 502 with John Goddard in 1944, and 574 with Clyde Walcott in 1946, both unfinished, and both for Barbados against Trinidad – provide a better epitaph for him as a player. He did, after all, believe in partnerships above all else.Many will remember Worrell best as the first black man to be appointed West Indies captain. “… He was possessed of an almost unbridled passion for social equality,” James wrote. “It was the men on his side who had no social status whatever for whose interest and welfare he was always primarily concerned. They repaid him with an equally fanatical devotion.” Not for nothing, then, was Worrell snidely referred to as a “cricket Bolshevik” in the corridors of West Indian power.Such treason evaporated in the heat of his first assignment at the helm, West Indies’ epic 1960-61 venture to Australia. Famously, 500,000 Australians lined Melbourne’s streets to bid the West Indians farewell at the end of the tour. And that in an Australia that was in the grip of a racist mindset.As a South African who grew up when apartheid was at its most murderous, I have had cause to wonder what difference Worrell and his team might have made to the history of my country had they spent just one summer playing here. I never met Worrell or saw him play, but in the words of James, “No cricketer… ever shook me up in a similar manner.” Espresso for the soul, you might say.

    A different stripe

    Crab-like and inelegant he may be, but it is his gritty determination and stomach for a fight that are more worth remarking on. “Tiger” Chanderpaul is a man driven by the simple mantra of just doing the best he can

    Fazeer Mohammed02-Jan-2008


    The ‘business of batting, batting and more batting’
    &copy AFP

    On the face of it, the nickname just doesn’t seem to fit. Shivnarine Chanderpaul The Tiger? Rampaging, mauling, utterly
    destructive? No man. It’s got to be someone else. Not that dour nudger and deflecter with the crab-like shuffle across the stumps. Chanderpaul The Crustacean maybe, for surely those big cats would be deeply offended to be associated with someone who apparently lacks their feline grace, blood-curdling snarl and the ability to pounce like lightning and rip an
    unsuspecting victim to shreds.Then again, maybe it’s not so far-fetched, for in the same manner that stealth and determination are primary attributes of the tiger, so has the durable Guyanese left-hander emerged in his own understated manner as one of the most prolific and reliable batsmen in the midst of the darkest era in the long, proud history of West Indies cricket.Brought up in an environment that cherishes a legacy of larger-than-life batting champions from George Headley to Brian Lara, Chanderpaul inevitably suffers in comparison with those legends. Not that he isn’t capable of lifting the tempo
    when required, but even when he does, it lacks the panache, the flair and the almost regal arrogance associated with the maestros of yesterday, whose flashing blades typified the marriage of joyful exuberance and technical excellence that is celebrated as definitively West Indian.As the first cricketer of East Indian descent to play over 100 Tests for the Caribbean side, he has been content to ply his trade in the shadows of the incomparable Brian Lara – and anyone else who happens to come along and shine brightly for a brief period before the indiscipline and inconsistency that have dogged the former kings of the game poison the latest pretender to the throne of batsman supreme.Indeed, it is only since Lara’s surprise retirement at the 2007 World Cup that Chanderpaul’s value has become blindingly apparent. A tally of 446 runs at an average of 148.66 just two months later in England placed him in a different stratosphere from his struggling team-mates. And even when they all finally got it together as a team to produce a stunning series-opening victory at the end of year over South Africa in Port Elizabeth, the 33-year-old former captain remained a cut above the rest, with his 17th Test hundred anchoring the side to what proved a match-winning first-innings total.He may not look the part, but this is one case where statistics don’t lie: 7294 Test runs (average 46.75) and 7141 one-day international runs (average 39.67) to the end of 2007 are not figures to be taken lightly. But they only tell part of the story. It is Chanderpaul’s single-minded determination to excel as a batsman for West Indies from a very young age that offers a greater understanding of just why he carries a nickname that seems so much at variance with his personality on and off the field.Born in Guyana, Chanderpaul is the product of a society defined by economic hardships and racial divisions fuelled by inflammatory politics. In such a society, every opportunity for advancement is not only grasped with both hands but guarded with a jealousy that borders on selfishness. For a land of such bountiful natural resources and enormous economic potential, the harsh realities of everyday life have meant that those with the means to do so invariably take flight.

    His comparative silence in the dressing room or limited, faltering comments in front of the microphones should not be mistaken for a lack of conviction – far from it. As one of his fellow countrymen, Clive Lloyd, publicly commented during his term as manager on the 1996-97 tour of Australia, Chanderpaul will stand his ground in any situation when he has to

    Three former West Indies captains, Rohan Kanhai, Clive Lloyd and Alvin Kallicharran, are among the most notable of Guyanese natives who have made their homes in the United Kingdom, while another from that South American
    nation to have led the regional side more recently, Carl Hooper, now lives in Australia. In essence, the theme for most Guyanese seems to be to work hard, make good and get out.It is difficult to see how such imperatives would not have had a deep influence on Chanderpaul’s approach to his cricketing career. Just as talented boys on the other side of the country’s southern border with Brazil see football as their ticket out of humble circumstances, the skinny little youngster from Unity Village on the east coast of Demerara River was obsessed with cricket not just for the aesthetic delights of batsmanship, but as an avenue to fame, fortune and a better life for himself and his family.While others with much more natural talent from the relatively affluent tourist havens of the Caribbean squandered their many opportunities at making it on the big stage, Chanderpaul’s credo has been pretty much the same as when he first strode out at Bourda for his Test debut as a 19-year-old against England in 1994. It is not for him to play with the
    extravagance of a millionaire, even though he can obviously afford to live the good life now as he heads into his 14th year as an international cricketer. His wicket is still to be guarded jealously. Runs are still runs, whether acquired by flair or graft. And even as the senior man by some distance in the West Indies squad, he is still prepared to do whatever is necessary for the cause of the team and his own pivotal role in it.On the basis of his vast experience and status as a former captain, it would probably be expected that he should demand every now and then to have his own way. Yet he has returned in the last year to opening the batting in ODIs, not so much because it his favoured position but because it is in the best interests of the West Indies. In his own way he is very much a team man without being the loud-mouthed, cheerleading type that seems so much in vogue in this modern, media-driven era. But his comparative silence in the dressing room or limited, faltering comments in front of the microphones should not be mistaken for a lack of conviction – far from it. As one of his fellow countrymen, Lloyd, publicly commented during his term as manager on the 1996-97 tour of Australia, Chanderpaul will stand his ground in any situation when he has to.


    I alone: Chanderpaul has made an art form of playing the solo hand, especially over the last two years
    © Getty Images

    That fierce determination and willingness to take on any challenge was very much in evidence on that arduous campaign, where the 22-year-old relative newcomer took on the responsibility of the No. 3 spot in the batting order from a struggling Lara. It was also during that series that he launched a scintillating assault on Shane Warne on the final morning of the Sydney Test, racing to 71 before being undone by a sensational ripper that the legspinner has since often described as one of the best deliveries he has ever bowled in his outstanding career. It was therefore ironic that the same batsman had been ignored for the entire home series against the same Australians in 1995, partially on the premise that he would have been unable to cope with the wiles of Warne. It was not the first time, and certainly not the last, that he has been underestimated.Chanderpaul doesn’t fit into the standard mould of the modern cricketing superstar and has suffered for it. When all the popular, chatty, fashionably attired pretty boys were selected for the ill-fated ICC Super Series two years ago, no serious protestations were raised about the omission of the crab-like left-hander, who just happened to have one of the best Test averages of the previous 12 months.But that will always be his lot, because he isn’t bothered by it enough to attempt to reinvent himself for the sake of being more marketable. Whether or not anyone cares to notice, his is the business of batting, batting and more batting. From living in the considerable shadow of Lara for more than a decade (he will forever be associated with Lara after having partnered him to his first world record-breaking Test innings of 375 in Antigua in 1994) to carrying the frail West Indies batting on his shoulders in the last English summer, Chanderpaul is driven by the simple mantra of just doing the
    best he can, whatever the circumstances.He knows the game, as someone who has played at the highest level for as long as he has should, but is not comfortable as a leader, as his brief tenure as West Indies captain confirmed. That painful experience in 2005-06 showed that while he may be able to adapt to any challenge in the middle – his generally phlegmatic style is belied by a 71-ball Test hundred against Australia at Bourda in 2003, among other examples of quick scoring – the burden of such overall responsibility was too much for him. Whatever his shortcomings as spokesman, skipper or tactical wizard, all of his opponents respect him for that tigerish determination and ability to creep along almost unnoticed towards another significant score. Despite never figuring in any discussion about contemporary batting greats, he has compiled 15 Test centuries in the last five years.So it seems the “Tiger” nickname is right on the ball after all, for by the time anyone really takes notice of Chanderpaul, it’s too late: he has already pounced on the chance to devour the bowling in his own deliberate, undemonstrative style.

    Reality bites

    It probably helps if you are coaching Bangladesh to be both grimly realistic and cautiously optimistic. Luckily for Bangladesh, Jamie Siddons is able to do both

    Osman Samiuddin at the Iqbal Stadium11-Apr-2008

    Bangladesh have had a tough tour to Pakistan so far, but their time will come, believes coach Jamie Siddons
    © AFP

    It probably helps if you are coaching Bangladesh to be both grimly realistic and cautiously optimistic. You must accept that defeat will, at present, mostly be inevitable, but you must also be able to draw from it some solace, something to hold on to. Luckily for Bangladesh, Jamie Siddons is able to do both.Defeat by seven wickets in Faisalabad, where they were defending a defendable, rain-affected target could easily be put aside as yet another dispiriting loss. Shoaib Malik, the Pakistan captain, later argued it wasn’t an easy win, but you suspect he said it to please himself more than anything else, for Pakistan were never really pushed at any stage of the game.But for Siddons, there was something to take from Faisalabad. This was, as he pointed out, the second-highest score Bangladesh had ever made against Pakistan. And no, it wasn’t difficult to lift his side’s spirits after another loss. “I don’t find it hard at all to keep them up,” he said. “There were things out there that I saw which were very exciting. We got some positives out of today’s game. Tamim Iqbal’s batting was one and I thought Mahmudullah Riyad played a fantastic knock towards the end.”Both were indeed accomplished hands, particularly Tamim’s. He has a pleasant, erect left-handedness about him, which was most evident in a couple of punches to deliveries on the up through extra cover early in his innings. On both occasions the bowler was Umar Gul, who may be rusty currently, but is never a slouch. Tamim’s on-side game is similarly easy on the eye, the on-drive off Rao Iftikhar Anjum the one to note, and a steady clip through midwicket later not to be overlooked.But then most of Bangladesh’s batsmen have the shots. It is the nous that is absent, of knowing when to attack, when to settle, who to attack, who to see off. At just the wrong moment, to just the wrong shot, Tamim gave it up; he went for 60, but it should have been – and Bangladesh will hope in years to come, will often be – much more. At least a hint of that batting sense came in Mahmudullah’s maiden fifty towards the end of the innings, a smart knock, built on angles, percentages and good running.A couple more contributions from the top order would have been handy, as coach and captain both acknowledged. Mohammad Ashraful, who perished for 22, probably referred to himself as much as Tamim when he said the top-order batsmen got out at the wrong time.But these reality checks help ensure that Siddons doesn’t get carried away, which is just as well, because hard days will continue to come for now. “My job is to get guys to perform internationally and in Tamim and Riyad there are two guys who can do that, so that is exciting for me to see. If you didn’t see anything exciting out there in Bangladesh’s performance then your cricket sense isn’t great.”Though it would add some spice to the series, Siddons has recognised all along that a win over Pakistan would mainly be the result of something going very wrong in the home camp. Results, he stressed before the series began, were not as important as progress. “Most sides find it tough to win out here [in Pakistan]. Pakistan are fifth in the rankings and we’re ninth and that is a big gap. But we have seen some positives out there today and are happy with that.”We are a long way away from where we want to be. We have got to be patient. We’re probably two-three years away from being the side we need to be. But this competition is great experience for our players.”In time it will show.

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