Faulkner, fielding down Kings XI

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Apr-2015Sandeep Sharma had Sanju Samson lbw on the last ball of the third over to leave Rajasthan Royals on 14 for 2•BCCIKarun Nair tried one shot too many and missed a straight delivery from Axar Patel•BCCISteven Smith struck five glorious fours for his 23-ball 33 but was outsmarted by Mitchell Johnson…•BCCI…Who struck two balls later to dismiss Stuart Binny leaving Royals at 76 for 5 after 11•BCCIJames Faulkner smashed three sixes and two fours for his 33-ball 46 that helped Royals to finish on 162 for 7•BCCIThough Royals scored 52 runs from the last five overs Anureet Singh conceded just four of the final one and finished with 3 for 23•BCCIKings XI’s chase was off to a jittery start as Tim Southee dismissed Virender Sehwag for a first-ball duck•BCCIRoyals quickly nudged ahead with the wickets of Wriddhiman Saha and Glenn Maxwell, who were both dismissed for 7•BCCIM Vijay held the chase together with a calm 37•BCCIBut Vijay was done in by a sharp throw from Sanju Samson that found him short of his crease•BCCIRoyals were electric in the field, capped off by the relay catch between Tim Southee and Karun Nair to dismiss George Bailey•BCCIAfter his impactful knock with the bat, Faulkner finished with 3 for 26 to set up the 26-run win for Royals•BCCI

Results vindicate captain Cook

Winning the Ashes was another impressive marker in Alastair Cook’s fledgling captaincy and Andy Flower was keen to ensure he received due credit

George Dobell13-Aug-2013If captaincy is about tactical ingenuity, about surprising opponents with novel field positions and bold declarations, then Alastair Cook is, at this stage of his career, an also-ran.But if captaincy is more about remaining calm under pressure, if it is about uniting a disparate group of individuals into a team with common goals and shared beliefs, if it instilling a clear purpose and providing consistent messages through example and communication, then Cook is developing into a fine leader. A leader very much in the image of Andrew Strauss, the man he succeeded in the role.Cook’s captaincy has attracted striking criticism in recent times. Shane Warne, who continues to sledge England from behind a microphone and in the pages of newspapers, may not recall but it is worth reflecting on the situation that Cook inherited when he was appointed 12 months ago.England were a divided, defeated group of individuals. The fall-out from the Kevin Pietersen debacle had exposed cliques within the dressing room and defeats against Pakistan and South Africa had brought their period as the No. 1-ranked team to an abrupt halt. The tour to India loomed menacingly.Yet, despite a thumping loss in his first game in command, Cook has led England to a series victory in India and retained the Ashes in the minimum number of Tests possible. England are now unbeaten in 12 Tests and came a panic away from winning the Champions Trophy. The team are now working together productively and have the opportunity not just to become the first England side to win four Ashes Tests in a home series, but to move back to No. 2 in the Test rankings. No reasonable judge could have asked for more from Cook.So it should not have been surprising that Andy Flower, the England team director, used his first press conferences after England won the series against Australia, to praise Cook for his contribution to their success.Flower is not a fellow to speak carelessly. He is not a man to do anything carelessly. In each press conference, while he arranges the dictaphones in front of him neatly (you get the impression he would like to catalogue them alphabetically in a binder), he ensures he conveys the message he wants and nothing more. And when he spoke to the media on Tuesday, he wanted to ensure Cook received the credit he deserved.”One of the keys to our success has been the couple of outstanding captains we have had,” Andy Flower said as he reflected on England’s success in Durham. “A captain in a cricket team is a very important position. They are making constant decisions out in the middle. When they speak in the dressing room they have to be stirring and clear, sometimes showing empathy, sometimes showing real strength or even stubbornness. In Andrew Strauss and Alastair Cook I think English cricket has been very lucky to have had, and still have in Cook, two outstanding leaders.Flower on…

Tim Bresnan
“Bressy is an excellent man, a really solid bloke and a guy that is really calm under pressure. He has been excellent for the England team over the last few years, both in limited-overs cricket and Test cricket. He hasn’t picked up many five-wicket hauls but he has made some serious contributions to the England team doing well and yesterday was an excellent example. His batting in the morning was outstanding. He played tight when he had to and then he shifted his game to an aggressive style when he needed to.”
Ian Bell
“His contribution to the series win has been immense. This is his batting at its best, no doubt about it. He’s very experienced and that has helped him. Until the day he and every batsman retires, they will get out in silly ways, there will be soft dismissals because that is the nature of the game, that is the nature of human imperfection. However he is very confident at the moment. Technically he is very solid and his is making good decisions.”
Joe Root
“The most important decision was who, in our opinion, would be the two best opening batsmen. It’s worked pretty well because we’re 3-0 up. That’s a pretty good start. Root’s 180 was an outstanding innings. We always knew that it would be a tough series to begin his opening career in and the Australian bowlers have bowled very well at him. But I think he has shown in his short exposure to international cricket that he is going to be a very fine international cricketer.”
Monty Panesar
“Sussex are handling that issue and we will await the result of their disciplinary hearing. Of course I am concerned about that incident but there is not a lot I can say prior to the outcome of the hearing. He was fine in Manchester and bowled quite nicely in the nets at Old Trafford.”
Kevin Pietersen and FLt20 Finals Day availability
“Pietersen won’t be available for Finals Day. He will be rested because of a couple of the niggles he has. I have spoken with [Surrey’s interim coach] Alec Stewart about that. It would have been nice to have made him available but injuries have meant that he can’t be. We’re just resting his knee and calf. He has played four Test matches now and this is an opportunity to rest. We try to be as fair to the counties as possible and you might have noticed over the last couple of years that we do try and get them back with their counties where we can. It possibly happens more often than it used to six or seven years go. But in this instance we can’t because of injury. He’ll be fine for The Oval. Chris Tremlett will be available for Surrey.”
James Anderson
“It would have been almost impossible to sustain the standards and energy levels he showed in those first two Tests. But we got two ahead after two Tests and he had been a major contributor to those two wins. He will be fine. We have a little window now and we don’t have to rush any decisions on selection for the fifth Test.”

“Keeping calm was certainly important and Cook was excellent in that regard. They also tinkered slightly with their tactics which you would have seen after tea. At 140 for one Australia had played really well, but I thought our guys held their nerve well and tinkered a little. We created pressure and chances followed.”The key moment may have come at tea when Cook, sensing a need to up England’s intensity, spoke to the team in the dressing room and coaxed one more effort from the bowlers. Pitching the ball fuller, they bowled with impressive hostility on a sluggish pitch and, after building the pressure, forced Australia to buckle in a spectacular final session.”I was present in the dressing room at the time, but to be quite frank this is one of those instances where we don’t talk about what we said,” Flower said. “I won’t talk in any detail about it but in those sorts of situations, at 120 for one, those are the instances where you need strong and decisive leadership and Cook showed that.”He speaks fluently in the dressing room. He has handled the captaincy really well so far. Like all the players he is probably a bit weary after four Test matches but most of the guys will be feeling that way. But there is a nice break now before the fifth Test and he will be absolutely ready.”It is not hard to understand why Flower felt the need to praise Cook. In both the Test series this summer, many pundits have compared the captaincy of Cook unfavourably with that of first Brendon McCullum and then Michael Clarke. Yet England have won five Tests and the opposition have not won any. While you could argue with some justification that Cook simply has the much stronger side at his command, it does raise questions about the criteria being used by his critics. Sometimes it seems they use the word “bad” when they mean “unexciting”. They are not the same thing at all.But not only has Cook attracted criticism, his personal contribution has also been somewhat understated. He is averaging only 27.25 with the bat and has, at times, looked inflexible in the field.That is not entirely Cook’s fault. With a four-man attack to marshal Cook has limited options. Besides, England have something close to a formula and, by sticking to it, know that each member of the team understands their role. By adhering to their plans, with a few minor adjustments, England rarely panic, are rarely confused and, since the tour to India anyway, have rarely been beaten. They have a method they believe in and they pursue it relentlessly.Their record suggests it is a decent tactic. While there are times England can look bereft in the field – they did for a while on Monday afternoon – instead of searching for new methods, they go back to the old one – bowl ‘dry’, build pressure and create chances – and attempt to follow it better. It may not excite the pundits, but it works. A boa constrictor can be just as deadly as a lion.Flower accepts that the England have faults. He accepts that the top order have struggled during the series and that the team remains a work in progress. But he also feels they deserve credit for their resilience and determination.”Our cricket side is not perfect, perhaps not even a great side,” Flower said. “We don’t call ourselves great. We don’t think we’re going to be perfect, we’re all going to make mistakes and Australia are going to have some good periods of play of course. They’re a good outfit themselves.”I think it is fair to say that Cook and [Jonathan] Trott have not been at their absolute best, but they can’t be at their best all the time. Both sides have shown real skill with the new ball and they have been testing conditions for batsmen so we haven’t seen huge scores.”But it would be more productive to focus on how we have fought ourselves out of those positions and been skilful and tough enough to get back into the game to continually build totals.”All we’re trying to do is win series. We don’t put up on our white board ‘What do we have to do to become a great team?’ We plan how to win series, that’s what we do.””But I must say I quite looking at things like Bell’s twentieth hundred and where he comes in the all-time leading batsmen for England. I quite like seeing those types of records because it does give you some sort of context in the history of English cricket.”We have won the series. We will be presented with another Test match next week and they will be desperate to win it because they are representing their country and competing to win.”

Prasanna takes a clonking

ESPNcricinfo presents the Plays of the Day from the third day of the second Test in Colombo

Andrew McGlashan in Colombo05-Apr-2012Clonk of the day

A wicketkeeper’s job is tough enough without wild throws from your team-mates. Prasanna Jayawardene had a difficult day behind the stumps with low bounce not making his task easy and at the end of an over from Randiv was given a blow on the head for good measure. Randiv picked up the ball in his follow through and, as bowlers like to do, hurled it back towards the batsman who momentarily blinded Jayawardene and the ball struck his head. An inch or two lower and it would have been the eye.Warning of the day
No, not Kevin Pietersen. In the fourth over of the day Alastair Cook was facing Dhammika Prasad and will have been grateful the delivery that scooted low was outside off stump rather than straight. The previous evening Angelo Mathews had said the bowlers needed to be more consistent to exploit the cracks and Prasad had clearly located the spot. It was a warning to England to score as many as they could during the day.Bad review of the day
Sri Lanka were justified in reviewing the not-out decision when they thought Alastair Cook had gloved to leg slip. It was mighty close but only Hot Spot would have confirmed it one way or the other. Using up their second review an over later was less understandable. Suraj Randiv appealed for lbw against Jonathan Trott but replays showed a huge inside edge. Trott had even suggested as much to the fielders. Not that the batsmen can always be trusted but on this occasion Sri Lanka should have listened.Periscope of the day
There was not much bounce in the surface for Sri Lanka’s pace bowlers and it came close to costing Trott. Facing Prasad he ducked to avoid a bouncer but left his bat in the air behind him. The ball did not climb as much as Trott expected and clipped the back of his blade, deflecting wide of Jayawardene to fine leg.Bowling change of the day

Tillakaratne Dilshan has shown he can be effective with the new ball in one-day cricket so it was not a surprise to see him handed it when just four overs old. He didn’t let his captain down, producing a perfect offspinner first delivery which took the edge of Alastair Cook’s bat low to first slip. It was the second time Cook had fallen for 94 this year, after the second Test against Pakistan in Abu Dhabi, and meant his wait for a 20th Test hundred continued.Shot of the day

Many in Pietersen’s innings stood out, but watching him bring out the switch hit against Dilshan showed that he still retains that free-spirited approach he regularly unfurled in his earlier days. And it is not reckless batting. Far from it. Dilshan had a 7-2 leg-side field so Pietersen decided his best scoring option was the vacant off side.

A job well done by professional India

The final Test of the series summed up where India and New Zealand stood vis-à-vis history and Test rankings. Sidharth Monga reviews the series

Sidharth Monga in Wellington08-Apr-2009The final Test of the series summed up where India and New Zealand stood with regard to history and Test rankings.India, not having won a Test series in New Zealand for more than 41 years, shed the daredevilry that has become their trademark of late and went for safety first. It showed how much series wins outside the subcontinent, rare as they have been, mean to an Indian team. You can’t really dump all the historical baggage.With a little help from the weather, New Zealand hung on, which will give them some satisfaction, a mini-milestone for a team on a long road to recovery after sudden retirements and an abrupt changing of the guard. The emergence of Jesse Ryder and the return of Chris Martin will be their biggest gains.The series confirmed the ICC Test rankings, but in Napier, New Zealand showed they could not be written off as a Test side. After their capitulation in Hamilton, a 3-0 result had become a distinct possibility. In application New Zealand might have lacked, in talent they didn’t. But as usual they left their followers wondering which was the real New Zealand: one that almost won in Napier or the one that almost lost next week in Wellington? Did they play above themselves in Napier, or did they under-perform in Wellington? We will know over the next year or two.India as a professional unit did what was required to win the series, as they were expected to. They showed early aggression in Hamilton, character and resolve in Napier, and circumspection, induced by their dismal overseas record, in Wellington. But the way they played the first two Tests is a serious warning to Australia and South Africa; they could play their natural flashy game, but they could just as well bat for close to seven sessions to save a Test.Gautam Gambhir’s batting and Harbhajan Singh’s bowling are the big success stories for India. Gambhir showed he could transform his game to any situation, something Rahul Dravid had earlier mentioned was critical to the success of a Test cricketer. Harbhajan showed he could lead the attack, when the pitch offered assistance, as in Hamilton, and that he could play back-up and perform the thankless act of bowling into the wind, as in Wellington.Another big success for India was that the likes of Dravid and VVS Laxman slipped into a support role with ease. That they did so efficiently, and that their big centuries were not missed, is a good sign for a team that will again be in transition in the near future. Sachin Tendulkar will be 36 in 16 days, Dravid turned 36 three months ago, and Laxman is going on 35. The series win will be most satisfactory for the trio, who were humbled on green tops when they last toured here.The pitches were much better this time around: even the worst of them produced the most gripping of the matches, in Napier. The ones in Hamilton and Wellington were excellent Test-match wickets, with something in them for skilful bowlers and skilful batsmen. Wellington, especially, was worth a pat on the groundsman’s back, because the match started in April, with winter almost in.The second Indian innings in the Wellington Test featured an event symbolic of what happened through the series and what could be expected in the years to come. Tendulkar walked off to a warm reception from the crowd, who suspected this could be the last time they would watch him bat, but Tendulkar didn’t make a special acknowledgement of that reception. “Perhaps they think this is my last tour,” he had said earlier during the tour, when asked about the standing ovations wherever he went. You never know with Tendulkar, and who would complain if he came here again? He entertained the crowds to the fullest: wholesome and innovative at the same time, while scoring a century each in the two formats he played in.The series overall wasn’t one that made neutrals sit up and take notice, as did Australia and South Africa in back-to-back series. New Zealand fought over seven days out of the 14 days of cricket. But those seven days made for compelling viewing, Ryder and Daniel Vettori thwarting India’s charge on day one, Ryder and Ross Taylor setting up a huge total in Napier, and Martin and Co surprising India on the first day in Wellington. That India survived those days was crucial to the 1-0 result. And those should be the days to remember the series by.

Gardner, Sutherland crack South Africa's resistance to secure huge innings win

Australia’s versatile and talented attack overcame a resolute South Africa mustering belated fight to complete a comprehensive Test victory at the WACA late on day three.Having been pushed in tight T20I and ODI series victories, Australia’s experience in red-ball cricket came to the fore as they clinched the inaugural multi-series between the teams 12-4.Australia’s attack were made to work against gritty batting on a surface that flattened out as the match wore on, but their bowling depth shone with six bowlers taking wickets in South Africa’s second innings of 215.Related

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  • 'Spin didn't work, seam didn't work' – Sutherland floors SA with fluent double

Captain Alyssa Healy was forced to unfurl her deep attack with eight bowlers used, including allrounder Annabel Sutherland who finished with five wickets for the match to go along with her historic double century.Debutant Delmi Tucker and Chloe Tryon helped stretch the match longer than expected with maiden Test half-centuries as South Africa salvaged some respectability after a torrid initiation into Test cricket against Australia.Tucker, Tryon and debutant Tazmin Brits faced more than 100 deliveries each as South Africa lasted 97.2 overs in a considerable improvement on their meek first innings of 31.2 overs.After being routed for 76 on day one, their lowest ever Test score, South Africa had been in danger of humiliatingly losing within two days when they crashed to 13 for 3.South Africa resumed their second innings at 67 for 3 with Brits and Tucker hoping to continue their rearguard after defying Australia late on day two with a half-century stand.In warm conditions, Brits looked tentative as Australia’s seamers targeted a dangerous length outside off-stump. Darcie Brown’s extra pace proved a handful and she was unlucky not to take a wicket when Brits edged just in front of second slip.She also had Tucker top-edging over wicketkeeper Healy, but the batters settled on a sun-baked surface offering little movement. They put away rare loose deliveries and were untroubled by short deliveries coming off the wicket relatively slowly compared to earlier in the match.Tucker had a couple of anxious moments as she neared her half-century, including miss-hitting a pull shot off Ellyse Perry that narrowly was out of reach of Alana King running back from square leg.Chloe Tryon brought up an excellent fifty•Getty Images

But Tucker regained her composure and notched her half-century on the very next delivery. Healy resisted using her three frontline spinners and she was rewarded with her faith in the seamers when Perry ended the 96-run partnership after Brits edged low to second slip where replays confirmed that Phoebe Litchfield had her fingers under the ball.But Australia were again made to wait as Tryon showcased a mix of power and finesse to continually hit through the off-side as Healy finally reverted to spin.It almost paid off immediately when Sophie Molineux, playing her first international since late 2021, had Tryon inside edging onto her pad only for Healy to drop a tough chance moments before lunch.Ashleigh Gardner and King, who received warm applause on her home ground when she entered the attack in the 42nd over of the day’s play, bowled well in tandem after lunch and found turn and bounce. They shackled Tryon with four fielders around the bat as runs crawled to a halt.The pressure built on Tucker, who was undone by extra bounce as she chipped a return catch that was well taken by Gardner. She trudged off in disappointment, but earned a strong ovation from the crowd after making 64 off 180 balls in four hours at the crease.King was denied a first wicket of the match when Mooney dropped a straightforward catch at slip to reprieve Tryon, who capitalised to notch her half-century soon after.But an Australia victory was always just a matter of time as Sutherland capped a memorable match by clean bowling Tryon with hometown hero King claiming the final wicket to punctuate Test cricket’s return to the WACA.

USMNT Transfers: Injury situation at AC Milan might force Yunus Musah to stay, Josh Sargent's price is rising and St. Louis reportedly interested in Griffin Yow

The USMNT Transfer Notebook tracks American player movements, with latest developments for those in the U.S. national team pool

The European transfer window is largely set to close on Sept. 1, which means it's business time for both clubs and players looking to potentially improve their circumstances. While much appears to be settled for players in the U.S. men's national team pool, there are still some uncertainties.

Yunus Musah was reportedly set to head to Atalanta, but a new development might force him to stay with the Norwich's Josh Sargent might be the most in-form striker in England right now, but his rising price tag means he might remain in the Championship.

And Griffin Yow has had difficulty finding a way out of Westerlo, but a return to the U.S. might be in the cards. 

GOAL tracks all of the American player movements in the USMNT Transfer Notebook, a recurring feature covering the latest developments for those in the U.S. national team pool.

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    Injury might force Musah to stay in Milan

    After reports of a complex transfer involving four teams, Musah appeared to be close to a reported $29.2 million move Atalanta. Then a training ground injury changed everything. 

    A collision between Mexico international Santi Gimenez and central midfielder Ardon Jashari resulted in an injury for Jashari. The Swiss international was determined to have a compound fracture in his right fibula. Milan had high hopes for the 23-year-old, for which Milan parted with a hefty sum of $43.1 million to Club Brugge.

    Now with Jashari set to miss at least eight weeks, manager Max Allegri might be compelled to keep Musah, according to Sky Italia. The midfielder didn't play in Milan's opener, but he could factor a lot more following this development.

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    St. Louis to start rebuild around Yow?

    Yow's desire to leave Westerlo has been clear, but he's had difficulty finding suitors in Europe to secure a move. While his aim is to remain abroad, his contract is expiring next summer and it could spark interest from MLS.

    According to Tom Bogert, one team to monitor is St. Louis CITY SC. The club has not met expectations following its inspired inaugural campaign, firing both two head coaches and its sporting director in the past two seasons. The club is expected to go after Yow next season if he doesn't find a suitor abroad before then.

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    Sargent staying in Norwich for now?

    Josh Sargent's strong run of form to start the season – scoring four goals in four games – has led to Norwich raising his price tag. The move has essentially locked in what they wanted: keeping their star striker. 

    Local outlet Pink Un expects Josh Sargent will stay with the club during this transfer window unless it is blown away by an offer it can't refuse.

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    MLS clubs tracking Rokas Pukstas

    U.S. youth international Rokas Pukstas might not generate a lot of headlines, but make no mistake, MLS clubs are watching the Hadjuk Split star. Transfermarkt reports an unnamed MLS club bid $7 million on the striker. 

    And while Split accepted the deal, he ultimately turned it down – preferring to stay in Europe. Yet, several outlets are reporting that interest on the continent is building for the 21-year-old, who hails from Stillwater, Oklahoma. 

Man Utd's backup plan for Carlos Baleba revealed as Ruben Amorim eyes £50m reunion with Sporting CP midfielder who has Arsenal tattoo

Manchester United are reportedly lining up a shock move for Sporting CP's powerhouse captain Morten Hjulmand after their pursuit of Brighton's Carlos Baleba hit a wall, with the Seagulls demanding a jaw-dropping £120 million for their Cameroonian star. United boss Ruben Amorim is desperate to bring Baleba to Old Trafford, but Brighton's sky-high asking price left Old Trafford chiefs wincing.

  • Man Utd eye Sporting skipper Hjulmand
  • Baleba chase halted by £120m demand
  • Arsenal-loving Dane could join Red Devils
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Baleba was a revelation last season, ranking among the Premier League’s best for tackles, interceptions, blocks and recoveries. Brighton aren't budging, seeing him as a pivotal piece for the campaign ahead after starting 31 of 38 league games last term.

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    According to Brighton's firm stance has forced United to shift their focus to Hjulmand. United are preparing a £50m bid, with Sporting likely to consider an offer about £10m shy of his £68m release clause if performance add-ons are met. The Dane is no stranger to Amorim’s high-intensity, structured style, having played 65 matches under him at Sporting. Together, they lifted two Primeira Liga titles and a Taca de Portugal, with Hjulmand wearing the captain’s armband.

  • TELL ME MORE

    If United pull the trigger on Hjulmand, the savings could fuel another high-profile raid – this time for Paris Saint-Germain’s Gianluigi Donnarumma, as they seek a new long-term goalkeeper. However, they must act quickly, as Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City are also lurking, with the Spaniard also eyeing Baleba as a potential long-term heir to Rodri.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR MAN UTD?

    Hjulmand is a lifelong Arsenal supporter, and he’s literally got the ink to prove it, with a Gunners-inspired tattoo on his body. That’s unlikely to sit well with sections of the United faithful, but Amorim believes his ex-captain’s mentality could win over even the most sceptical fans. 

Noni Madueke makes pre-season decision despite short break since Club World Cup with Chelsea as winger prepares to link up with Arsenal team-mates

Noni Madueke has cut short his holiday and joined Arsenal's pre-season training camp despite travelling to the US with the Chelsea squad for the Club World Cup earlier this summer. The 23-year-old English winger left the Blues after two seasons as he joined the Gunners for £52 million (€60m/$69.9m). Madueke joined Arsenal's training a week before the rest of the team returned from their Asia tour.

Madueke joined Arsenal trainingCut short his vacationCould make Arsenal debut against Villarreal this weekFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Madueke is wasting no time preparing himself for a fresh challenge at Emirates Stadium in the 2025-26 campaign as he cut short his holiday to report for pre-season training with Arsenal last week, according to . The rest of the squad returned from their Asia tour last Thursday and were then given a few days off before they resumed pre-season preparations from Monday. However, Madueke reached the club a week early and was training with his individual coach, Saul Isaksson-Hurst.

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Madueke reportedly wanted to travel with the Gunners squad for their Asia tour, but he was later advised to take rest as he had also travelled with the Chelsea team to the Club World Cup in the US. On Madueke's exclusion from the squad, manager Mikel Arteta had said last month: "With Noni it wasn’t possible because he needed some time, and he’s going to take a short vacation. He said he wants to join straight away, as soon as we are back."

DID YOU KNOW?

Arteta bought Madueke to further strengthen the wings of his squad. While the England star predominantly played on the right flank at Stamford Bridge, he can operate on both sides.

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Getty/GOALWHAT NEXT FOR MADUEKE?

The 23-year-old could make his debut on Wednesday as the Premier League giants take on Villarreal at home in a friendly clash.

Luis Enrique named the 'most disciplined coach in the world' as PSG president backs Spaniard after Joao Pedro clash following Club World Cup final loss to Chelsea

Paris Saint-Germain president Nasser Al-Khelaifi says Luis Enrique is "the most disciplined coach" in the world after his brawl with Joao Pedro.

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PSG president protects Luis EnriqueCalls for respect towards managersCoach can face disciplinary actionsFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Tensions flared high as PSG manager Enrique was caught shoving Chelsea's Joao Pedro in the face after his team's loss against Chelsea. The PSG president came to the support of his staff and manager, labelling Enrique as 'the most disciplined coach in the world'.

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After the final whistle in the match, PSG goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma was seen arguing with Pedro. The PSG head coach stepped in to support his player, and this is when the situation got a bit out of hand, with the Spanish manager caught pushing the Brazilian forward and raising his arm towards his face. The French club's owner later supported Enrique and stressed that it is unusual for the former Barcelona coach to behave the way he did.

WHAT AL-KHELAIFI SAID

When asked about Enrique's action in the post-match conference, Al-Khelaifi said: "Our coach is the most disciplined and respected coach in the world. He went to separate the players who were fighting, and he got caught up in it. Coaches deserve respect too."

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Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT FOR ENRIQUE?

Pedro has since condemned PSG staff and players, and labelled them 'sore losers' in his post-match conference. The Chelsea striker later called it all part of the game and believed it's better to move on and celebrate the cup win. However, there is a potential that Enrique can face disciplinary actions, which could lead to him being banned for a while, in which case he might also be absent on the sidelines for PSG's Super Cup fixture against Tottenham Hotspur on August 14.

Patterson powers Strikers past Renegades and to the top of the table

Late hitting from Bridget Patterson powered defending champions Adelaide Strikers past struggling Melbourne Renegades at Karen Rolton Oval in their WBBL fixture on Wednesday.Despite a gulf between the teams on the ladder, Strikers were made to work and the target of 149 was not easy on a tricky surface. But Patterson was superb at the death, finishing unbeaten on 36 from 26 balls as Strikers claimed victory with an over to spare.Renegades’ total had been built around a 96-run fourth-wicket partnership between Harmanpreet Kaur and Jess Duffin after they had slumped at 41 for 3.After that, Renegades needed early wickets under lights, but were thwarted by aggressive opener Katie Mack in the powerplay. She used her feet to great effect against offspinner Hayley Mathews and capitalised on wayward short bowling from 16-year-old quick Sara Kennedy.Bowling at speeds close to 120kph, Kennedy has impressed in her debut season but struggled for rhythm, and conceded 15 runs in the third over amid Mack’s flier.Mack had the boundary in her sights on almost every delivery before holing out to Matthews after scoring 24.Captain Tahlia McGrath became the second Strikers batter to pass 2000 WBBL runs and was untroubled along with Laura Wolvaardt. They were in cruise control at the halfway mark before both fell after the drinks break to seamer Georgia Prestwidge.Danielle Gibson, the hero in their thrilling chase against Perth Scorchers, was set to again lead Strikers over the line before falling to Kennedy with 26 runs still needed. But Patterson calmly stepped up as Strikers moved back to the top of the ladder.Jess Duffin’s half-century helped Melbourne Renegades get to a competitive total•Getty Images

Renegades’ finals hopes, however, appear forlorn after losing their sixth straight game.Propping the ladder, Renegades were major underdogs but their only victory of the season had been against Strikers, who they had routed for 86 at the Junction Oval.After electing to bat on a lively surface, Renegades desperately needed Matthews to find form after she had scored just 99 runs from seven innings.She didn’t face up immediately with Tammy Beaumont smashing a first-ball boundary from offspinner Georgia Adams and added another lusty blow three balls later.But on the last ball of the over, when she finally went on strike, Matthews was cramped for room attempting a cut shot to be caught behind for a golden duck. It was the second time this season Matthews had fallen to Adams and the fourth time she has failed to reach double-figures.Renegades’ top-order woes continued when a frustrated Courtney Webb was stumped after being lured out of her crease by a looping delivery from legspinner Amanda-Jade Wellington that spun sharply off the pitch.Beaumont, who had been reprieved on 12 when legspinner Anesu Mushangwe dropped a tough return catch, was bowled by Gibson as Renegades stared down the barrel.In a familiar tale, the pressure was on Harmanpreet, who again dug Renegades out of trouble. She targeted Wellington down the ground and also played with trademark inventiveness, including several well-executed scoops, as she mastered the two-paced surface.Duffin provided strong support and after a slow start she overtook Harmanpreet with a slew of belligerent strokes. Both batters fell at the death with Harmanpreet brilliantly caught by McGrath low to her left at cover.Mushangwe deservedly picked up the wicket of Duffin to finish with 1 for 18 off four overs in a disciplined performance that the Renegades bowlers were unable to replicate later in the night.

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