Marsh, Hastings take Australia home in tense chase

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Feb-2016Martin Guptill looked in good form before he holed out to deep cover for 31•Getty ImagesKane Williamson, though, kept the runs coming with another solid fifty•Getty ImagesAdam Zampa, on debut, chipped away at the middle order with the wickets of Williamson and Grant Elliott•Getty ImagesNew Zealand collapsed soon after, and were reduced to 205 for 7•Getty ImagesMitchell Santner added a useful 39-ball 45 to guide the hosts to a score of 281 for 9•Getty ImagesUsman Khawaja started the chase in sprightly fashion and struck his first ODI fifty•Getty ImagesKhawaja and Warner smashed a 122-run opening stand in 98 balls•Getty ImagesHowever, the game turned again as New Zealand roared back into the game with quick wickets•Getty ImagesDavid Warner looked set for a ton before he was given out lbw on review for 98•Getty ImagesMitchell Marsh and John Hastings then combined for a 86-run seventh-wicket stand to calmly take Australia to a series-levelling win•Getty Images

'I'm not a lucky charm' – Mike Young

Daniel Brettig15-Jan-2015You’ve been away from the Australian team but are now back in time for the World Cup.It’s great to be back. I’ve been looking forward to this ever since I got the call. I’ve been up in the north woods and actually the day I left it was 20 below zero Fahrenheit and there was 15 inches of snow following me as I drove to the airport six hours back to Chicago. Then I got out here and it’s 90 degrees out here – that was a wake-up call.When did you get the call to come back to the team?It’s been about a month I knew. Darren (Lehmann) called me and said get involved with the tri-series and the World Cup, so very pumped up about that.This will be your fourth World Cup campaign with Australia. Winning the trophy in 2003 and 2007, and knocked out in the quarter-finals in 2011, which was not so good. What do you take out of those campaigns?First of all let me comment on the not so good. Playing in India we made it to the knockout round and we played pretty well and almost beat India. What I take out of them is experience. Every World Cup game is important. I can pass on a few little things here and there from those World Cups but these guys know what they’re doing.In 2013-14 you worked with the team through the home summer and in South Africa and fielding standards were very good but then you didn’t continue. Why was that?Darren was just moving the staff around, making some changes. I’d been with the team and I’m back for now. Greg Blewett I know very well, he’s doing a great job, he and I talk every day. It’s good to inject new people – the coaching projection, to be quite frank, is if you’re doing a good job you want to make yourself redundant. It sounds crazy and people don’t like to hear that about most of their work, but there comes a time when they need to have another injection of a different personality to keep players sharp. I think what Boof’s done here is a really good job.

“Nobody on this planet in cricket respects how hard it is to catch a cricket ball more than me, because I didn’t play. When I got into the game I was amazed. These guys are the best in the world – you’re going to drop some balls, you’re going to catch some.”Mike Young

What have you made of their fielding performances this summer?I was in America, I followed it and read some things and I take offence to some of those things because there’s a lot of facts, and nobody on this planet in cricket respects how hard it is to catch a cricket ball more than me, because I didn’t play. When I got into the game I was amazed. For years in America on they’ve got the top 10 plays of the day. I called up New York City and said ‘that was a nice play baseball-wise, but I see two of those every match in cricket that are better than that’. All of a sudden I’m watching , they’ve got top 10 plays and there’s a cricketer on it. I was happy about that because they have no idea how hard it is. These guys are the best in the world – you’re going to drop some balls, you’re going to catch some.Catches win matches in any sport, but in a World Cup it’s even more important to hold those?The worst thing to do is to say it’s more important, honestly. Because why put the excess pressure on somebody when it’s already hard enough. You’re going to have good games and bad games – what I consider a drop and what other people consider a drop can be different – I see guys diving for a ball, it hits them one-handed and it’s labelled they put it down. Come on, it’s not that easy. I think that [the fielding problems] has been overplayed a bit.Darren has spoken about how it’s not an issue of training volume but more confidence dropping after a couple chances have been missed.Confidence is everything. But to their credit they’re so resilient, they’ve been through so much, they bounce right back. You’re going to drop a catch, no big deal. I’m going to go public on one thing – I’ve been around coaching for 30 years, I read something the other day and it doesn’t matter who wrote it, but I have a problem with people calling me a lucky charm. I have a problem with that as a professional. I’m not a lucky charm, I’m not a horseshoe. They don’t need a lucky charm, they’re good enough. I’m here to impart anything I can to help. My job is to help Blewey.Ricky Ponting wrote a column recently in which he said one of your qualities is that when later in a season guys are getting tired or have sore hands, they will still want to train with you because of how you operate.Ricky was the best thing for me because he loved fielding training. Being Ricky Ponting the superstar and the captain, if he’s going to do it people will follow. That made my job so much easier, and let’s not forget the talent. I just take a different approach, I come from a different background. This is my coaching style. Some guys might not like it, I don’t know, but I’m just there to help.Do you know what you’ll be doing after the World Cup?I have no idea. If they wish for me to continue I’ll happily do it – I’m an Australian, don’t let the accent fool you – I’d love to continue on but that’s not my decision and whatever it is I’ll support it.

The surprise No. 8

Plays of the day from the IPL game between Kolkata Knight Riders and Rajasthan Royals in Kolkata

Devashish Fuloria03-May-2013The surpriseRahul Dravid sent in James Faulkner at No. 3 and you thought that was the surprise of the day. But as Rajasthan Royals’ batsmen started falling one by one, everyone expected to see Dravid walking in. Samson came in to bat, then came Yagnik, then Owais Shah, surely Dravid was the next in line? Apparently not. He came in to bat at No. 8, possibly the lowest he has ever batted. He struck his first ball for four, missed the second and charged back for a quick couple off the last ball of the innings. Three balls. That’s it for the legend.The buggy algorithmShane Watson had been making smooth progress and looked set for another important innings, until Sunil Narine was introduced in the 11th over. Watson got a leading edge off the first delivery, then survived a very good shout for lbw to one that was going away, then survived another shout to one that came into him, and was finally trapped in front off the fifth ball. What does one expect of lesser batsmen when an international biggie like Watson still has no algorithm to decode the mystery?The dropWhile the rest of Royals’ batting line-up was struggling against spinners on a pitch that magnified the effect, Sanju Samson, all of 18 years, was stroking the ball beautifully. But then he tried to go leg side to a Sunil Narine wrong ‘un and got a thick leading edge that ballooned towards short cover. Manvinder Bisla, the wicketkeeper, called for it and comfortably got under it, only to see the ball pop out of his hands. Bisla couldn’t believe it, Eoin Morgan, who had tried to catch the fumble, couldn’t believe it, the bowler couldn’t believe it, but reaction of the day came from team co-owner Juhi Chawla, who stared with a blank expression like she had seen a ghost.The wide Manvinder Bisla had just been beaten by a Brad Hogg wrong ‘un which he didn’t read as he went for a sweep. The next ball he tried the sweep to a chinaman that was down the leg side. He missed that one too and the keeper was unable to stop it cleanly, allowing the batsmen to change ends. The umpire, CK Nandan, didn’t signal anything, which means it would have counted as runs for Bisla. The batsman, though, signalled to the umpire that he hadn’t touched it after getting to the non-striker end. A polite request was all the umpire need to call it a wide belatedly.

Down Under? Point up

How come Australians prefer to catch the ball with their hands reverse-cupped? Steve Rixon and Ian Chappell weigh in

Sidharth Monga05-Mar-2012For much of the 1990s, cricket in India was infatuated with Australia. The team was on its way to becoming the best in the world, and games played there provided the best television product in India – the quality of pictures, the commentary. Kids in playgrounds – I was one – would run in a few extra feet when taking outfield catches, so that they could take them with fingers pointing up. During international matches in India, when a fielder caught the ball that way, the Indian commentator would say: “That is the Australian way of catching.”Like other kids back then, I dropped a few. I got hit in the face once because I covered my eyes with the “reverse cup”, losing sight of the ball. Then I stopped, going back to what came naturally to me, believing the Australian way of catching was some sort of idiosyncrasy that belonged to them alone. Like the inverted scores. Like their own cricket dictionary. Like the eight-ball over. When I finally got to Australia, though, I just had to try to trace the history and the logic behind the practice.I ask Ian Chappell, a brilliant slip fielder and someone who has watched most top-level cricket in Australia from the ’70s onwards, about the “Australian way of catching” with the fingers pointing up.”That’s not my way of catching, I can tell you that much,” he says, to my shock. He turns to Mark Taylor and asks, “Ever heard any Australian player call this the Australian way of catching?” Taylor says no, but adds, “I liked to catch that way, but not everyone does.””I think the other nations might talk about it,” Chappell says. “I have never heard one Australian player say that.”Why do the Aussies catch that way, though? How did it start? I ask a few players from older eras, but they can’t pinpoint how the reverse cup became the preferred way. A possible explanation could be the influence of baseball, which is quite popular in Australia, but Chappell quashes that notion too.”I can remember the first time I ever caught in baseball. I was about 11 years old,” he says. “And first time it popped up, and I went like that [], and I dropped it. I was walking up to pick the ball up and throw it back to the pitcher. I looked at my glove and said, ‘Ian you are an idiot. Have a look at the shape of your glove. It’s much better [fingers] down.’ I don’t remember my father telling me [either way]. He probably did, but I don’t remember it.”It was not all uniform in the Chappell family. Ian and Greg preferred the traditional method; Trevor caught with fingers pointing up.Taylor offers a plausible explanation. “I think it comes from the fact that some of the Australian players have also played Australian Rules football in the past,” he says. Fingers pointing up is how you catch in footy. “Typically the Western Australian blokes. Graeme Wood used to catch it that way,” Taylor says. At which point Chappell chips in and says, “[Simon] Katich is terrible. Ricky Ponting too.”Steve Rixon, Australia’s current fielding coach, is not entirely convinced footy is the key influence, but can see the logic. “I wouldn’t have thought that is the reason they catch it that way, but that’s not a bad summation,” he says. “I reckon there is merit in that.”Rixon, a wicketkeeper himself, preferred catching the ball with fingers up. The idea for him, and for Michael Hussey, another Western Australian, is to get the eyes in line with the ball, bend the knees and use that foundation to absorb the catch.”Either side of the body there is [a risk of losing] the ability to watch the ball closely,” Rixon says. “When the ball is round about eye level, all the way into your hands, people find it much easier. I haven’t seen Mike Hussey drop ever with fingers up. I have occasionally seen him drop some when the fingers are down.”There is merit to catching with fingers up but only if you do it as well as Hussey does, where you don’t risk losing the ball in the background: you are just waiting for it to come at you.This technique also obviously helps when you are at the edge of the boundary and can’t push further back. We watch Peter Forrest take one such during a game against India, and Taylor immediately brings up his background. “He is a rugby league player. New South Wales. His dad was a first-grade rugby league player.”I ask Rixon, how the average Aussie father teaches his kid to catch the ball. “Try both,” Rixon says. “With the understanding that if the ball is at chest level, [you] bend your knees, bring your eyes to the level of the ball, and just see how it feels. If it feels extremely uncomfortable that way, try the other way.

Chappell liked to move to the side and take chest-high catches in a normal cup. Bob Simpson would let the ball hit him full force and then take the rebound. Most modern Australian fielders get down low to make sure they catch with fingers pointing up

“What he will then find, like a lot of people, who play differently with a bat in their hands, a lot of people do things differently with a ball in their hand – ot is no different to a fieldsman, when it comes to the specifics of catching.”The safe way of catching the ball is to obviously cup your hand, but a lot of people find it easier to catch it the other way, and my advice to young cricketers is, try both, find out for yourself which feels comfortable, find out which feels safer. I know if I ask Mike Hussey right now right here, he would say he feels safer with his fingers pointing up.”A source of ire to Chappell and concern to Rixon is the chest-high catch taken in close-in positions. The overhead ones you can take with fingers pointing up, and the low ones you can cup your hands under, but what about the in-between height? Chappell liked to move to the side and take them in a normal cup. Bob Simpson would let the ball hit his chest full force and then take the rebound. Taylor used to get his hands together, with palms facing the chest, as if hugging the ball. Most modern Australian fielders get down low to make sure they catch with fingers pointing up.”I mean, it’s abysmal the way Ricky does it down here,” Chappell says. “For the obvious reason – lots of catches in the slips, the ball is looping down.””Makes me a little nervous, yes, but he has got beautiful hands,” Rixon says.The chat with Chappell and Taylor also busts the myth that the Australians prefer catching with fingers up because it lets them have a second grab. “The whole basis isn’t about if you drop, you get a second chance,” Rixon says. “That’s just an outcome of bad execution of the catch. The reason is, you are bringing your eyes to the same level of the ball coming to you.”Catching the ball with fingers pointing up has become more and more popular in Australia with time. Rixon sees a lot more players employ the method than did in his own playing days.Australia continue to be up there among the best fielding sides. They seems to remain casual and natural with how they catch, but to outsiders, especially those who grew up watching cricket in the ’90s, it is the “Australian way of catching”.

High scores, and joy for Akmal

Stats highlights from the last day of the first Test between Pakistan and Sri Lanka in Karachi

Cricinfo staff25-Feb-2009

Kamran Akmal became the fourth batsman to score more than 150 in the match, which is a record in Test cricket
© AFP
  • Pakistan’s total of 765 for 6 is the fifth-highest score in Test cricket. It’s their highest, comfortably going past their previous best of 708 against England at The Oval. It’s also the highest by any team in Pakistan, and the highest by any side against Sri Lanka. In fact, it’s the first time any team has scored more than 700 against them.
  • Despite the flurry of wickets towards the end, the match still finished with an average of 86.27 runs per wicket, which is good enough to put in seventh place in the all-time list of Tests with the highest runs per wicket. The venue which tops the list is Lahore, where India and Pakistan had a combined average of 136.12 in a Test in 2006. Considering that’s also the venue for the second Test of the current series, it isn’t particularly good news for the bowlers.
  • Only 18 wickets fell in the match, which equals the record for least number of wickets in a Test in Pakistan which has produced at least 400 overs of cricket. In Tests across the world, fewer than 18 wickets have fallen in eight Tests (with the 400-over qualification).
  • Kamran Akmal’s unbeaten 158 was the fourth 150-plus score in the match, which is the first time this has happened in Test history. There are 21 instances of three 150-plus scores. Click here for the full list.
  • Akmal’s knock is also his highest in Tests, going past his previous best of 154 against England. He went past the 2000-run mark during the course of this knock. Among Pakistan wicketkeepers, only Moin Khan, with 2581, has scored more runs.
  • Muttiah Muralitharan bowled 65 overs in the Test, which is his second-highest in a game. He had bowled 75 against India in Mohali in 1997. He has now bowled 65 overs in a match on three occasions.
  • Sohail Khan conceded 164 runs in the match, the most by a bowler without taking a wicket in his first Test. The only other bowler to concede 150 runs on debut without taking a wicket is Aaqib Javed, the former Pakistan fast bowler.
  • 'Light years ahead' – Carli Lloyd says USWNT behind European powers such as Spain and England, despite 2024 Olympic gold

    The USWNT legend expressed skepticism about the national team's standing, suggesting European nations have surpassed them

    Lloyd ranks USWNT behind Spain, EnglandSays American squad has "a bit more to prove"Says Spain is "light years ahead" in developmentTSTWHAT HAPPENED

    With England outlasting Spain for the Euro 2025 title on Sunday, former USWNT star Carli Lloyd said that – even coming off a 2024 Olympic gold medal – Emma Hayes' side is still behind European nations on a global scale.

    “It's an interesting debate,” Lloyd said on the State of the Union podcast. “After watching this tournament, I mean, even teams like Switzerland, Italy, you know, Italy, you could argue that they had a little bit of an easier path to get to the semiinal, but they still came out brave. They were tactically flexible. They played really, really well.

    “And so, yeah, it kind of got my wheels turning a bit to think about our current US women's national team, where they're at right now. I know that they had just won the Olympics. I still think they're hovering currently right now, third or fourth behind Spain, England – you could throw in Sweden than there."

    AdvertisementWHAT LLOYD SAID

    Lloyd emphasized that while Hayes is working to improve the squad, the team still has significant ground to make up compared to their European counterparts

    “I mean, Germany down, down 10 men. Their epic performance was pretty amazing," she said. "But I do still think that there's a bit to go. There's a bit there's a bit more to prove to me. You know what they have as far as the depth. And I know Emma's spending a lot of time getting a lot of different players minutes and caps and doing all that to build the 2027. But Europe is in a really, really good position right now. I mean, Spain is undeniably the best. I think they are light years ahead as far as a playing style.”

    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    FIFA released its latest Women's World Ranking last month, with the United States maintaining their top position. The gap between the Americans and their closest challengers narrowed, with Spain (second) and Germany (third) rising.

    Brazil, which split two matches with the USWNT this spring, moved into fourth place, representing a substantial four-position climb in the rankings.

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    Getty Images SportWHAT’S NEXT?

    The USWNT are focused on developing ahead of the 2027 FIFA Women's World Cup. They’ll face Portugal twice in October and then a to-be-determined opponent at the CPKC Stadium.

    Hungry Weatherald makes a certainty of it

    Jake Weatherald has been slower to find his feet in T20 but it has been a combination of persistence by the Adelaide Strikers and evolution on the young left-hander’s part that led him to Sunday’s innings

    Daniel Brettig in Adelaide04-Feb-2018Two years ago, in his fourth first-class match, Jake Weatherald opened the batting for South Australia in a Sheffield Shield final and looked right at home. So much so, in fact, that he made it to 66 and 96 before throwing his hands away with a pair of shots that might best be described as presumptuous. In the second innings his skied slog at Fawad Ahmed, after a brief scoreless period, ushered the collapse that won a more composed Victoria the title in an away decider at Glenelg Oval.These memories were at the forefront of the mind of Adelaide Strikers captain Travis Head as he batted in the slipstream of Weatherald on another day when he looked in control – the Big Bash League final in front of more than 40,000 spectators at Adelaide Oval. At 24, Head has already captained his state for three seasons and the Strikers for this tournament, and he made sure he was in the ear of Weatherald who, at 23, is one of the richer batting talents in the Australian system.Unlike the four-day game, Weatherald has been slower to find his range in T20 matches, but it has been a combination of persistence by the Strikers and evolution on the young left-hander’s part that led him to Sunday’s innings. With Head in his ear to keep him focused, he surged to the first-ever century in a BBL final, underpinning a total of 202 that was ultimately far too much for even the redoubtable Hobart Hurricanes to chase, and enough for the Strikers to defend without the speed of Billy Stanlake and the wrist-spinning wiles of Rashid Khan.”It just comes down to experience, he got those scores in the Shield games and he had the foot on the throat and didn’t capitalise. Today I just kept reminding him, just kept telling him to capitalise,” Head said of Weatherald. “He didn’t slog, he played great cricket shots, he was very calm, selective on who he targeted and that just comes from experience.”He’s a mature man now, he’s played a lot of cricket, he’s played in big games, a lot of our big games for South Australia and today he’s gone out and shown he’s learned from experience and a few opportunities he’s had in the past and really put his foot down and made sure it was a match-winning performance. Last year and the start of the year, he probably didn’t give himself much of an opportunity, and we knew how good he was in the sheds, so we backed him in.”We gave him every game, we said we weren’t going to change that, him and Kez [Alex Carey] were going to open the whole time and gave him full confidence to go out there and back his skill and ability. We knew how good he was but he probably wasn’t giving himself the opportunity he would’ve liked, and at the back end he showed he’s given himself a chance and had some crucial innings for us.”The innings Weatherald conjured on Sunday arrived at the end of a period in which he had been trending ominously upwards. Scores of 65, 3, 56 and then 57 in the semi-final thriller against Melbourne Renegades on Friday night indicated that Weatherald was ready to step up from handy to substantial, and he was helped by some less than precise Hurricanes bowling in doing so. Their captain George Bailey said that Weatherald’s strengths square of the wicket were well known, particularly on a ground like Adelaide, but that his attack had offered too many deliveries in his strong zones.”I reckon he hit a lot of balls where we talked about not letting him hit balls,” Bailey said, his typical smile more of a grimace. “Like most of these young blokes they’re beautiful strikers of the ball, so you want to make them hit the ball where they don’t like to or they’re not as strong as they are [elsewhere]. He’s very strong square of the wicket and I reckon he hit too many pull shots and cuts shots today.”Having blazed eight sixes and nine fours Weatherald, too, agreed he had been offered the chance to play the square-of-the-wicket shots with which he is most comfortable, following a long tradition of South Australian left-handers from Clem Hill and David Hookes to Darren Lehmann. “I wanted to stick to my strengths and thankfully they bowled to them today,” he said. “Throughout the tournament I haven’t been overly successful, but thankfully they bowled where I wanted and I was able to hit to the boundary”I felt like I was hitting the ball really well throughout the tournament, I said that to anyone who asked me, I felt I was close to getting a big score and everyone around me was so supportive and saying the same thing, which was probably why they stuck with me. It’s really good to perform when I and the team really needed it.”The support staff have been so great throughout the tournament, letting me know my spot’s secure and backing me in to perform at some point. It was great they were so supportive throughout, all the players were supportive too, we’ve got such a great group, and that’s why we’ve been so successful.”Much like the Strikers themselves, Weatherald has taken time to find his best ways of succeeding in the shortest format, often seeming in too much of a hurry for one so capable of striking the ball cleanly once he has had a few sighters. But the ball-striking talent he possesses has been gradually honed through the faith of the captain Head, the coach Jason Gillespie, and the parallel state set-up led by Jamie Siddons. Tim Nielsen, the former Australia coach, serves as the high performance link between the two.”To be honest I found T20 cricket the hardest of all formats,” Weatherald said. “You obviously don’t have as much time, and I hadn’t really played too much T20 cricket before I played Big Bash, so it was a massive learning curve, the first 14 games I really found it quite hard to play, but just having good support staff around, Greg Blewett, “Dizzy” Gillespie and Jamie Siddons my Shield coach has been amazing. They’ve got around me and said ‘just bat the way you normally bat and you’ll make runs in T20 cricket’. My game’s evolved to hopefully perform in all formats, which is slowly coming together.”It is in finding the aforementioned adaptability that a link can be drawn from the Weatherald of the 2016 Shield final and the Weatherald of the 2018 BBL finale. For Head, there is satisfaction in knowing that several players have now come through the experience of losing three finals for their state – also the 2016 limited-overs decider and the 2017 Shield final, this time in Alice Springs – to be part of a dominant team on the most high-profile stage in Australian domestic cricket.”It was nice to take a back seat to Weathers today, he was exceptional, a match winner,” Head said. “That’s what we asked for Friday night and asked for that today, you want to step up in big games, be a match winner, he’s probably gone a bit unnoticed earlier in the tournament, probably teased us a little bit, been in really good form, but it’s fantastic that he’s gone out and played an unbelievable innings and won us the game.”It was nice to get it off the back I guess and nice for a lot of the guys who’ve played in them to celebrate winning a final and hopefully we can build something really special with this group of guys. Looking at it from the SACA perspective there’s a lot of guys in there that are playing Shield cricket for us and it’s great for South Australia but it’s also great for the Strikers. I’m sure this team will roll out the same next year and we expect nothing less than to win. We’ve set the example now.”That does not just bode well for the Strikers and South Australia, but for the national team at the top of the Australian pyramid.

    Benjamin Sesko names iconic former Man Utd striker as his childhood role model in move Red Devils supporters will love

    New Manchester United signing Benjamin Sesko has revealed which iconic Red Devils player is his role model.

    Sesko signs for Man UtdReveals who is role model isHopes to take after iconFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

    Following his £74 million ($100m) switch from RB Leipzig to United, Sesko has revealed former Red Devils striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic was his childhood idol. The Swede scored 29 goals in 53 appearances for the club and helped them win the Carabao Cup and the Europa League in 2017. Now, the 22-year-old is eager to emulate the ex-AC Milan star at Old Trafford.

    AdvertisementGetty Images SportWHAT SESKO SAID

    He told United's website: "He’s been my role model since I’ve been small. I've been watching him, like every single YouTube video that I can find, because he's just amazing for me, you know. We don't have the same, let's say, character. But I like to see him, the way he plays, the way he enjoys football, because that's when all the joy comes, you know. If you enjoy football, then everything works. And I think this is the most important. It's probably also one of the parts that just makes me love him so much, you know what I mean? So maybe one day to meet him, that would be great. He's my idol."

    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Ibrahimovic went on to become one of the greatest strikers of the 21st century, so if Sesko has a career anything like the big Swede, he will have done very well. For the time being, the 6ft 5in player has been tasked with reigniting United's lukewarm attack as he tries to make them a force again.

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    Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT?

    Slovenia international Sesko, who signed a contract until 2030 with Ruben Amorim's team, could make his United debut when they host old adversary Arsenal at Old Trafford on Sunday in their first game of the Premier League season.

    'Get a grip': Hamza Shaikh given out for obstructing the field at Under-19 World Cup

    The England batter picked up a ball that had stopped in the crease by his feet

    ESPNcricinfo staff04-Feb-2024England batter Hamza Shaikh ensured his time at the Under-19 World Cup would not be forgotten when he was given out obstructed the field against Zimbabwe.In the 17th over, Shaikh defended a ball down by his feet and Zimbabwe wicketkeeper Ryan Kamwemba started to come from behind the stumps to collect it. Then, with the ball stationary in the crease, Shaikh bent down to pick it up to pass it back to the fielders, as is often seen from batters.Kamwemba and the bowler, Ryan Simbi, led the appeal and it was sent upstairs by on-field officials Donovan Koch and Masudur Rahman where third umpire Nigel Duguid gave it out.Previously it would have been handled the ball, but that mode of dismissal was combined with obstructed the field in 2017 with MCC saying they were effectively the same thing.

    The relevant Law, 37.4, reads: “Either batter is out Obstructing the field if, at any time while the ball is in play and, without the consent of a fielder, he/she uses the bat or any part of his/her person to return the ball to any fielder”.Unsurprisingly, there was reaction on social media. “Oh get a grip,” Stuart Broad posted on X. “He’s passing a stationary ball back to the fielder? Doing him a favour! Cant give that out.”Sam Billings retweeted a video of the dismissal, simply adding: “Wow.”Late last year Mushfiqur Rahim was given out obstructed the field in a Test against New Zealand when he punched a delivery away after defending it down into the crease.

    تشكيل وادي دجلة أمام بيراميدز في الدوري.. ثلاثي هجومي

    أعلن محمد الشيخ، المدير الفني لفريق وادي دجلة، عن تشكيل لاعبيه لمباراة اليوم أمام بيراميدز، المقرر لها بعد قليل ضمن منافسات بطولة الدوري المصري الممتاز.

    ويلتقي بيراميدز مع وادي دجلة، على أرضية استاد السلام، في إطار مواجهات الجولة الأولى لبطولة الدوري المصري.

    نجح فريق وادي دجلة، في حجز مقعده في بطولة الدوري المصري للموسم المقبل 2025-2026، كأول الأندية الصاعدة باحتلاله المركز الأول.

    طالع أيضاً.. تشكيل بيراميدز أمام وادي دجلة في الدوري المصري

    ويدخل بيراميدز مباراة اليوم طامحاً في تحقيق نتيجة جيدة وذلك رغبة منه في المنافسة على اللقب، بعد أن اقترب من التتويج في الموسم الماضي، واحتل المركز الثاني بفارق ضئيل خلف الأهلي. تشكيل وادي دجلة أمام بيراميدز اليوم في الدوري المصري

    حراسة المرمى: عمرو حسام

    خط الدفاع: شادي ماهر – عمر عدلي – كمال أبو الفتوح – أحمد دحروج

    خط الوسط: إبراهيم بهنسي – محمود طلعت – محمد عبد العاطي 

    خط الهجوم: محمود دياسطي – وينفول كوبينا – أحمد فاروق

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