Kudus upgrade: West Ham told to pay £40m for star who is "majestic viewing"

West Ham United have now made three senior signings this summer, but many more are required.

On Saturday, the Hammers announced the signing of veteran England international striker Callum Wilson, arriving on a free transfer after departing Newcastle.

He joins full-backs El Hadji Malick Diouf and Kyle Walker-Peters as the Hammers’ new recruits so far this summer.

However, given that Mohammed Kudus has been sold and Łukasz Fabiański, Kurt Zouma, Vladimír Coufal, Aaron Cresswell, Danny Ings, and Michail Antonio have all been released, Graham Potter will need many more signings if he is to avoid a repeat of last year’s miserable campaign.

So, are the Irons about to spend big to bring in an attacking midfielder who makes for “majestic viewing”?

West Ham targeting reinforcements

Fair to say, West Ham supporters were not very pleased with the sale of Kudus, joining fierce rivals Tottenham Hotspur for a reported fee of £55m.

Mohammed Kudus celebrates for West Ham

Not many have made this controversial move across London in recent decades, as the table documents.

Players moving from West Ham to Tottenham (21st century)

Players

Year

Mohammed Kudus

2025

Scott Parker

2011

Jimmy Walker

2009

Jermain Defoe

2004

Michael Carrick

2004

Frédéric Kanouté

2003

Information courtesy of FBref.com

As the Irons search for a Kudus replacement, according to the printed edition of The Sun (03/08/2025), as relayed by West Ham Zone, West Ham United have been told by Shakhtar Donetsk to pay £40m if they want to sign target Georgiy Sudakov.

Sébastien Vidal of Weekend Sports reported a few weeks ago that West Ham “have opened initial talks”, stating the club wanted to finalise the move as soon as possible, but this has not come to fruition so far.

Nevertheless, he could still become the third Ukrainian to call East London home, after Serhii Rebrov and Andriy Yarmolenko.

What Heorhiy Sudakov would bring to West Ham

Sudakov, who is 22 years old, has made 142 senior appearances for Shakhtar Donetsk since his senior debut five years ago, accumulating 35 goals and 24 assists.

This includes scoring Champions League goals against Barcelona, BSC Young Boys and Stade Brestois while, already this season, he has featured in all four of the Miners’ Europa League qualifiers, dumping out Ilves and Beşiktaş, now set to face Panathinaikos in the third qualifying round, with the first leg taking place in Athens on Thursday.

Andy Jones of the Athletic describes him as a ‘technically gifted…versatile midfielder’, adding that he is one of the ‘most exciting prospects’ and ‘brightest young talents’ that Eastern Europe has to offer.

Meantime, Shakhtar Donetsk sporting director Serhiy Palkin stated in April that his star man “will definitely move to a top European club this summer”, with António Mango labelling him “well-rounded” and “creative”, making him “majestic viewing”.

Georgiy Sudakov for Shakhtar Donetsk.

But the question still remains; how does he compare to the outgoing Kudus?

Let’s find out.

Georgiy Sudakov vs Mohammed Kudus 2024/25 comparison

Statistics

Sudakov

Kudus

Appearances

37

35

Minutes

3,081

2,721

Goals

15

5

Assists

6

4

Shots on target %

31.8%

27.6%

Take-on success %

58.8%

44.2%

Statistics courtesy of Transfermarkt and FBref.com

First and foremost, worth stating up front that Sudakov was playing at a lower level last season, with Global Football Rankings believing that the Ukrainian Premier League to be the 51st strongest league in the world, albeit he did also impress at Champions League level.

Nevertheless, that caveat aside, Sudakov did score more goals and provide more assists than Kudus last season, posting more impressive underlying statistics too.

Heorhiy Sudakov for Shakhtar

The Ghanian, for all his talent, was not very productive throughout the 2024/25 campaign, albeit he may point to West Ham’s general lack of attacking quality and cutting edge, which did not make his life easy.

Even so, should Sudakov swap Ukraine for the London Stadium, he could turn out to be even better than Kudus.

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Better than Elanga: Newcastle ready to accelerate move for £40m "menace"

Newcastle United missed out on one of their key targets this summer, Bryan Mbeumo. The Brentford attacker reportedly chose to join Manchester United over the Magpies, as well as Arsenal and Tottenham Hotspur, although that is a deal that is yet to go through.

So, with the Cameroon star off the table, they turned their attention to another Premier League forward, Anthony Elanga. The Nottingham Forest star had his move to St. James’ Park all but confirmed by Fabrizio Romano with his famous “here we go” tagline. It is a deal that will cost the Magpies £55m.

Nottingham Forest's Anthony Elanga

Even though one winger is essentially through the door, Newcastle are not stopping there. They are targeting another wide player who could be an even better signing than Elanga.

Newcastle’s next winger target

There are certainly not many options for Eddie Howe out wide. Jacob Murphy and Anthony Gordon did an impressive job last season, but it is no surprise that they are signing Elanga to help reduce the workload.

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Indeed, to supplement that further, the Magpies could turn to Manchester City and England international winger Jack Grealish. Football Insider says that the North East giants ‘are planning to accelerate their interest’ in the 29-year-old this summer.

However, they will face competition for the former Aston Villa star. Everton, who move into the Hill Dickinson Stadium this season, as well as newly crowned Serie A champions Napoli and clubs in Saudi Arabia, are also interested.

Manchester City's JackGrealishduring the warm up before the match

It was reported by Caught Offside at the start of the week that City will ask for £40m to secure Grealish’s services.

Why Grealish would be a good signing

It has obviously not been the season that Grealish may have hoped for in 2024/25. He barely got a look in at the Etihad Stadium and was not included in their squad for the Club World Cup, a competition in which they were eliminated by Al-Hilal.

The Birmingham-born winger played just 32 times for the East Mancunian side across all competitions. That included just 20 Premier League games, and 715 minutes, in which he scored and assisted just two goals.

Yet, let’s not forget the quality that the former Villa star possesses. He played 96 Premier League games for his boyhood club, scoring 15 goals and grabbing 19 assists. That included 18 goal involvements in 26 games during his final top-flight season at the club in 2020/21.

Those are impressive numbers, with Elanga putting up similar numbers in the most recent Premier League campaign, to the ones Grealish notched up five seasons ago.

For Forest last season, he managed six goals and 11 assists in 38 top-flight games.

Nottingham Forest's Anthony Elanga

He also scored one of the best solo efforts in the Premier League in recent memory, against his former club, Man United. The Sweden star picked up a loose ball in his own half and carried it all the way into the United penalty area, before slotting home past Andre Onana.

Indeed, ball carrying at such an electric pace is a key part of Elanga’s game. Likewise, Grealish is a specialist carrier, although in a slower and more methodical way. The numbers from 2020/21 via FBref suggest his all-around game was better than Elanga’s now.

For example, Grealish averaged 7.08 progressive carries and 7.78 progressive passes for Villa in that campaign. In comparison, the Forest number 21 averaged 3.67 progressive carries and 2.27 progressive passes last term.

Grealish and Elanga key stats compared

Stat (per 90)

Grealish (2020/21)

Elanga (2024/25)

Goals and assists

0.66

0.61

Key passes

3.33

1.8

Progressive passes

7.78

2.27

Progressive carries

7.08

3.67

Take-ons completed

2.67

0.9

Ball recoveries

5.14

3.2

Stats from FBref

If the Magpies can help Grealish find his best form, like what he showed in the 2020/21 season, they may have made an even better signing than Elanga.

At his best, he can be a “menace”, according to Statman Dave, and Howe will be hoping to unleash that side of his game.

Former Aston Villa captain Jack Grealish.

For a Premier League proven, England international, £40m seems like a bargain of a move for the Magpies this summer.

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Trescothick undecided on candidacy for England white-ball head coach

Former England opener will take charge for T20I and ODI series against Australia next month

Matt Roller22-Aug-2024

Marcus Trescothick could be a contender to succeed Matthew Mott•Gareth Copley/Getty Images

Marcus Trescothick will act as England’s interim head coach in their T20I and ODI series against Australia next month, but has not yet decided whether he wants to be considered as a long-term option for the white-ball role.Trescothick, one of England’s assistant coaches, is working with the Test team during their series against Sri Lanka and will leave the team during the third Test at The Oval. He will then link up with the white-ball squads – which are due to be announced next week – at the Utilita Bowl in Southampton ahead of the first T20I on September 11.”It’s not something I’d ever thought about before, until I got this opportunity now,” Trescothick said. “I’m not necessarily thinking any further ahead than the end of the Australia series. I’ve been very much focused on the job we’re doing here [with the Test team].Related

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“You plan your winter: we’re off to Pakistan, then New Zealand. I’m so ingrained in that at the moment, I’ve not really sat down and said, ‘right, this is where I’ll try to go, this is what I’ll try to do’. I’m looking forward to the opportunity, for sure. I’m really excited about doing the job. We’ll work it out a little bit more from there.”Trescothick has never previously worked as a head coach but has expressed an interest in graduating to that role. He spent 18 months as an assistant coach at Somerset after his retirement as a player in late 2019, and has been involved in England’s staff since early 2021.He will be involved in selection and has a close relationship with Jos Buttler – who has retained the white-ball captaincy – from their time at Somerset together. Buttler returned to full training this week after a calf injury ruled him out of the Hundred, and could feature for Lancashire in their T20 Blast quarter-final against Sussex on September 4.England’s T20I series against Australia starts 24 hours after the scheduled close of play on the fifth day of their third and final Test against Sri Lanka, necessitating separate squads – though Jordan Cox may be included in the T20I squad if he is not required at The Oval. “They have a busy schedule,” Trescothick said. “The two series very closely overlap.”The ECB has yet to formally advertise the white-ball role vacated by Matthew Mott’s sacking at the start of this month, but Trescothick could become a strong contender if England perform well against Australia. Kumar Sangakkara is considered the early favourite but has not confirmed – or denied – whether he will apply.Andrew Flintoff, whose Northern Superchargers team missed out on the Hundred’s knockout stages on net run rate in his first role as head coach, could also be a contender. But he will not reprise his recent role in England’s coaching staff against Australia, with the reporting on Thursday that he has not “gelled” with Buttler.

He rejected Forest: 49ers now racing to sign "versatile" int'l for Leeds

Looking to make a statement by doing what Nottingham Forest failed to do, Leeds United have reportedly joined the race to sign a USA international.

Leeds' transfer plan after Bijol

After welcoming Jaka Bijol from Udinese, it looks as though Leeds’ summer business is far from over. Their focus following the defender is reportedly transfixed on signing fresh midfield reinforcements and one of the biggest names mentioned on that front has been Douglas Luiz. The Juventus midfielder is set to leave Turin this summer and could be on his way back to the Premier League courtesy of those at Elland Road.

He’s not the 49ers’ only option, however. Reports have also mentioned the likes of Habib Diarra – going as far as to suggest that the Whites have already submitted an offer to sign the Strasbourg captain this summer. The interest should come as no surprise as Leeds step into the Premier League either, given the partnership that he would form with Ao Tanaka.

League stats 24/25 (via FBref)

Habib Diarra

Ao Tanaka

Minutes

2,352

3,584

Progressive Carries

61

38

Tackles Won

13

58

Ball Recoveries

90

217

When compared it is, as if often the case, Tanaka who stands out but Diarra has plenty to offer in his own right and his ability to progress play whilst carrying possession would hide one of the few weaknesses that the Leeds star has.

Senegal's Habib Diarra in action against England's Eberechi Eze.

Even if they secure a deal to sign Diarra, however, Leeds still may not be done with their summer business. The 49ers are seemingly looking to make a statement this summer and create a squad capable of first avoiding Premier League relegation, then so much more.

With that target in mind, the American owners have now reportedly joined the race to sign a UCL-level star ahead of Leeds’ top-flight rivals.

Leeds join Timothy Weah race

According to The Guardian’s Ed Aarons, the 49ers and Leeds have now joined the race to sign Timothy Weah from Juventus this summer after he rejected the chance to join rivals Nottingham Forest.

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The American international was left out of Juventus’ squad to face Manchester City in the Club World Cup on Thursday alongside Samuel Mbangula after the Italian giants reached an agreement with Forest, before Weah burst their bubble in ruthless fashion. Now, Leeds, Everton and Bournemouth have set their sights on signing the winger.

Dubbed “one of the most versatile players in world football” by Sky Sports’ Dougie Critchley, Weah was used as a forward and on both flanks for Juventus last season. Despite that, he’s now on the move – potentially leaving Leeds to take full advantage.

In one swoop, Leeds could deal Forest a frustrating blow and land someone who’d quickly become a key member of Daniel Farke’s squad at Elland Road.

Approach made: Leeds and 49ers move to sign "fantastic" PL defender for £0

Leeds United have now made an approach to sign a “fantastic” Premier League defender, who is set to be available on a free transfer, according to reliable reporter Ben Jacobs.

Leeds eyeing Premier League players after promotion

It was a thrilling end to the 2024-25 campaign for Leeds, securing the Championship title with 100 points, but they are now faced with the even more difficult task of remaining in the Premier League, so it could be wise to bring in new signings who are proven in the top flight.

Micah Richards has suggested Manchester City’s James McAtee could be a fantastic signing for the Whites in the attacking midfield area, while there has also been talk of a double swoop for Newcastle United’s Sean Longstaff and Callum Wilson.

Having played a role in transforming the Magpies from a relegation-threatened side into Champions League contenders and EFL Cup winners, the Newcastle duo could be exciting signings for Daniel Farke’s side, who also have their sights on another proven Premier League player.

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According to Jacobs, in an interview with GiveMeSport, Leeds are interested in signing a West Ham United defender this summer, saying an approach has been made. “Vladimir Coufal may be a market opportunity as well. I’m told that Leeds and Everton are the two clubs that have enquired for him. So, there is substance to both of those links for sure and like I said a moment ago, I’m fully expecting Leeds to explore the goalkeeper market.”

The Hammers have confirmed that Coufal is set to leave the club upon the expiration of his contract this summer, which means the Championship title-winners will have the opportunity to snap him up on a free transfer.

"Fantastic" Coufal is proven in the Premier League

Once lauded as “fantastic” by former teammate Ben Johnson, the Czech defender has a plethora of experience in the Premier League, having made 146 appearances in the competition during his time at the London Stadium.

Vladimir Coufal.

The 32-year-old has played more of a sporadic role this season, often being utilised as a substitute, but he has put in some impressive performances in the past, picking up seven assists in 36 league outings last term.

There may be concerns about the defender’s age, however, and some members of the media have suggested the full-back is now past his best, which is underlined by the fact West Ham are willing to let him leave for free.

That said, Leeds will require players with Premier League experience if they are to avoid an instant return to the Championship, and Coufal has that in droves, so a move would make perfect sense.

Aston Villa keen on signing "fantastic" £300k-a-week ace who Emery loves

Journalist Fabrizio Romano has delivered an update on Aston Villa’s summer transfer plans as the reportedly look to pen a “fantastic” player to a long-term deal.

Aston Villa pushing for summer signings regardless of league finish

It remains to be seen if Unai Emery’s side will clinch a top-five finish in the Premier League this season, getting back into the Champions League in the process, but a busy summer transfer window is expected either way. Rosenborg midfielder Sverre Nypan is a rumoured target for Villa, with the highly-rated 18-year-old being watched by club scouts and their recruitment team even holding talks with him.

Another exciting young player, Lyon winger Malick Fofana, has also been backed to move to Villa Park ahead of the 2025/26 season, as Emery looks to bring in more attacking depth. The 20-year-old has enjoyed an excellent season, scoring 11 goals in Ligue 1 and the Europa League combined.

Their moves in the market will of course still be influenced somewhat by their European status, with Ollie Watkins’ winner against Bournremouth this weekend moving the Villans level on points with Chelsea, who were defeated away at Newcastle.

Aston Villa's Ollie Watkins celebrates scoring their first goal with Jacob Ramsey andMorganRogers

A new striker arguably wouldn’t go amiss for Villa in the summer, with Watkins turning 30 later this year, and Paris Saint-Germain marksman Goncalo Ramos has emerged as a rumoured option. He has found minutes hard to come by for the Champions League finalists, with competition for places incredibly strong, but would surely only join another club in Europe’s elite competition.

Aston Villa keen to sign Rashford to long-term deal

According to Romano for Give Me Sport, Aston Villa like the idea of signing Marcus Rahsford permanently at the end of the season. They are reportedly “very happy” with the Manchester United attacker, adding that Emery considers him an “excellent player and the feeling between coach and player is understood to be very good”.

There is a potential issue surrounding Financial Fair Play, however, which will “now dictate the next steps” of a potential deal, with the England international’s salary “another important point not to be underestimated” in the update.

Rashford’s loan move to Villa felt like a gamble at the time, following a run of poor form for United, but he has been a big success overall, registering 10 goal contributions in 17 appearances, even if four goals isn’t exactly an earth-shattering return.

The Englishman looks to have a spark back in his game, with Emery praising the impact he has made last month, saying of him: “He is feeling better and he played a fantastic match. We are very happy. If he is happy, we are happy.”

The fact that Emery likes the £300,000-a-week Rashford so much suggests that he should be trusted in wanting to sign him on a permanent deal, even though there is an element of risk there, especially if they cannot negotiate those wages down.

There is always the possibility that the 27-year-old has simply upped his game for a short period, in order to earn a move elsewhere, but he will surely be desperate to prove himself in the long-term at another club, considering his time at United looks over.

Worse than Son: Spurs' 6/10 "bystander" is now fading away like Maddison

Tottenham Hotspur’s winless run at Stamford Bridge stretched to nine matches and Ange Postecoglou watched bitterly on as his side’s Premier League campaign sank further into the dredges.

It has been a frustrating season, a calamitous season, but hope remains. While Spurs are stuck in 14th, ten points behind tenth-place Bournemouth, who have lost four of their past five fixtures and yet are unassailably ahead, hope remains.

Tottenham face German side Eintracht Frankfurt over two legs in the Europa League quarter-finals, the first of which arrives this Thursday, and while the manager will hold on to confidence that his team can get the job done, this was a sour display, lacking the attacking fizz and vigour that ‘Angeball’ once blessed N17 crowds and television screens.

Dominic Solanke and Ange Postecoglou

One player’s decline has been emblematic of his squad’s overall torpor. Heung-min Son has been a stalwart for Tottenham over the years, but he appears to be reaching the end of the road.

Heung-min Son's Spurs struggles

Could anything typify it more than that flash of promise in the closing stage? Brennan Johnson, fresh and off the bench, wooshed a lovely pass across the box, but the skipper could only reach it tamely to force a stretching save from Robert Sanchez.

Were this a younger iteration, he would have covered that extra yard, connected with more emphasis, saw the net bulge.

But Son, 33 this summer, lacks his one-time athleticism and was largely marshalled by Chelsea’s defence, failing to create a single key chance despite losing the ball ten times while also only winning one duel, as per Sofascore.

Heung-min Son for Tottenham

However, he needed his fellow players – the forwards in particular – to pull their weight too, and, frankly, Spurs failed to muster enough in west London, with the man in the middle anonymous through the majority of proceedings.

Son's not the only one fading away

Dominic Solanke has endured a frustrating season in the capital, transferring to Tottenham from Bournemouth in a deal worth £65m last summer.

Tottenham's Dominic Solanke

After a bright start, he’s flaked away, with a knee injury picked up in the new year stifling the 27-year-old’s progress and reducing him to several disappointing recent performances.

However, with 11 goals and eight assists from just 25 starts in all competitions, there’s still hope that he can make the requisite adjustments to play a big part over the coming weeks.

That said, he was a “bystander” at Stamford Bridge, as was noted by Alan Smith on co-commentary.

Minutes played

88′

Goals

0

Assists

0

Touches

21

Shots (on target)

0 (0)

Accurate passes

6/10 (60%)

Key passes

0

Possession lost

11x

Dribbles

1/1

Duels (won)

8 (5)

Completing just six passes, failing to even attempt a shot on Sanchez’s goal, Solanke will be most frustrated, especially since he’s beginning to look like Postecoglou’s next version of James Maddison, whose nightmarish Lilywhites career has involved various setbacks after an electric start last season.

Maddison won the Premier League Player of the Month in August 2023 but has since endured a number of injuries and consequent sappings of form, leaving him scrambling for that one-time reputation as one of European football’s standout playmakers.

Both Englishmen have enough about them to make convincing returns to their apex, but if they aren’t on their A-game against Frankfurt this week, fan tensions might just boil over.

Solanke, at least, worked tirelessly, leaving football.london to award him with a 6/10 match rating, but he was toothless in the final third and needs to emit more of a talismanic aura in the coming weeks.

Son huffed and puffed to little avail too, but at least the aging captain found space to strike on goal, sought to create with one wicked low cross.

This drop, the latest drop, in form has not come at a great time for a Spurs side whose season hinges on triumph in the Europa League.

But hope remains. Son, Solanke, Maddison. All fading. Now, the big one is coming up, and they need to return to colour.

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The resolution of the India-Pakistan Champions Trophy standoff was a win? Not by a long shot

We’ve heard it said that the ICC has been reduced to an event management firm, but is it even that now?

Osman Samiuddin20-Dec-2024First of all, a round of applause for cricket for finally ending what seemed at first to be the saga with no end but which quickly became the saga that if nobody cared much about it, might just go away. Second of all, everyone involved can claim a win. The PCB has its equitable and just agreement, the sense that it is being treated as an equal with the biggest board in the game. The BCCI is not going to play in Pakistan, which is what it has wanted from the off. The ICC has a tournament, and all members their ensuing revenues from it. We all get our tournament and perhaps, somewhere down the line, a triangular or quadrangular series involving both India and Pakistan.Third – and realest – of all, though, better make that a really slow handclap for cricket. If anyone thinks the outcome of this entire sorry drama is a win – least of all for cricket – then it is not the game’s interests they have at heart, no matter how much they tell us otherwise.Consider the ICC. Their perfunctory statement on the resolution is, by one count, six paragraphs long. By another, less generous, count, it is actually six sentences long, two of which spell out the decision and two being space fillers about a schedule that will come soon and about how many teams will take part. That’s it. Six sentences, with no explanation or context as to why there is a statement in the first place. Why do we need a hybrid model, ICC, when the tournament was awarded three years ago to Pakistan as the sole hosts? And how come this arrangement will last until at least 2027?Related

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Remarkably, it is the only statement the ICC has made since November 9, when the BCCI first informed the ICC that India were not going to travel to Pakistan. Not a single statement about the uncertainty around one of their premier events, a tournament essentially held hostage by two of their biggest members who together form their events’ biggest rivalry. There’s Stockholm Syndrome and then there’s this.It used to be said, a little disparagingly in the years after Malcolm Speed was forced out as CEO, that the ICC had become a mere event management company and was no longer a global governing body. What, then, might it be left as these days, given its lack of management of the 2023 World Cup and then the fallout from the T20 World Cup this year? An event management company that is no longer managing events at all, or at least not managing them very well?If you conclude that this is down to a complete absence of leadership, or the total subjugation of the ICC to the game’s strongest constituents, then you would not be entirely wrong. But I think a more illuminating insight can be drawn from Greg Barclay’s recent interview with the , in which the outgoing chair deploys a curiously detached gaze on the game, as if he were a fond – but mere – observer, with no real skin in it. The game’s a mess, isn’t it? Lost a bit of perspective, hasn’t it? Sure hope Jay Shah uses India to grow the game and not put it under the yoke of India. Gee, somebody should really do something about all this. Er, who’s going to tell him, guys?And so, in this reflection, the ICC has stood aside and shrugged, watching the game not grow but grow more unruly, pulled here, pushed there, stretched out so that it loses all shape and meaning. Yep, it’s a mess, fellas. Yep, there’s challenges. If only somebody would do something about it.

It used to be said the ICC had become a mere event management company. What, then, might it be left as these days, given its lack of management of the 2023 World Cup and the fallout from the T20 World Cup this year? An event management company that is no longer managing events at all, or at least not managing them very well?

If there’s a smidgen of sympathy here, it’s because the ICC has been wedged in between in this anti-romance between the BCCI and PCB. Nothing brings out the worst in either board than having to deal with the other. And this time the charade that the wrangling is anything other than a proxy for their governments to point-score has been especially risible.Mohsin Naqvi has repeatedly argued that politics and sport should not be mixed. At the best of times this is a reductive line. For Naqvi, concurrently, the incumbent PCB chair and Pakistan’s interior minister (and an especially influential one) it’s a supremely disingenuous line to push. To the extent that it feels like it’s pure trolling.In India, meanwhile, cricket is to politics as smoke is to mirrors, which, given the BCCI secretary had a direct line to the sitting home minister, was something. The BCCI said it was the government not allowing the team to travel. The government didn’t say anything. Until one day, in response to a question, the ministry of external affairs referred to a BCCI statement on the decision. The BCCI, said the spokesperson, had cited security concerns in Pakistan and so was unlikely to send the team there.Umm, what now?The BCCI had made no statement at all, then or now; had, in fact, made clear the decision was in their hands: Rajiv Shukla, the forever BCCI grandee, once said to the media the decision was not the board’s. That was half the problem, that the PCB wanted to know from the BCCI (and not the ICC) why it wasn’t going to send its team, and what the Indian government had said. And security concerns? A security plan had been presented and no objections raised at an ICC meeting in October. None of the eight Full Members who have travelled to Pakistan since 2019 have raised any issues, nor the teams who are actually in the Champions Trophy.And in the middle of this impasse, Jay Shah ascended (or should that be was demoted?) to the ICC chair. One day he was fighting for the BCCI’s interests. The next, a switch was flicked and he was meant to be fighting for the ICC’s interests. It’s quite the to-do list to have left on the last day of your old job to pick up on the first day of your new job. It was entirely fitting. This is, after all, a members’ body in which members routinely do things that undermine the members’ body, and then, as members of said members’ body, bemoan those undermining actions.Still, at least everyone won. Only, if this is what cricket winning feels like, may we never find out how cricket losing feels.

How do you rank the best captain in an individual Test?

The Captaincy Performance Index takes into account the team’s performances and the captain’s individual contribution to the team

Anantha Narayanan11-Mar-2023A couple of weeks ago, an article of mine, on Test captains, was published in the . While that feature covered this fascinating subject in an anecdotal manner, this article will look at the subject from an analytical point of view, using the measure I created to evaluate the performance of Test captains at individual Test level, called Captain Performance Index (CPI).A Test captain’s role in cricket, unlike those of captains in, say, football, Davis Cup tennis, and basketball and baseball, comes with real responsibility. A cricket captain – setting aside the matter of how much advice he receives from the coach – bears responsibility in a number of areas. He selects the team, more or less; determines the sequence of bowlers used; decides the batting order; sets fields; decides whether the team plays safe or aggressively; and a lot more.Inarguably, the Test captain has the most responsible and difficult task among captains in all sports.So how does one measure a captain’s performance? Results, of course, are important here, starting with the captain’s own batting, bowling and fielding performances. Factors such as the venue of the match, the relative strengths of the two teams, how much experience the captain’s team has, and who won the toss, come into play as well.We can look at the numbers relating to these factors in different ways to arrive at an assessment of how the captain performed. But there is one more factor to understand. If a team wins by a margin of, say, under ten runs, we could say that the captain marshalled his troops at key moments. How do we measure a captain’s impact in one- or two-wickets wins? It is the batters at the crease who have to perform. The captain, in the pavilion, can do nothing but chew on his fingernails. But he has to get some credit for such close wins for decisions taken earlier.There are three major bones of contention.The first is that most of these close wins could be attributed to the team rather than the captain, barring personal performances. That’s true, but in my view the captain is like the CEO of a company. He takes important decisions on behalf of the team, he is one with his team, so it does not matter that some of these measures are identified strongly with the team. If the captain wins, the team wins and if the team loses, the captain loses. I am going to treat the captain and the team as roughly synonymous. (And my methodology ensures that “non-playing” captains do not have a great chance of getting high CPI values.)The second is that it is impossible to assign values to captaincy decisions that might have had a profound impact on the course of the match. Say, the captain places two short covers and gets a batter caught driving, or places two leg slips to a sharply turning offspinner and gets his man, or deliberately leaves the midwicket area open and gets the batter top-edging – we have to accept that these are part of the captain’s contribution but cannot really be measured.Finally, how do we really measure the overall game-changing strategic contributions, such as those England captain Ben Stokes has made recently? (The coach, Brendon McCullum, is like the policy-making chairman of the company – let us keep him out of our analysis.) It is impossible to recognise these strategies in an objective manner and we have to be satisfied that these methods have been rewarded by a sequence of ten wins and two losses in 12 matches.What is Captain Performance Index?CPI is calculated through a combination of what the captain achieved for the team, in terms of the result and the margin of result, and how he performed on the field in his individual capacity. These numbers are indexed by four factors: how the teams match up on their strength matrix, their experience quotient, the location of the match, and the result of the toss. The calculations are simple and are explained below. A CPI value of 90.0 is about the highest that can be achieved.

1. Result points

1a. Result: A win is allotted the maximum of 40 points, a tie gets 25 points, and a draw receives 20. A loss is allotted four points because after all, the losing captain too has played, and often fought hard. And he could well have lost a close match, and so deserves these nominal points.Recently, some readers have questioned some of these numbers. Why 40? Why not 50? Why toss?Most of these are relative numbers. These are fixed so that the CPI maxes out at, say, a nice round number like 100. And regarding the weights, these are the result of my analysis for over two decades and the inputs provided through thousands of reader responses. I am open to considering well-thought-out alternatives; say, a fifth multiplying factor, if you have one. Or another base-point factor.1b. Margin: The margin of victory, as perceived in the Team Performance Points measure, is allotted a maximum of ten points. The biggest win is England’s 675-run win over Australia in Brisbane in 1928-29, which is allotted 9.42 points. The teams that did not win receive their fair allocation. Thus, a captain who loses by a narrow margin receives significant recognition.

2. Performance points

These are for a captain’s own performance on the field, based on the percentage of team contribution he made. Care is taken that the performances are substantial and a lightweight one, such as taking two out of three wickets to fall in an innings (where the target is reached or there is a declaration or the match ends), is not rewarded out of proportion. The captain’s individual performances carry around 15-25% weight.2a. Batting: Ten points.2b. Bowling/fielding: Ten points. (Fielding points account for wicketkeeper-captains).

3. Index values

Index values are used to multiply the Base Points. The range of the parameter is an indicator of the weight it has and its importance.3a. Relative Team Strengths: 0.667 (very strong team) to 1.333 (very weak team). Maximum 2.97, and minimum 0.33. These are extrapolated to between 1.33 and 0.667.3b. Location of Test: 0.875 (Home), 1.00 (Neutral), 1.125 (Away).3c. Team Experience: 0.925 to 1.075. This is based on the sum of Tests played by the members of the teams – 600 to 0. Actual value of maximum Tests is 850 (India-2008); the 171 historical values (6%) above 600 are normalised to 600. I have deliberately used the absolute values of the teams rather than the relative values (like the team strength) since I strongly feel that a shortage of experience hits a team badly irrespective of who they play against. The captain of an inexperienced team has to be given credit for his team’s lack of caps.3d. Result of Toss: Winning – 0.975, Losing – 1.025.The product of all four multiplicative indices (MF1) is used to adjust the Result-related values. The product of the first two multiplicative indices (Location and Team Strength – MF2) is used to adjust the Performance values since the Performance does not depend on Team Experience or Toss.Captain Performance Index:
CPI = Result points * MF1 + Performance points * MF2.Anantha NarayananOverall, it can be seen that this is a rather simple, easy-to-understand measure.Let us now move to the tables.

The best performance by a captain was, by a mile, Rashid Khan’s coup d’etat against a much stronger Bangladesh, away from home, with an experience quotient of a mere 13 Tests from the 11 Afghanistan players. Okay, I concede that Rashid won the toss and he performed like a champion himself: 51 (off 61 balls), 5 for 55, 24 (22 balls), and 6 for 49. Truly a great all-round performance. The net effect – a huge CPI value of 91-plus, ahead of the next best by more than ten points. Then comes Imran Khan, who won by an innings against England at Headingley in 1987 after losing the toss and fielding quite a weak team. He took 3 for 37 and 7 for 40 and scored 26.South Africa, led by Trevor Goddard, stunned the strong Australians in Adelaide in 1963-64 by a comfortable margin, which fetched Goddard over 80 points. Archie MacLaren, leading a team containing four debutants and a low experience index, beat a much-fancied Australia side in Sydney in 1901-02. He got close to 80 points. Sunil Gavaskar led the way with a hundred in a tough away win in Auckland in 1975-76 and secured over 78 points. Most of us are familiar with the ninth-placed Test – Mominul Haque secured one of the greatest away wins against a much stronger New Zealand side last year in Mount Maunganui. He scored 101 runs and took two wickets.Indian readers will be happy to see that Ajinkya Rahane’s MCG win in 2020-21 is featured in 14th place. His outstanding match-winning 112 helped the team immensely. And the Brisbane win to seal the series also finds a place in the top 30. Rahane is the only captain to have two entries in the top 30.

I have five classifications in this table on Special CPIs. Since each has four entries, I will only briefly cover one in each classification. The lowest CPI for a win is that of Marvan Atapattu, when a very strong Sri Lanka, with a very experienced team (575 caps), won the toss and won comfortably against Bangladesh in Colombo in 2005. The key factor here is that Atapattu contributed a sum total of 11 runs out of 457, which goes some way to explaining why he secured a low 27 CPI points.The most points for a drawn Test was when John Reid, captaining a considerably weaker and inexperienced New Zealand, secured a draw at The Oval in 1958. Reid scored 27 and 51 not out and took two wickets. He secured a very high 48 points.A draw at Lord’s in 1954 against a considerably weaker and inexperienced Pakistan fetched England captain Len Hutton fewer than 13 CPI points.On the other hand, a decidedly inexperienced Zimbabwe ran Sri Lanka close and lost narrowly in Colombo in 2017. Graeme Cremer got over 30 CPI points for this loss, in which he took nine wickets and 61 runs – more points than Atapattu got for his win, which shows how sturdy the whole CPI concept is.Finally, Mike Gatting, who did nothing in the match, gets a low 3.7 points for a innings loss against a much weaker Pakistan at Headingley in 1987 (the match for which winning captain Imran got 80.73 points).

Who was the best captain, based on average CPI per Test? It is no surprise that Don Bradman leads the table. He achieved a win per cent of 62.5 and an average CPI of over 36.4 CPI points per match. Richie Benaud follows with 33.8 and Ian Chappell is next with 33.5. In sixth place comes a surprise. Abdul Hafeez Kardar, though he won only six out the 23 Tests in which he captained Pakistan, has a relatively high average CPI of 31.9. There are a few reasons for this. The first is that the teams Kardar captained were mostly very weak and with almost no experience. And some of those six wins were memorable, like the one at The Oval in 1954.This would also explain why successful captains like Steve Waugh, Ricky Ponting and Clive Lloyd do not have high average CPI values. They captained strong and experienced teams and the results they produced were mostly expected. While a win is a win, it can be seen that the CPI values can be dramatically different from one win to another. The list of the top captains contains some unexpected names like Dimuth Karunaratne, Shaun Pollock, and John Goddard.

At the other end of the spectrum – low average-CPI values – three Zimbabwe captains prop up the table. Then comes the real surprise. As I said in the article, David Gower had a very poor overall career as a captain. His average CPI value is just over 20. Another relative surprise is India’s Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi. The win-percentage values tell a story. In general, the weaker teams have low values.

The table above is an extension of the average CPI values. I have presented the table by team so that the top captains by teams, based on CPI, can be viewed. The Australian top five have already been presented.Hutton was the best English captain. His average CPI was just above 31 but he had a sub-50 win percentage. Mike Brearley is second. His win percentage was higher, at 58. However, as everyone will be aware, his batting contributions were minimal. He scored only 1100 runs in those 31 matches – a meagre contribution indeed.For India, Virat Kohli is the best captain, by a wide margin. A win percentage of nearly 59 is very good indeed. His CPI average is an acceptable 30.6. Then come Rahul Dravid, Sourav Ganguly, and MS Dhoni – but with considerably lower average values. Dravid’s win percentage is quite low.

For West Indies, Lloyd and Viv Richards follow Goddard. It must be understood that Goddard had much weaker teams than the two more illustrious captains. Pollock leads the table for South Africa, followed by Hansie Cronje and Graeme Smith, who averaged 27.2 across no fewer than 109 Tests. Akram was the best Pakistan captain, followed by Kardar, Misbah-ul-Haq and Imran. All have averages exceeding 30. Despite Kane Williamson’s high win percentage, the fact that he had a strong and experienced team meant that Geoff Howarth leads the table for New Zealand. Karunaratne leads for Sri Lanka, way ahead of Angelo Mathews and Mahela Jayawardene.

Now for a set of matches in which the CPI values for the two captains vary by a mile. The highest difference occurred in a match we have already discussed. When Rashid secured over 90 points for Afghanistan’s win against Bangladesh, the local captain, Shakib Al Hasan, secured a mere 8.6 points, a huge 83-point difference. Everything that worked for Rashid worked against Shakib. At Headingley in 1987, Gatting secured 3.8 points, while Imran got 80.73 points.

In most Tests, one captain gets the benefit of potentially getting more points because it is an away game for his team, and one gets the toss benefit. Unless the teams are evenly matched on the team-strength factor, one team will benefit. It’s the same with the experience factor. And the captains perform at varying levels. In other words, the base factors could vary considerably, as also the multiplication factors. Given all these variations, it is a miracle if the two CPI values almost match. The way the values in the table above cancel each other out is fascinating. The match scorelines are very interesting.At Newlands in 1992-93, Kepler Wessels and Mohammad Azharuddin managed to secure the same number of CPI points in a well-contested match. India, set 215 to win, were 29 for 1. In Chennai in 1981-82, India had the edge over England, but the other factors helped England attain parity. At The Oval in 1909 a tight match ended almost perfectly balanced, with England at 104 for 3, chasing 313 against Australia. In Lahore against West Indies in 1980-81, Pakistan led by 72 runs but slipped in the second innings and had a lead of 228 with three wickets in hand. The captains did not do much. In Napier in 2009-10, New Zealand had the edge at the end of the match against a well-matched Pakistan. Both captains did well.

Finally, a table to identify the best ten-Test sequences any captain has had.Johnny Douglas had a ten-Test sequence in 1911-12 in which he accumulated over 450 CPI points. It was a win-dominant sequence with several away victories. Imran had a good unbeaten sequence in 1987; though he had only three wins, most of the draws were in away Tests. But what really helped him was his performances in these matches – 400 runs and 45 wickets. Dean Elgar captained South Africa to an excellent 440-plus point sequence in which he had wins over West Indies, India, New Zealand and Bangladesh. Bradman had a similar sequence between 1937 and 1946. However, it must be remembered that England were also quite comparable in those times.Readers might wonder what has happened to all those successful sequences of West Indies in the 1980s and Australia in the 2000s. The truth is that these were almost certainly the strongest teams of their era and they just bulldozed their opponents, home or away, The captains had hugely experienced teams under their command. Many of their wins were clocked at CPI values of around 30. The bottom line is that just about any top player could have captained these teams and reached levels close to what those captains achieved. For the record, Waugh’s best sequence was 349 points, Lloyd’s 356, and Ponting’s, 342.There’s another way of looking at the Australian streaks. I have looked at each of the 32 Tests and perused the key numbers at the beginning of the Test. The numbers clearly indicate that in every Test plus the two Tests that ended the streaks, Australia were favourites to win.

Conclusion

It can be seen that the CPI, although it has strong team-centric features, gives a good idea of how a captain has performed – both in leadership and player roles. Rightly, the result carries a higher weight. However, the captain’s performances on the field have sufficient weight to clearly identify performing and non-performing captains.Talking Cricket Group
Any reader who wishes to join the general-purpose cricket-ideas-exchange group of this name that I started last year can email me a request for inclusion, providing their name, place of residence, and what they do.

Smart Stats: Why Sam Curran's impact was higher than Moeen Ali's

According to Smart Stats Sam Curran’s efforts with the ball came at a time when the opposition had a higher chance to win.

ESPNcricinfo stats team19-Apr-20212:58

Stephen Fleming: Moeen Ali has been ‘instrumental’ in us getting big scores

One allrounder takes 3 for 7 and hits 26 off 20, while other takes 2 for 24 and tonks a 6-ball 13. Who would be your Player of the Match? The former? Well, that indeed was the official choice for the award in the game between Chennai Super Kings and Rajasthan Royals. That performance had come from Moeen Ali, and the latter, were Sam Curran’s stats in the match.However, ESPNcricinfo’s Smarts Stats rates that Curran’s impact on the match was higher than Ali’s. Smarts Stats not only takes into account the quality of the batters dismissed, but also the situation in which a bowler bowls, among other things, to arrive at an impact value for the bowling performance. The match situation is quantified and fed into the calculations through ESPNcricinfo’s Forecaster tool, according to which, Rajasthan Royals’ chances of winning the match were at their highest during the Powerplay. Curran sent down three overs during that period and took out Royals’ captain Sanju Samson, in addition to dismissing Manan Vohra. Curran’s two wickets were worth 3.04 Smart Wickets, including Samson’s wicket which was valued at 1.71.ESPNcricinfo LtdBut surely the wickets taken by Ali – of David Miller, Chris Morris and Riyan Parag – were bigger than those taken by Curran? That’s where the Smart Stats looks at the ‘context’. When Jos Buttler got out to Ravindra Jadeja in the 12th over, Royals were already facing an uphill task: they needed 102 runs off 54 deliveries. Historical data in major leagues and internationals between top teams pegs the win probability of the chasing team at 30%. Smart Stats further adjusts this win probability for the batting quality left and the bowling quality it is up against in the current match. It pegged Royals’ chances at only 19% at the start of the 12th over. By the time Ali took Miller’s wicket in the next over Royals’ chances of winning had dropped to single digits. Ali twin strike in his next over – that of Morris and Parag – came at a time when the match was lost, statistically at least, according to the Forecaster. That’s why Ali’s three wickets were worth only 1.85 Smart Wickets.Curran seemingly was less economical than Ali, but he bowled three over upfront, conceding only 12 runs from this first three overs. By the time he bowled his last over – an expensive one, off which he conceded 12 runs – Super Kings had already won the match. Overall, Curran’s impact with the ball earned him 66.7 impact points, while Ali’s earned 34.7 points. Ali managed to bridge some gap through his efforts with the bat – his 26 runs were worth 31.7 impact points, while Curran’s cameo was worth 21.5 – but Curran’s exploits with the ball meant that he was the Smart Stats player of the match.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

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