Forest ‘agree’ deal for Wayne Hennessey

Nottingham Forest have reportedly agreed on a deal to sign Burnley goalkeeper Wayne Hennessey, according to Football Insider. 

The lowdown: Doubling down

The Reds have already completed the capture of Dean Henderson on loan from Manchester United for the 2022/23 campaign, but they could now be looking to further bolster the goalkeeping department at the City Ground.

Amidst increasing doubts over play-off hero Brice Samba’s future and the departure of American stopper Ethan Hovarth on a season-long loan to Luton Town, Steve Cooper is seemingly desperate to strengthen the options available to him as Forest’s last line of defence.

A fresh report has now suggested that the Welsh manager has done just that with the signing of a compatriot…

The latest: Deal agreed

As per Football Insider, Forest have ‘agreed a deal’ to sign 35-year-old stopper Hennessey this summer.

It is claimed that a ‘Forest source’ has informed the outlet that the club has ‘secured a full agreement’ to bring the 103-cap Wales veteran to the City Ground.

The report added that the Welshman – who was lauded by commentator Ian Darke for his ‘exceptional’ recent heroics whilst on international duty, earning a standout 9.30 Sofascore rating in making nine saves against Ukraine – is now ‘set to join on a permanent deal’ in the coming days.

The verdict: Why not…

This is very much a transfer in the no-risk bracket for Forest, with Henderson almost certain to take over the number one role from Samba, Hennessey will provide a vastly experienced and, judging by his recent international exploits, high-quality backup option.

Valued at just £450,000 and into the final 12 months of a contract at Burnley (Transfermarkt), the fee required to land the 6 foot 6 goalkeeper is likely to be minimal, and therefore it should still leave plenty in the bank for Cooper to pursue other targets.

With the manager seemingly unsure about the capability of Jordan Smith as Henderson’s understudy, the signing former Crystal Palace stopper Hennessey, who has 183 Premier League appearances, appears a no-brainer for City Ground transfer chiefs.

Newcastle transfer news on Barbosa

Newcastle United are reportedly now eyeing up a potential move to sign Gabriel Barbosa.

The Lowdown: ‘Gabigol’

Nicknamed ‘Gabigol’ for his ability to find the back of the net, Barbosa has scored a total of 151 times for club and country combined over the course of his senior career so far.

The Brazil international is still only 25 years of age, so those numbers really are impressive and worthy of his nickname, although only two of his club goals have come in Europe – one for Inter and one for Benfica.

The Latest: Newcastle interest

Writing in his latest piece for 90min, transfer expert Graeme Bailey has revealed that the St. James’ Park outfit are now ‘keeping tabs’ on Barbosa’s situation at Flamengo.

They targeted a move for him in the January transfer window, but a deal never materialised, and so they could come back in for him this summer.

However, the North East club may face competition from West Ham United, Wolves and Aston Villa for his signature.

The Verdict: Ekitike alternative?

It has been widely reported that the Tyneside outfit are pursuing a move for Hugo Ekitike, but a deal is not guaranteed for the Reims striker.

Thus, Barbosa could be seen as a decent alternative, given his goal record and the fact he is a lot more experienced at 25 compared to the 19-year-old Frenchman.

Nonetheless, the Brazilian would surely be licking his lips at the prospect of being fed chances by his fellow countrymen Bruno Guimaraes and Joelinton, and so this is certainly one to keep an eye on as the window progresses.

Fabrizio Romano drops big Liverpool update

Liverpool have been hit with a huge blow as it was revealed last month that Sadio Mane wants to leave Anfield this summer, and now a new update has emerged from a reliable source on the ongoing situation.

What’s the latest?

Italian journalist and transfer insider Fabrizio Romano has revealed an update on the back and forth between Liverpool and Bayern Munich over their intentions to agree on a deal for Mane, with two bids from the Bundesliga giants already rejected by the Merseyside club.

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Romano took to his YouTube channel to reveal: “The position of the player has not changed.

“Bayern already had two bids refused by Liverpool for Sadio Mane, but from what I’m told today [Sunday], Bayern are preparing a new bid for Sadio Mane and the feeling around the deal is that the positions of Bayern and Liverpool in the negotiations are getting closer and closer.

“Bayern are really close to completing the signing of Sadio Mane.”

Supporters will be upset

There is no doubt that Liverpool supporters will be upset at the news that Mane’s time at Anfield is coming to an end when you consider the huge part he has played in the club’s recent success over his six years at the club.

Mane has scored 120 goals and delivered 48 assists since joining in 2016, with a goal contribution every 128 minutes which has led the side to win a Premier League title, Champions League, Carabao Cup and FA Cup during his time in the team.

The Senegalese winger’s success with Liverpool has seen his market value soar over the years, with Transfermarkt valuing the player at just £27m in August 2016 rising to £135m in December 2019 and is currently set at £72m, however the club are now reportedly willing to sell the player in the last 12 months of his contract for £42.5m.

That’s another cause for concern with the club clearly not being able to fetch a price that fairly matches his abilities.

Despite the player becoming a fan favourite and dubbed a “Liverpool legend” by Gabby Agbonlahor, the club has already made massive strides in finding a player who can replace Mane’s goal contributions in the team with the signing of Darwin Nunez reportedly set to be announced today.

With that being said, it will obviously be a big disappointment to see the Liverpool attacker leave this summer but the fact that FSG are identifying ways to replace him will be a massive relief to supporters ahead of next season.

AND in other news: Klopp can land his next Coutinho as Liverpool eye bid for “magical” £117k-p/w dynamo

Leeds: Donnohue drops Drameh update

Joe Donnohue has dropped an update on the future of Leeds United right-back Cody Drameh.

What’s the latest?

In a recent post on Twitter, the Yorkshire Evening Post journalist revealed that, despite the defender’s long-term future at Elland Road previously looking extremely uncertain, after the 20-year-old held talks with Jesse Marsch regarding his place in the Whites squad, the England U21 international is now fully committed to earning a place in the 48-year-old’s starting XI next season.

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In his tweet, Donnohue said: “Cody Drameh was Cardiff’s Player of the Season after going on loan in January, but is focused squarely on LUFC now. With [Luke] Ayling (2-4 months) & [Stuart] Dallas (6 months) on crutches, there’s no time like the present. He & Marsch have already spoken of his intention.”

Supporters will be buzzing

Considering just how exciting a talent Drameh quite clearly is, in addition to it previously looking as if the right-back’s time in LS11 was all but over, Donnohue’s update that the 20-year-old now intends to stay and fight for a place in Marsch’s first team is sure to be news that will have the Elland Road faithful buzzing.

Indeed, over his 22 Championship appearances in 2021/22, the £2.7m-rated full-back more than proved his undoubted ability, registering three assists and creating four big chances for his teammates, as well as making an average of 0.6 key passes and completing 1.1 dribbles per game.

The £4.4k-per-week defender also impressed in metrics more typical of his position, helping Cardiff keep six clean sheets, in addition to making an average of 1.0 interceptions, 3.8 tackles, 2.0 clearances and winning 6.9 duels – at a success rate of 57% – per fixture.

These returns saw the former Fulham starlet average a quite extraordinary SofaScore match rating of 6.92, ranking him as the Bluebird’s fourth-best performer in the second tier of English football.

As such, it is clear to see that the defender choosing to remain at Leeds in order to fight for a starting spot ahead of seeking a move away from the club is fantastic news for everyone involved with the Whites, as Drameh undoubtedly boasts the potential to overtake Ayling in Marsch’s right-back pecking order next season.

AND in other news: Orta now plotting Leeds bid for “unreal” £59.5m-rated talent, he’s Alphonso Davies 2.0

Wolves: Daniel Podence nearing return

Wolves could have winger Daniel Podence available for the final three Premier League matches of the season.

What’s the latest?

According to goalkeeping coach Tony Roberts, as quoted by Birmingham Live, “Daniel has been doing a bit of training so we will see what happens with him.”

That was stated before yesterday’s thrilling 2-2 draw away at Chelsea with manager Bruno Lage unable to take the press conference nor travel to the capital following a positive virus test.

The Portuguese was absent from the matchday squad at Stamford Bridge and hasn’t featured for Lage’s side since the 2-1 win against Aston Villa over a month ago whilst nursing a foot injury.

However, his return will be incredibly timely with Wolves targeting a third seventh-place finish in four seasons.

Lage will be buzzing

It could definitely be argued that it’s no coincidence that Wolves had lost three games in a row without scoring whilst without Podence before yesterday’s draw.

Moreover, the West Midlands outfit had gone 2-0 down at Stamford Bridge before Chelsea crumbled and conceded two goals late on.

The 26-year-old has scored six times and registered three assists in 29 appearances across all competitions this term with goals a rarity for the Old Gold this season.

Only Burnley, Watford and Norwich have scored fewer Premier League goals than the Golden Boys’ 35, with the latter two now relegated.

Moreover, Podence’s tally is an improvement on the three goals and two assists last year, although the winger did score all three in the league whilst his tally in the top-flight currently stands at two this term.

With Wolves sat in eighth, there’s still a chance that the Black Country club secures European football for next season with seventh place West Ham just two points ahead whilst sixth-place Manchester United have an eight-point gap but have played two extra games.

Although it’s not in his side’s hands, Lage will be keen to have as many of his key players available for the final three games as possible as they look to make a late climb up the table.

If Podence can return to fitness in time for the final matches, it will certainly boost his side’s chances of securing European football.

AND in other news: Forget Coady: “Ridiculous” Wolves dynamo who won 71% duels saved the day vs Chelsea

Pakistan have the runs, but do they have the quick scoring rate?

With two power-packed line-ups in West Indies and England first up at a high-scoring Trent Bridge, Pakistan’s top order might need to look at their scoring rates

Nagraj Gollapudi in Nottingham30-May-2019Pakistan batsmen have scored nine centuries this year in 15 ODIs. That is the most by any team. Yet, stunningly, all those hundreds have come in defeats. And that might well be down to the pace at which those runs have come. The numbers suggest so. What might hurt Pakistan further is that they don’t seem to have identified their slow scoring rate as an issue.Since the 2015 World Cup, in terms of the combined strike rate for the top three, Pakistan are seventh among the ten teams taking part in the 2019 event. Imam-ul-Haq features among the top ten for batsmen with the lowest strike rates (with at least 1000 runs since the 2015 World Cup); Mohammad Hafeez is in there too.Of those nine centuries, four were scored by the top-order trio of Imam (two), Fakhar Zaman and Babar Azam. The three of them were integral to Pakistan scoring 300-plus totals consistently in the recent ODI series in England, but they lost that series 4-0.One of the talking points in that series was around the Trent Bridge ODI, where England hunted down a target of 341 with three balls to spare. Babar scored 115 in that match, but at a strike rate of 102.67. In contrast, Jason Roy’s match-winning 114 took 23 balls fewer (89), and came at a robust strike rate of 128.08.In the previous ODI, in Bristol, Imam helped Pakistan to what seemed a formidable total of 358 for 9. He hit 151 at a brisk pace, off just 131 balls. But that seemed sluggish when England chased down the target with more than five overs to spare, with openers Jonny Bairstow and Roy blasting the Pakistan bowling to ransack 159 runs in the first 17.3 overs (105 balls).Sarfaraz Ahmed slams another shot over the leg side•Getty ImagesAs for Fakhar, in his first 18 ODIs, he had a strike rate of 101 and an average of 76. In his last 18 matches, the strike rate has dropped to 91 and the average to 32.In the last three years, Babar and Imam have scored a number of centuries, but the average balls taken by the pair are 107 and 108 respectively. The top two in that list, Bairstow and Roy, have taken 75 and 83 balls on an average for their three-figure scores respectively.In a World Cup where big hitting and big scores are expected to be the norm, this could be a problem, but do Pakistan even recognise it? Before leaving for England, Babar responded to a question on him chasing milestones by pointing to his No. 1 rank among T20I batsmen (he is also No. 7 in ODIs). “If I can be No. 1 in the world without power-hitting, then I don’t need power-hitting,” he said.Even Pakistan captain Sarfaraz Ahmed was reluctant to concede that there was an issue.”As far as a strike rate is concerned, I don’t think it matters a lot,” Sarfaraz said on the eve of Pakistan’s World Cup opener against West Indies at Trent Bridge. “If England played at 140 (in that ODI series), our batsmen played at a strike rate of 120. Both teams scored similar runs: If they made 370, we also made 360 and 340,” he said. “Their playing style is different, ours is different. We will try and play as far as possible according to the situation.”If we have to hit at a strike rate of 130, we will do that. We will play as per the requirements of the scoreboard.”To be fair to Pakistan, they batted first in all but one of those games against England, but ‘situational awareness’ is not just a fancy term that coaches like to spew. T20 cricket has forced think tanks to mine deep data on every player. The importance of instinct can never be undermined, but Pakistan would be foolish to ignore the fact that metrics have a place in modern cricket, and their opponents will be aware that Pakistan fail to up the ante as the game progresses.In overs 11 to 40 since the last World Cup, Pakistan’s run rate of 5.35 is a mid-table figure among the ten teams playing in this World Cup. Their batsmen take 13 balls per boundary, which is three more than England, who are perched at the top. Even in the last ten overs, Pakistan have struggled, hitting at 7.54 runs per over, which is sixth among the top ten teams.Pakistan’s first two opponents at the World Cup are West Indies and England, and both matches are at Trent Bridge, which is likely to be sunny and warm and, in any case, often makes batting look easy. Andre Russell has already warned that West Indies will target scores in the region of 400, and England are – unofficially – targeting 500 at some point in the tournament. Can Pakistan match them?

'I think we can be in the top four this season'

Kim Barnett, Derbyshire’s new director of cricket, has big ambitions for the county, and he wants to create an environment where players take more responsibility

David Hopps13-Apr-2017To understand how Kim Barnett is once again centre stage at Derbyshire, determined to shake them from another long period of struggle, it is probably best to start with the story of his heart attack. It came six years ago during a troubled period that had the messy break-up of his second marriage at its heart. It was hard to imagine then that one day he would once again be the most influential cricketing figure in the county.”I didn’t make it public,” he said. “I had a heart attack one night and went into hospital and a bloke came in and said, ‘I can sort this out if you want; sign this form.’ I was on the operating table in no time, he removed whatever he needed to remove, and the next morning I felt great.”If Barnett was a bit sketchy on the exact procedure, it is apparent that his tenacity was left in place. Immediately after his release from hospital, flouting doctors’ orders to take it easy for three months, he turned out for Bignall End in the North Staffordshire League. It was a nice day, he fancied a bat and he didn’t want to let anybody down.”I didn’t tell them. They knew nothing about it. The captain asked me if I fancied a bowl and I thought to myself, ‘I’d better not today.’ I had a bat and got about 20. Nothing alarming happened, so I thought ‘well it’s got to get better from here’.”Barnett is Derbyshire cricketing royalty, a status once granted in the pages of the , which knows better than most. He captained them for 13 seasons, first taking up the job as a 22-year-old. In the most glorious phase in their history, he scored most runs, made most centuries, and played in three of only five trophy successes since they first joined the County Championship in 1895.

“I was asked to do a report on Derbyshire’s underperformance. Once the board read it, it was decided somebody had to have total authority to put this right. And here I am”Barnett on how he was made Derbyshire’s director of cricket

Royalty or not, his abdication was not a happy one. Amid talk of rifts, he left for Gloucestershire in 1999, where his strategic talent in limited-overs cricket later led John Bracewell, who also coached New Zealand, to remember him as a walking Duckworth-Lewis machine even before the rain tables had been invented, a man skilled in plotting a course to victory in infinite detail. When Barnett retired, Derbyshire’s committee refused the request of the captain, Dominic Cork, for him to return. Typical, wrote one of the county’s keenest observers, of a county forever lost in “black passions and scarlet enmities”.Barnett coached in schools, and in Staffordshire, and delivered cars to clients for a luxury car company until he drove one off the road on an icy night.The heart attack, and all that came with it, seemed likely to encourage him into early retirement. But shortly afterwards, Barnett was enticed by Derbyshire’s chairman, Chris Grant, to rebuild links with the club. Before too long, he was offered the presidency and says that the woman who would go on to become his third wife, Sue, a retired police officer, persuaded him it would be an interesting way to pass the time.Barnett, though, is not designed for a ceremonial role. Derbyshire did not win a single Championship match in 2016 and flopped in both limited-overs tournaments. When he was invited to write a report on the club’s affairs, he was not found wanting. Last September, as part of the restructuring, he was made Derbyshire’s director of cricket, a job that has come 15 years too late.”We had been playing what people perceived to be poorly, but we have been through that many times,” he said. “Certainly in the ’70s, before I started, the record wasn’t great and people were getting a bit fretful. So I was asked to do a report on it. I thought, ‘Okay, 10 to 15 pages.’ It ended up about 70. Once the board read it, it was decided somebody had to have total authority to put this right. And here I am.””If they want to call me director of cricket and give it a big title, that’s fine, but now the restructuring is done, I just coordinate”•Derbyshire CCCThe outcome of the Barnett report was the scrapping of Derbyshire’s “elite performance” coaching structure, which invested heavily in the skills and authority of coaches. Its instigator, Graeme Welch, had resigned mid-season, and it was not long before Barnett dismantled his vision, adamant that money should be rerouted to the playing budget and more control and responsibility should be put back in the hands of the players.”The danger with an elite coaching model is that people take more credit than they should,” Barnett said. “Eventually people think, ‘People are not playing well, my job is at risk, so I have to go and shout at them’, and eventually the players think, ‘It’s not our plan, I am not in charge of my own career.'”That reverses everything I believe in – that you support players, you give them information, you get them to the point where they are doing something with it and ultimately it is up to them. How do you want to play? What help do we give you?”If they want to call me director of cricket and give it a big title, that’s fine, but now the restructuring is done, I just co-ordinate. I’m doing managing and strategy and turning up where I want. If they tell me something is a shambles I will sort it out but I won’t be telling them what to do.”Instead of a bank of full-time coaches, specialist freelance coaches – John Emburey for spin bowling, Jack Russell for wicketkeeping and Graham Gooch for batting – will supplement a smaller coaching staff from time to time. In their absence, senior players will be expected to pass on their knowledge.

Barnett was adamant that money should be rerouted to the playing budget and more control and responsibility should be put back in the hands of the players

There is an imaginative approach in T20, too, where John Wright, coach of Mumbai Indians and a former Derbyshire player, is one of only two specialist T20 coaches in the NatWest Blast.”John has a great record with Mumbai Indians. He is a hard competitor, the perfect guy. We are rubbish at T20, one of only two counties who have never been to Finals Day. I said, ‘Can you come and teach us, and teach our coaches, how to play it?'”Even as the youngest captain in Derbyshire’s history, Barnett was not to be trifled with: almost from the outset, he had strong opinions on how the game should be played. He insists the impetus for his return comes from identifying in Derbyshire’s captain, Billy Godleman, something of “the Barnett of old”.Since becoming the second youngest cricketer ever to play for Middlesex, at 17, Godleman’s career has not quite kicked on. A stormy phase at Essex was followed by a bit of a backwater move to Derbyshire; he was awarded the captaincy in 2016 and a desperately poor season ensued. Barnett wants to free up an unfulfilled talent.”I wouldn’t have taken the job without knowing Billy’s potential because I thought, ‘This guy is tough.’ And we have some decent guys in the 2nd XI who just need someone to lead them. When I was playing, I was a far more aggressive person. Now I want to be a bit more tranquil and I want to do something for somebody else, rather than wresting away, wanting to prove myself for my own career.”Barnett sees something of his younger self in Derbyshire’s captain, Billy Godleman•Getty ImagesDerbyshire’s history has been one of adversity. Barnett still remembers being taken aback at the reaction of Bob Taylor, Derbyshire’s England wicketkeeper, when they beat Yorkshire for the first time in 26 years at Abbeydale Park in 1983 and Geoffrey Boycott carried his bat.”Bob got the champagne out afterwards. I thought that was a bit over the top, and he said he had never beaten Yorkshire and he planned to celebrate it. That’s the difference between a Derbyshire history and a Yorkshire history. We have patches where we are bottom or nearly bottom and then a batch of people come along and we have a better patch.”I suppose the biggest concern for the smaller counties like Derbyshire is that first-class cricket is ultimately going to be taken away.”Throughout Derbyshire’s history, they have mostly been sustained by the quality of their seam bowlers, such as Les Jackson, a stalwart of the 1950s who took more wickets for the county than any other bowler. He played cricket in the summer and worked just as hard in the mines in the winter; so tied was he to this most demanding of industries that in later years he worked as a chauffeur for the National Coal Board.Harold Rhodes’ England prospects as the ’60s dawned were wrecked by a throwing controversy. A decade or so later, Alan Ward was briefly the fastest thing around. “Bring Back Ward!” the once demanded during times of England struggle, only to change the headline in its southern editions to “Bring Back Snow!”While Barnett chatted enthusiastically about the season ahead on the edge of the Derby outfield – no longer the windswept wasteland upon which he cut his captaincy teeth – he received a call from Mike Hendrick, a miserly back-of-a-length seamer who could boast a Test average lower than the likes of Harold Larwood, John Snow or Ian Botham but who rarely gained the credit for it. Hendrick is back as cricket advisory director and sounds like just the man to help Barnett keep the board in place.

“That’s the difference between a Derbyshire history and a Yorkshire history. We have patches where we are bottom or nearly bottom and then a batch of people come along and we have a better patch”

Then there was Devon Malcolm, who, though his fielding and batting could be comically myopic, produced one of Test cricket’s great spells of fast bowling when he took 9 for 57 at The Oval against the 1994 South Africans, enraged by a bouncer that had struck him on the helmet while batting. Cork, too, whose opinions will be put to good use once T20 comes around.Barnett stayed true to this tradition as captain, emphasising the need to rotate a squad of fast bowlers, and unapologetically seeking to win home matches on green pitches. The toss regulations introduced last season, where the visiting team can bowl first by choice, make such a tactic a non-starter. So Barnett’s Derbyshire, for virtually the only time in their history, will put the onus on winning matches with legspin. There are three of them – Sri Lankan Jeevan Mendis for the first phase of the season, Imran Tahir once his IPL duties are over, and the local tyro Matt Critchley, back from a close season in Australia and eager to learn as much as he can.”In my days we would just make the pitches green and like meadows, throw the ball to the likes of Michael Holding and Ole Mortensen and see who came out on top. You can’t do that now, so how are we going to win these four-day matches? Spin’s a good option.”I am shocking myself to wonder about playing two legspinners in the same side at Derby. It can’t be right, can it? I must be dreaming. But I think Imran will bring Critch on, who is a superbly talented lad.”We have to try and dry the pitch out somehow. The groundsman is looking forward to the challenge. You just want to win cricket matches. Last year we lost six fair and square, and of the draws, we had half-a-dozen opportunities and we weren’t good enough to take them.”Near the end of last season, the chairman said to me, ‘We need to get some loan signings in to stop us being bottom.’ I said, ‘Bottom or second bottom, it doesn’t matter – it still has the word bottom in it.’ I am not saying we are going to go from bottom to top this season but I think we can be in the top four.”

Vilas' edginess reopens wicketkeeper debate

Dane Vilas, who was picked for the Test series in India ahead of Quinton de Kock, hasn’t done badly behind the stumps, but has looked edgy with the bat in the first two matches

Firdose Moonda20-Nov-2015A wicketkeeper should be a silent contributor – if he is not noticed, he has done well – but on South Africa’s tour of India, he has found himself in the spotlight.Dane Vilas was a risk South Africa took – he had played just one day of Test cricket before this tour – and he was tasked with one of the toughest tours for a wicketkeeper. The bounce would be variable, the spin plentiful, and that was not the only difficulty. He would also have to double up as the seventh batsman to accommodate an extra bowler. In both departments, he has not looked convincing enough yet.Vilas has not dropped catches or fumbled stumpings, but he has not appeared entirely in control either. He conceded 15 byes in the first Test and four in the second, in 165.3 overs overall. On some occasions the ball scooted past him; on others it went through him. Almost every time he slapped the surface in frustration.Vilas has been more conspicuously out of his comfort zone while batting. He was edgy and nervous, as any newbie may be if he came in at 105 for 4, or 45 for 5, or 120 for 5. Vilas, however, tried to be over aggressive. He approached batting as though he had a point to prove, which he had already done in domestic cricket.Vilas’ first-class average is just shy of 40 and he has scored runs under pressure in the past. In 2011, when he moved from his home provincial team Gauteng to Western Province and found that his first match for his new side would be against his old, Vilas responded with a century, as if to show Gauteng what they had missed. He was promoted to the franchise team, Cobras, the following season and in his third game he scored a match-winning 161 not out against Titans – the then defending champions.Since then, Vilas has consistently been among Cobras most reliable players. Last season, he scored 499 runs in nine first-class matches, including one hundred and three fifties, at an average of 38.38.Morne van Wyk, who amassed 714 runs at 79.33 in eight matches for Dolphins, was last season’s leading wicketkeeper batsman in domestic cricket but Vilas had done enough to get noticed. It was eventually Vilas, and not the 36-year old van Wyk, who was called up for the South Africa A side for the India tour in August.The idea when that A side was picked was to create depth for the national selectors and to give some of the players who had not played much on the subcontinent – Dean Elgar for example – an opportunity to get used to conditions. It was not to ready Vilas for a Test stint in India; Quinton de Kock was the first-choice wicketkeeper.That changed when de Kock’s prolonged lean run became a proper drought in Bangladesh and he was subsequently dropped. Vilas was called up for the Bangladesh tour because AB de Villiers, who would have taken the gloves as he did when de Kock was injured against West Indies in late 2014, was on paternity leave. The expectation from Vilas himself would have been low and the understanding was that he was drafted in purely as cover for an emergency.Quinton de Kock was left out of the Test series against India, despite scoring two centuries during the ODI leg of the tour•Associated PressVilas’ debut Test in Mirpur was similar to the one that finished in Bangalore. There was only one day of cricket with four days washed out and that was rightly deemed far too small a sample to judge Vilas’ ability. He had to get another chance to show what he could do and the schedule dictated that the other chance would come in India.South Africa’s selectors cannot be faulted for sticking with Vilas. Consistency in choosing their players and affording them a long enough run in the side is what South Africa have built their success on. By picking Vilas, they simply did what has worked for them and what is fair. But professional sport is sometimes not all about following that linear line.By the time the Test squad was picked on September 10, de Kock had blasted his way back to form with three centuries on South Africa A’s tour to India. He was rewarded with a recall to the senior limited-overs’ sides but was left out of the Test series. Even after de Kock scored two hundreds in the ODI series, he was not kept on for the Tests and was sent home to play in the domestic T20 competition. It was the right message sent to Vilas and de Kock, though it may have cost South Africa both on the field and in the succession race.South Africa’s wicketkeeping position was owned by Mark Boucher for years and that meant there was never a clear plan on how to move on from him. Now, that issue has become fuzzier.Vilas will not know whether the next two Tests could decide his international future. De Kock will not know whether the fact that Vilas not scoring enough runs means he will get right back in. And what of Thami Tsolekile, as former international opener Alviro Petersen had mentioned on Twitter? Tsolekile may now consider himself extremely unlucky not to have been used in a stopgap role, and that may raise a transformation issue, as Petersen already pointed out.The tour of India will be won or lost with bat and ball, but there will also be debate about South Africa’s selection.

A rebirth for Christchurch

The Hagley Oval has put Christchurch back on the cricketing map after the AMI Stadium was damaged by the earthquake of 2011

Marc Swain-Rogatski04-Nov-2014The venue
While the Hagley Oval has only had a handful of international matches so far – during the World Cup qualifiers in January 2014 – the newly built facilities are set to host New Zealand’s first Boxing Day Test in 11 years, against Sri Lanka, as well as the first match of the 2015 World Cup, featuring the same teams. The new set-up looks picturesque, with its lush outfield and floating tensile roof covering the pavilion – a fitting setting, indeed, for the cricket Christchurch has fought so hard to get back.The primary venue in the city was the AMI Stadium – formerly Jade Stadium and originally Lancaster Park – in the south-east of the city. Following the devastating earthquake of 2011, the ground suffered irreparable damage. From late 2014 building up to the World Cup, cricket in Christchurch will be homed in the more central Hagley Oval.The AMI Stadium was always abuzz on game day. Before the Hadlee Stand and the other large seating arrangements were raised, the ground had a large embankment area that was often home to some very colourful individuals; its atmosphere provided a lot of fun for the boundary fielders. Spectators were even allowed to play their own games of cricket on the field during the lunch interval. If one was to walk the corridors beneath the DB Draught stand, they would find games as fierce as those on centre stage, raging between the New Zealand players of the future.Ground page | FixturesGreat matches (AMI Stadium)
New Zealand v India, 3rd ODI, March 2009
The third ODI between New Zealand and India in 2009 saw an Indian batting class in session, led by Sachin Tendulkar. On track to record the biggest ODI score, he helped pummel New Zealand’s attack, but retired hurt in the 45th over on 163 as India reached a mammoth 392. An excellent Jesse Ryder century and a late partnership between Kyle Mills and Tim Southee gave India a scare, but they still emerged victorious by 58 runs.New Zealand v Australia, 3rd ODI, 2005
A few years earlier, in 2005, in the third ODI of the Chappell-Hadlee Trophy, a New Zealand chase led expertly by Scott Styris and Brendon McCullum got New Zealand to the highest ODI score at the time (332), and won them the match. McCullum’s unbeaten 50, thrashed from 25 balls, aided Styris’ gallant century in chasing down the large total, which had seemed a high mountain to climb after Michael Hussey’s 88 from 56 earlier in the day.Top performers in ODIs (AMI Stadium)
Most runs: Nathan Astle 705 at 50.35 | Highest score: Sachin Tendulkar 163* v New Zealand | Most wickets: Daniel Vettori 23 at 31.82 | Best bowling: Simon O’Donnell 5 for 13Major players
Chris Cairns | Stephen Fleming | Nathan Astle | Chris Harris | Shane Bond | Craig McMillan | Richard Hadlee | Rod Latham | Lee GermonHome team
Christchurch is home to Canterbury, which supplied several players to the New Zealand one-day team in the 1990s. They won the one-day trophy seven times in the 1990s. They have also won the first-class Plunket Shield 17 times.

Give MS Dhoni his due

From Kaushik Bhattacharya, UK

Cricinfo25-Feb-2013
Under-rated, despite his Test achievements•Getty ImagesGiven he’s the most celebrated cricketer India have had (with the exception of Tendulkar), it feels strange to say MS Dhoni is underrated. But I do think he’s not given due credit for his achievements as a Test match wicketkeeper-batsman.Partly, I think it’s his excellence as an ODI cricketer (second-highest batting average among all players with 4000-plus runs) that overshadows his achievements in the Test arena. Add to that, he looks somewhat ungainly (both as a wicketkeeper and a batsman), and for some unfathomable reason most people have the view that great Test match players need to be elegant or graceful. The recent Test thrashings meted out to his team in England and Australia have given fodder to his bashers to begin the “Oh, but he can’t play Test cricket” refrain.Ultimately, the things that matter are performance on the field, the numbers you rack up and the results you deliver. Let’s have a look at the stats. Starting off small-scale, there’s no doubt that Dhoni’s been India’s best Test wicketkeeper-batsmen ever (and he’s not finished yet). He has the most dismissals already and at a rate (dismissals per innings) higher than anyone else who’s played at least 10 games with only Dinesh Karthik coming close. Also (again for keepers who’ve played at least 10 Tests), his batting average is higher than his closest rival (Budhi Kunderan) by over four runs per innings. And he needs to play only 22 matches more to go past Kirmani as the most tenured Indian wicketkeeper.Going further afield, if you look at top wicketkeepers of all time, Dhoni ranks ninth in terms of overall dismissals and 14th if you look at dismissals per innings (for players who’ve kept in more than 30 Tests).Turning to batting, his average is the sixth-highest of all time (again for players who’ve kept in more than 30 Tests) and ahead of men like Alec Stewart and Brendon McCullum who’ve played as specialist batsmen at times.Plus, he’s captained the side in 37 of his 67 Tests and has a win-loss ratio that’s the best ever for an Indian captain and the eleventh-best for all captains (who’ve led their side in 35-plus Tests). This without a bowling attack half as good as that which any of the ten men above him had at their disposal. He didn’t even have Srinath and Kumble (unlike Ganguly, who had at least the latter for much of his reign) who are probably India’s best modern-day pace and spin bowlers respectively.So, give the man his due and stop branding him as only an ODI and T20 champion. He’s been good in Tests but needs better support from his team (especially the bowlers) to keep proving.P.S: For those who say he can’t score runs in pace-friendly conditions, he averages 39 in England and 31 in South Africa, though he’s been poor in Australia, averaging 19.

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