49ers could now sell £50m Rangers stars who Martin wants to keep at Ibrox

Rangers could still sell two Ibrox stars that new manager Russell Martin wants to build his team around, according to a new update.

Rangers officially seal Lyall Cameron deal

It promises to be a busy few months in the transfer window under new owners the 49ers Enterprises, who will also have their eyes on bolstering Leeds United’s squad ahead of their Premier League return as well as looking to return the Gers to Scottish Premiership glory.

In Glasgow, though, Rangers officially unveiled Lyall Cameron as their first addition of the summer on Tuesday, with the midfielder signing a pre-contract agreement back in February.

Talking in his first interview as a Gers player, Cameron said: “It is amazing to walk in the door today, it is a privilege really. I have been looking forward to it for a long time.

“It was a no brainer as soon as Rangers came in, I was desperate to be here. It is obviously a massive club and the history and everything about it is just amazing. Being from Scotland, I know what the club stands for, so I just wanted to jump at the chance.

“It is a new project, they are looking to build, improve and win leagues again and I really wanted to be a part of it. I want to come here, make an impression, do as well as possible and get this club back to where it belongs.”

More players are set to follow Cameron through the Ibrox door, and there have been strong links to Bournemouth full-back Max Aarons and Peterborough United’s Kwame Poku.

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However, with multiple additions on the cards, there may also be some Rangers stars heading for the exit door, and a worrying new update

Rangers could sell £50m stars Igamane and Raskin

According to a transfer update from Football Insider, Martin wants to build his Rangers side around stars Hamza Igamane and Nicolas Raskin. However, despite this, the 49ers could still cash in on the pair this summer.

It is claimed that ‘sources say Rangers are still susceptible to big offers for the duo despite their recent US-backed takeover but do not need to sell for below-market prices’.

Both Igamane and Raskin have been valued at £25m each recently, with the likes of Everton and West Ham keen on the former, whereas numerous clubs in Europe have their eye on Raskin.

Should clubs come in with £25m for the duo, it would smash the current record Ibrox departure which stands at just under £20m.

Calvin Bassey

Ajax

£19.6m

2022

Nathan Patterson

Everton

£11.5m

2022

Alan Hutton

Tottenham

£9m

2008

Giovanni van Bronckhorst

Arsenal

£8.5m

2001

Jean-Alain Boumsong

Newcastle

£8m

2005

It would give Rangers and the 49ers plenty more cash to play with, however, Martin may not be happy if the pair are sold given he wants to keep them in Glasgow.

Nottingham Forest pursuing £29.7 million ace who may be available in summer

Nottingham Forest are still in the hunt for a European place and look to be showing the same ambition in the transfer market as they circle for a talented defender, according to a report.

Nottingham Forest hopeful of statement summer window

Form has dipped at the City Ground over the last few weeks, and some supporters could be forgiven for getting a little twitchy over the Tricky Trees’ chances of Champions League qualification.

However, Nuno Espirito Santo has remained stoic in the face of Premier League rivals’ momentum, and there is still belief that a special ending could be in store for the Nottingham Forest faithful.

Regardless of how the rest of the campaign goes, there is optimism that an exciting summer window could be on the cards to help bridge the gap further after a valiant effort this term.

Showing their ambition, Ipswich Town striker Liam Delap is on Forest’s radar amid his £30 million relegation release clause, which has also attracted the eyes of Manchester United and Chelsea.

James McAtee could join his former Manchester City teammate after enduring a frustrating campaign at the Etihad Stadium that has resulted in limited minutes for the England Under-21 international.

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While the market is becoming increasingly globalised, proven Premier League operators appear to be the type of profile Nottingham Forest want to attract to enrich their playing squad.

There is also the carrot of arrivals from their own division potentially being homegrown, which is a vital component when it comes to meeting UEFA registration rules.

With that in mind, Nottingham Forest have now spotted another opportunity to try to land a Premier League star who could be on the move this summer.

Nottingham Forest closely pursuing Liverpool's Jarell Quansah

According to TEAMtalk, Nottingham Forest are now closely pursuing Liverpool defender Jarell Quansah, who is also on the radar of Newcastle United this summer.

The Reds are said to value the England international at £29.7 million and could look to cash in on his services should they add another body to their rearguard during the off-season.

Pass accuracy

91.9%

Tackles won

8

Duels won

19

Aerial duels won

6

Recoveries

16

Interceptions

6

Labelled “absolutely brilliant” by journalist David Lynch, Quansah has made 24 appearances across all competitions this season, becoming a reliable contributor on Liverpool’s journey to claiming the Premier League title.

Nevertheless, he hasn’t been in the limelight as much as he would’ve hoped, which has left the door ajar for a potential exit to put himself in with a chance of regular minutes in 2025/26.

The 2026 World Cup isn’t too far in the distance, potentially amplifying urgency from his own perspective to make sure he is noticed by Thomas Tuchel in the lead-up to the finals.

Nottingham Forest are in a brilliant position to offer him that pathway. Now, it is about whether they can fend off competition from elsewhere for his signature.

Wolves must rue selling sensational star who is worth £40m more than Cunha

Wolverhampton Wanderers’ stunning 1-0 victory over Manchester United in the Premier League was the first time they have done the double over the Red Devils since the 1970s.

It was a win that proves how good this Wolves squad is, and next season they should be aiming for a top-half finish without a shadow of a doubt.

Vitor Pereira has worked miracles at Molineux since taking over towards the end of 2024, and if he is backed in the summer transfer window, he can take the club to the next level.

One burning question is, will Matheus Cunha be in the starting XI for the first Premier League fixture of the 2025/26 season?

Matheus Cunha’s future at Wolves is uncertain

The Brazilian may have enjoyed a wonderful season on the pitch, scoring 16 goals and grabbing four assists, but his behaviour in recent months suggests he could be sold this summer.

Cunha has clashed with supporters on social media following a post he put up on his Instagram. He even confessed that he wishes to leave in order to challenge for trophies, and if a big offer comes in, the forward may depart.

The former Atlético Madrid star only signed a new contract back in February, tying him down for another four years. A £62.5m release clause has been inserted into the deal, so whoever wants to sign him this summer will need to stump up the cash.

While losing him would be a big blow, the club sold a player in the summer of 2022 who is now worth £40m more than the Brazilian and is also starring in the Premier League.

Goals

14

Assists

4

Big chances created

12

Key passes per game

1.7

Shots per game

3.2

Goal conversion percentage

16%

Wolves must regret selling £100m-rated star

While Cunha has been stealing the limelight in Wolverhampton, a player not so far away in Nottingham has also very swiftly become one of the leading Premier League players; Morgan Gibbs-White.

Selling the playmaker for a fee in the region of £42.5m was seen as excellent business by the Old Gold initially. Indeed, he’d registered a total of just three goals and one assist in 88 matches for the club was hardly an impressive return, but the move has backfired spectacularly.

Since moving to Nottingham Forest, the Englishman has racked up 111 appearances for the club, registering 43 goal contributions – 16 goals and 27 assists – in the process.

It is no wonder he has been dubbed “sensational” by certain sections of the media for his displays and according to journalist Graeme Bailey, the attacking midfielder is now being valued at around £100m by Forest amid interest from Manchester City.

This is nearly £40m more than Cunha, and the statistics back up his high valuation. In the top flight this term, he has created eight big chances, averaged 1.6 key passes and succeeded with one dribble per game.

Furthermore, he ranks in the top 11% for goal-creating actions (0.63) and in the top 5% for passes into the final third (4.33) per 90 when compared to his positional peers this season in the top flight.

Wolves perhaps made the correct decision at the time by selling the 25-year-old, but boy, must they be rueing that decision now.

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No apologies allowed as Anderson bows out

James Anderson knows from 40,037 (legal) deliveries to be grateful for anything you can get in this game

Andrew Miller12-Jul-2024It all ended with a stooped-shouldered apology. Ben Duckett, feet planted inside the Grandstand boundary, settled beneath a top-edged pull off Jayden Seales with a diffidence that you might not ordinarily expect at the winning moment of a Test match. Gus Atkinson, standing at the end of his follow-through, bowed his head in supplication, even as he completed a debut match haul of 12 for 106, the fourth-best in Test history, and the best by an Englishman for 134 years.It was James Anderson who broke the awkwardness, rushing up to Atkinson to embrace the man who, for this Test at least (if not necessarily for the next 187 to come) has proven himself worthy of leading England’s changed guard.”Gus apologised for taking that last wicket,” Ben Stokes, England’s captain, told the media afterwards, before pausing on the punchline to check the TV cameras weren’t taking his comments live. “Jimmy told him to eff off!”As well he might. Anderson knows from a career spanning 40,037 (legal) deliveries that you should be grateful for anything you can get in this game, that the sensation of success – even if you’re able to feel it on an extraordinary 704 occasions – is still fleeting in the grand scheme of a sportsman’s career. And besides, he’d had his chance to write his own script three overs earlier, when he spilled one of the easiest return catches that can ever have been poked back to him.Anderson’s eyes had widened and his sinews stiffened as Gudakesh Motie stabbed at an inswinger, in his fourth over of the morning, that looped back towards his outstretched left hand. But he simply couldn’t close out the deal. Perhaps, as with the gentle shove towards the exit that he had required in that Manchester hotel-room back in April, Anderson was still not quite ready to go out on his own terms.Related

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Who truly was ready for that moment? Even allowing for the prospect of a full refund for such a swift end on this third day, you got the sense that a packed Lord’s crowd would have watched this final spell for all eternity. His captain was certainly ready to oblige them.”I didn’t tell Jimmy, but I said he was always going to bowl until we took that last wicket,” Stokes said. “However long it took, I wasn’t going to take him off. Even if he said he was tired, I was like, ‘you gotta keep going here’.”And keep going he did, even after the felicitations had been completed and the pints of “recovery shake” Guinness had been downed, as he returned to his favoured Pavilion End long after the close of play to bowl at his daughters and other team-mates’ kids in an outfield knockabout. If he was visibly at peace on this emotional day of farewells, it may be that he’s not yet processed quite what a void he is leaving in this sport.If the choreography of Anderson’s exit paled in comparison to that of Stuart Broad’s at The Oval last summer, then at least the highlights reel will recall his final wicket, No.704, as a true collector’s item; a disassembling of Joshua da Silva that will hold its own in perpetuity.The angle, the length, the subtlety of his outswing – extravagant on the one hand, as it curled from leg to off to kiss the edge of da Silva’s closed-faced bat, yet economised on the other, in keeping with so much else about Anderson’s channelled, streamlined and seemingly eternal pomp.Half a bat’s width, as Glenn McGrath made a point of proving in his own magnificent career, is all you’re ever really looking for as a fast bowler. Anything more, and you’re relying on batter error. Anything less, and the best in the business will be finding the middle of their bat.James Anderson leads his team-mates off•AFP/Getty ImagesIf that moment underlined the craft and the cunning that kept Anderson at England’s cutting edge for two decades, then the moments after his drop were arguably a touching throwback: with his sporting mortality now apparent, a slight hint of desperation crept into his game as he neglected, ever so briefly, the processes that had served him so well for so long, and strained instead for that magic ball that both defined and undermined his uncertain start to Test cricket.Fortunately, Atkinson was on hand to save him from himself and allow the curation of those memories to begin. And it was only at that moment that the true imprint of Anderson’s story – that meteoric arrival in the winter of 2002-03, the traumatic rookie years that followed, and the peerless blend of genius and tenacity that prevented him, first, from becoming another of sport’s precocious “what ifs?” before elevating him into a third act of simply astonishing endurance – was able to burst through the façade and take hold of the day’s narrative.No moment better epitomised this than Sky Sports’ breaking of the fourth wall, moments after the contest was over, as Anderson’s first Test captain, Nasser Hussain, joined him on his perch in the dressing-room for a unique fireside chat.Their five-minute exchange was notable, less for Anderson’s composure, than for the rapt attention that he received from every single member of a team that could not have avoided idolising him long before they began sharing his highs and lows.”Moments like that, you take a step back and you actually really appreciate listening,” Stokes recalled afterwards. “Jimmy did say he felt a bit under the pump, because everyone’s just staring at him, but they were pretty special images for the public and the world to be able to see. Everyone was just so interested to hear what Jimmy had to say, from players to support staff as well.”James Anderson can only laugh after dropping a caught-and-bowled chance•Alex Davidson/Getty ImagesStokes himself was 11 when Anderson played his first Test, on this same ground against Zimbabwe in 2003. Ollie Pope, his vice-captain, was 5. Jamie Smith was 2. Shoaib Bashir had not even been born. Even Chris Woakes, the team’s new senior statesman, was a mere 14. Even for a team that has seen some notable departures in recent years, something about this parting is bound to hit different.”When we got back into the dressing-room, I said to Joe [Root], we’ve been with Cookie [Alastair Cook], we’ve been with Broady, and now we’ve been with Jimmy, so that made us realise our age as well. But I feel very fortunate to have played as much cricket as I have done with three Goats of our game.”It’s a very emotional day, but also, what an occasion for the new lads coming in, to be a part of that,” Stokes added. “For Gus and Jamie, in their first taste of international cricket, to see that reception that you can get as England players. Even I’ve played a lot of cricket, but it sends goosebumps down you.”And now, for Stokes and his men, the challenge is to pay all this forward. To make good on the promise that the team management must have had to make to themselves in the first instance, but which the whole of the squad will now have to uphold: to ensure that the sacrifice of Anderson is not in vain, and that the values he has epitomised are not mislaid in the most seismic era shift that English cricket will have known in generations.”Walking off there at the end there, there was that overwhelming feeling of this being the last time that we would get to walk off the field with Jimmy,” Stokes said. “And the last time for the crowds who’ve come out to watch us, to see Jimmy walk off the field. The reception he got there, and for that half an hour afterwards, was very, very special to be part of.”

In case you forgot: Bhuvneshwar Kumar is still one of the sharpest, most skilful bowlers in T20

He is a master of his craft, among the sharpest bowlers around, and has the superpower of being able to swing the new ball both ways at will

Jarrod Kimber16-May-2022There is a whisper about fast bowlers of a certain age, and for medium-fast guys it comes sooner and is louder. It’s the muffled choir of thousands of people wondering if they have lost their nip, lost the yard, lost that little bit of extra pace that allows them to be dangerous.Ishant Sharma had it recently. After years of dominating batters worldwide, the collective wisdom about his recent drop in form is that he’s just not getting the same energy off the wicket. Bowlers, seamers especially, are almost seen as this disposable asset at times. Used until they are no longer physically able to do their jobs, and then discarded for the next six-foot-five bloke who hits the deck hard.Bhuvneshwar Kumar had these comments and thoughts aimed at him last year, when he had his worst IPL season, taking only six wickets in 11 matches. He has never been all that fast; that this slump came when he was over 30, and was coming off the back of a season-ending injury the year before led people to think his time at the top was over.Related

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But in that very same year he did some of his best work ever in tormenting an England team on some incredibly flat pitches. On the 20th of March 2021, he bowled against England in a game that had 412 runs in it. Bhuvneshwar’s four overs went for 15, and he dismissed Jason Roy and Jos Buttler. No other Indian bowler went for less than 8.50 runs per over.Three weeks later he was in the IPL, and he went at an economy of over 11 in two of his first three matches, and nine in the last one before the Covid break. In the second part of the season he got back on top of his economy, but took only three wickets in six matches.In or out? You never know what you’re getting with Bhuvi, new white ball or not•Faheem Hussain/BCCISo you could make the leap to say he was over if you looked at Bhuvneshwar last season and only at his IPL form. Perhaps he was losing that little bit extra off the pitch and that was making him less potent.But it’s worth talking about why he was so good for years despite never being tall, quick or unconventional, which is generally what helps in T20. His primary skill is skill. That perfect wrist gave him a really good Test average. But it was an asset that translated better to white-ball cricket than it did for other similar bowlers like Vernon Philander and Mohammad Abbas. And one of the reasons is that Bhuvneshwar moves the ball so much more than most bowlers, and he does it in two directions.Early on he’s almost like a legspinner because most of his balls are on and around an off-stump line. But he can also miss off stump by two feet with an outswinger, and then swing it back to leg with an inswinger. That is not a usual cricket skill.Most seam bowlers can only bowl an outswinger or an inswinger. Because their actions are made for that kind of delivery. Some can bowl both, but they only can master one. And there are bowlers who can deliver both but struggle to do it with the new white ball, as it gets away from them. Bhuvneshwar can swing in and out at will, with accuracy, with the shiniest of new balls.This skill is important in T20 because when you’re trying to smash him over the ring for a boundary, depending on his mood, a ball angled in at your off stump can hit leg or be around 50cm wider than off. That is a disturbing amount of lateral movement and very hard to line up.

That is a superpower. And he’s been so good over the years that teams have changed how they play him early. They now try not to be dismissed by him. That is incredibly rare in T20, but Bhuvneshwar is a powerplay genius.But he’s also good at the death. Not Lasith Malinga or Jasprit Bumrah, but he’s a consistently good death bowler, and the ball doesn’t swing there. So he uses his incredible accuracy and cricket intelligence to stay a step ahead of everyone. He has a good slower ball, but it’s not like he’s Dwayne Bravo. And considering he has such a normal release and isn’t that fast, it’s incredible he has been able to have such a good career.Bhuvneshwar has been one of the best bowlers in the history of the IPL, year after year. And he’s well tested, he has bowled the most seam deliveries of anyone. And then when he slipped last season, people were too fast to suggest that he was on his way out.It was a terrible year but Bhuvneshwar kept his economy in the IPL at 7.97, which is fine for most bowlers but high for him. His career T20 economy rate is 7.17, and this was his most expensive year. However, it was his average that stuck out most – he took those six wickets at 56, and he was the only seamer with over 200 deliveries who took fewer than ten wickets.Of course he did this in the middle of the Sunrisers running into a brick wall on and off the field. So bad was his – and their – season, the franchise didn’t retain him ahead of the auction. They perhaps assumed other teams would be wary of him as well, and they were right. Only Lucknow Super Giants really bid a decent amount, and he finally went to SRH for half as much as he had four years earlier. Now part of this was probably due to his age: older quicks are more worrying. But he had been one of the most bankable local seamers in the competition, and this was quite a haircut.When compared to an out-and-out fast bowler like Umesh Yadav (left), Bhuvneshwar’s skills might come off as too subtle to appreciate•Lakruwan Wanniarachchi/AFP / Getty ImagesFor instance, Umesh Yadav went for only half the money that Bhuvneshwar did, and was even overlooked in the first round of the auction. But last year he played no IPL games, and the year before he took no wickets in his two games and went at 12 runs per over. And his career numbers are nowhere near what Bhuvneshwar has achieved. But Umesh is fast, even when things have gone wrong for him, and though he hasn’t mastered his T20 bowling consistently, he can whang down the ball. That is very easy to see and get excited about. What Bhuvneshwar does is far more subtle.There also just aren’t many bowlers like Bhuvneshwar who have been anywhere near as good, so what he does doesn’t feel as repeatable. And we’re regularly told that being so easy to predict is a problem for T20 bowlers. That you can be too accurate. It has never been a problem for Bhuvneshwar.This year he’s back to what you expect, averaging just over 30, but with an economy of 7.25. There’s little doubt he’s been one of the best seamers this year. And he has done this when his team has bowled incredibly well and also when all of them dropped off and he was on his own.As sports fans we’re obsessed with being the first to call it when someone is over, to say that their time is up. And with anyone not fast-fast, we’re waiting for the slight drop that ends their effectiveness. Whether it was injury that caused the problem or not.When a bowler is this talented with the ball and has a bowling brain of this calibre, it is always worth waiting a little bit longer. A bad season can hit anyone in T20, whisper it, but talent like this doesn’t die overnight.

'You always got the feeling MS Dhoni was one step ahead of everyone else'

Michael Hussey, who has played with and against MS Dhoni and also coached him at Chennai Super Kings, talks about the man and leader behind the scenes

Interview by Divij Gala15-Aug-202011:03

Mike Hussey: MS Dhoni often said that he who panics last wins the game

Among all the cricketers you have played with or against, or captains you’ve played under, what’s unique about MS Dhoni?
I’ll have to say probably how calm he is, particularly in a place like India, where it can get very crazy with the fans, media, the cricketers. Normally, the captains I have come up against have been very… not aggressive, that’s not the right word, but they are vocal and they lead by example. They stress the importance of certain things, whereas MS is very calm and chilled out. He has the great ability to take the pressure off players, particularly young Indian players. Quite often he just impresses on them to relax and go out and play the game – some days you win, some days you lose. It was very different playing under him from anything I had experienced before in Australia.Did he never lose his calm in the middle?
I think I’ve only seen him lose his temper once in all the times I’ve been around Chennai Super Kings. There are times when he gets frustrated, of course. Everyone does when the team is not winning, but MS is not a reactive person. He always looks at the bigger picture. He won’t make changes just for the sake of making changes or after a couple of losses. He knows things balance out in the long run. It was a strength of his leadership and it certainly gave a lot of faith, trust and backing to the players.Him losing his temper – was that the game against Rajasthan Royals this year where he walked onto the pitch to argue with the umpires?
The funny thing was that even after the [Royals] game, he was quite chill and calm about it. He even had a joke about it. It was so out of character. We couldn’t even believe it, sitting on the side.No, there was a game two years before, when he wasn’t scoring runs, the team wasn’t playing really well, and he wasn’t happy with the level of effort the guys were putting in on the field. He certainly let us all know we needed to lift our effort. Not so much worrying about the result but the effort we were putting on the ground.

“After every IPL game there would be one or two guys from the opposition wanting to come in and talk to him about their performance and what they could do to improve. He was very giving of his time”

Was the calm always a part of his leadership from the beginning? Or did that evolve as he got older?
I think it was always there. I’m talking about the time I was playing for Australia against him. You always got the feeling that he was one step ahead – whether he was or wasn’t was another thing, but you got the feeling he was.He tried some things that were a bit unconventional where we all felt: why is he doing this? And more often than not it would work and you’d think, ‘Well, that was unbelievable foresight to do that.’He has said he doesn’t believe in data and stats, so when you say he gets things, where do you think he got that from?
I think he is a very observant person, very intelligent, very perceptive of what’s happening in the game. He reads the game extremely well, and he is his own man as well. If he makes a decision, it will take a lot to change his mind. You will have to be someone who he really respects and trusts for you to change his mind. But it’s incredible how many times you think: what is he thinking here? Did he come back and acknowledge that something he tried didn’t work?
That’s the other thing that stands out about MS. He is a very humble person. He doesn’t big-note himself at all. He is not arrogant, and that is one of the things I really admired about him – the way he handled success as well as failure. He was a very consistent person. He wasn’t too high when things were going well, he wasn’t too low when things weren’t going well. He always treated everyone equally. If there was someone perceived to be important in the room, he wouldn’t treat them any different than the cleaner coming in at the end of the day.”Whenever we played India and Dhoni was still there, no score was safe because he had this amazing power to hit any bowler out of the ground at the end of the innings”•Getty Images Was he any different before a big game or a final?
No, he was basically exactly the same person whether it was the final or any other game. So much so that I felt that he was too relaxed sometimes (laughs). Even while sitting on the sidelines during the finals, he would just sort of sit there and soak in the game, and you would think: does this guy have any emotions?I remember before one big game against RCB at Chennai, the crowd was rocking and we had the little huddle before we went out to play. MS pulled the team in and said, “Right guys, big game today against RCB, but the fair-play award is really important to me. We’ve got to make sure we play the game in the right spirit so that we get full points on the fair play.” I remember looking at him like: Are you serious? This is a massive game and we have to win it. But he was very big on playing with the right spirit and he wanted us to be known as a team that was very good with results but also a team that was very fair. What did he usually say in his pre-game talk to the team?
He wasn’t big on meetings at all, so we didn’t have a lot of preparation meetings and things like that. There will be a couple of minutes literally as the team walked onto the field. He basically gave a little bit of direction but it was more about taking the pressure off the players. I remember a chat before a game and it was, “Guys, just go out there and play tonight. Just smile at the crowd. Some days you win and some days you lose. Just try and execute the skills the best you possibly can.” You could almost see the tension coming out of certain players. You could see their shoulders relax, knowing he would back them to execute their skills.How could you convince Dhoni about something he didn’t believe in?
I do remember one occasion. This was my first year as a coach at CSK and we were coming up against Sunrisers Hyderabad in a Qualifier. Our analyst found this great photo of Rashid Khan, who obviously is a great bowler. It was a split-screen and he said that when Rashid Khan runs in with his fingers like this, he is going to bowl a legspinner, and when he runs in with his fingers like this, he is going to bowl his googly. I’m sitting on this information and thinking about what to do. Do I send it out to the batsmen on the night before a big game or do I let it be?I sent out the information but I said in the message that you may want to use this or not. Do with it what you want. I didn’t really get a message back from MS, which I rarely did anyway, but he went out to bat and he was playing Rashid Khan.Sure enough, we are under pressure, losing wickets. The run rate was getting away from us. He went for a cover drive, wrong’un straight back through the gate and clean bowled. He walked off the ground and came straight up to me and said: “I’ll bat my own way, thanks.”

“MS is very calm and chilled out – just let the guys play. He has the great ability to take the pressure off players, particularly young Indian players”

In the middle of a huge game, I was a little bit worried to hear that, but to talk to him afterwards was very good. He said: “No, the information was correct but I hadn’t had a chance to practise it, so if we have that time again, definitely give me the information. I saw him running in with the fingers like this, so I didn’t even bother watching the ball after that, but if I had a chance to practise it in the nets, knowing that I still need to watch the ball out of the hand and play accordingly, then I would have been okay.”When he comes in to bat, he loves to take his time in the middle, just to knock it around and get himself in. We’d often encourage him to back himself a bit more, go a bit hard a bit earlier. He wants to do that, but because he is so set in the way he wants to play the game and he wants to take that responsibility of being there till the end and finish the game off, he won’t allow himself to just sort of free up and play. That’s just how he is.Towards the end of his career, did all the talk about how he took too much time to get settled in, or that his hitting powers were on the wane get to him?
Not really, no, and certainly we didn’t discuss it. Because in the last couple of years in the IPL, he has probably been almost at his best. The criticism has come more from when he has played for India in one-day internationals, where he probably has got more time.How did you view him as an opposition player, and how did that change after getting to know him more intimately?
I just couldn’t believe how calm and relaxed and chilled out he was. I thought as an international player, there’s always a level of anxiety and stress, particularly in a place like India, where it’s just cricket-mad. But honestly I felt as though the game wasn’t even that important to him at certain stages. He didn’t seem to care too much at all. It was like: let’s just go and play this game. We love it and that’s why we play the game. He never really seemed to put a lot of pressure on himself. I couldn’t understand that until I played with him in the same dressing room. That’s actually how he lived his life and how he put everything in perspective.”He was a very consistent person. He wasn’t too high when things were going well, he wasn’t too low when things weren’t going well”•AFPDo you think he actually didn’t quite care enough about winning or losing?
Yeah, it’s a difficult one. I actually think, internally he definitely did care an incredible amount, but externally, maybe it was just a façade. I don’t know. You would have to ask MS that. But the way he handles the pressure, the stress, the anxiety of being a top international player, especially someone so famous in India where you can’t leave the hotel without getting mobbed by thousands – just to be able to take that in your stride is pretty phenomenal. It seemed like even if Dhoni didn’t have the best team, he got players to perform better for him. Things that numbers and data can’t really explain. What do you think that was down to?
A number of things. I think he has a fair understanding of how a winning team works and how to put together a winning team. Part of that is that he shows enormous faith and gives enormous backing to the players. Even if you have had a number of innings when you haven’t performed, he would still keep picking you and showing that faith in you. That gives you enormous faith in yourself. You believe that you want to go out there and play for him because you know he’s backing you so much.The other side of it is that he is very observant of players. He knows how to pick a really good player. It may partly be down to the character and then he identifies a very good player very quickly and brings him into his family. And once you are part of the family then, well, you are part of the family. How much cricket did he talk off the field?
A fair bit, but not day in, day out. His room was open almost 24 hours a day. You see players sharing some food or sitting around, having a chat. The game was always on TV. He loved to watch the game. There would be little things he would pick up that others wouldn’t see, and that’s the sort of thing he would talk about. Very perceptive in how he watched the game and spoke about it. Did he predict things sitting in the dugout? Or was he the guy who would say, this is what they should do and this is what they have?
Not really. Out in the middle, he would. I remember batting with him quite a few times, and I’m sort of a panicky person in the middle. MS has got so much power, he doesn’t have to panic at the end, I guess. He would quite often say that he who panics last will win the game.He was very perceptive in the way he knows that this bowler will bowl at this time, and he’d say: “Don’t worry about him, I’ll be able to take him on as he doesn’t know where to bowl to me. You can take this guy, you can hit him here.” He basically had it all mapped out.

“I remember a chat before a game and Dhoni said, ‘Guys, just go out there and play tonight. Just smile at the crowd. Some days you win and some days you lose. Just try and execute the skills the best you possibly can'”

Dhoni or Ricky Ponting? You have played under both.
It’s hard to rank them one and two. They are definitely the best leaders I have played under. They are very different in a lot of ways but very similar in certain ways. They both have a great understanding of the game and they both read the game well. The way they back and trust players, you think that they are in your corners and they are fighting for you. The differences are that Ricky is a very competitive beast and he would go bull at the gate to win, win, win. He can get quite emotional at times as well, whereas MS is very calm – unemotional, really. Did Dhoni have a good sense of humour?
Yeah, quite quick-witted. Was he a prankster?
Not really a prankster. However the relationship he and Sakshi [his wife] have is quite hilarious. I love the banter between the two. Sakshi doesn’t put him on a pedestal. She is very happy to give it back as he gives it to her, and it’s all in good fun and good humour. They have a wonderful relationship. It’s fascinating to watch. Did youngsters in the squad warm up to him immediately?
Yeah, I think they were really intimidated to begin with, and very shy, but once they saw how he is around the team, how relaxed he is, then those barriers were broken down.After every IPL game there would be one or two guys from the opposition wanting to come in and talk to him about their performance and what they could do to improve. He was very giving of his time. He would always encourage the youngsters to sit and have a chat with him while he had his food or drink.”The relationship Dhoni and Sakshi [his wife] have is quite hilarious. I love the banter between the two”•AFP There is a lot of hostility between India and Australia in cricket. Did Dhoni naturally command the respect of even established internationals? Was he one of those captains who people would automatically warm up to?
Without a doubt. I think it was because of how perceptive he was on the field, the moves he made. It seemed like he was in control of the position. Whether he was or not, I don’t actually know, but he put out that impression that he was in control.The other side of it is that the other big Indian senior players seen from outside looked like they really respected Dhoni as well. Guys like Sachin [Tendulkar], [Rahul] Dravid, [VVS] Laxman, Zaheer Khan, Harbhajan Singh. They all seemed to hold him in high regard. Plus, of course, the results he was able to get as captain of the Indian team. Winning the T20 World Cup, the 50-over World Cup, getting the team to Test No. 1 in the world. The results commanded a lot of respect from the community as well. What do you think is the legacy he leaves behind?
I think he bucked the trend on how to lead teams. He did it his own way. He did it in a different way to other leaders in history – not just in cricket but even gladiator times, where the fiercest leaders were leading the way. You think of the emotional leaders who just rant and rave to lead by example. He has done it by just being so relaxed and calm. It’s refreshing that someone can have so much success doing it in a completely different way.Did he ever admit he got lucky at times?
Yeah, he was very honest and open that some days he would get lucky, other days he wasn’t. But that is him in a team. He is very humble doesn’t get too carried away. He knows you need some luck in this game sometimes.The other legacy he would leave is the way power-hitting came into vogue at the end of one-day and T20 games. If you got 250-280, that was pretty much a winning score. But whenever we played India and Dhoni was still there, no score was safe because he had this amazing power that he could hit any bowler out of the ground at the end of the innings. Other teams, seeing the success Dhoni had, started to develop players in the same mode. I think he was probably one of the first pioneers of power-hitting that came into the game.

Hundred's 'transition' year is relying on Test star Steven Smith as headline act

Steven Smith hoping to use his first appearance for Welsh Fire as a platform to reclaim a T20I spot for Australia with the long-term aim of playing in the 2028 Olympics

Matt Roller05-Aug-2025The Hundred’s season of “transition” begins on Tuesday, days after the first wave of payments from new investors hit the counties’ accounts. The ink is still wet on the paperwork for six of the eight multimillion-pound deals and two more will follow on October 1, when host venues and investors assume operational control of their franchises from the ECB.Next season will bring at least three name changes, new kits and new sponsors, but the 2025 edition will be much the same as the previous four. The main difference is a sprinkling of additional star power in the men’s competition through salary increases, with the added intrigue of which investors are spotted in corporate hospitality boxes over the next four weeks.The introduction of direct signings marks the start of the Hundred’s next phase and a more commercial focus. Whatever their respective merits as T20 players, Test cricket’s predominance in England – underlined by the epic series against India – means that fans are far more likely to buy tickets to watch Steven Smith and Kane Williamson than Matt Short and Colin Munro.Related

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It remains to be seen if, given the new IPL links, the ECB can convince the BCCI to release Indian men’s players in future years. The board’s chairman, Richard Thompson, said earlier this week that it would be “a matter of time”, barely two hours after Vikram Banerjee, the Hundred’s managing director, had attempted to play the prospect down.For now, it is Smith’s arrival at Welsh Fire that encapsulates the shift. They first signed him in 2019 only for Covid to kibosh the deal and he has never entered the draft since. But, with the top men’s salary up to £200,000 (from £125,000), Smith has been tempted over, signing soon after the tech entrepreneur Sanjay Govil emerged as the successful bidder for a stake at the Fire.Govil is already the owner of Washington Freedom in Major League Cricket and has a relationship with Smith from his time playing for them last year. He can already foresee a long-term arrangement: “With Sanjay getting involved at the Welsh Fire, potentially, there might be something moving forward,” Smith told ESPNcricinfo.There are similar arrangements elsewhere: Rashid Khan, who plays for Mumbai Indians’ global offshoots, has moved from Trent Rockets to Oval Invincibles, while the RPSG Group’s involvement has seen Noor Ahmad and Heinrich Klaasen join Manchester Originals and Jos Buttler sign for Durban’s Super Giants for the next SA20 season.

“It gives me some opportunities to be able to play in some different tournaments and keep trying to put my best foot forward to get back into the T20 team for Australia. My goal now is to try and play in the Olympics. That’s motivating me, and I want to try and keep getting better at the shorter format”Steven Smith

Smith’s involvement forms part of his master plan to win back his place in Australia’s T20 team – 18 months after his last appearance – with the long-term ambition of winning an Olympic medal at Los Angeles 2028. He retired from ODIs after the Champions Trophy, and said that freeing up his schedule was “certainly a huge part” of that decision.”It gives me some opportunities to be able to play in some different tournaments and keep trying to put my best foot forward to get back into the T20 team for Australia,” he said. “My goal now is to try and play in the Olympics. That’s motivating me, and I want to try and keep getting better at the shorter format.”It is four years since Smith last played an IPL match and his recent short-form opportunities have been scarce. He was a T20 World Cup winner in 2021 before losing his place to Tim David the following year, but with three centuries in his last eight BBL innings for Sydney Sixers, he is confident that he can force his way back in.”[Australia coach] Andrew McDonald actually joked with me the other day,” Smith said. “Every time I go back and play [T20], I always send him a text saying, ‘Did you see that?’ Hopefully, I can send him quite a few texts throughout this month of August. It’d be nice to smash a few around the park and send off a text and ask him whether he saw it.”Steven Smith poses in his Welsh Fire kit•Welsh Fire/The HundredHe will be united with a long-time Ashes rival in Jonny Bairstow, who is hoping to revive his own international career. Bairstow noted with interest Harry Brook’s wish list from players in his England white-ball teams earlier this year: “He’s got a point to prove,” Smith said. “He’s going to come out and play his shots. Hopefully, I can spend some time in the middle with him.”Smith has followed England’s 2-2 draw with India with interest and said recently that he expected this winter’s Ashes to be an “absolute belter”. He played down the relevance of the Hundred to that series, but was looking forward to testing himself against some of England’s bowlers: “It’s going to be great to be able to come up against some of those players.”By the time the Ashes starts on November 21, it will be Australia’s turn to have their own debate around the future of their T20 league. Cricket Australia is already considering the merits of following the ECB’s lead and opening BBL teams up to private investment, and weighing up the potential repercussions – positive and negative – for the wider game.But for now, the focus is squarely on England – and, in Smith’s case, Wales. As the cricketing public breathes a collective sigh of relief after the most intense Test series in recent memory, can the Hundred ride on the wave of interest, eyeballs and drama as it heads towards its brave new world?

Red Sox Leave Door Open for New Rafael Devers Role After Triston Casas Injury

When you lose a player as important as Triston Casas for the majority of the season, all your plans go out the window. That's the reality the Boston Red Sox are facing now, as Casas is expected to be out for the year with a ruptured patellar tendon in his left knee after leaving Friday night's game on a stretcher. He will undergo surgery.

Team executive Craig Breslow briefly spoke about the injury on Saturday, sharing that "all options" are on the table, specifically leaving the door open for Rafael Devers to play first base, as relayed by Chris Cotillo of MassLive.

Devers had a somewhat tense spat with the team coming into this year. Boston added elite third baseman Alex Bregman this offseason in free agency, which has typically been Devers's role. Devers strong-armed the position as firmly his, but later let up to serve as the full-time designated hitter. Now, it looks like the team could reposition him in the infield at first. That was followed with a tough slump to start the year that he has now rebounded from.

Devers has never played first base at the highest level of pro ball, nor has he played the position in minor league ball. It's a transition many players have made over the years though, including star players like Bryce Harper in recent memory.

'It’s all or nothing' – Inter Miami's Javier Mascherano knows what's at stake in MLS Cup against Vancouver Whitecaps

Inter Miami head coach Javier Mascherano didn’t mince words ahead of Saturday’s MLS Cup final against Vancouver, calling it a “do-or-die” moment and demanding the hunger that has defined his team this season. With Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba set for their final match, Miami arrive at the title stage seeking redemption and their first league trophy.

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    Miami believe resilience can deliver a trophy

    Two days before the MLS Cup final, Javier Mascherano made it clear that Miami’s strength hasn’t been about dominating every week, but about responding when things went wrong. The team absorbed painful blows – including a 5-1 Concacaf Champions Cup semifinal loss to Vancouver and a heavy Leagues Cup final defeat to Seattle – yet kept fighting their way back to the summit.

    “We reach Saturday’s match with everything on the line, all or nothing,” Mascherano said. “It’s a huge reward for the work the players have put in all season, for everything they’ve done as a group. It’s the big prize, and it’s right there for us.”

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    Mas‘We need to wake up hungry’

    The Argentine coach emphasized that the final will hinge on mentality rather than tactics or reputation.

    “It will come down to the desire we have to eat it or not,” he said, describing Saturday as a moment that demands total conviction. 

    “Hopefully, we wake up very hungry," he said. 

    The matchup – Miami vs. Vancouver Whitecaps – offers both clubs the chance to win their first MLS Cup.

    “In these last few months, since the Leagues Cup, the team managed to rise again with the goal of getting here in the best possible way,” he said. “The players have had the strength to pick themselves up in every tough moment we faced.”

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    Allende’s status and Muller’s pedigree

    Mascherano also moved quickly to calm concerns about Tadeo Allende, who missed Thursday’s training session.

    “Tadeo showed a slight temperature, so we decided he shouldn’t train so close to the game. It’s nothing serious. He’ll train tomorrow and should be available.”

    When asked about past battles with Thomas Muller, he didn’t hide his admiration.

    “Not the best memories. He’s one of the best of his generation – a world champion, he won everything with Bayern. He gives Vancouver and MLS a different level of hierarchy.”

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    Busquets and Alba’s farewell

    Saturday will also be the final match for Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba, who will retire after the game. Mascherano, in his first season on the sideline, said finals feel different now, with the focus on managing emotion rather than feeding it.

    “As a coach you live it differently. You try to bring tranquility to the team and prepare the week the best way possible,” he said. “We’ve reached the goal of playing the last match for this trophy. The mood and atmosphere around the group are very good.”

Palmeiras x Inter de Limeira: onde assistir ao vivo, horário e prováveis escalações do jogo pelo Paulistão

MatériaMais Notícias

O Palmeiras recebe a Inter de Limeira nesta quarta-feira (24), pela segunda rodada do Campeonato Paulista. A bola rola a partir das 21h35 (de Brasília), no Allianz Parque, em São Paulo, com transmissão da Record e do Paulistão Play.

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✅FICHA TÉCNICA
ITUANO X CORINTHIANS – 2ª RODADA – FASE DE GRUPOS – PAULISTÃO

Data e horário: quarta-feira, 24 de janeiro de 2024, às 21h35 (de Brasília)
Local: Allianz Parque, em São Paulo-SP
Onde assistir: Record e Paulistão Play
Arbitragem: João Vitor Gobi (árbitro); Danilo Simon Manis e Luiz Andrini Nogueira (auxiliares); Guilherme Francisco Maciel (quarto árbitro); Daiane Muniz dos Santos (VAR).

⚽ PROVÁVEIS ESCALAÇÕES
PALMEIRAS (Técnico: Abel Ferreira)
Weverton, Marcos Rocha, Murilo, Gustavo Gómez e Vanderlan; Zé Rafael, Richard Ríos, Veiga e Mayke; Breno Lopes (Bruno Rodrigues) e Rony.

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INTER DE LIMEIRA (Técnico: Júnior Rocha)
Max Walef; Felipe Albuquerque, Matheus Mancini, Diego Jussani e Zé Mário; Gustavo Bochecha, João Paulo, Lucas Buchecha e Fernando Canesin; Quirino e Éverton Brito.

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