Romano drops Lenglet to Spurs update

Tottenham Hotspur are closing in on their fifth signing of the summer transfer window…

What’s the word?

As revealed by Italian journalist Fabrizio Romano, Spurs have agreed on a deal to sign central defender Clement Lenglet on loan from FC Barcelona.

“Tottenham are set to sign Clément Lenglet from Barcelona, here we go! Loan deal agreed, valid until June 2023 – Lenglet already accepted last week, personal terms agreed,” he tweeted.

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The transfer guru then provided further details about the deal in another update on Twitter, where he claimed:

“Loan move to Tottenham done, no buy option clause included; Officially he’ll be back at Barça in June 2023, as things stand; Tottenham will pay a loan fee and part of the salary; [Antonio] Conte already called Lenglet.”

Conte will be delighted

The Frenchman becomes the Lilywhites’ fifth signing of the summer, having signed Ivan Perisic (free from Inter Milan), Fraser Forster (free from Southampton), Yves Bissouma (£25m from Brighton and Hove Albion) and Richarlison (£60m from Everton) so far.

Conte was keen to bolster his backline with the addition of a left-footed centre-back and whilst it’s not his former gem Alessandro Bastoni, it is still a solid solution and as we’ve seen with the initial loan moves of Cristian Romero and Dejan Kulusevski, it is a pretty risk-free deal.

The 27-year-old colossus, who stands at 6 foot 1, has fallen out of favour at the Nou Camp since the LaLiga outfit activated his €35m (£30m) release clause from Sevilla.

Last season, he managed only 724 minutes of league action but over the course of his career, he has racked up plenty of experience, having registered nearly 200 appearances across the Spanish top-flight and the Champions League.

Spurs are expected to pay a large portion of the £97k-per-week wages that the Barcelona man, who was once lauded as a “special talent”, is earning over in Spain.

The £10.8m-rated defender has averaged 1.7 tackles, 1.2 interceptions and an 87.8% passing accuracy over his career to date, via WhoScored, making him a very solid and reliable option at the back and ultimately, one that fits Conte and his system immensely.

As such, the Italian head coach is surely buzzing to get this one over the line at long last, just in time for their pre-season trip to South Korea on Saturday.

AND in other news, Fabrizio Romano: Spurs plot another swoop after Lenglet…

Aston Villa: Fabrizio Romano drops Rory Wilson news

Aston Villa are now set to sign Rangers forward Rory Wilson, according to Fabrizio Romano.

The Lowdown: Wilson links

Wilson, a 16-year-old striker, has been on Villa’s radar for some time now, with Steven Gerrard keen on beating Liverpool to the youngster’s services.

Regarded as one of the best young players in the United Kingdom, Wilson has already signed a boot deal with Adidas. The Scot netted a ridiculous 49 goals at youth level this season, and it looks as if he’ll be plying his trade in the Midlands next season.

The Latest: Romano’s post

Transfer expert Romano took to Twitter on Monday morning to provide a further update regarding Villa and Wilson.

He revealed that Villa are officially ‘set to sign’ the forward, who has ‘now agreed’ on personal terms. Gerrard has been the ‘main factor’ in Villa winning the race for his services, with a move to officially go through on July 1.

The Verdict: Good news

NSWE have already brought in four first-team additions this summer, so Wilson will now become the fifth but the first academy arrival.

Villa have been active over the last 12 months when it comes to adding to their academy talent, so bringing in Wilson is yet another exciting move.

The club have reaped the rewards of signing some gifted teenagers, with Tim Iroegbunam already a full-time member of Gerrard’s first-team squad less than a year after swapping West Brom’s academy for Villa.

Hopefully, Wilson will continue his fine goalscoring form at Bodymoor Heath, which could result in him being fast-tracked through to Gerrard’s plans over the coming years.

In other news: Villa now receive ‘official proposal’ for player with ‘unbelievable’ work rate. 

Spurs: Paratici interested in Mamardashvili

Tottenham Hotspur are interested in a deal to bring Giorgi Mamardashvili to the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in the summer transfer window.

What’s the talk?

That’s according to a report by Spanish publication Marca, who claim that Fabio Paratici has now joined the race to sign the Valencia goalkeeper, with Manchester United having already made contact with the LaLiga side regarding a deal for the 21-year-old.

The report goes on to state that, with Los Che needing to raise around €70m (£60m) from player sales in order to balance their books, Jose Bordalas’ side would be open to the sale of the Georgia international this summer – with the shot-stopper reported to have a €20m (£17m) release clause written into his contract at The Mestalla.

The next Jan Oblak

Considering the sheer amount of potential Mamardashvili undoubtedly possesses, it is easy to see why Paratici would be interested in a deal to bring the ‘keeper to north London this summer – especially for a figure of just £17m.

Indeed, the £4.5m-rated talent highly impressed over his 18 LaLiga appearances this season, keeping eight clean sheets and making an average of 3.1 saves per game – the joint fifth-most in the league.

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These returns saw the £13k-per-week shot-stopper who Xisco Munoz claimed can have “brutal growth” and Jacek Kulig dubbed Jan “Oblak-esque” average a quite remarkable SofaScore match rating of 6.98, ranking him as Bordalas’ fourth-best performer in the Spanish top flight.

Furthermore, according to FBref data, the 21-year-old also ranks in the top 8% of goalkeepers in Europe’s big five leagues for saves made per 90, as well as the top 4% for clean sheets, the top 23% for goals conceded, the top 9% for goal-kick distance, the top 24% for crosses stopped and the top 29% for defensive actions outside of the penalty area over the last 365 days.

As such, with the 35-year-old Hugo Lloris being no spring chicken, and Mamardashvili clearly being an exceptionally talented young goalkeeper, it would appear highly advisable for Paratici to do everything he can to land the Georgian ahead of Manchester United this summer.

Indeed, should the Valencia starlet continue his extraordinary rate of development following a £17m switch to the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, the Italian sporting director could well have sealed a player who could go on to become the next Oblak – the Atletico Madrid number one who had a £70m asking price last year – for Spurs.

AND in other news: “Understood to be keen”: Gold drops big Spurs transfer claim that supporters will love

Tottenham: Sky Sports reporter backs Pau Torres claims

Sky Sports reporter Michael Bridge has now backed some big recent transfer claims involving Tottenham Hotspur and Pau Torres of Villarreal.

The Lowdown: Spurs in the mix for Torres?

Spurs head coach Antonio Conte is allegedly setting his sights on the signing of a central defender and has apparently earmarked the Spaniard as a primary summer target.

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Torres has been a mainstay under Unai Emery over the 2021/22 La Liga season, and Tottenham transfer chief Fabio Paratici has actually tried to bring him to the Premier League before, as confirmed by the player himself.

Reports have indicated that Spurs are now confident that they can strike an agreement for the 25-year-old, who wants now wants to leave Villarreal.

Indeed, the Lilywhites hold a serious interest in Torres, as now backed by Sky Sports reporter Bridge.

The Latest: Bridge backs Torres reports…

Speaking to GiveMeSport, the journalist claimed that there is ‘no doubt’ that Tottenham are eyeing a move for Torres.

Bridge explained: “He is definitely on their radar – there’s no doubt about that. But he would probably be one of the more expensive options in a long list of defenders they’re looking at.”

The Verdict: Time to advance…

While there are many promising candidates to become a member of Conte’s back three, we believe that Torres stands out as one of the more elite targets.

Spain manager Luis Enrique reveres the defender’s partnership with Aymeric Laporte at international level, perhaps best summed up by his description of the Villarreal titan as ‘sensational’.

As ever, the only sticking point for Spurs is the finances involved, but reports have suggested that the club are confident they can sign him for less than his £55m release clause.

Going by the plethora of reports, now backed by a reliable source, this may well be one to keep an eye on.

In other news: Paratici tables crucial bid as Conte personally pushes for Spurs signing! Find out more here.

West Ham: Journalist shares Watkins update

West Ham United’s pursuit of Aston Villa striker Ollie Watkins may have been given a slight boost, according to journalist Paul Brown.

The Lowdown: Hammers eye move…

The Hammers and manager David Moyes are reportedly watching Villa’s forward ahead of the 2022 summer transfer window with a new striker firmly on West Ham’s agenda.

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It is believed that the club want to add an out-and-out centre forward to Moyes’ ranks alongside the potential additions of a central defender and new midfielder (The Times).

Michail Antonio is currently the Irons’ only natural senior option in the striker role, and with an interesting 2022/2023 season around the corner, West Ham simply must add an alternative at long last.

The Latest: Brown makes Watkins claim…

Speaking to GiveMeSport, journalist Brown of The Daily Star has claimed that Watkins could have his head turned by West Ham – especially if they manage to secure a Champions League spot either through the top four or winning the Europa League.

He explained: “Would Ollie Watkins leave Villa? It depends. If West Ham were to do something special and really get in the top four or get into the Champions League, that might turn his head. But he’s kind of Villa’s crown jewel, so it would be hard for them to let him go.”

The Verdict: Promising?

You would imagine, like many of West Ham’s targets, a place in Europe’s most coveted competition would be a major pull for them.

Much could ride on their potential place in the Champions League next season but, if Moyes’ men were to seal a place, there is little doubt Watkins would upgrade the forward line.

A serious homegrown talent, the England international is pivotal for Villa, scoring more goals than anyone in Steven Gerrard’s squad – while only Philippe Coutinho has averaged more shots at goal per 90 in the Premier League (WhoScored).

Former West Ham striker Frank McAvennie is certainly a fan, branding Watkins a ‘massive player’ and ‘brilliant’.

Indeed, he could be the ideal striker signing for Moyes this summer, but much will depend on Villa’s selling stance.

In other news: ‘He will…’ – West Ham source shares major Rice update from the last 48 hours, find out more here.

Talking points – the secret behind DK's success

Well, game awareness. It’s the one thing a batsman needs to handle tough conditions and the KKR captain had plenty

Alagappan Muthu25-Apr-2019He was 3 off 10 balls. And already ten overs had gone. So how did he end up with 97 runs?! Well, game awareness. It’s the one thing every batsman needs to handle tough conditions.2:24

County cricket helped me improve my inswingers – Aaron

Dinesh Karthik saw Shreyas Gopal – a spinner, and so the weak link on this green pitch – and took him for 19 runs in the 11th over. That got him going.Then, he pulverised Jaydev Unadkat – who has only one weapon, the change of pace, and so is extremely predictable – for 35 in 14. And once he was in full flow, even Jofra Archer couldn’t stop him, although Karthik did tilt the battle his way by doing something most finishers have done this IPL: take guard deep in his crease. That way he was set up for anything from the yorker to the bouncer. That’s how he could flat-bat short balls for sixes over extra cover.A captain’s wicketThree catching chances and a run-a-ball 14. That was Andre Russell tonight. It was bad. And Steven Smith had a lot to do with it turning out that way. The moment Kolkata Knight Riders’ big-hitter came to the crease, he pressed into service his best wicket-taker on the night – Varun Aaron, his best match-winner – Archer, and his fastest bowler – Oshane Thomas. They bowled 71% of the deliveries faced by Russell in this game.Now, this was a massive gamble. Smith was willing to bowl out his best bowlers in an effort to take out KKR’s best batsman. And if Russell had weathered the onslaught, he could have feasted on the weaker bowlers. After all, Unadkat ended up bowling two of the last three overs of the innings.ESPNcricinfo LtdAaron in the greenIt’s been home disadvantage for KKR, playing much of this season on surfaces that have, largely, negated their spin-bowling strength. Things went to a whole other level on Thursday as Eden Gardens rolled out a very green surface with pace, bounce, carry and movement.Rajasthan Royals loved the look of it and Aaron even started with a maiden; he’s only ever bowled one of those before in his entire IPL career. Later on, he delivered a knockout knuckle ball, swinging it so far into Shubman Gill that he really had no reply.ESPNcricinfo LtdBoth Aaron and his partner – IPL debutant and express quick Thomas – bowled that hard, hit-the-deck length, rarely allowing the drive, and it had a clear effect. KKR’s batsmen were rushed by the speed at which the ball came at them and were disconcerted by the movement on offer.It was all reminiscent of the 2017 IPL, the first one after the Eden pitch was relaid, with fast bowlers picking up 65 wickets and spinners contributing a mere 25.Narine magicHis heart is in playing for West Indies, but his finger is not ready to take on the load of 50-over cricket. Here in the IPL, even a niggly Sunil Narine proves to be a handful.There were two things that made him so good against Royals. One, he hit an in-between length, not letting batsmen come forward and get to the pitch of the ball, or rock back to play the horizontal-bat shots. And two, his speed, which was in the 90kph range.That is probably why neither Ajinkya Rahane nor Smith could cope with the balls they got out to even though they only turned very slightly. Both men were playing down the wrong line but the zip off the track meant they had no time to adjust.In fact, in the second innings, the spinners became immensely effective, picking up 5 for 36 in eight overs (not including part-timer Nitish Rana) while seamers were walloped for 119 in 10.2.

No point worrying about things out of your control – Ojha

A trimmer, fitter Pragyan Ojha talks about the hurt of being left out and the “one chance” that could turn things around

Arun Venugopal15-Mar-2017Pragyan Ojha has stood at nearly six feet for a number of years, but appears taller during the Bengal-Mumbai game at the MA Chidambaram Stadium. Whether he is bowling, fielding or simply returning to the top of his run-up, Ojha looks a few inches taller than usual. When you meet him after the game – Ojha (3-28) has engineered a 96-run thrashing of Mumbai along with Abhimanyu Easwaran (127) – you realise it’s no string theory. Ojha is a lot slimmer than he used to be, and hence appears taller.Unless you have been present at Bengal’s games this season, chances are you have seen little of him, with the exception of two East Zone matches in the Syed Mushtaq Ali T20 tournament, that were broadcast live. In the three-and-a-half years since his most recent international game, Ojha’s television appearances have largely been confined to the IPL. But, even those became sporadic since he was banned from bowling in December 2014.But, over the last seven or eight months, Ojha, 30, has quietly gone about putting his body through the wringer. According to Ojha, he hasn’t lost weight, but instead slashed the fat-percentage. And, while his training methods have largely remained unchanged, he now abides by a stricter diet regimen. Ojha has cut back on sugar and carbohydrates, and tries to eat the “right kind of food at the right time.”His reasoning is simple: if he has to make a comeback to the national side, he has to work doubly hard.”The first thing [you see] when you look at the Indian team is everybody there is pushing hard,” he says. “So, to do anything right on the field, I have to be fit. It’s as simple as that. As we know, we don’t get younger. So, the fitness level has to be up.”A leaner, fitter Ojha wasn’t automatically a more successful version. With 10 wickets from six matches at an average of nearly 40, Ojha had a below-par Ranji Trophy season. He has, however, done better in the shorter formats, finishing with seven wickets across four matches in the inter-state T20 tournament and the Syed Mushtaq Ali inter-zonal competition. In the 50-overs Vijay Hazare Trophy, Ojha was also Bengal’s second-highest wicket-taker in the league phase with nine wickets from six games at an average of 23.55 and an economy rate of 4.51.’When you have so many great players in the team, you try to match them’•PTI But, IPL franchises continued to ignore him at the auction. Since Ojha’s last Test match ended on November 16, 2013, Ravindra Jadeja has emerged as one of India’s most influential match-winners. During the period, Jadeja has picked up 102 of his 129 Test wickets from 23 games. On the other hand, Ojha has had to change his action and clock enough overs to ensure he got a hang of it. Moreover, the reality check that he was no longer in the thick of things was harsh. However, hope has followed hurt.”Yeah, initially it used to hurt me, but now that has become the biggest motivation for me,” he says. “Obviously when you have played at that level and won games for the country, you know you can do it again, and that is the motivation I have and I am trying to work on that.”I didn’t get picked for the IPL this season, but the fact was that all the teams were packed. So, there is no point thinking about things that are not in your control. I came here and spoke to [Bengal coach] Sairaj Bahutule. He said: ‘Give your best in Vijay Hazare. [If the] team does well, you do well, and things will change.’ That’s my biggest motivation. I believe if I keep taking wickets then at some point of time, there might be a chance and I am just looking for that one chance.”Every senior player Ojha has spoken to has had one simple advice to offer: keep fit and bowl a lot. With his remodelled action, Ojha says, he bounds into the crease a lot straighter.”Previously I was going diagonal. That’s the only difference,” he says. “And, I have got a slight pause in my action [just before delivery] where I see the batsman. Nowadays the batsmen are so good, they step out and hit […] especially in the shorter formats. So you have to have that fraction of a second. That’s what I am working on.”Ojha is also hopeful of landing a county deal later this year. He says he had to pass up an opportunity to play for Middlesex last year as it clashed with the Duleep Trophy. “If I get a chance I will definitely look to play,” he says. “Previously when I played for Surrey, I learnt a lot. You get to bowl a lot as a professional and the whole team depends on you. So, that is a challenge and you grow as a cricketer.”

‘I don’t think like a cricketer when I am at home. I just go home as a normal boy and enjoy my life’

For now, Ojha feels he is better for the experience of being one of the senior players in the Bengal side, which has made the knockouts of the Vijay Hazare.”If you see, we have got some great cricketers in Bengal. We have got Manoj [Tiwary], Wriddhi [Wriddhiman Saha], [Ashoke] Dinda and [Mohammad] Shami,” he says. “When you have so many good players in the team, you look to do well and you try to compete with each other. When everybody is giving their best, you also try to match them and the best performances come out. “Sairaj Bahutule has a lot of inputs, not only as a former spinner but also as a coach. Keeping the team together is the most important thing. When it is a team game, everybody should work towards one goal because you have different minds. He is doing it superbly.”Ojha also says he doesn’t agonise over an international comeback. “Right now, I am just thinking about working hard and just going out there and bowling the best I can,” he says.”I am blessed with a good family – my parents and my wife really don’t discuss cricket at home, and to a certain extent, I don’t think like a cricketer when I am at home. It’s the biggest plus point that my family doesn’t ask me questions about my cricket or anything. I just go home as a normal boy and just enjoy my life.”

Expecting Sehwag to do the unexpected

Opposition captains always feared: what if Sehwag gets going? Everyone else just learned to accept that he would forever surprise

Siddhartha Vaidyanathan23-Oct-2015The heart wishes Virender Sehwag had retired after a rousing Test, his team-mates chairing him off the ground, the crowd bidding him adieu with a standing ovation. The mind understands that this was never going to come to pass, that Sehwag’s days as an international cricketer were long past, and that he would tweet the news of his exit (as he had promised late last year) and be off without a fuss.The end was as abrupt as it was apt. Not for him a press conference bathed in emotion, or a speech that tugged at heartstrings. There was no grand felicitation, there were no teary goodbyes. Instead he went his own way, wrapping up with a tweet that started “I hereby… ” and a statement that began, “To paraphrase Mark Twain…”None of this should come as a surprise; to have experienced Sehwag’s career is to have come to expect the unexpected. During times when conventional wisdom advised circumspection, he would blast off. Where other batsmen shut shop a few overs before stumps, he saw it as an opportunity to pick off boundaries. When opposition captains pushed mid-off and mid-on back, he didn’t look at it as a chance for singles; instead he was determined to launch the ball over the fielders’ heads. Where team-mates used the services of a nightwatchman, he deemed it an insult (“If I can’t play for 25 minutes, I’m not much of a batsman.”)Stories of Sehwag’s counter-intuition are legion. He once charged a medium-pace bowler in a Ranji Trophy game, swished wildly, and missed by more than a foot. That in itself should come as no surprise, except, as his former team-mate Aakash Chopra wrote on this website, it was little but an act. On “one of the worst pitches”, Sehwag was actually trying to mess with the bowler’s length. Sure enough, the trick rattled the opponent. The next two balls pitched short. And Sehwag smashed two fours.Paul Harris ended up the loser in his contest with Sehwag in 2008•Getty ImagesThe common refrain while talking about Sehwag’s batting is how his approach was so simple, how the see-ball-hit-ball approach served him so well. This, of course, is partly true – he has himself acknowledged the value of clearing all clutter from the mind – but it is also somewhat reductionist. Sehwag might not have analysed ground conditions and wagon wheels with a high level of granularity (and, back in 2006, he might not have known about Pankaj Roy and Vinoo Mankad’s record partnership) but he was far from unschooled. He analysed his innings and dismissals, and spoke to those he respected about technical glitches, taking on advice from openers as varied in approach as Sunil Gavaskar and Kris Srikkanth. He enjoyed chatting with psychologist Rudi Webster (he was especially curious to hear about the early struggles of Viv Richards, whom Webster likened Sehwag to) and sometimes surprised team-mates by reeling off names of bowlers he had faced in stray innings.Most significantly he was astute enough to constantly upend traditional approaches to batting. Where Sachin Tendulkar was bogged down, padding away Ashley Giles bowling over the wicket, Sehwag backed away and slashed; charged diagonally and slashed; and, in what was little short of a tight slap across the bowler’s face, reverse-swept without a care in the world. None of this was blind slogging; it was a planned assault to disrupt a bowler’s rhythm, nullifying his negative tactics. Six years on, when another left-arm spinner targeted his pads, Sehwag challenged him: “Come round the wicket and first ball I’ll hit you for a six.” Paul Harris – with a long-off, long-on, deep midwicket and a deep point – accepted the dare. And sure enough, the first ball soared over the sightscreen.Such provocation wasn’t merely an instinctive flash of bravado. Like the smartest of bowlers, Sehwag understood when to needle the opposition and when to send out a message by shutting up. Against Australia in Chennai in 2004, he made friendly small-talk with some fielders as he walked off after the first day’s play. But come the end of the fourth day, with India chasing a tricky target, he pounded a drive past Glenn McGrath and strode off, chin up, with a raging sense of purpose. “You have to show the other team that you’re here to win,” he would later say of that unforgettable walk-off.Fury Road: Sehwag set up India’s record chase against England in Chennai in 2008•AFPIt has often been pointed out that Sehwag averaged slightly over 30 in the third and fourth innings of Tests with just one hundred, a stat used to demonstrate his frailty under “scoreboard pressure”. What is not highlighted as much is that he averaged a mighty 65.91 in the second innings of Tests, with 12 hundreds – many of which came after the opposition had piled on massive scores. When New Zealand amassed 630 in Mohali in 2003, Sehwag responded with 130; when South Africa piled on 510 in Kanpur in 2004, he answered with 164; when Pakistan erected 679 in Lahore in 2006, he blitzed 254; and when South Africa put on 540 in Chennai in 2008, he smoked the fastest Test triple-hundred. As important as it is to celebrate Sehwag the match-winner, it’s vital to hail Sehwag the match-saver: the opening batsman who drew games not by playing out time but by rollicking along at berserker pace, eliminating threats of India following on.What this meant was that, despite his poor fourth-innings record, teams were often hesitant to declare in the third innings, the fear of “what if Sehwag gets going?” never far from their calculations. There is no stat to quantify the psychological effect that Sehwag had on fielding teams but an Ian Chappell quote from 2005 sums up the sentiment: “Sehwag can change the course of a match with the ease of Moses parting the Red Sea”.Over the years there were a number of innings when Sehwag parted the metaphorical Red Sea, but the apex of match-changeability arrived on that December afternoon in 2008 – a month after the terrorist attacks in Mumbai – when England set India 387 for victory in Chennai. The odds were grim. No team had chased more than 155 at the ground and no team had achieved a fourth-innings target of more than 276 at any Indian venue.None of this mattered to Sehwag. He had begun the fourth day by telling Ravi Shastri, “We could easily chase 300-plus against England,” and then gone on to burn the batting manual, juddering a 68-ball 83 to fire-start the chase. There were rasping upper cuts and swirling sixes; the short balls ending up in the V between point and third man, the full ones in the V between square leg and midwicket. It was a kind of innings that galvanises the team to dare to dream; an innings that sends shock waves through the fielding side; and an innings that makes ten-year-olds want to reach for their bats, getting them hooked to the game for good.Once the win was achieved, Tendulkar was asked about Sehwag’s mighty eruption. “We are quite used to that,” he said with a smile. “You kind of expect something which is not expected.”He may as well have been summing up a once-in-a-lifetime career.

T20 keeps Kieswetter in mind

The class of Craig Kieswetter and Ravi Bopara lead ESPNcricinfo’s countdown of the things that mattered in the latest round of NatWest T20 Blast matches

Tim Wigmore16-Jun-20145. A tale of two England wicketkeepers
If this were the IPL, Craig Kieswetter would be a run shy of wearing the orange cap given to the top scorer in the tournament. The T20 Blast eschews such wheezes, but there is no doubting Kieswetter’s T20 pedigree. He is currently second in the scoring list and, since his last international appearance, he has scored 801 runs in English T20 at 57 apiece.It was raw power that earned Kieswetter his first international caps, in Bangladesh in 2010, but his game now possesses more refinement. He has spoken about his improved ability to assess conditions and gauge a match-winning total; a 48-ball 55 in Somerset’s opening game at Bristol may have appeared sedate but it was the prelude to a comfortable win.Kieswetter is closer than many think to an England recall: he was an injury replacement in the World T20 squad in Bangladesh and will hardly have been harmed by missing the defeat to the Netherlands.Thanks to Jos Buttler’s emergence, his route into England’s limited-overs sides would be as a specialist batsman opening the innings. If his Powerplay impact smiting the ball down the ground is not in doubt, there are legitimate questions over what comes next: even his 70 at Arundel on Sunday contained a 22-ball lull without a boundary. Yet to focus on this feels churlish given Kieswetter’s fourth half-century of the season set-up a 34-run win. If England’s interest is reawakened, they would find much more than a harum-scarum hitter.And what of the other would-be England keeper? Having relinquished the gloves for his county five weeks ago, Steven Davies may no longer qualify for membership of the group. Forty-seven runs in four T20 innings as a specialist batsman led to Davies being dropped from Surrey’s side on Friday night. He turns 28 tomorrow.4. Notts need overseas aid
With Alex Hales, Michael Lumb, James Taylor and Samit Patel, a formidable quartet unwanted by England apart from Hales’ T20 involvement, Nottinghamshire have one of the most intimidating batting line-ups around. So it is a curiosity that they have still only registered two victories this season.One explanation lies in a lack of overseas aid: Peter Siddle is focusing exclusively on Championship cricket. What they would give for David Hussey. He averaged 35 with the bat in T20 cricket for Notts, but his 10-year association with the county ended last season.Director of cricket Mick Newell has conceded: “His type of cricket is exactly what’s missing.” But Caribbean Premier League commitments render a return impossible. Unless Notts change their policy, more success from Michael Lumb and James Taylor – who average 17 between them – is urgently needed to prevent a shock exit in the first round.

Player focus: James Hildreth (Somerset)

“Who should replace Marcus?” Somerset regulars have wondered in recent years. The reassuring thud emanating from Trescothick’s bat in the Championship has made the question seem less pressing, but a groin injury, forcing him out of both Somerset’s weekend matches, perhaps provided clarity about his successor. James Hildreth led Somerset to a pair of wins and, with Trescothick preoccupied by the tantalising prospect of the club’s first Championship title, may get more captaincy experience in white-ball cricket in 2014. It would be apt if Trescothick handed the baton on to another batsman sharing his undiluted commitment to the West Country.

3. We’re all Boplievers now
With England’s Test players available only fleetingly, attention has been on others to inject the Blast with some homegrown razzmatazz. For all the hype, Andrew Flintoff has not appeared and Kevin Pietersen has managed five runs. Into this void, step forward Ravi Bopara. His runs have always contained panache. Now this is being married to a most welcome quality: inevitability.In the space of three nights last week, sumptuous unbeaten innings of 81 and 66 made a pair of onerous-sounding chases seem facile, and took Essex top of the South Division. Bopara now has 207 runs – 72 of them in sixes – in this year’s competition, and has only been dismissed once. We are all Boplievers now.2. The UK’s worst T20 team
Memories of the formidable Sussex T20 side that reached five quarter-finals in six seasons from 2007, including winning the tournament in 2009, are fading. A pair of weekend defeats, including a ten-wicket thumping at The Oval, reinforced Sussex’s status as the country’s worst T20 side around. The problem is primarily with the batting: for all Ed Joyce’s elegance, Sussex are over-dependent on Luke Wright for impetus to reach imposing totals. Since scoring 56 against Surrey, Wright has failed to pass 31 in his last six T20 innings.The upshot is that no county has won fewer than Sussex’s three games since the start of 2013, and they have lost all but two – the opening games of this season – of their past 15 T20s. “Focus on the league” time beckons.1. Glamorgan’s premature revenge
“Let’s Get Revenge” declared Glamorgan’s posters in preparation for the visit of Somerset to Wales on July 4. Nothing wrong with that: a little spice never goes amiss in county cricket. But then Glamorgan had to go and ruin it all by having the chutzpah to win at Taunton, ruining the presumption of the marketing men. They should have had a little more faith. After Friday’s tie against Kent, when a superlative final over from Michael Hogan prevented the visitors scoring the three runs they required for victory, Glamorgan lie third in the South Division.

Big friend of a little island

Tony Greig shared a special bond with Sri Lanka, dating back to before their World Cup win

Andrew Fernando30-Dec-2012Two years ago I was travelling with a cricket-illiterate foreign friend through Colombo when a billboard showing a large man with a wide-brimmed hat caught his attention.”Who is that? I keep seeing him around,” he asked, pointing.”Tony Greig,” I replied. “He is a cricket commentator. He’s very popular here.””Just for being a commentator? What about all the other commentators?””Well… no,” I stuttered, struggling to find the words that would capture the warmth and history of Greig’s relationship with the island. “Tony’s different,” I finally offered. “We love him and he loves us.”For many people, especially in the provinces of Sri Lanka, it is common practice to have the radio on alongside the cricket on television, providing the Sinhala commentary they understand. Often six or seven neighbours sit cloistered together in a small room, in front of one of the few television sets in the village. When Greig’s name appears on the bottom of screen, though, someone calls it out. Nothing more needs to be said. The radio is turned down and the TV volume cranked up. Perhaps no one in the room understands Greig, but they feel like they know him. He is an old friend. He has been part of their lives for so long now, and to leave his commentary unheard is like leaving him on the doorstep to wither in the heat.Sri Lanka’s love affair with Greig began during the 1996 World Cup, though he himself had admired its cricketers and their country for some time by then, even consoling the side after Muttiah Muralitharan had been called for chucking on Boxing Day 1995.Sri Lanka were barely better than minnows in most estimations then. Talented, perhaps, to a point, but far too young and erratic still to make a genuine play for a title as coveted as this. Greig nailed his colours to the mast early in the tournament. “I just love the way these little Sri Lankans play,” he declared during one of Sri Lanka’s group matches. “I really think they can win this World Cup if they play well.””These little Sri Lankans” was to become his catchphrase during the tournament, alongside his nickname for Romesh Kaluwitharana – “little Kalu”. Perhaps on the lips of any other, those words may have seemed tinged with condescension, but the affection in Greig’s voice was unmistakeable. He is remembered as a combative man and cricketer, but he only ever had love for Sri Lanka.

Both in the cricketing universe and elsewhere, Greig believed in Sri Lanka before she even believed in herself

It was fitting that he was on air as Arjuna Ranatunga and Aravinda de Silva took Sri Lanka close to triumph in the final. “These Sri Lankans are giving the Aussies a real hiding,” Greig boomed, after Ranatunga hit a Shane Warne full toss over the square-leg rope – a cricketing moment almost every Sri Lankan remembers.After the winning runs had been hit, Greig dubbed the victory “a little fairytale”. “The thing that I like about these guys is that they not only win, but they win in style. It is only a small place, Sri Lanka, and what a moment this is for Sri Lankan people.”Over the years Greig’s love for the island grew irresistible, and the nation embraced him as one of their own. Sri Lanka perhaps suffers from a condition that might be termed small-nation syndrome. Locals feel they are perennially overlooked and constantly lumped with neighbours from the north they have little in common with. Greig was Sri Lanka’s relentless champion, proclaiming the wonder of her beaches, the sweetness of her seafood, and the hospitality of her people, even while the country was in the grip of an ugly civil war.In 2010, Greig was made a brand ambassador for tourism in Sri Lanka, but as many noted, it was strange that he was being paid for a job he had been performing with untamable enthusiasm for years. Both in the cricketing universe and elsewhere, Greig believed in Sri Lanka before she even believed in herself.When he announced his illness in October, Sri Lankans were sympathetic and sincere. A Buddhist blessing ceremony was organised for Greig in Colombo, with Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara in attendance. Greig was overwhelmed with get-well messages from Sri Lanka and he acknowledged their support with a heartfelt message of his own.”You’ve no idea what it means to me,” he said, “to have received the support that I have from so many Sri Lankans in so many different ways. It’s a very special feeling in the heart of someone that there is a nation of cricket-lovers like the Sri Lankans, who care about an individual like myself.”The news of his death shocked almost everyone, and the outpouring of grief from Sri Lanka has been immense. Greig had many friends in the country, and countless men in high places have had his company, though he had always taken care to remain unbiased and apolitical. In many ways, he chose to see the best of Sri Lanka and to ignore, at least outwardly, her less praiseworthy traits.Sri Lanka is now a more united country than it was during much of Greig’s commentary career, and it will be united now in acknowledging the loss of a favourite adopted son. Farewell, Tony, and may the earth give you peace. Beloved of Sri Lanka, big friend of our little island.

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