Steve Bucknor to retire from umpiring

Steve Bucknor is the only umpire to have stood in 100 Tests © Getty Images
 

Steve Bucknor has announced that he will retire from umpiring at international level in March and the ICC has confirmed his decision.The third Test between South Africa and Australia in Cape Town from March 19 to 23 will be his last Test while the two upcoming ODIs between West Indies and England in Barbados on March 27 and 29 will be his last one-day international assignments.”I have notified the ICC that the South Africa versus Australia series will be my last Test series,” Bucknor, 62, told the on Sunday. “The body is feeling quite good and I know I could go on for another two or three years. However, something inside me is telling me that it is time to go.”Bucknor was looking forward to help improve the standard of umpiring in the Caribbean after his retirement. “I hope I will be accorded the opportunity by the West Indies board to work with young umpires in the region because I still would like to continue making a contribution,” he said.The ICC has announced it will pay a special tribute to Bucknor after his final match.”Steve’s contribution to our great sport over two decades at the top level of umpiring has been immense,” Haroon Lorgat, the chief executive, said. “To have remained as one of the game’s top officials for that length of time has required Steve to be self-motivated, confident and well respected, and he has all those qualities in abundance, while at the same time remaining a very humble man.”In the meantime I know that Steve, being the understated man that he is, will want to focus on the job at hand, that of getting things right on the field, something he has done as well as any other umpire in the history of the game.”Bucknor, who began his international umpiring career in 1989, has officiated in a record 126 Tests. He has also stood in 179 ODIs, including five consecutive World Cup finals since 1992 – the most by any umpire. Bucknor has been on the ICC’s elite panel since 2002.

Sky Sports journalist drops Rangers exit theory

Sky Sports journalist Michael Bridge has raised the prospect that full-back Borna Barisic may have a move away from Rangers lined up ahead of the transfer deadline on Tuesday.

The left-back has been heavily linked with a potential move to Italian club Roma in this transfer window.

Barisic has been heavily involved at the start of the season for the Scottish club and has played five times in all competitions.

He was also involved versus Celtic in the Old Firm derby at the weekend and provided an assist in the 1-0 win.

Bridge has pointed out the Croatia international lingered on the pitch after the final whistle and wonders if he may have been saying goodbye ahead of a potential exit from the club prior to Monday’s deadline.

Barisic has been with Rangers since 2018 and has a contract until 2024, making a total of 117 appearances and scoring seven goals, while providing 33 assists during his time in Scotland.

Bridge said: “There is one interesting one. The Sky cameras picked it up, the very last shot, he was the last player to leave the pitch, Croatian left-back, excellent left-back, called Borna Barisic.

“He kissed the ground and looked sort of quite tearful, so I don’t know if he’s lined up a move anywhere. He’s quite injury prone but when fit, he’s a really, really good left-back.

“I’d say he’s a Premier League top 10 left-back. I don’t know if anyone’s come in for him. Nothing’s come out today but it was a very interesting reaction for a player.

“I know they’d just beaten Celtic but even so, it was a bit of a strange reaction, kissing the ground.”

Moores undecided over Vaughan recall

Peter Moores, England’s coach, has still not decided whether former captain Michael Vaughan should be brought back to the national side

Cricinfo staff24-Dec-2008
Will Michael Vaughan be in the squad for the West Indies tour? Peter Moores isn’t sure yet © Getty Images
Peter Moores, England’s coach, has still not decided whether former captain Michael Vaughan should be brought back to the national side. The England touring party for the West Indies series, which starts next month, will be announced on Monday.Vaughan, 34, stepped down from the captaincy in the summer and had said he wanted a break from the game. He was awarded a central contract in September and has stated his desire to be a part of the side for the West Indies tour.He has played little cricket since last July, and missed an opportunity to get some match practice after the England Performance Programme squad’s trip to India was cut short after the Mumbai terrorist attack last month.”Michael has had no cricket,” Moores said. “But we have got to look at where we are now as a team and what we think is right to go forward as a batting unit.”So we will look at those decisions once the dust has settled, get the views of people like (national selector) Geoff Miller, and the views of the side of the camp and make our decisions to announce in the new year.”But we do know in Michael we have someone who is outstanding as an individual and is also a fantastic player. We have to weigh all that up about the players we’ve got in the squad at the moment.”Vaughan and Middlesex batsman Owais Shah could be competing to take the place of under-pressure Ian Bell, who has managed only one half-century in his last ten Test innings. Shah was England’s highest run-getter, making 236 runs at a strike-rate of 102, in their 5-0 one-day series loss to India.”We left out Owais Shah for the two Tests after doing very well in the one-dayers and is pushing very hard for his Test place,” Moores said. “So we have to look at that and pick what we think is the best squad to go to the West Indies and following the West Indies away and at home we’ve got the big Ashes coming up.”Former captain Nasser Hussain was less ambiguous on the Vaughan issue, writing in the that Vaughan had not done enough to justify a recall. He wrote that Vaughan should be reconsidered for the national team only after he made his case scoring runs for Yorkshire early next season.

Crystal Palace linked to Callum McGregor

Crystal Palace remain in the market for further acquisitions this summer and have been linked with a move for Celtic midfielder Callum McGregor.

What’s the story?

According to French outlet Homme du Match, the Eagles are preparing a £7m offer for the technically gifted 28-year-old, just weeks after he was named club captain of the Glasgow giants following Scott Brown’s departure.

McGregor’s current contract still have three years left to run, meaning new Celtic boss Ange Postecoglou will not be forced to part ways with his prized asset.

Parish must swoop

The Scotland international has established himself as one of the top players in his homeland after rising through Celtic’s ranks, bagging 54 goals and providing 64 assists in 332 appearances for the Hoops.

In that time, McGregor has become of the most decorated stars in the club’s history, winning six Scottish Premiership titles, three Scottish Cups and five League Cups, securing his place in Celtic’s illustrious history in the process.

His impressive displays in the centre of the park have earned many plaudits down the years, including former Celtic manager Brendan Rodgers.

“He controls the tempo of the game,” said Rodgers. “He is a boy that takes the ball, so clever in his movements, and we ask him to go into certain area of the pitch to offer support. He has a dream of a touch that allows him to go forward.

“His feet are nice and soft, he doesn’t play backwards so much, and he has a great range of passes, and he has the personality now to play those passes, not just one that is secure to keep the ball, he can break a line with a pass and open up and split up the game for us.

“He has been absolutely exceptional in that role, but I say that everywhere he plays.”

With the departure of James McCarthy and Cheikhou Kouyate beginning the new season at centre-back once again, new Palace boss Patrick Vieira is keen to bolster his engine room options in the remaining weeks of the window.

Therefore, chairman Steve Parish must sanction a move for McGregor, supplying the Frenchman with a quality midfielder capable of controlling games and opening opposition defences up at will.

And, in other news…Crystal Palace suffer transfer blow in pursuit of £7m machine, Vieira will be gutted 

Ingressos para Santa Cruz x Londrina já estão à venda no Arruda

MatériaMais Notícias

Até agora, o Santa Cruz conquistou duas vitórias nos dois jogos disputados no Estádio do Arruda nesta edição do Campeonato Brasileiro Série B. Entretanto, a única vez que venceu fora de casa foi contra o Criciúma, no Heriberto Hülse, pela rodada de estreia da competição. Nesta sexta a equipe recebe o Londrina no estádio do Arruda, às 20h30 em busca de vitória, para se manter na quarta colocação ou até subir mais um pouco.

A novidade da partida pode ser a presença do atacante Augusto, de 26 anos, que só espera ser regularizado para estar entre os relacionados de Vinícius Eutrópio. O meia Léo Lima também deve aparecer no jogo, mesmo que seja para ficar no banco de reservas, já que está em fase de recondicionamento físico desde que chegou ao clube.

Ingressos para a partida já estão diponíveis nas bilheterias do estádio deste a última quarta-feira. As vendas continuarão até o momento do apito inicial da partida. Confira abaixo preços e horários de funcionamento dos pontos de venda:

Arquibancada superior – R$ 10,00
Arquibancada inferior – R$ 20,00 (meia) | R$ 40,00 (inteira)
Sócio: gratuidade ou desconto, dependendo do seu plano.

Horários das bilheterias:
Quinta (8): 9 às 18h
Sexta (9): 9 às 21h30

Predicted Man City XI vs Spurs

Manchester City kick off their Premier League title defence with a trip to North London on Sunday afternoon, with Pep Guardiola’s side looking to earn their first-ever win at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

The Citizens began their season with a 1-0 defeat against Leicester City in the Community Shield last weekend, but Guardiola can welcome back the likes of Ederson, John Stones, Kyle Walker and Raheem Sterling following their international commitments this summer.

However, all eyes will be on Spurs striker Harry Kane, with the England captain reportedly set to feature despite being heavily linked with the Citizens throughout the summer.

Here’s how Football FanCast expects Guardiola to line his side up in North London, with Grealish making his first start as a City player…

After returning from Copa America duty with Brazil, Ederson seems likely to replace Zack Steffen in between the sticks.

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In defence, John Stones and Ruben Dias resume their centre-back partnership, whilst Kyle Walker and Joao Cancelo both deserve starts at full-back following their impressive performances in the 2020/21 campaign.

After a disappointing end to last season, Rodri is left on the bench with the more experienced Fernandinho earning a start, and he is joined in midfield by Ilkay Gundogan and Grealish, who could take up the Kevin De Bruyne role in the Belgian’s absence.

Following a superb Euros with England, Raheem Sterling gets the nod on the left-wing, with the Englishman dubbed “world-class” by Frank Lampard and Rio Ferdinand after his excellent performances for Gareth Southgate’s side as they reached the Final.

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Riyad Mahrez starts on the right-hand side after an excellent pre-season, supporting Ferran Torres up front, with the Spaniard arguably City’s best striking option at the club following Sergio Aguero’s summer departure.

In total, there could be as many as five changes for the trip to the capital.

And, in other news… Guardiola delivers worrying injury update, Man City fans will be fuming

Sheff Wed keen on signing Mendez-Laing

Sheffield Wednesday manager Darren Moore is keen on signing Nathaniel Mendez-Laing this summer, according to Dom Howson.

The Lowdown: Great summer for Sheff Wed

The Owls may have suffered relegation from the Championship last season, but there is real positivity in the air at the moment.

Not only do Wednesday top League One after four matches, winning three games and drawing the other, but they have also enjoyed a hugely productive summer, signing a host of new names.

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The Latest: Mendez-Laing interest confirmed

With deadline day approaching looming on Tuesday, the Owls’ business may not be done just yet, with Howson confirming Moore’s interest in free agent Mendez-Laing, in a Q&A for Yorkshire Live:

“I know he is someone that was mentioned to Wednesday earlier in the summer. I am led to believe that Moore likes him as a player. “The difficulty with all free agents is how long it will take to get them up to match speed. Mendez-Laing, for instance, has not got a pre-season under his belt so you could be looking at anywhere between six to eight weeks to get him fully fit and firing.”

Mendez-Laing spent last season at Middlesbrough, making just two Championship starts, and the 29-year-old may be desperate for a new challenge.

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The Verdict: Another exciting addition

While Wednesday aren’t necessarily in desperate need of any more signings, bringing in Mendez-Laing can only help increase competition for places in wide areas.

The Englishman has a wealth of Championship experience, not to mention making 20 Premier League appearances for Cardiff City back in 2018/19.

It could be a shrewd addition, especially as no fee would be required to sign him.

In other news, one Sheff Wed player has been tipped to join the Owls on a permanent move. Find out who it is here.

Tottenham urged to sell Serge Aurier by pundit - Exclusive

Paul Stewart has exclusively told The Transfer Tavern that Nuno Espirito Santo must sell disaster waiting to happen Serge Aurier.

The Ivorian has generally been Tottenham’s first-choice right-back since Kieran Trippier departed for Atletico Madrid two years back, having been signed by Mauricio Pochettino in 2017.

Aurier showed signs of a revival under Jose Mourinho, contributing 10 goals in 42 matches during the Covid-hit 2019-2020 season, including eight assists.

But injuries and a major loss of form led to Aurier featuring in just half of Spurs’ Premier League games last season, with those all too familiar mistakes creeping back into the right-back’s game.

Aurier didn’t play a minute in any of Tottenham’s final three games under Ryan Mason, and with just one year remaining on his deal in north London, has openly expressed his desire to return to PSG.

Santo’s arrival could see an upturn in fortunes for Matt Doherty, who previously struggled during his first campaign at the club, which could allow Spurs to part ways with Aurier, a move which Stewart would be on board with.

He told The Transfer Tavern:

“I’m sorry, but I’m still staunch on my decision about Aurier, he’s got to move on. He’s not a good defender for sure, but then an attacking full-back? I don’t think he’s got that much quality to do that.

“If he does a Sissoko then I will be eating my words, but week in, week out he’s disappointed me all the time, and he’s got a mistake in him.”

Series catches light with controversy

Spectators watching the final two days at Lord’s could easily have drifted off to sleep, with England managing three wickets as South Africa ground their way to a draw. Headingley, though, doesn’t deal in dull cricket and the Test series came to life

Andrew McGlashan at Headingley18-Jul-2008
Did he or didn’t he? Michael Vaughan takes a tumbling catch off Hashim Amla, but the decision was turned down by the third umpire © Getty Images
Spectators watching the final two days of the first Test at Lord’s could easily have drifted off to sleep, with England managing three wickets as South Africa ground their way to a draw. Headingley, though, doesn’t deal in dull cricket and the series came to life. Thirteen wickets tumbled, Andrew Flintoff made his comeback, Darren Pattinson, a 29-year-old unknown was handed a debut, and there was more than a dash of controversy.It takes a lot to overshadow Flintoff – who bowled a hostile 10-over spell – while Pattinson’s selection will go down has one of the most mind-boggling of any year, but not for the first time this summer it was the controversies that left the major talking points. During England’s innings AB de Villiers claimed a catch at third slip off Andrew Strauss, which was clearly dropped when viewed on TV. Then late in the day Hashim Amla was reprieved after being told to stay in the middle by his team-mates, following a catch by Michael Vaughan at mid-off.Peter Moores, the England coach, wasn’t impressed by the de Villiers incident, calling it “disappointing.” “I think the [two] incidents are quite different. One catch was dropped and de Villiers has to decide whether he knew that or not. It was fairly obvious from the screen that it bounced.”Mickey Arthur, his South African counterpart, said that Vaughan had expressed his view to de Villiers during lunch, in no uncertain terms. However, Arthur defended his player and said de Villiers wasn’t feeling good about the incident. In a neat twist, it was then Vaughan who was the catcher involved late in the day against Amla.”AB apologised and it’s fair to say he took a lot of criticism at lunch time from some of the England players and from Michael Vaughan himself,” said Arthur. “And it’s amazing that there’s a lady up there called Mother Cricket who doesn’t sleep, and I think it came back to haunt Michael later in the day.”AB is an honest guy and not for one minute would he consider claiming a catch that he didn’t think was out. He thought it had gone from one hand to the other hand, but it clearly hadn’t, and on the replays it looked pretty ugly. He felt pretty bad about it. He’s a real solid young guy who plays the game in the right spirit and he did feel particularly bad about it. Maybe rightly so, it did look bad, but he apologised to Andrew [Strauss].”Moores was quick to stress that he didn’t lay any blame at Amla’s door for his part in the second incident. After getting a leading edge low to mid-off, he had almost made it across the boundary rope when Andre Nel, Graeme Smith and Arthur told him to stay in the middle. Moores said that Vaughan, himself, had suggested the catch be sent to the third umpire.”I’ve nothing against Amla, if your team-mates are telling you to stay you have to wait for the umpires decision,” said Moores. “The only thing I’ll say is that Vaughany thought it was clean. When he was in the huddle there was a commotion and it was Vaughan who said maybe you should refer it. But he said he thought it was a clean catch, and still does.”There are precedents for players getting signals from the dressing, and it happened in another England Test, against India at Lord’s, last year. Mahendra Singh Dhoni claimed a catch off Kevin Pietersen, who was two thirds of the way back to the pavilion when he stopped and the decision was overturned. It again questions what role the off-field players, or coaching staff, should have for matters on the pitch, but Arthur was adamant he was within his rights.”Hashim did have some thoughts. He walked off and Ashwell [Prince] questioned the umpire at the time as he felt it bounced,” he said. “Then I felt I was well within my rights to tell one of our key batters, a man in form, to stay on the ground so that the correct decision can be made. I’m 100% sure it bounced.”Both teams could have had an official referral system in place for this series, but instead it is being trailed in the forthcoming Sri Lanka-India contest after England objected. South Africa were in favour of using the new technology, but the home side had concerns about the referral procedure involving the players.”I’ve always been a coach who has advocated technology,” said Arthur. “If the ball bounces it is not out. For me, if we can get a correct system, then it has to be good for the game. I think it is muddied [at the moment], but the referral system takes away the grey area.”Moores, though, wants the pressure taken away from the players. “The referral system has been talked about a lot. We support referrals but didn’t want the players doing the referring, we felt it should be the umpires,” he said. “We made it pretty clear that we felt certain things should be referred and others shouldn’t, but we think the umpires should take responsibility. In a team sport like this, the decisions should be taken on by the umpires.”The tension clearly grew out in the middle during the closing overs as Flintoff peppered Amla with a succession of short balls. England-South Africa contests have a history of getting spicy (Headingley 1998 being a classic example with Javed Akhtar’s umpiring) and the tension levels have been lifted a few notches.”It’s a proper Test, which is good,” said Moores. “It’s played tough as it should be and it’s been an interesting day’s cricket.” This match may not last five days, but it will be compelling viewing throughout.

Arthur wary of Flintoff recall

South Africa’s coach, Mickey Arthur, believes that his side could well find themselves facing Andrew Flintoff when they take on England in the first Test at Lord’s a week on Thursday

Andrew Miller at Taunton01-Jul-2008
Andrew Flintoff: his recall would be a gamble, but worth taking, according to South Africa’s coach © Getty Images
South Africa’s coach, Mickey Arthur, believes that his side could well find themselves facing Andrew Flintoff when they take on England in the first Test at Lord’s a week on Thursday, even though he concedes that it would require a gamble from the selectors to pick him.Arthur was speaking at Taunton where South Africa’s first warm-up game drifted to a draw on the final afternoon. Had the South African dressing-room contained a television, they would have been able to watch a fired-up Flintoff taking on Sussex for Lancashire at Hove, where he bowled with great pace and hostility, and was only denied the wicket of Chris Adams when the third umpire decided that an edge to slip had not carried.His bowling form presents England with a dilemma, because for all that the trio of Ryan Sidebottom, Stuart Broad and James Anderson have impressed in recent months against New Zealand, none of them provides the attack with the same 90mph cutting edge of a fully-fit Flintoff. With South Africa set to field two out-and-out pace bowlers in Dale Steyn and Morne Morkel, plus the enduring hostility of Makhaya Ntini, the temptation to fight fire with fire is all the greater.England’s selectors met today, and are set to unveil their squad on Thursday, along with a 30-man preliminary party for the Champions Trophy in September, and Arthur was more than willing to stir the pot ahead of the series. “If I had a Flintoff I’d have him back,” he said. “I think Andrew gives their attack a different flavour. He’s got that bustling pace so it would be tempting to play him if he’s fighting fit.”It might be a gamble, but Peter [Moores] knows what he’s doing,” said Arthur. “He’ll assess the risk, because if you’ve got a quality player like him available, you certainly want to pick him. I wouldn’t be surprised if he came straight back … I think he strengthens England.”Though Flintoff’s pace and skill is not in question, there are two big question marks hanging over his game. The first is the ability of his troublesome left ankle to withstand 25 overs in an innings, the prerequisite for a bowler in a four-man attack. The other is the current state of his batting – he managed only 6 in the current match at Hove, and has now gone 114 innings in all forms of the game without hitting a century.”I wouldn’t want to be selecting the side, because I’m not sure you can bank on him coming straight back and giving the amount of overs a Broad or an Anderson would,” said Arthur. “He really has to take the place of one of the top six. [The selectors] have got to weigh it up because I’m not quite sure they’ll get the balance right there.”Arthur’s willingness to speculate on England’s selection issues reflected the confidence and satisfaction he was able to take out of South Africa’s first foray of their tour. Aside from Mark Boucher, every single member of the top seven managed a lengthy spell in the middle over their three days in Taunton, and the bowlers all enjoyed a useful workout as well.Off the field, Graeme Smith made encouraging progress in his recuperation from his hamstring tear, while Jacques Kallis has already been passed fit for the four-day warm-up match against Middlesex at Uxbridge on Friday, after recovering well from a bruised elbow. “I think we got everything we wanted out of the game,” said Arthur. “In fact I don’t think we could have scripted it better.On the first afternoon, Somerset’s captain, Andrew Caddick, had hit out at the flat-pitch policy that had condemned his bowlers to a long and fruitless toil in the first innings, and Arthur was being slightly tongue-in-cheek when he thanked Somerset for their outstanding hospitality. Even so, if there was one quibble he could take from their three days in Taunton, it was the failure of his pace attack to step up their intensity on the final afternoon.”The one thing we probably lacked a little was we wanted to build our bowlers up,” he said, “but we’ve got another four-day game before the Test so we didn’t want to overbowl them either. We probably get better intensity in two-day warm-ups because you bat for one day, bowl for one day, and then the third day tends to drag on a little bit, but we’re very happy with where we’re at. Our focus is on July 10, and everything we do is leading up to that day.”

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