Naseem Shah, the boy who will rule the world

Take a peek into the life of one of Pakistan’s most exciting fast bowlers

Shashank Kishore03-Sep-2022There is a boisterous energy Naseem Shah brings to everything he does on the cricket field. And he makes things happen. If his fiery lifters to Virat Kohli elicited a raised brow and a nod from the batter, his late seam movement back into KL Rahul to clang into his stumps triggered an Imran Tahir-like sprint of celebration. Even his handshake comes off with a sideways high-five vibe. It’s all or nothing.When Naseem is running in, everyone must stop what they are doing and watch. At training, and at press boxes. Even in the dining room, people put down their spoons and forks and watch him. On Sunday, he bowled Rahul first ball, and then welcomed Kohli with a sharp bouncer and a smile. Everyone’s eyes were on him. Even the private security guards whose job it is to survey the crowed for signs of trouble couldn’t help but steal a glance.Yet, for all that aggression, there’s a boyish charm to Naseem, in the way he just seems to enjoy everything about the game. Bowling is what he loves, though. Even at the end of a long two-hour session, if he still has the ball in hand, you know batters are going to be challenged, if not cop blows. It doesn’t even matter that they are all his team-mates.Related

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Naseem plays with a smile; angry barbs aren’t his way. If you know his story, just 19 years’ worth, you would know why playing cricket means so much to him. He has seen poverty knock on his door. He has had to deal with the loss of a parent – his mother. He’s experienced challenges every step of the way. It has all been in search of a dream. A dream that may have once seemed as far from becoming a reality as his hometown in the Lower Dir in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa is to Karachi or Islamabad. But not anymore.Naseem has overcome setbacks on the field too. Some serious, like multiple stress fractures on his back that has had him spend more time on hospital beds, looking at PET scans and reports, than the nets or at the ground. And others not quite so frightening, but worrying all the same, like his shoulder troubles earlier this year.In between, he has roughed up batting line-ups with swing, seam and raw pace. He is the youngest bowler ever to pick up a Test hat-trick. He has played in England, West Indies, Australia, New Zealand, Sri Lanka, and is now in the UAE for the Asia Cup. In a month’s time, he is likely to be on the flight to Australia, the country of his Test debut, for his maiden [T20] World Cup.Not bad, you’d think, for someone who didn’t have a pair of spikes till four years ago. He didn’t know what a leather ball was or what seam position meant. All he knew was bowling fast. No compromises.A 16-year old Naseem Shah takes off after picking up a Test hat-trick against Bangladesh in February 2020•Associated PressMudassar Nazar, the former Pakistan allrounder, remembers watching Naseem in his debut season, in 2018, and being spellbound. Mudassar was director of academies at the PCB and was in charge of honing the skills of young cricketers who had been handpicked to be part of the National Cricket Academy in Lahore.”In his maiden first-class season, I remember a game where Naseem was bowling to a tailender, a No. 11, I presume,” Mudassar recalled in a chat with ESPNcricinfo. “You could see the guy was scared of Naseem. He kept exposing all three stumps, it was basically an open invitation for Naseem to clean him up. But he kept bowling short, bowling bouncers at him. He was so aggressive that he wanted to knock him out. We had to sit him down and tell him this is not how you bowl; the prime objective is to get people out.”The NCA in Lahore shares a wall with the Abdul Qadir Academy, where Naseem began his formal training at 15. He had just moved into his uncle’s house in the city, from where he would cycle long distances to reach the academy. On his first day there, he was handed an old ball. Two overs later, Naseem made a beeline for the new ball, and he wasn’t to be denied. Clearly, he was special. Saud Khan, a man with an eye for talent and one of the coaches at the academy, was Naseem’s first instructor, and Sulaman Qadir, one of Abdul Qadir’s sons, his mentor.For six months, Naseem’s routine was something like this: cycle to training, bowl for four hours, cycle home, grab some food, then go back and do it all over again in the evening. It wasn’t for everyone. But for Naseem, it was all he wanted to do. Once word about him spread, he was immediately drafted into one of several age-group camps at the PCB Academy.This period coincided with Mudassar’s return to Pakistan from Dubai, where he had been in charge as head of cricket development at the ICC Academy. Mudassar, a veteran of 76 Tests and 122 ODIs, had been at the forefront of the academy’s development since its launch in 2009, but couldn’t refuse an offer when then PCB chairman Shaharyar Khan came calling.Naseem Shah got his first Pakistan cap from Waqar Younis in November 2019•Getty ImagesMudassar’s first task was to identify a pool of players at the Under-16 level to take part in PCB’s exchange programme with Cricket Australia in early 2017. Sure enough, Naseem figured in that list. It was Mudassar’s first proper sighting of the fast bowler, long before he played that first-class game where he roughed up tailenders with bouncers.”My first impression was the guy can bowl sharp, and that he was quick, but can get quicker,” Mudassar said. He continued after a long pause: “But he had a terrible bowling action that was putting a lot of strain on his back. Much of it came about because of non-stop cricket. He’d bowl at the NCA, then hop over to the academy next door and bowl there. And this took a toll on him without him realising it.”Towards the end of 2017, Naseem had his first stress fracture and it needed six-seven months of rehab. “He dealt with the news of his injury better than me, or better than many other kids would,” Mudassar said. “But that desperation to play was there. It was a stressful time, but he was so composed. Every morning, he’d come and say, ‘sir, ‘ [I want to play]. Our challenge as coaches was to control hm and tell him he needed to look after himself.”Mudassar has undertaken several courses about biomechanics and injury management over the years. His ability to explain a complex issue in layperson’s terms helps put things into perspective.”Naseem’s action is side-on, and his front arm kept falling away from his body instead of going across his body,” Mudassar said. “That would take the head position with it, and all his energy, instead of going straight down the pitch, would be going towards gully. This put immense stress on his back.”He would be so fond of bowling that you couldn’t keep him still. You have to do a certain number of repetitions to get a message from your brain to form your muscle memory. But because young players are so fond of playing, it’s easy to go back to old habits. We had to control Naseem for six months. And inch by inch, we worked on bringing his front arm across. Only once we were fully satisfied, he was able to do that, we let him play.”Mudassar Nazar played 76 Tests and 122 ODIs for Pakistan•Getty ImagesWithin two months of getting fit, Naseem was playing for Zarai Taraqiati Bank Limited in a Quaid-e-Azam Trophy game against Lahore Blues. Less than a year later, he was in Australia, making his Test debut. He was that good. He didn’t need to play Under-19 or ‘A’ team cricket. It was straight into the senior team.”The boy simply wanted to knock batters out with his aggression and pace, the main thing was to get him to understand how to bowl to every batter, how to bowl on different kinds of pitches and how to get people out,” Mudassar said. “He slowly started to play more matches. Which is why he was also in the scheme of things for the Under-19 World Cup in 2020. But you knew he was way ahead of his mates at that level.”Naseem made his Test debut in Brisbane, a week after he had received the news of his mother’s death. The fastest flight home was going to take 48 hours. He chose to stay on.Since his debut, Naseem has become a regular member of the Pakistan line-up, and although he only made his T20I debut a couple of days ago, he looks a shoo-in for the T20 World Cup squad. Especially now that it is clear he was only suffering from cramps when he went down, screaming in pain and clutching his leg, in the India game earlier this week.But, for all his gifts – his pace, his swing, his aggression – there are still things Naseem can get better at. “I don’t see him using the crease yet,” Mudassar said. “But as he bowls more, he’ll pick up the finer aspects. I’m keeping my fingers crossed that he stays fit. This boy, like his second name, Shah – which means emperor in Urdu – will rule the world.”

Michail Antonio training with Championship club as comeback nears following near-death car crash and release from West Ham

Michail Antonio is reportedly training with Championship side Leicester as he seeks to make a sensational return to professional football. The 35-year-old forward has been without a club since being released by West Ham in the summer of 2025. No fresh terms were offered there on the back of Antonio suffering a near-fatal car crash in December 2024. He is not ready to hang up his boots just yet.

  • Lucky stars: Antonio underwent surgery after car accident

    Antonio's vehicle collided with a tree after leaving Hammers training. He had to be cut from the wreckage and was airlifted to hospital. Once in medical care, the veteran frontman underwent emergency surgery on his broken leg.

    It was suggested at the time that Antonio may struggle to walk again, never mind kick a ball around. He was, however, able to make remarkable progress in his recovery and returned to international action with Jamaica in June 2025.

    The former Sheffield Wednesday and Nottingham Forest winger severed ties with West Ham shortly after those outings, with the Premier League giants not allowing matters of the heart to rule their head.

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    On trial: Antonio at Leicester after training with Brentford

    Antonio has continued to work on a fitness programme since then, with time spent at Brentford after accepting an invitation from Bees boss Keith Andrews. As a proven top-flight performer that registered 83 goals for West Ham through 323 appearances, his vast experience can be put to good use somewhere.

    That may be in the East Midlands, with John Percy of reporting that Antonio had been at Leicester's training ground on Thursday for talks, though nothing officially has been finalised.

    Leicester suffered relegation out of the Premier League last season and have found the going tough back in the Championship – with talismanic title-winning captain Jamie Vardy moving on to Italian outfit Cremonese as a free agent.

    There may be a role for Antonio to fill in their attack, with Jordan James currently the Foxes’ top scorer in 2025-26 with five efforts to his name. Marti Cifuentes’ side sit 13th in the second tier table – three points adrift of the play-off places.

  • Antonio reveals first question he asked in hospital

    Antonio would certainly appear to boast the hunger required to join the ranks at King Power Stadium. He told recently of wanting to land another contract: "I wasn’t done with football and I didn't want my career to be finished literally in a car crash.

    "The very first thing is, as soon as I could speak to the doctor, the first thing I said to him was, ‘Am I going to play again?’, and from him saying to me, ‘Yes’, that was me, no problem, that’s all I need to know. I knew I had more in me and I knew I’ve still got more in me."

    Antonio made three appearances for Jamaica at the CONCACAF Gold Cup over the summer, taking him to 24 caps, and remains determined to get back on the goal trail.

    He added on his experience with the Reggae Boyz: "I was back on the pitch within six months. I played a couple of games for Jamaica in June. Still to this day it burns me.

    "The first time I get on the pitch, there was a time where a player at Jamaica, he’s gone through, I’m standing open goal, all he needed to do was roll me the ball. I was screaming at him. Let me have this moment, first game back, comeback story, it’s written in the stars. He missed and you know the worst thing about it? He missed it and it goes half a yard behind me. I’m stretching my leg, I’m stretching my leg so much just to get a touch but it goes behind me."

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    Pundit work: Antonio playing waiting game

    Antonio is now fully recovered from his accident – an incident that his brain has blanked out as he remembers nothing – and has cut his teeth as a pundit while waiting on an enticing offer that takes him back onto the field.

Cartwright century has WA eyeing Shield final

Cartwright’s 109 and some quality seam bowling means WA are five wickets from victory against Victoria which would see them host the Shield final for the first time in 24 years

AAP and ESPNCricinfo staff24-Mar-2022A Hilton Cartwright century has put Western Australia within touching distance of hosting the Sheffield Shield final at the WACA for the first time since 1997-98.Chasing an outright victory to clinch top spot on the Sheffield Shield table ahead of next week’s decider, they were firmly in control of their final-round clash with Victoria after day two at the WACA, thanks in large part to Cartwright.The 30-year-old former Test batsman made 109 as WA scored 337, taking a first-innings lead of 223, after they’d ripped through the Victorians for 114 on day one.By stumps, the Vics had been reduced to 5 for 82 in their second innings – still 141 runs in arrears – after the WA quicks again broke through their top-order.Cartwright’s seventh first-class ton included 14 fours and a six, continuing great form after he made 81 last time out against NSW.He was helped by 17-year-old first-class debutant Teague Wyllie, who looked right at home in Shield cricket as he made 42.His dismissal at the hands of Will Sutherland triggered a mini-collapse in which WA lost 3-15 and fell to 7-307, while the wheels fell off completely late as they lost their last three wickets for no runs.Earlier, nightwatchman Matthew Kelly enjoyed his stint up the order, whacking 41 off 51 balls batting at No.4 for WA.Sutherland and James Pattinson were Victoria’s best bowlers, each taking three wickets.Victorian opener Will Pucovski continued his return from a concussion in his side’s second dig, but he scored only 11 runs before nicking a Joel Paris delivery to the keeper.Travis Dean was in good touch making 29 but was bowled by Aaron Hardie, and Nic Maddinson was given lbw to Kelly for five, leaving the Vics reeling at 3-59.Wickets in consecutive balls for Paris and Lance Morris saw them slump to 5-79, with Peter Handscomb departing after a robust 20.
Mitch Perry (0 no)and Matt Short (3 no) will resume for Victoria on day three.Victoria have already locked up a place in the final but an outright loss would see them lose hosting rights and return to the WACA for the final on March 31. WA has not won a Sheffield Shield since 1998-99 and have not played in a final since 2014-15.

'Teams that start rubbishly always win'

An indisputable assertion from WG Grace kicks off this World Twenty20 special edition of the World Cricket Podcast

Andy Zaltzman25-Feb-2013

Download the podcast here (right-click to save) | iTunesThe music in the podcast is by Kevin MacLeod

Hello, Planet Cricket, and welcome to the Andy Zaltzman’s World Cricket Podcast World Twenty 20 Preview Podcast Cricket World Special. I am Andy Zaltzman, no-time Kent and England opening batsman and non-inventor of the googly and reverse swing. When I was a baby I slept in a cot made of old . I osmosed statistics, and when I cried in the night, my infant wails spelt out Morse Code for Wally Hammond’s batting average.Later in this cricketcast, I will be revealing a statistic that will revolutionise the way international T20 is played. No kidding. This is going to shake cricket to its molten core like a rhinoceros turning up late at the wrong wedding. Things will never be the same again. Cricket might even be blown off its axis so hard that it becomes golf. And not just any golf. Crazy golf. I will also be exclusively revealing who will win the World Twenty20, and why. Amongst the things I will not be doing in this programme are:● Explaining why the ICC remain reluctant to allow a special new T20 Powerplay, in which the batting captain can control the fielding side for two overs.● Reading an epic poem waxing lyrical about the elemental timeless balletic beauty of Johan Botha’s bowling action.● Revealing why the downturn in England’s fortunes this year was down to Andy Flower accidentally sitting on the team’s lucky hamster, Florence, during a team-bonding game of musical chairs at the start of the UAE tour in January. Florence survived but has been cross ever since. A cloning programme is underway at ECB headquarters to ensure a continual supply of Florences for all time.● Explaining how Jacques Kallis’ continuing age-defying quality is down to him relying on a diet of nothing but pasta shaped like cricket bats and drizzled in linseed oil.● Revealing that the paparazzo photographer who took those pictures of the Duchess of Cambridge doing her Sourav Ganguly-at-Lord’s-in-2002 impression was, in fact, Kevin Pietersen. How can he get back in the England team now after this latest breach of trust?So, the cricket world has gathered in Sri Lanka for its biennial quick-fire international quick-fire slug-out. Two quick-fires in that sentence, which explains why the World Twenty20 has considerable appeal, even for those cricket fans, like me, who remain un-entranced by T20’s skittish charms and concerned about the brash grandson of Test cricket deciding to plonk its granddad in a nursing home and forget about it.It’s an intense and unpredictable three-week jamboree of slower balls, yorkers, hoicks, slaps, sploots, and the kind of skied catches that made me fear fielding practice at school more than going to see a sadistic dentist. Which I’m sure my cricket coach dreamed of being. Instead, he focused his efforts on demonstrating to small boys how hard ball plus physics equals “Ouch, that hurt my fingers.”And to kick off the show, looking ahead to the tournament and giving us the kind of insight only a cricketing legend can give, it’s a very special guest, an icon, a celebrity, a former England captain, all the way from beyond the grave, via ESPN’s Ouija-Link phone line to the other side, it’s the late, great WG Grace.AZ: WG, hello.WG: Hello, Andy. Thanks for having me on the show.AZ: The pleasure is all mine.WG: Can we keep this brief? I’ve got to do the Test Match Special podcast with Agnew in five minutes.AZ: Certainly, Doctor. So, WG, you, of course, never had the opportunity to play T20, as you sadly died in 1915, some 88 years before it was launched.WG: Yeah, rub it in, Inspector Insensitive.AZ: Sorry. How do you think you’d have fared as a T20 player?WG: I’d have been bloody amazing, Andy. Sensational. None of the franchises could have afforded me, and I’d have wanted full control of my image rights, but on the pitch I’d have been like Chris Gayle and Lasith Malinga rolled into one.AZ: With a bit of Hashim Amla? On the face?WG: Yup. Fair play to the lad, he knows the importance of chin branding. Got to be recognisable. Do you think I’d have got my megabucks deal to advertise Colman’s Mustard without my massive beard?AZ: Of course not. And you have liked to play, say, the IPL?WG: Damn straight, I would. Sign me up. I reckon I could still do a job. I’m in good shape these days. Good news is, I didn’t stay as the fat old WG when I popped my clogs. I reverted to the buff young WG. I’m ripped, absolutely ripped. I could advertise anything. Apart from shaving foam – might be a bit of a stretch.AZ: I was thinking more about whether you’d enjoy the format of the game.WG: More money, less cricket. I’d have loved it. Four overs max? I bowled 125,000 balls in my first-class career. That’s the equivalent of 300 seasons of the IPL. I could have made billions. I could have bought MS Dhoni and made him spend 12 hours a day, crouching in my garden, wicketkeeping.AZ: Let’s move on to this World Twenty20. So, how do you see this tournament going?WG: Well, you’d have to say, looking at it, that the favourites are India. South Africa. Pakistan. West Indies. Sri Lanka. England. And Australia. And New Zealand. I reckon the winner will come from one of the them. Or one of the other teams.AZ: And what do you think the winning team will ultimately have to do?WG: Win the final, probably. And to do that, they’ll need to hit the ball lots, and try to stop the opposition hitting it as much. Those would be my tactics. The fundamentals of the game haven’t really changed since my day. But mostly hit the ball. India managed to win in 2007 with a bowling economy rate of 7.88, that was seventh-best of the Super 8 teams, of course, Andy, but they hit the ball hard and often enough that that didn’t matter. And that was their tactical masterstroke.AZ: Anything else?WG: Andy, the absolutely crucial thing to do if you want to win a World Twenty20, is start badly.AZ: Hit the ground stumbling?WG: That’s right. India had a no-result, a tie and a loss in their first three in 2007. Pakistan lost two of their first three in 2009, their one win being against Associate team Netherlands. We didn’t have the Netherlands in cricket when I was playing. In fact, in my day, the Netherlands was where you wanted to make sure you remembered to put your box when Charlie Kortright was bowling on a dodgy wicket. And England had a loss and a no-result in their two group matches in 2010. So, really, you want to try to time your run-in to the tournament so you are playing dreadfully from day one.AZ: Good point. In 2007, South Africa, perennial peaking-too-early specialists that they are, had four convincing wins to start, flunked one game in six disastrous overs of batting uselessness against India, and that was their goose baked for another tournament. In 2009, they began with five wins on the spin, then lost the semi-final to an Afridi-inspired Pakistan.WG: Yes. And Australia won six in a row in 2010 but lost the final, just as Sri Lanka had done the year before.AZ: You’ve clearly kept abreast of cricket stats whilst you’ve been dead.WG: Yeah, lots of time to kill. Stats are ideal for passing the time until the end of the universe once you’re dead. You wouldn’t want to waste your time on them when you’re alive, mind.AZ: What? What are you saying about what I’ve done with my life?WG: I digress. So, basically, teams that start rubbishly always win. So expect to see all the teams busting any available gut to be completely useless in the first couple of games, safe in the knowledge that hitting form early is a sure-fire route to failure. In that respect, World Twenty20 tournaments are like World Wars and marriages. You want to time your run late and finish with a bang.AZ: What else do you need?WG: Luck. Always helpful. And for your batsmen to collectively average between 26.5 and 27.3. All three tournaments have been won by teams doing that. Other teams have averaged more than that, but none of them has ever won it. So, bat well, but not too well.AZ: Do you think this will influence the way teams play?WG: Yes. They’ll keep an eagle eye on their team tournament average, and as soon as it starts creeping up towards 30, they’ll start deliberately smashing their stumps to pieces when their team tournament average starts creeping up towards 30.AZ: You cannot argue with statistics.WG: Well, you can, but you’ve probably got better things to do with your time, and statistics can be a rather annoying conversationalist when they’re drunk. Anyhow, better go, AZ, I’ve got Aggers on the other line, and I’ve got a date with Florence Nightingale later. Oh yeah. I love a woman in a nurse’s uniform.AZ: WG Grace, thank you for joining us.WG: Thanks for having me, big horse.Time for your questions now, submitted to my Twitter feed. And we will kick off with that stat I mentioned at the start of the broadcast that will revolutionise all T20 World Cups. Strap in, people. The cricket universe is about to change for ever.samg1231: Statistically, are team scores of an even number defended more often than those of an odd number?Good question, samg1231. Arguably, the greatest question ever asked. For too long, we cricket fans have obsessed on the total number of runs a team has scored. But in World Twenty20s, that is irrelevant. Far more important is whether the team batting first scores an odd or even number of runs. Excluding the one no-result and one tie there have been in World T20 games, teams scoring an odd number of runs batting first have won 19 of 43 completed games – 44%. Teams scoring an even number of runs in the first innings of World Twenty20 games have successfully defended in 24 out of 35 games: 69%. So, scientifically, you are better off scoring 56 than 249.But it gets even more intriguing. And by intriguing, I mean irrelevant. But intriguing. Teams losing an even number of wickets batting first – two, four, six, eight or ten – have won just nine of 34: 26%. Teams losing an odd number of wickets batting first, however, have ended up winning a staggering 34 out 44 matches: 77%. Is it better to lose nine wickets than two? Well, no one has ever only lost two wickets in the first innings of a World Twenty20 match, so we just don’t know. But probably. It is certainly true that teams who have been nine down after their innings batting first have won five out of eight (plus that solitary tie). Teams losing just eight wickets have won only one out of eight. When they have ended seven wickets down – ten wins, four losses. But six wickets down: three wins, eight losses. These numbers are blasting conventional cricketing wisdom into the stratosphere. And I’m not done yet.Teams scoring an odd number of runs for an even number of wickets in the first innings of World Twenty20 matches have won four, lost 18. A win percentage of 18. But teams scoring an even number of runs for an odd number of wickets have won a staggering, mathematics-defying 19 out of 23. Win percentage: 83. So, the unarguable mathematicoscientific conclusion: if you score even runs for odd wickets, you are four and a half times more likely to win than if you score odd runs for even wickets. So, batting first in a World Twenty20 match, 32 for 9 is a better score than 309 for 2. That is a stone cold fact.Tactically, this is a game-changer of massive proportions, equivalent to landmark watersheds in other sports, such as when they stopped doing fencing fights to the death, or stopped using a live chicken in badminton and started using a little fake one instead, or having Olympic javelin-throwing as one-against-one from opposite ends of the stadium. Those were the days. That was a real spectator sport.So the last over of the first innings is where these matches will be decided, as the teams frantically jockey for position – the batting teams blocking out to make sure they remain on a score divisible by two, and standing in the middle of the pitch waiting to be run out, or rugby tackling the wicketkeeper and then appealing in the accent of the opposing team to get themselves out obstructing the field, to make sure they even up one, three, five, seven or nine wickets down; whilst the bowling teams will be hurling down wides and no-balls, or kicking balls over the boundary rope, to try to make sure they concede an odd number of runs and give themselves at least a sliver of a chance.It turns out international T20 is not about skill, power, nerve under pressure, or being any good at cricket. It is simply about ending up on a multiple of two runs for a non-multiple of two wickets. Put that into your cybermetric laptops, all you professional performance-analysing cricket wonks out there. Some people might claim this is just a bizarre coincidence thrown up by a relatively small statistical sample of matches. And those people could be right. They are almost certainly right. But not absolutely certainly. And can the teams afford to take the risk that they might be wrong?GMK3000: Will Brian Close get a recall?Unlikely for Close to get a recall, particularly not into an England team that seems to have trouble accommodating abrasive characters, and at the age of 81, even his cat-like reflexes in the field must have dulled over the years. Plus, with the advent of helmets and body armour, the need to have a player who has the technique and temperament to knock the shine off the ball with his ribs and skull has somewhat departed from the game, and the shiny snooker-ball head which could distract a batsman by glinting baldly in the sun at short leg. In his day, though, he could have been a T20 legend, and there are moves afoot to back-date all cricketers’ pay according to how much they would have fetched at an IPL auction had the IPL existed in their day. So Garfield Sobers can be expecting a cheque for $85 million, and Geoff Boycott will be receiving a single rupee in the post next week.Here’s a question – if you could choose any cricketer from your nation’s past to parachute into your current T20 squad, who would it be? I suppose if you are Australian, Bradman would be high up your list. Alan Davidson would probably have been a tidy T20 allrounder too. India – maybe Vinoo Mankad if you wanted a tidy spin option who could chip in with some runs. Graeme Pollock, Imran Khan, Richard Hadlee, Aravinda de Silva, and Viv Richards would all be contenders for their respective cricketing nations. And for England, well, it would have to be Kevin Pietersen.magicdarts: Can you see any new shots (like the Dil-Scoop) being invented this tournament? The “Morgan Thraggle” might work.Good question, magicdarts. The thraggle is a very good term for the ugly reverse hoick when a batsman stands facing the bowler and flonks it with an ungainly thwack into the off side. Morgan Thraggle, incidentally, the former US Secretary of State for Swearing in the Eisenhower administration.The new shots likely to feature in this tournament include:The Tweet Sweep: a highly technical shot, in which the batsman plays an orthodox sweep shot with one hand on the bat, whilst posting a message on Twitter with his other hand about how well he’s battingThe Kohli Hair Randomiser: India’s star young batsman, who has rapidly elevated himself into one of the world’s most influential cricketers, has no fear of hair-care products. And it is rumoured that, in the Indian training camp, he has been working feverishly on an updated version of the Dil-Scoop. Batting without a helmet, Kohli scoops the ball toward the top of his highly-kempt head, where the carefully gelled peaks will then deflect the ball in unpredictable directions, making setting a field even more difficult. The shot, of course, is fraught with risk, and Kohli has apparently had his high-value face insured for $500 million.The Saloon Bar Door Thwack: To counter the prevalence of slower balls in T20, batsmen will routinely swing their bats forward then back like a saloon bar door that’s just had Clint Eastwood burst through it in a cowboy movie. If the ball is of regular pace, they will thwack it straight down the ground on the forward swing, if it is a slower ball, they will catch it on the slam-shut backward swing, blasting it past a terrified wicketkeeper at high speed.So, I will now reveal, as promised, who will inevitably win this tournament.T20 is notoriously hard to predict when it comes to one-off games… since 2005, the year T20 was birthed messily onto the international scene, in matches between the big eight Test nations that have ended in a positive result, six of those eight teams have a win percentage between 44 and 56; in both Tests and ODIs, only three of the eight teams are close to the 50% break-even point in that 44-56% slot. So, in essence, in T20, anyone can beat anyone.Propping up that T20 table, New Zealand, who have still managed to win 39% of their T20 internationals against the rest of the big eight. West Indies, with the worst record in both Tests and ODIs in that time, have won just 16% of their Tests and 26% of the ODIs. As the betting suggests, all 12 teams in the tournament will probably lose it. Apart from one. Which could be almost anyone.So, instead, we need to look for a pattern from previous tournaments that has nothing to do with cricket, since cricket, it would seem, can offer few clues as to the eventual result. In terms of averages and performances by winning teams, no clear trends emerge, other than not being useless and hitting a streak of form at the right time. But, the odd numbered World Twenty20s, the first and third ones, have been won by teams beginning with vowels, whilst the one even-numbered competition, No. 2, was won by unmistakable consonant-commencer Pakistan. So you can count Australia, England, India, Afghanistan, Ireland and Zimbabwe out of this fourth World T20 straight away. Is Z a vowel these days? I’m a bit out of the loop. Well, count Zimbabwe out anyway, probably safe to.Tournaments one and three were won by countries with odd number of letters in, but tournament No. 2 was claimed by eight-letter P-a-k-i-s-t-a-n. So this time, you can also count out 11-lettered South Africa. Furthermore, no team with two words in its name has ever won, so Sri Lanka, New Zealand and West Indies might as well pack their bags and go home now, or, in Sri Lanka’s case, pack their bags and stay at home, but maybe go to a different part of home. And no team has ever won this trophy twice, so it’s goodbye Pakistan. I can therefore now formally reveal that the winner of the 2012 World Twenty20, according to historical precedent, will be Bangladesh. Strap in, folks, there’s going to be the grandmother of all street parties in Chittagong.History has spoken. Admittedly, history has a well-documented habit of speaking utter bilge, and not just about cricket, so just in case, here is my own personal official prediction for the 2012 World Twenty20 – South Africa to beat India in the final, chasing down 153 to win by four wickets with two balls to spare. Is that specific enough? Good. Because it will definitely happen. That has the Zaltzman guarantee. And if it does not happen, then you can download this podcast again for free.That’s all for the preview show. Thanks for your questions, and enjoy the cricket. And above all, enjoy the format of the tournament and wonder for a second or two how exciting the 50-over World Cup could be if it took roughly the same amount of time. Or at least, not more than twice the amount of time.Thanks to my special guest, WG Grace. I’ll be back next week with a mid-tournament update. Until then, may the cricket be with you. And start counting the number of times a commentator says “That was a proper cricket shot” when a short-arm cross-batted thwoick disappears into the stands at deep midwicket.Bye.

Four MLB Teams Drop Television Partnership With Bally Sports for 2025 Season

Four additional MLB teams will no longer be broadcast on the Sinclair-owned Bally Sports regional networks in the 2025 season and beyond.

MLB announced Tuesday that the Cleveland Guardians, Milwaukee Brewers and Minnesota Twins will have their local games produced and distributed by the league next season, which will provide more opportunities for fans to watch or stream their favorite teams.

Additionally, the Texas Rangers announced they will no longer partner with Diamond Sports Group in 2025 and will explore other options for the future of their television broadcast.

In 2024, MLB handled the broadcasts for three teams: the Arizona Diamondbacks, Colorado Rockies and San Diego Padres. All three teams offered direct-to-consumer streaming options as well as negotiated cable and satellite distribution. The Padres, for example, offered packages that cost either $19.99 per month or $99.99 for the entire season to stream local games without dealing with blackouts.

The league estimated that Guardians games will be available to reach 4.86 million households—up from 1.45 million last year—and the Twins will be able to reach 4.40 million homes—an increase of 307% from 1.08 million in 2024.

"With the media landscape continuing to evolve, Major League Baseball is committed to serving our fans by ensuring they can see their favorite clubs, removing blackouts where we can, and ultimately growing the reach of our games," Noah Garden, MLB's deputy commissioner of business and media, said in a statement. "We are proud to bring Guardians, Brewers and Twins games to their passionate fan bases with the same high-quality production that we have demonstrated in Arizona, Colorado and San Diego."

The Bally Sports regional networks carried 12 MLB teams in 2024. Diamond Sports Group announced last week that it plans to shed contracts for 11 teams and keep its contract for the Atlanta Braves.

Personal terms done: Man Utd midfielder agrees £4.5m-a-year deal to leave

One Manchester United midfielder has agreed personal terms to leave the club this summer, it has been reported, in a move that could have consequences for the rest of the Premier League giants’ transfer window.

Manchester United waiting on exits

Despite the news breaking at the beginning of the summer that almost all of Erik ten Hag’s squad are available for the right price, there have been very few exits at Old Trafford so far this summer.

French pair Anthony Martial and Raphael Varane both left on free transfers after their deals in Manchester came to an end, while Omari Forson also departed as a free agent.

Anthony Martial and Jadon Sancho

Elsewhere, Mason Greenwood was sold to French side Marseille in a deal worth £22m, whlle talented defender Willy Kambwala has joined Villarreal in an £8m move.

Midfield outcast Donny van de Beek has also finally departed permanently following a horror spell at Old Trafford since his £35m move from Ajax, joining Girona for a nominal fee.

It has allowed Manchester United to make two new signings, with Joshua Zirkzee and Leny Yoro coming in to replace Varane and Martial for a combined £86m, but they are still waiting on exits.

It is believed that a deal for Noussair Mazraoui is all but done, but requires right-back Aaron Wan-Bissaka’s departure before it can be confirmed, while any new incoming centre-back is likely to hinge on the future of Victor Lindelof.

The same can be said in midfield, with deals likely waiting to be completed after they can shift one of Christian Eriksen, Scott McTominay or Casemiro, all of whom have been linked with moves away. Now, one man has agreed terms to leave.

Midfielder agrees to leave Man Utd

That comes in the shape of academy graduate McTominay, who has reportedly agreed personal terms over a move to Galatasaray this summer. The Scottish midfielder is believed to be a target for Premier League side Fulham as well as the Turkish giants, with both sides tussling for his signature.

Scott McTominay’s 23/24 Premier League season

Appearances

32

Starts

18

Goals

7

Assists

1

Yellow Cards

2

As per reports in Turkey, relayed by Sport Witness, McTominay is top of the Galatasaray wishlist and has even said yes to joining the Turkish side.

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Indeed, he has given the green light to a deal worth a reported €5.5m a year (£4.5m per year, or £86,500 per week), an increase on the £60,000 a week deal he finds himself on at Old Trafford.

That may well have been the easy part though, with reports earlier in the week suggesting that Galatasaray had seen an opening bid of €15m (£12.7m) knocked back for the Scottish international, with Dan Ashworth and Co keen to hold out for closer to £25m to let him leave this summer.

Should that price be met and McTominay depart, it could allow Manchester United to move for one of their midfield targets, with PSG’s Manuel Ugarte among those that they have been linked with in recent weeks.

'Can't survive' on the basis of her 171* – Edulji wants India to look beyond Harmanpreet

Former India captain wants Mandhana to be the next ODI captain, suggests “a little rap on the knuckle” for Shafali Verma

PTI17-Feb-2022Diana Edulji feels Harmanpreet Kaur “can’t survive in the [Indian] team” on the memories of the 171 not out in 115 balls she scored in the 2017 ODI World Cup semi-final against Australia, and it’s time to look beyond her, starting with the third ODI against New Zealand on Friday.”If you are going with the same yardstick which was used to drop Jemimah Rodrigues, what the coach (Ramesh Powar) had mentioned, the same yardstick should be applied to Harmanpreet,” Edulji, a former India captain and a member of the Supreme Court-appointed Committee of Administrators that oversaw the running of the BCCI for 33 months up to October 2019, said. “I am very disappointed with her. She was my favourite player but you can’t survive on that one innings. She is only one innings away from a big knock but the effort has to be there. I will be the happiest if she proves me wrong. I just want the team to win the [ODI] World Cup [starting in New Zealand next month].Related

  • Harmanpreet credits team psychologist for bringing her out of her 'shell'

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“Even on captaincy front, Smriti [Mandhana] is the frontrunner for all formats after Mithali [Raj] as Harman is not performing. I wouldn’t mind dropping her for the next game. Sneh Rana is a good replacement for her.”Since that iconic innings against Australia, Harmanpreet has scored 614 runs in 32 ODIs, at an average of 27.90, with just three half-centuries, one of them in the final of that World Cup against England. Overall, in 109 matches, she has 2588 runs at an average of 34.05. She hasn’t passed 30 in her last five innings, including the two ODIs in New Zealand this past week.Her form for Melbourne Renegades in the 2021-22 WBBL was, however, excellent as she scored 406 runs from 12 innings, and also picked up 15 wickets to be named the Player of the Tournament.Edulji also suggested dropping Shafali Verma for the next game, with Mandhana expected to return after completing quarantine. In Mandhana’s absence, S Meghana has made an impact, with an innings of 49 in the second game, but Verma has continued her struggles in the format since making her debut last year.”Shafali needs a little rap on the knuckle, she needs proper grooming,” Edulji said. “She is moving towards the square leg and playing. There is no stillness in her stance. I can’t understand why.”When she was scoring, there wasn’t this type of (trigger) movement. Bowlers have found her out and that is why she is moving away from the stumps to play her strokes. But you have to respect the bowlers at this level.”

'Had I been captain maybe I wouldn't have scored all these runs'

Osman Samiuddin15-May-2017It remains one of the most enduring what-ifs of Younis Khan’s career: what if, in November 2009, he had not upped and left the captaincy? Where would he, and Pakistan cricket, be now had he continued?Pakistan cricket is no longer as obsessed with that one, in light of the successes of the eventual beneficiary of that decision, Misbah-ul-Haq. But the question has hounded Younis’ career since, up to and including this, his last series.And now, as he steps away from international cricket as Pakistan’s most prolific Test batsman, it seems he has found closure. “People say to me, you should’ve done more captaincy,” he told ESPNcricinfo.”But I think whatever happens, happens for the best. Had I been captain maybe I wouldn’t have scored all these runs. People think that maybe I carry these regrets, but no. Had I done more, who knows whether I would be where I am today? If I had been captain for so long, maybe I would’ve been too distracted by other duties to score as many runs as I did.”Despite leading Pakistan to the World Twenty20 title in 2009, Younis’ experience with the captaincy has been difficult. He turned it down first in 2007, having been groomed for it. In late 2006, as an interim captain, he had given it up in anger, only to accept it back a day later. When he resigned in 2009, it was under the weight of, effectively, a player revolt. And yet, over the last couple of years, he has spoken of another tilt at the captaincy, talk that has been encouraged by people around him.Certainly it is difficult to imagine him having done better as a batsman. Though his last series was a poor one, under Misbah’s captaincy, Younis scored nearly 5000 runs and more than doubled his century count: 18 in 53 Tests (16 in 65 before). It is a run that has established him as, arguably, Pakistan’s greatest Test batsman and one of the finest from anywhere in the modern age.”All the cricket I’ve played – for club, department, association, county, in Australia, wherever – when I’m gone if you ask any of them, they won’t be able to say that Younis Khan left something in the tank. I gave 200% everywhere I played.”Two-three years ago, I was about to retire but I got the motivation to try and get to 10,000 runs. As a captain, player, junior, senior, I put it all out there, whatever I had. Whatever I could, with bat, ball, in the field. No regrets either. We won a world title, we beat Australia, leveled a series in England. We performed, I performed so there’s nothing left that I really wanted to do.”So much does he feel he has given to the game that, unlike Misbah, he does not foresee a post-retirement attachment within the game. When he became captain in 2009, he had spoken keenly of helping set up a players’ association, something Pakistan’s cricketers have never known. That is not, for now, on the agenda.”Believe me – I think, in all, I’ve given 27-28 years of my life to cricket. So I have nothing in my mind about any future plans to get back into cricket. I don’t know if I’ll have any energy left after I leave to give to cricket.”A players’ association should happen for sure, but I don’t think I have the energy to be able to do something like this. We should do this, and if others start it up, then I will stand by them for sure.”One thing he will be doing plenty of is fishing, a pastime in which he often sought refuge during his career. “A lot of the dreams I had which I couldn’t get to while I was playing, I will now pursue. People think you achieve all of them in your career but actually this is a new career starting for me now.”

Werner upgrade: Spurs could land an amazing £34m Saka & Martinelli hybrid

There are just a few days remaining before the summer transfer window slams shut, and as things stand, Tottenham Hotspur fans have a lot to be happy about.

Daniel Levy and Co have signed a plethora of talented players, from young prospects like Archie Gray, Wilson Odobert and Yang Min-Hyeok, who could go on to become superstars to first-team ready and Premier League-proven level raisers like Dominic Solanke.

However, the decision to extend Timo Werner's loan deal for another campaign still feels like a slight mistake, as while he wasn't dreadful last season, he was underwhelming and isn't going to help the club reach the next level this year.

Tottenham's Timo Werner.

Interestingly, the Lilywhites were linked with a player who'd be an ideal upgrade on the German earlier this month, who has been compared to Gabriel Martinelli and Bukayo Saka.

Werner's Spurs spell

In the January transfer window this year, Spurs needed to bring in some more attacking reinforcements, as following a rapid start to the season, they were starting to falter. So, Levy and Co turned to former Chelsea attacker Werner, who had fallen out of favour at RB Leipzig.

The club agreed to a six-month loan with an option to buy at £15m, hopeful that Postecoglou's aggressive style would help the 28-year-old regain the incredible goalscoring form that led to his initial transfer to Stamford Bridge in 2020.

However, instead of a game-changing attacker who scored for fun, the North Londoners ended up with a fairly useful winger who was as profligate as everyone remembered and ended up getting injured before the end of the campaign.

Spurs forward Timo Werner.

Now, it's important to stress that the 57-capped German was not terrible for the Lilywhites. In fact, his tally of two goals and three assists in 14 appearances was perfectly serviceable. But therein lies the problem: he's simply okay.

The Stuttgart-born ace has scored 15 goals or more only once in the last four seasons, and based on his displays last year, it doesn't look like he is going to this season either.

Spurs forward Timo Werner

So, if he's not good enough to take the club forward, bringing him in for another season seems counterproductive, especially when the club was linked with someone far better already this summer, someone compared to Martinelli and Saka: Kingsley Coman.

How Coman compares to Martinelli and Saka

The player in question is Bayern Munich star Coman, who was touted for a move to N17 last week for a fee around £34m, or potentially even on a season-long loan.

The "complete" winger, as dubbed by former France U17 coach Patrick Gonfalone, is an incredible talent, and while last season wasn't his best campaign to date, he still racked up five goals and three assists, while the season prior saw him chalk up nine goals and seven assists.

With that said, most football fans are more than aware of how talented the former Paris Saint-Germain dynamo is, but where do these comparisons to Saka and Martinelli come from?

Well, aside from the positional similarities, which are plain to see, these specific comparisons stem from FBref, which compares players in similar positions across Europe's top five leagues, the Champions League and the Europa League, then creates a list of the ten most comparable players for each one, and in this case they concluded that the Brazilian is the number one most similar attacking midfielder or winger to the Bayern ace, while the Englishman is the seventh.

The easiest way to see these similarities for yourself is to examine their underlying numbers to see where they rank closely. For the former Ituano gem, it's in metrics such as non-penalty expected goals plus assists, actual non-penalty goals plus assists, short passing accuracy, crosses and ball recoveries, all per 90.

Coman & Martinelli

Stats per 90

Coman

Martinelli

Non-Penalty Expected Goals + Assists

0.53

0.58

Non-Penalty Goals + Assists

0.49

0.45

Shot Passing Accuracy

86.4%

86.5%

Crosses

4.84

4.87

Ball Recoveries

4.03

4.24

All Stats via FBref for the 23/24 League Season

When it comes to the Gunners' number seven, he ranks closely in a number of other underlying statistics.

These include metrics such as expected assists, goals per shot and shot on target, blocks, dribblers tackled and touches in the attacking third, also all per 90.

Coman & Saka

Stats per 90

Coman

Saka

Expected Assists

0.31

0.32

Goals per Shot

0.09

0.10

Goals per Shot on Target

0.38

0.32

Blocks

1.21

1.33

Dribblers Tackled

0.73

0.80

Touches in the Attacking Third

41.4

40.4

All Stats via FBref for the 23/24 League Season

Now, there are also similarities beyond the raw stats that the former Juventus gem shares with the two Arsenal stars, such as his goalscoring and creative abilities.

Ultimately, while Werner isn't a dreadful player, he's not good enough to help Tottenham progress this season, and while the fans don't like them, the fact Coman has been compared to Saka and Martinelli is just another reason why Levy and Co should look to bring him in before the window closes on Friday night.

Spurs could take Maddison to new heights with late move for £50m PL star

The incredible midfielder would perfectly balance Postecoglou’s team.

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Jack Salveson Holmes

Aug 27, 2024

‘He got in the way!’ – Bukayo Saka blames Arsenal team-mate for denying him first-ever hat-trick in Monaco win

Bukayo Saka has jokingly blamed Arsenal team-mate Kai Havertz for denying him what would have been a first senior hat-trick of his career.

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Article continues below

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  • Gunners forward bagged another brace
  • Helped to secure Champions League victory
  • Still waiting to collect his first match ball
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The England international winger put in another match-winning performance for the Gunners during their Champions League clash with Monaco at Emirates Stadium. Saka netted twice in that contest to put Mikel Arteta’s side on their way to victory.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    He was presented with an opportunity late on to claim the match ball, with a shot fired goalwards in the 88th minute. Monaco’s keeper may have had it covered, but said effort deflected off German forward Havertz and into the back of the net – wrapping up a 3-0 success.

  • WHAT SAKA SAID

    On being denied a first treble, Saka – who still finished with three goal contributions on the night – told reporters afterwards: “He [Havertz] got in the way of it, but don't worry, it's [a hat trick] coming. It's on the way.”

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    DID YOU KNOW?

    Saka’s performances have made him a key figure for club and country, with Arteta saying when asked if the 23-year-old is now in the “world-class” category: “You have to be able to do that consistently throughout many years to put yourself in that position.

    “We can compare what he's done in his first six years of professional football, which is exceptional, you know, and that's it and his aim is to improve. He has the players and environment to continue to do that and I'm sure he will.”

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