Tottenham keeping tabs on Sneijder’s standoff

Tottenham are monitoring the situation of Inter Milan playmaker Wesley Sneijder, according to the Metro.

The Dutchman has not played for the Serie A giants since September, as a dispute surrounding a pay-cut rumbles on.

Sneijder is reportedly unwilling to agree to the terms being put forward by his employers, which could see him make a cut-price January exit.

Premier League rivals Manchester United, Manchester City and French big spenders Paris Saint-Germain were thought to be leading the race for his signature, but Spurs have emerged as latest team to register an interest.

Italian newspaper Gazzetta dello Sport believe that Andre Villas-Boas sees the 28-year-old as the ideal man to fill the void left by Luka Modric, who joined Real Madrid over the summer.

AVB drafted in the likes of Moussa Dembele and Gylfi Sigurdsson to replace the Croatian, but, as of yet, the duo have failed to provide the required creativity.

A bid of £8m is thought to be enough to tempt Inter Milan to part company with the midfielder, a fee considerably lower than the speculated cost of Joao Moutinho, with whom the White Hart Lane club have been strongly linked.

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Sneijder began his career at Ajax, before joining Real Madrid in 2007.

A turbulent two-year spell in the Spanish capital was brought to an end during 2009, as Inter paid just over £10m for his signature.

Sanju Samson century, spinners hand India big win in T20I series opener

Chakravarthy, Bishnoi claim three wickets apiece to secure 61-run win

Firdose Moonda08-Nov-20243:23

Samson and spinners see India dominate in Durban

Sanju Samson struck his second successive T20I century and shattered records and South African hopes at Kingsmead. His was the fastest T20I hundred by an Indian against South Africa and will be remembered as one of the most destructive.For India, runs came mostly in boundaries: 17 fours and 13 sixes, including seven fours and 10 sixes for Samson. Overall, 88 of his 107 runs were scored in boundaries and he was particularly brutal square of the wicket. He scored 69 runs from 19 balls in the region between point and cover and square leg and mid-wicket, and only 13 runs behind square. Samson took on the spinners with gusto and scored 58 runs off the 27 balls he faced from Aiden Markram, Keshav Maharaj and Nqaba Peter combined. He also shared in two explosive stands: 66 runs off 37 balls with his captain Suryakumar Yadav and 77 runs off 34 balls with Tilak Varma. That meant India’s innings had middle-order momentum that South Africa could not match.They may have thought they gave themselves a chance when they pulled India back at the end. South Africa were staring at conceding the highest total at Kingsmead and highest against India but after Samson’s dismissal in the 17th over, India scored 28 runs off 20 balls and lost four wickets. They still ended up with their fourth-highest total against South Africa, and it proved way too much.South Africa were never in the chase as only three batters scored more than 20 and there was only one partnership of more than 30. The two legspiners Varun Chakravarthy and Ravi Bishnoi took three wickets each and conceded 53 runs in their eight overs after Arshdeep Singh and Avesh Khan made the initial breakthroughs which all pointed to a more experienced Indian bowling line-up.

Gerald Coetzee’s comeback

It has been 166 days between internationals for Gerald Coetzee but it did not seem like he had been away a day. Given the ball in the fourth over, Coetzee immediately started with a full delivery outside off and found some extra bounce. Abhishek Sharma tried to get under it and clear mid-off but only got the ball over Markram in the ring. He ran backwards and took the catch over his shoulder to bring out an almighty roar from Coetzee, who has recovered from a hip injury and had come back from a 12-week conditioning block.The rest of the over did not go quite as well. India’s captain Suryakumar hit Coetzee over his head for four and then over fine leg for six to take 10 runs off his opening over. Coetzee closed out the Powerplay which India finished on 56 for 1. Coetzee also made an in-match comeback when he was called on to bowl at the death and had Hardik Pandya caught at deep point for just 2 and Rinku Singh caught behind with his penultimate ball.Varun Chakravarthy finished with 3 for 25•Gallo Images/Getty Images

Kruger’s timeless over which ended with a wicket

Patrick Kruger started off with what seemed like a good plan to keep India quiet – a slower ball that Suryakumar had to dig out but Samson was in no mood to be stopped by that. The next ball was also slower and hit over long-off. Kruger put in extra effort in response and overstepped. Then sent down a full toss. Then a wide, a no-ball and another wide and he still had three balls left to bowl. He got it right with a full delivery outside off, then pulled his length back and could not resist going back to pace off to end the over. His 11th ball was a knuckle ball which Suryakumar dragged to deep square leg where debutant Andile Simelane was stationed. He put the nerves aside to make his first contribution to the game, and not a moment too soon. Simelane was brought on as South Africa’s seventh bowler, in the 10th over.

Tilak too good to be left out

Tilak hit the second ball he faced with the wind over deep backward square for six as he joined in on the boundary hitting action. He sent the first ball of Peter’s second over between deep mid-wicket and deep backward square for four and then tore Kruger’s tactic to avoid the shorter leg-side boundary to shreds. He hit over backward point and slog swept over fine leg. His innings was cut short when he hit Maharaj to the deep backward square boundary where Marco Jansen took a good catch but his cameo gave India’s innings middle-order momentum.

Markram’s lean run continues, as does South Africa’s

It has been 25 innings and two years since Markram scored a T20I half-century and the run continued with a seventh single-figure score in this match. Markram looked especially out of sorts when he tried to play Arshdeep through mid-wicket but closed the face of the bat too early and got a faint edge to Samson to fall in the first over. That set the tone for an innings in which South Africa were never really able to get going. Tristan Stubbs and Ryan Rickelton were both dismissed in the Powerplay, which South Africa ended on 49 for 3. The combination of Heinrich Klaasen and David Miller put on 42 in 6,1 overs but when they were separated, South Africa crumbled. They were bowled out inside 18 overs and were bowled out for their fourth-lowest score against India to lose the series opener by 61 runs.

Varun removes South Africa’s best

Chakravarthy took out South Africa’s two middle-order players and he got them in the space of three balls. In his final over, Klaasen tried to pull a slightly shorter ball but sent it straight to Axar Patel at long-on. And two balls later, Miller hit Chakravarthy to Avesh at square leg and South Africa went from 79 for 3 to 87 for 5 and were looking straight at defeat.

OIiver Hannon-Dalby's stereo display powers Warwickshire to innings win

Seamer claims four in each innings as Kent are overwhelmed despite second-innings fight

ECB Reporters Network 12-Jul-2023 Warwickshire 549 for 7 dec (Yates 228, Maxwell 81) beat Kent 171 and 332 (Finch 67, Leaning 64, Denly 45, Hannon-Dalby 4-59) by an innings and 46 runsWarwickshire have thrashed Kent by an innings and 46 runs in their LV= Insurance County Championship game at Canterbury, bowling the hosts out for 332 on day three.Oliver Hannon-Dalby took four for 59 in the second innings and finished with eight for 115 in the match, as Warwickshire issued a warning to their title rivals with an overwhelming victory.Harry Finch made 67 and Jack Leaning 64, but the hosts were left to rue a dismal first-innings performance and remain mired in a relegation battle.Kent began day three on 55 for one, still 323 behind Warwickshire’s first innings score of 549 for seven, with Joe Denly and Ben Compton not out on 29 and 17 respectively.An early appeal for a catch off Compton’s shoulder drew a cry of: “Are you Australia in disguise?” from the Frank Woolley Stand and although he survived that one, he became the morning’s first victim in the 26th over, when he nicked Hannon-Dalby behind for 26.Denly made 45 from 105 balls before he was removed by Hannon-Dalby, caught by Michael Burgess after the ball seemed to ricochet off his pads.Finch and Leaning batted through till rain brought an early lunch at 12.52 pm. Play resumed at 2.15, with nine balls bowled before a second, briefer delay of 20 minutes, resulting in a cumulative loss of nine overs.It was Kent’s biggest stand of the match and worth exactly a hundred, but it ended when Leaning fell into a trap. With three fielders crowding the bat on the leg side he tried repeating a shot he’d played in Yates’ previous over and this time the bowler had him caught by Jacob Bethell.Jordan Cox lasted 17 balls before he tried to sweep Yates and was lbw for four, leaving Kent on 223 for five at tea.Finch’s obdurate innings came to an end when Chris Rushworth bowled him off stump with the new ball and when Henry Brookes had Joey Evison caught behind for 37, the last of Kent’s defensive-minded batters had gone.Grant Stewart decided to have some fun, whacking successive sixes off Rushworth including one that went into a third-tier balcony in the Old Dover Road flats and he hung around for 44 balls, putting on 64 with Hamid Qadri before he hit Hannon-Dalby to Glenn Maxwell at gully for 40.Any realistic hopes Kent had of taking the game into a fourth day ended when Qadri went to the very next ball, lbw to Maxwell for 30 and the victory was confirmed when Arshdeep Singh drove Hannon-Dalby to Will Rhodes at mid on in the next over.

Mohammad Hasnain undergoes official bowling test in bid to revive international career

The results will be compiled in two weeks and shared with the ICC, with the bowler optimistic that he will be cleared

Umar Farooq22-May-2022After three months of remedial work on his bowling action, Mohammad Hasnain has undergone an official test in a bid to revive his international career. Hasnain was suspended from bowling in international cricket in February, after he failed a biomechanics test in which the majority of the deliveries he bowled exceeded the 15-degree tolerance limit for a legal bowling action.The official outcome of the test, which is expected to be compiled in two weeks, will be shared with the ICC and all member boards in the world. Hasnain is optimistic that he will be cleared, but in case of an adverse outcome, he will have to go back to the drawing board to rework his action.Hasnain was first reported in January by umpires in the Big Bash League, where he was playing for Sydney Thunder. While awaiting his results in January, he was allowed to play any cricket that came his way. He subsequently featured in the PSL for his franchise Quetta Gladiators in their first three games of the season, as regulations allowed him to, but was benched soon after the board found out that his action was illegal.According to the ICC’s regulations on illegal bowling actions, the PCB can allow Hasnain to continue bowling in their domestic tournaments. But the PCB decided against it as the PSL is considered to be an international league. As a result, the PCB sent him back to the High Performance Centre to rework his action. It is understood that Hasnain worked with coaches who bowled around 5000 balls to him to help fix his action.ESPNcricinfo understands that the coaches figured out that Hasnain had been rotating his arm inconsistently to make the ball swing, causing a jerk. To bowl quicker deliveries, his landing was wild, making his alignment go out. It is understood that the structure of his new bowling action remains the same though his wrist, arm rotation and landing has been tweaked allowing him to bowl with consistent and repeatable action. He underwent multiple unofficial tests and the PCB, alongside Hasnain, went for official tests after getting encouraging results.Until he was suspended, Hasnain had been in and around Pakistan’s white-ball squads and already has a T20I hat-trick to his name. He had impressed in his short stint at the BBL, recruited as a replacement for English quick Saqib Mahmood, taking 3 for 20 in Thunder’s 28-run win over Adelaide Strikers on his debut. For the PCB, Hasnain has been an asset and among the bowlers the system had invested in as he was the among the few names in Pakistan who can bowl at 145kmph consistently.

Shaheen Afridi '100% frustrated' by Pakistan's missed chances

“It’s disappointing when you drop catches, and we didn’t take the review on Williamson”

ESPNcricinfo staff26-Dec-2020A “mature” Shaheen Afridi was left “disappointed” with Pakistan’s fielding on day one of the Mount Maunganui Test, as the team dropped three catches against New Zealand, failing to take full advantage of their decision to bowl first.Pakistan started the day strongly, reducing the hosts to 13 for 2 inside 11 overs, but could only pick up one more wicket till the end of play, as New Zealand ended with 222. Afridi returned figures of 3 for 55, while the other five bowlers, including the experienced Mohammad Abbas and Yasir Shah, all went wicketless. Pakistan will be particularly frustrated considering how well they did to squeeze the flow of runs, but allowed the momentum to slip away as two catches off Naseem Shah were put down, while Haris Sohail dropped a relatively straight catch at slips, off Afridi. Pakistan also missed a review on a potential Kane Williamson lbw, denying them the chance to have a go at New Zealand’s middle order.

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“They batted hard but I am 100% frustrated by the dropped catches. It’s disappointing when you drop catches, and we didn’t take the review (on Williamson),” Afridi said. “We did try to get wickets early on with new balls and took two wickets but if you don’t take catches it will be difficult. It’s a part of the game but if you need to win matches you have to take catches and have to improve the fielding. They know how to play in their conditions so it is tough, but the ball is still new and tomorrow we will come hard to take wickets as early as possible.”Ross Taylor, who became the most capped player for New Zealand, was playing Afridi for the second time in his career and acknowledged the progress the fast bowler had made since making his debut as an 18-year-old in Abu Dhabi two years ago. Overall, Afridi has dismissed Taylor twice in three innings, bowling 32 dot balls and conceding just 31 runs. Afridi and Abbas shared the major chunk of the workload on Saturday, bowling a combined 41 overs.”I think when we first played him, obviously I think it was his first test. He is lot more mature now and the way he’s trying to set you up, I think it’s quite often a left-arm ball that doesn’t necessarily swing back as much. But I thought, you know, when the ball was 50 overs old, he was still swinging. He picked and choose when to use it.”He’s got a slippery bumper, you know, he’s only going to get better. And I’m sure he’s going to enjoy obviously this wicket. But in Christchurch as well. And I think, you know, Pakistan, they’re going to see a very, very good bowler in years to come.”

Essex hope Bopara channels number six frustrations ahead of Lancashire spin challenge

Lancashire go into their quarter-final at Chester-le-Street as favourites, but will be wary of an in-form Essex side

Matt Roller03-Sep-2019Since the competition changed to a 14-match group stage in 2014, no team has ever qualified for the quarter-finals of the T20 Blast winning as few as five games, but a combination of bad weather and a miraculous set of results have seen Essex manage just that.They go into Wednesday’s quarter-final at Chester-le-Street against Lancashire as outsiders – not least with Mohammad Amir missing having returned to Pakistan – but after three wins and a tie in their last four games, are confident of causing an upset.Before Friday’s win against Kent, captain Simon Harmer told ESPNcricinfo that the tournament had been “frustrating and challenging” for his side, as he tried to “slowly change the mindset and get players to buy in”.One man who he has struggled to convince of his methods is Ravi Bopara, who missed two games earlier in the tournament after what he labelled “some very tough conversations” about his batting position.Of Bopara’s 141 innings in T20 cricket for Essex, only 17 have come at number six of lower, and eight of those have been in this year’s competition.”It’s probably why I got left out in those couple of games earlier in the tournament,” Bopara said. “And if I’m brutally honest, I’m still not happy down there.”But, it’s the role I’ve been given, I’ll give my very best, and hopefully we’ll win games – that’s all I can do.”If Bopara is unconvinced of the logic behind the call – and after liking a tweet from his agent saying “surely you want your best players to face more deliveries”, it seems clear that he is – then it has certainly paid off thus far.His strike-rate 10 balls into an innings over the past three seasons for Essex is only 112.92, but unbeaten knocks of 70 off 35 and 47 off 27 in the must-win games against Surrey and Kent last week demonstrated his ability to ‘catch up’ after slow starts. Ultimately, those innings were what dragged them through to the knockouts.And since 2017, Bopara’s record for Essex suggests that he is much more effective against seamers than against spinners: he has scored at 9.80 runs per over against pace, compared to 7.43 against spin in that time period, lending support to the idea that holding him back for the end of an innings works as a plan.Wednesday’s quarter-final may prove different. Lancashire have been happy to hold their spinners back until the end of an innings, bowling almost as many overs of spin (22.4) as seam (23.5) at the death.ALSO READ: Tracking Blast tacticsOutside of the powerplay, Lancashire’s spinners have bowled almost twice as much as their seamers (88.4 overs to 47.5), suggesting that Dan Lawrence – who has averaged over 50 while scoring at more than 10 an over against spin in the past two seasons – is the key man.”The way Dan’s played in this competition – he’s been a great find,” said Bopara. “We know that he’s been around for a while, and we’ve known that he’s a good player, but I just feel that this year, he’s kind of nailed it – he’s come good.”He’s a strong, powerful guy now – he’s filling out, so he’s able to strike the ball a bit harder, he’s full of confidence and that’s great to see. He’s played a crucial part in our qualification.”If it is less than ideal for their fans, who are tasked with a 275-mile round trip on a work night, then Lancashire’s venue switch to Chester-le-Street should be perfect for their gameplan. Durham’s home games this season have, as usual, been characterised by low scores due to a slow wicket and vast square boundaries, and with Matt Parkinson, Liam Livingstone, Glenn Maxwell and Steven Croft in their side, Lancashire will be more than happy to strangle Essex with spin.But Essex themselves have plenty of pace-off options: between Harmer, Bopara, Adam Zampa and even Cameron Delport, they could bowl as many as 16 overs of spin and medium-pace. It might not be a high-scoring thriller for the neutrals, but it promises to be filled with the tactical nuances that often define modern T20s.Zampa – after an underwhelming World Cup – has had a solid tournament, taking 12 wickets with an economy of 8.02, despite playing his home games on the competition’s fastest-scoring ground, and Harmer suggested that he is a perfect overseas signing.”He’s an intricate creature,” Harmer said. “He’s very different but he brings a lot of energy. He’s a hell of a good guy, always there for you when you need him, on and off the field.”You can throw Zamps the ball [in the] first six, at the death, in the middle – it doesn’t matter, he’s always up for it. As a captain, it’s been really nice having him in the XI.”It is important to remember why Lancashire are favourites. Nobody in their batting lineup has passed 300 runs in the tournament, but any side boasting the mercurial talents of Maxwell, Croft and Livingstone – not least with the competition’s leading wicket-taker in Parkinson to back them up – should win substantially more often than it loses.But despite Bopara’s frustrations, Essex have stumbled across a formula that has started to work for them; if they can bring that into Wednesday’s game, they are not to be written off.

Brendon McCullum clears the air about positive drug test

The former New Zealand has asthma and needed more than the usual dose of his medicine while playing in Delhi during IPL 2016, which had triggered scrutiny

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Jun-2018Brendon McCullum has cleared the air about a positive drug test during his time with Gujarat Lions in IPL 2016.The former New Zealand captain has asthma and, in light of heavy pollution in Delhi at the time, he needed more than the usual dose of his medicine. As a result, McCullum’s urine sample was found to have exceeded the allowable limit for salbutamol, a drug that is part of inhalers used to treat asthma. The BCCI approached McCullum with these findings following which he secured a retroactive therapeutic use exemption from a panel of independent medical experts in Sweden to close the matter and clear his name.”There was a bit of a process to go through to make sure they had all the information and ticked off the areas they wanted to see, but we went through it all and [the BCCI] were actually pretty good to work with in the end,” McCullum told .”I certainly don’t see it as a failed drug test. It was just a case of we just need to seek clarification and apply for this. I have no ill-feeling about [the process] and I also have no guilt or remorse about it because I needed a puff of my inhaler at that time.”McCullum hit 60 off 36 at the top of the order in a one-run win for the Lions against Delhi Daredevils in the game that day. But a test after the game resulted in an “adverse analytical finding” because the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) rules state any dosage that is not consistent with therapeutic use will be considered a violation.McCullum’s doctors and legal team then prepared his defence, which had proven successful last January itself, but he chose to go public with the information now because he wanted to quash the rumours.”I’ve heard this sort of rumbling around in the background for a while and I actually said to my wife, ‘I don’t know why we don’t just deal with this now, I’ve got nothing to hide and it is better off just talking about stuff rather than having other people talking about it’. Otherwise it just grows and festers.”As far as I am concerned it was just a matter of making sure we got everything signed off properly, rather than it being a failed drug test.”McCullum, who has had asthma since childhood, found the going particularly tough in Delhi whose pollution levels have touched dangerous levels in recent years. In November 2016, a first-class match between Gujarat and Bengal had to be abandoned due to smog, and in December 2017, a Test between India and Sri Lanka was severely affected by pollution, with several Sri Lankan players taking ill.

Resolute England march into semi-finals

England put together a complete performance on a difficult day for cricket in Cardiff to seal passage to the Champions Trophy semi-finals

The Report by David Hopps06-Jun-2017England 310 (Root 64, Buttler 61*, Hales 56) beat New Zealand 223 (Williamson 87, Plunkett 4-59) by 87 runs

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details2:32

Fleming: NZ batting undone by extra bounce

This was not quite the contest which brought the Champions Trophy alive, alas, but England will not lose sleep over that. They became the first team to qualify for the semi-finals with a comfortable 87-win against New Zealand. A grimy Cardiff day during which persistent showers gradually gave way to howling winds demanded application and resolution and they were not found wanting.New Zealand were in the game as long as their captain Kane Williamson was at the crease, gathering runs with his usual precision. At 158 for 2, they were more than halfway to their target of 311 with two wickets lost and nearly 20 overs remaining. But from the moment Williamson fell for 87 from 98 balls, unhinged by a ball from Mark Wood which reared at him from just short of a length, they looked ill equipped to compete, losing their last eight wickets for 67 in 14 overs.

New Zealand fined for slow over rate

Match referee Andy Pycroft ruled that New Zealand were two overs short of the target with all time allowances considered.
In accordance with Article 2.5.1 of the ICC Code of Conduct for Players and Player Support Personnel, players are fined 10% for every over failed to be bowled, and the captain is fined double that amount. As such, Williamson has been fined 40% of his match fee, while his players have received 20% fines.
If there is a second over-rate offence committed by New Zealand during the Champions Trophy with Williamson as captain, he will be suspended for one match.

There was little sign of the memorable cricket that characterised the series between these sides in England in 2015, one that signified the start of England’s more courageous approach to one-day cricket as they admired how Brendon McCullum would bet the lot and raised him. What there was, was a confident team performance.England’s innings felt like a strain yet with cool heads, at the end of it, they again surpassed 300. They have done it 23 times since the last World Cup, comfortably more than any other side. As New Zealand’s bowlers increasingly resorted to short balls, and the umpires stoutly ignoring the showers strafing the ground, it felt like hard work. That hard work persuaded them the score was a decent one.That proved to be the case on a Cardiff surface that played unevenly at times. After an over in which Liam Plunkett struck both Williamson and Ross Taylor on the helmet, the target looked onerous. He was unfortunate to go wicketless in his first spell, but his menace would not have been missed by New Zealand’s tail as they looked on from the dressing room and the last three wickets gained him 4 for 55.England’s seam attack have consistently held that cross-seam deliveries are the way to go in Cardiff and their example is bound to be followed by others.New Zealand survived an edgy period against the new ball – 22 for 1 in seven overs as Jake Ball (halting his run-up several times because of the strength of the wind) took on the new ball with relish. His first ball bowled Luke Ronchi, foot-fast and amplifying his reputation as a poor starter.An even more unnerving period came after the loss of Martin Guptill, who drove at a full ball from Ben Stokes and was held by Joe Root in the gully. Williamson was hit on the side of the helmet as he ducked into a short ball from Plunkett, who then struck Taylor on the grille before he had scored with one that spat off a length.For all that, Taylor and Williamson added 95 in 17 overs and England’s disquiet was growing before Williamson fell. Taylor, who has the capability to go from first gear to fifth, never made the transition and three overs later, with 39 from 59 balls, dragged Ball to short midwicket. Jimmy Neesham whacked Plunkett over the long-on boundary, but plopped the next into the hands of deep square leg.England had omitted Adil Rashid’s legspin for their first game, a victory against Bangladesh, but Stokes was held to be fit enough to bowl a full spell again as England’s fourth seamer, so with seam stocks replenished Rashid replaced the injured Chris Woakes. He survived the challenge of Cardiff’s short straight boundaries, having Neil Broom lbw sweeping and then Mitchell Santner stumped off a leg-side wide, smart work this by Jos Buttler.In England’s innings, the adaptability of Joe Root – England’s Williamson and one of three batsmen to pass 50 – was apparent from the outset, his game management in place as he worked the ball around. New Zealand also responded to the unresponsiveness of the Kookaburra – a cricket ball that does not like to party and that makes cricket duller because of it – with a pragmatic acceptance that rewards would be hard won and a shift to a shorter length.Jason Roy’s lack of form remains a problem that England will be desperate he resolves against Australia in the final group match. It is not just the runs; it is his effrontery that so often sets the tone. A record of 47 runs at 6.71 in England one-day matches since his bench-warming exercise at the IPL reveals that impudence is currently in short supply. He survived an lbw appeal first ball from Southee, tried to play himself in, then walked across his stumps twice in one over against Adam Milne and lost his leg stump.Alex Hales is in better touch. Trent Boult gave him an early opportunity to get his long levers loosened and he hauled the same bowler downwind for six. When he carved Milne over long-off for six more, England were 118 for 1 in the 21st over and beginning to take command only for Milne’s slower ball to deceive him as he anticipated a short one.When Morgan succumbed to an wide ball from Corey Anderson, feathering a catch to the wicketkeeper as he advanced down the pitch, Root, on the verge of fifty, would have recognised the need for a substantial innings. But he was starved of strike during his stand with Stokes – facing only 15 balls in the next ten overs – and he met an ungainly end when he dragged Anderson on to his stumps, envisaging a big shot that never materialised.Stokes possessed most menace. One straight drive left Root dancing in self-preservation. Twice, Anderson disappeared straightish for sixes and, with Santner’s left-arm spin vulnerable – his first five over-spell conceding 36 – there seemed opportunity to feast on the back-up seamers. But Stokes was tormented with a few wide ones outside off stump and, on 48, he had a brainstorm as he ran an uppercut against Boult into third man’s hands.It didn’t feel like a day for Moeen Ali, and he soon perished like a butterfly in winter, pulling Anderson to short fine leg where Boult again proved himself one of the more athletic fielders in the fast-bowling fraternity. Rashid fell lbw to Santner as one skidded on a little on a dampening surface.England needed Buttler’s intervention, an unbeaten 61 from 48 balls. His first boundary took 24 balls – and even that, fortunately for him, came via his helmet as Southee fired in another short one in thickening drizzle.Buttler then ramped a bouncer from Boult into the cameraman’s gantry and flat-batted another short ball from Milne back over his head for another six. Rare moments of ambition on a workmanlike day, but by the time Southee ended England’s innings three deliveries early with wickets in successive balls enough to swing the match in England’s favour. Decisively so, it was to prove.

Daredevils look to build on hat-trick of wins

Two teams on the upswing – Delhi Daredevils and Gujarat Lions – look for a win to continue their momentum in the second half of the season

The Preview by Nikhil Kalro26-Apr-2016

Match facts

Wednesday, April 27, 2016
Start time 2000 local (1430 GMT)

Big Picture

Many feared another gruelling season was in store for Delhi Daredevils after they suffered a demoralising loss against Kolkata Knight Riders in their tournament opener. Daredevils have bounced back with three consecutive wins, though, to intensify the race for the playoffs. Led by Zaheer Khan’s wiles, Daredevils defended 164 in their last game against Mumbai Indians.Quinton de Kock has carried in his confidence from the World T20, and Sanju Samson hit form with a steady 60 against Mumbai. With the ball, Amit Mishra and Zaheer have used their experience to limit the damage towards the end. Can Daredevils continue their form through the middle part of the tournament?Gujarat Lions have had one bad day, but four wins have left them comfortably placed in the points table. An in-form top order has resulted in relaxed chases, but the batting hasn’t been tested while setting a target. In the previous match, Dwayne Smith and Brendon McCullum made up for the injured Aaron Finch’s absence with a quickfire start in the chase of 181.Lions’ bowling, though, has failed to live up to expectations since the exclusion of James Faulkner. Dwayne Bravo picked up figures of 4 for 22 in the first game against Kings XI Punjab, but has since taken two wickets at an economy rate of 10.06. Considering the trend this season, and Delhi’s short boundaries, both sides may prefer bowling first. But do Lions have enough depth if they are asked to bat?

Form guide

Delhi Daredevils: WWWL (most recent matches first)
Gujarat Lions: WLWWW

In the spotlight

Amit Mishra‘s returns this season: seven wickets at an economy rate of 6.00 and an average of 10.28. He has primarily been used in the second half of the innings, and his control over his variations has helped Daredevils during the end overs.With 3873 runs, Suresh Raina is the highest run-getter in the IPL, and 174 of those have come for his new franchise. His consistent starts have set a platform for Lions’ successful chases.

Team news

Daredevils played four South Africans in their previous game. Legspinner Imran Tahir, who replaced allrounder Carlos Brathwaite, produced figures of 0 for 29. Daredevils may not tinker with their winning combination.Delhi Daredevils (probable): 1 Quinton de Kock (wk), 2 Shreyas Iyer, 3 Sanju Samson, 4 JP Duminy, 5 Karun Nair, 6 Pawan Negi, 7 Chris Morris, 8 Imran Tahir, 9 Mohammed Shami, 10 Zaheer Khan (capt), 11 Amit MishraFinch left the field with a hamstring injury in Lions’ last win and did not bat. If he is unavailable for this game, Lions may bolster their bowling attack by including Dale Steyn or Faulkner. If they decide to include an overseas bowler, Shadab Jakati may be left out.Gujarat Lions (probable): 1 Dwayne Smith/Aaron Finch, 2 Brendon McCullum, 3 Suresh Raina (capt), 4 Dinesh Karthik (wk), 5 Dwayne Bravo, 6 Ravindra Jadeja, 7 Akshdeep Nath, 8 James Faulkner/Dale Steyn/Shadab Jakati, 9 Praveen Kumar, 10 Dhawal Kulkarni, 11 Pravin Tambe

Pitch and conditions

Daredevils defended 164 against Mumbai in their previous game in Delhi. Despite the Feroz Shah Kotla’s short boundaries, scores generally do not cross 180 here. The weather is expected to remain dry, with temperatures lingering around 35C.

Stats and trivia

  • In his previous eight IPL games, Raina has six scores between 20 and 29
  • Dwayne Bravo has bowled his four-over quota in 15 of his last 16 T20 games. His record in this IPL so far, however, is not that great – five matches, 19 overs, at an economy rate of 9.10 and an average of 28.83

Lancashire release Gareth Cross

Gareth Cross has been released by Lancashire, increasing the possibility that they will sign Jos Buttler from Somerset

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Sep-2013Gareth Cross has been released by Lancashire, increasing the possibility that they will sign Jos Buttler from Somerset.Cross, 29, has been dropped in the latter part of this season in favour of Alex Davies, the England Under-19 wicketkeeper, who has played the last two Championship matches against Leicestershire and Gloucestershire. In 13 Championship games Cross made 409 runs at 24.05 with one hundred and two fifties.He tweeted: “Unfortunately my time at lancs has come to end. Thanks to everyone who ever supported me and everyone I played with. Have made some amazing friends. Its now time to move on and start a fresh somewhere else. Some big points to prove. Thanks again to everyone. Enjoyed every bit of it.”Buttler’s future with Somerset has been up in the air for much of the season after he was elevated to England’s one-day and Twenty20 keeper, but did not keep in all formats at county level due to the presence of Craig Kieswetter at Taunton. When asked during the one-day series against Australia, Buttler admitted it had been a bit of a distraction for him but hoped progress would be made soon.Cross had to bide his time for a regular first-team slot after beginning his career while Warren Hegg was the No. 1 at Old Trafford. Luke Sutton’s arrival meant he had to wait even longer before he became the main keeper for Lancashire’s Championship-winning season in 2011 although had been in the one-day role for some time.Cross is the second senior player Lancashire have released in recent days following the departure of Stephen Moore.

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