Leeds and Burnley lawsuit on Everton

Finance expert Kieran Maguire has now revealed some significant news involving Everton.

The Lowdown: Leeds and Burnley compensation

As shared by iNews, both Leeds United and Burnley are now seeking £200m in compensation in order to try and offset the advantage that the Goodison Park outfit have received through alleged overspending.

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It is understood that representatives from the two clubs have formally requested that the Premier League order them not to delete any relevant information with regards to their accounts.

The Latest: Maguire shares latest

Speaking to Football Insider, Maguire has revealed that both Leeds and Burnley have decided to pursue a compensation claim regardless of which team were to get relegated to the Championship:

“There are some precedents which need to be considered.

“There was the Carlos Tevez case in 2005. West Ham agreed an out-of-court settlement with Sheffield United. That was nothing to do with FFP because it didn’t exist then.

“But we have recently had a settlement between the owners of Derby County and Middlesbrough with regards to FFP breaches.

“You can understand why Burnley and Leeds are doing this. My understanding is that they have decided to pursue this regardless of who got relegated.”

The Verdict: Significant

The fact that Leeds and Burnley are pursuing this, despite the Clarets going down and Leeds and the Toffees staying up, is significant.

The claim could have easily been thought of in bitter taste, but it looks as if the Blues could still have a potential problem on their hands given Leeds’ involvement even after staying up.

If the claim is successful, then this may alter their transfer plans significantly for the summer, and they will not want to be restricted spending-wise again, after only spending a mere £1.7m last summer.

Nonetheless, the Merseyside club will still be confident that they have not broken any rules, and will continue with their plans as normal for now.

In other news, find out which ‘reckless’ flop EFC could now sell this summer here!

Celtic want to sell Vasilis Barkas

Celtic are keen on offloading unwanted goalkeeper Vasilis Barkas in the summer transfer window, according to a new report which has emerged.

The Lowdown: Barkas struggling for minutes

The Hoops have enjoyed an excellent season to date, still being in pole position to seal Premiership glory, having already won the Scottish League Cup.

Barkas hasn’t played much of a part in proceedings, though, with the 27-year-old appearing just once in the league so far in 2021/22. Last summer, goalkeeping coach Derek Soutar branded some of the Greek’s mistakes as “inexplicable”.

A fresh report suggests that the £19k-per-week stopper’s time at Parkhead may be reaching its natural conclusion.

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The Latest: Summer exit expected for Barkas

According to Football Insider, Barkas is free to leave Celtic this summer, with his current contract expiring in 2024.

The Hoops are instead looking for a ‘new senior goalkeeper’ to come in and replace the Greek, with a Lennoxtown source saying they want to offload him permanently, even if it is at a significant loss on their initial £4.5m investment.

The Verdict: Shrewd decision by Hoops

This makes perfect sense for Celtic, with Barkas’ contract situation also meaning that they could receive a fee for him, rather than losing him on a free transfer.

He has only managed 24 appearances for the club in two years and has never been able to oust Joe Hart as first-choice between the sticks this season, so it does seem time for him to move on.

Bringing in a superior ‘keeper as competition for Hart, or maybe even a long-term replacement for the English veteran, would help to make competition for places even stronger in Ange Postecoglou’s squad moving forward.

In other news, another Celtic transfer claim has emerged. Read more here.

Chahal's record haul ends with the victory it deserved

Agarkar had also bagged six wickets at the MCG in January 2004, but India lost 6 for 13 and the match. Fifteen years later, they found themselves at the right end of the result

Daniel Brettig at the MCG18-Jan-20194:04

Hodge: Chahal’s consistency, self-belief work for him

In 622 ODIs played in Australia since the very first took place at the MCG in 1970-71, no-one has ever bettered the bowling figures of 6 for 42 claimed by Yuzvendra Chahal for India against Australia on January 18, 2019. He now shares that lofty perch with another Indian, Ajit Agarkar, who plucked his one haul of same at the MCG in January 2004.That night, 15 years ago, Agarkar had reason to believe for most of its journey that his efforts would deliver India the win, only to find himself part of a rush of wickets at the end, 6 for 13 in all, that slid the visitors from victors to vanquished in the space of 19 frenzied balls.Yuzvendra Chahal claimed his career-best figures•ESPNcricinfo LtdThis time, however, Chahal was not to be required with the bat, as MS Dhoni and Kedar Jadhav teased, tested and ultimately tormented Australia with a perfectly modulated chase for 231 that delivered India the series with four balls to spare.That Dhoni in particular was able to dawdle at times, very nearly blocking out a maiden from Adam Zampa’s 10th over, can be put down largely to the quality displayed by Chahal, who with his variations of spin, line and pace found exactly the right sort of wristspin for an MCG surface that in its modicum of tacky moisture offered him just enough assistance.ALSO READ: Dhoni, Jadhav clinch series win in tight chaseAt the same time it was a performance all the more remarkable for the fact that this was Chahal’s first match of the tour; by virtue of his surprise, his performance mirrored that of Kuldeep Yadav against Australia in the decisive Test match of the 2017 Test series in India. Ironically, it was Virat Kohli’s sense that the Australians were now reading Kuldeep better than in the past that compelled him to change up his spin battery.”Our strength as a side has been upredictability,” Kohli said. “We haven’t been predictable with our combinations in the past couple of years. So felt like they were reading Kuldeep quite well and they were able to score singles easily, picking his variations from the hand quite well, so we thought it might not be a bad thing to bring in Chahal for variation. Also because we were bringing in Kedar [Jadhav] who’s an offspinner and gives us an option against left-handers.”Credit has to go to him [Chahal] because the way he bowled in his first game of the tour was absolutely outstanding. To take six wickets at the MCG is no small feat for a spinner, and I’m really happy for him. He’s a very intelligent bowler and he gets us those breakthroughs. Him and Kuldeep together are definitely a force to be reckoned with and if they play together it’s our most potent spin bowling attack, but just for the balance of the team, Kuldeep had to make way for Chahal this evening.”All spin bowlers will have days where they are grateful for an early wicket, whether intentional or otherwise. For Shane Warne, of course, his first ball dismissal of Mike Gatting in England in 1993 came through a combination of vicious spin and fortunate happenstance; for Chahal, his second delivery brought impatience and inattention from Shaun Marsh, who advanced at a ball fired down the leg side and swatted at thin air before being stumped.Three balls later, and Chahal’s first delivery to Usman Khawaja arrived on a similar line, this time stopping in the pitch enough to turn the batsman’s attempted work to the leg side into a gentle leading edge and a return catch. Whatever was to follow, that double-blow when Marsh and Khawaja had appeared well set told a large part of the evening’s tale.This is not to say that Chahal did not make more vital incisions. With each delivery his rhythm improved, perhaps peaking with a legbreak to Marcus Stoinis that with drift and angle drew the batsman to shape towards the leg side, then with enough snap back across the body to draw the edge to slip, where Rohit Sharma held a terrific catch. Jhye Richardson was also confounded by drift and turn, offering a front edge to midwicket, before Peter Handscomb’s otherwise productive stay was ended by some skid off the surface when he misjudged length and was pinned lbw.”Chahal bowled beautifully today and he would have troubled anyone on that pitch,” Kohli said. “Even our team he would have troubled if we’d batted against him because he was bowling so well.”When Zampa, Chahal’s opposite number, failed to reach the pitch of the ball and lofted to long on, Chahal had six wickets and the adulation of a largely Indian crowd of 53,603. Rightfully, he pouched the Man-of-the-Match award, as Dhoni claimed the series prize. “The wicket was a little bit turning and so I could plan to bowl a little bit slower and I did my best,” Chahal said at the presentation.Startling as Chahal’s performance was, he still has work ahead of him to secure a spot in India’s World Cup plans. Kuldeep and Ravinda Jadeja are among many and varied options for India’s management, and it remains to be seen whether Chahal can transcend the conditions-based selection he clearly was on this day. But in conjuring figures that put him right at the top of a long list of accomplished bowlers to play ODIs in Australia, he had made a mark that will be difficult to forget.”If you see their performances how can you not,” Kohli said when asked whether Chahal and Kuldeep could both fit into the World Cup squad. “Two wristspinners who are getting you wickets in the middle overs. That’s the game-changer, if he didn’t get us wickets in the middle overs we would have been chasing 260-270. In one-day cricket you have to take take wickets there, and any captain would want that.”

Captain Kohli's glorious year

Virat Kohli and Jayant Yadav broke plenty of records on the fourth day in Mumbai

S Rajesh11-Dec-20165 Batsmen who have scored three or more double-hundreds in Tests in a calendar year. Virat Kohli joins Michael Clarke, Brendon McCullum, Ricky Ponting and Don Bradman in this elite list. Kohli is the third captain to score three doubles in a year, after Clarke (2012) and McCullum (2014).50.53 Kohli’s Test average after his 235, the first time his Test average has gone past 50. He also averages 52.93 in ODIs, and 57.13 in Twenty20 internationals, making him the first batsman to simultaneously average more than 50 in all three formats in international cricket.640 Kohli’s aggregate in the series, the highest for any Indian batsman in a Test series against England. He went past Rahul Dravid’s aggregate of 602 in the four-Test series in England in 2002. This is only the seventh instance of an Indian batsman scoring 600-plus runs in a series; Kohli joins Sunil Gavaskar and Dravid among Indian batsmen who have done this twice.

India batsmen to score 600+ runs in a Test series

Player Series Tests Innings Runs Average 100sSunil Gavaskar Ind in WI, 1970-71 4 8 774 154.80 4Sunil Gavaskar WI in Ind, 1978-79 6 9 732 91.50 4Virat Kohli Ind in Aus, 2014-15 4 8 692 86.50 4Dilip Sardesai Ind in WI, 1970-71 5 8 642 80.25 3Virat Kohli Eng in Ind, 2016-17 4 7 640 128.00 2Rahul Dravid Ind in Aus, 2003-04 4 8 619 123.80 1Rahul Dravid Ind in Eng, 2002 4 6 602 100.33 3241 The partnership between Kohli and Jayant Yadav, India’s highest for the eighth wicket. The previous best was 161, by Mohammad Azharuddin and Anil Kumble against South Africa 20 years ago. It is the second double-century stand for the eighth wicket in Tests against England: the previous one came almost 109 years ago, when Roger Hartigan and Clem Hill added 243 in Adelaide in January 1908. This is only the eighth 200-plus stand for the eighth wicket in Test history.0 Indian No. 9 batsmen who had scored Test hundreds before Jayant Yadav’s 104 today. India have now become the seventh team to have a centurion at No. 9 or lower. This is only the 20th hundred by a batsman at No. 9 or lower in Test history.65.50 Kohli’s Test average as captain, second only to Bradman’s 101.51 among captains with 2000-plus Test runs.Among captains with 2000-plus Test runs, only Don Bradman has a higher average than Virat Kohli•ESPNcricinfo Ltd165 Kohli’s average century, in terms of runs per innings, as captain; when not captain, his average century score was 117.1 Where Kohli’s innings ranks, in terms of most runs in an innings by an India captain in Tests, and by any India batsman against England. Kohli’s 235 is the second-highest score by any batsman in Tests at the Wankhede Stadium: the best is Clive Lloyd’s 242 not out in 1975.4 Instances of India scoring 600-plus against England; the previous three were all in England, at The Oval in 1990 and 2007, and at Headingley in 2002.118.3 Overs bowled by England’s spinners, the fifth-most for England in a Test innings in India. The last time they bowled more was also at the Wankhede Stadium, in 1993, when John Emburey, Phil Tufnell and Graeme Hick wheeled down 127.3 overs. That was also the Test in which Vinod Kambli scored 224, which was the previous highest for India against England.192 Runs conceded by Adil Rashid, the third highest by an England bowler in a Test innings, and the highest overseas. The two higher ones were both at The Oval, by Ian Botham against Pakistan in 1987, and by Ian Peebles against Australia in 1930.4 Batsmen who have scored a century and a duck on Test debut. The previous such instance before Keaton Jennings in this Test was by Mohammad Wasim, 20 years ago against New Zealand.10 Fifty-plus scores for Joe Root in ten Tests against India; in each of these Tests he has passed 50 once.362 Runs scored today, the second highest ever on the fourth day of a Test match in India. The only instance when more runs were scored was against Pakistan in Kolkata in 2005, when the fourth day fetched 369 runs, 274 by India and 95 by Pakistan.

Bangladesh surge to 145-run victory

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Nov-2015Tamim Iqbal, who was troubled by Tinashe Panyangara early in his innings, settled down and stitched a useful partnership of 70 with Mushfiqur Rahim•AFPSikandar Raza dismissed both Tamim and Shakib Al Hasan in quick succession to leave Bangladesh shaky•AFPMushfiqur, however, anchored the side, sharing a crucial 119-run partnership for the fifth wicket with Sabbir Rahman•AFPAlthough Bangladesh lost a few quick wickets at the end, Mushfiqur’s fourth ODI hundred set the base for their score of 273 for 9•Associated PressJongwe, promoted to open in place of Richmond Mutumbami, who injured his ankle while keeping, gave the visitors a brisk start•AFPShakib then came into the attack and rattled the chase with subtle variations in length and flight•Associated PressHe went onto claim his maiden five-wicket haul in ODIs while his captain Mashrafe Mortaza passed 200 wickets•Associated PressElton Chigumbura offered some resistance with 41 off 51 balls but it was only a matter of time before Bangladesh surged to a 145-run victory•Associated Press

Chennai spoil Mumbai's party

And the DJ ruined the spectators’ party

Mihir Gosalia29-May-2014Choice of game
Since Mumbai was hosting the eliminator and a qualifier game, I decided to go for both. I am a Mumbai Indians fan, but this time I wanted Chennai Super Kings to win, because they are one of the most consistent teams in the IPL. They are a strong team. They have a powerful batting line-up who chase down any opposition’s score in the game well.Team supported
Though Mumbai managed to somehow qualify for this eliminator and the home crowd was vociferously supporting them, I knew in the back of my mind, even before the match started, that Chennai would win it.Key performer
Suresh Raina was due for a big score in the tournament not having done that well in this year’s tournament so far. The unbroken fourth-wicket partnership of Suresh Raina and David Hussey won the game hands on for CSK. For Mumbai, Lendl Simmons was the key performer. He has been consistent as an opening batsman for them and scored a well-deserved half-century.One thing I’d have changed about the match
I would have changed the DJ, who was not really entertaining the spectators before the start, during the match or even during the mid-innings.Face-off I relished
Corey Anderson had just played one of the best T20 innings, and is the reason why Mumbai made it to the eliminator game. R Ashwin has been one of the consistent bowlers for his team. After a quickfire 20 off 10 balls, Anderson tried to sweep Ashwin, but top-edged him to Ishwar Pandey at deep backward square leg.Wow moment
After the first six hit by Kieron Pollard went flying into the crowd at midwicket, the big screen flashed the message: ” [This time outside the stadium]”. Pollard tried to oblige, hitting a very high aerial shot off Ashish Nehra, but it was held by Mohit Sharma.Shots of the day
Simmons hit two sixes after he got to his half-century. He first hit Ravindra Jadeja for a one in the 15th over, the ball effortlessly clearing long-off, and then Nehra in the 16th over long-on.Hardship factor
Getting to the stadium and exiting it were very easy since it is located just opposite the Churchgate railway station. I reached the stadium early to secure a good seat. The security checks were quick. There were no specific seat numbers allocated. The seating was spacious, and the chairs were comfortable, though you hardly sit and watch while the game is on.Entertainment
Sixes were followed by smoke released from machines installed in various locations around the stadium. Before the match began, someone from the broadcasting team flew what looked like a remote-controlled camera to record the crowd, which waved at it.Before the match began, they showed the live telecast of the first qualifier in Kolkata, so we got to watch that.Overall
8. Chennai were the better team and the deserving winners. The experience of watching the game at the Brabourne Stadium was a refreshing change as compared to the regular experience at the Wankhede Stadium. The crowd atmosphere was good, though it could have been noisier, with more slogans and at least one Mexican wave.

The battles Bangladesh fought to win

Bangladesh’s victory in the final ODI was a sum of having come out on top in six crucial situations

Mohammad Isam09-Dec-2012Bangladesh had to win six mini-battles in the deciding game against West Indies. These small victories added up to deliver a special night for Abdur Razzak and captain Mushfiqur Rahim. These moments also made a hero out of Nasir Hossain, who wanted to be a hero since the time he was having lunch with Saqlain Mushtaq, the Bangladesh bowling consultant. Above all these individual triumphs lies a team performance that is perhaps Bangladesh’s finest to date because it was also their hardest-fought.The 3-2 win in the ODI series has come against a side whose captain had stated, before the series, his intention to win 5-0. When West Indies manager, and former captain, Richie Richardson said matter-of-factly that they would like to win everything in Bangladesh, it didn’t sound unrealistic. West Indies’ last assignment prior to the tour was the World Twenty20 which they had won in grand style, and never has a reigning champion side come to Bangladesh and not won something.West Indies won the Test series 2-0, and as the ODI series neared Bangladesh hardly featured when the talk was about winning. What a 5-0 win would mean for the West Indies’ ODI rankings was everyone’s concern. The absence of Shakib Al Hasan was seen as the major blow that the home team could never recover from, so much so that ideas of 400-plus scores were also thrown around.Instead, Bangladesh fought, and fought till the very end. Even the winning runs had to be hit twice, as Elias Sunny forgot to complete the run when Nasir had first struck the ball into the gap. The batsman had to redo the winning shot the next ball, carving the ball over point, which was Bangladesh’s sixth comeback. The five earlier ones made sure it got to this stage.The first obstacle was Chris Gayle. Despite the lack of runs this series, he remained a threat until he chopped the ball to Nasir at point, who took a low catch in the eighth over. The wicket came about in the only way Bangladesh could have dismissed Gayle, by building pressure through dot balls; his ODI series with an aggregate that is his third-lowest in a five-match series.From 17 for 3, West Indies recovered significantly. Kieron Pollard settled into the crease by hitting sixes and the spinners strayed. Mominul Haque finally slipped one through Pollard, giving Bangladesh their second win of the afternoon.That dismissal, however, was not going to end Bangladesh’s woes. But they denied West Indies a second chance, as Mahmudullah and Shafiul Islam picked up two wickets each, helping restrict the opposition to 217.Bangladesh winning battles with their bowling was not unexpected, given their current form. The turnaround they forced after Pollard had decimated the spinners was worth watching. They had to use new angles and a lot of variations to keep the West Indies tail from wagging.When it came to batting, Bangladesh suffered their second top-order collapse in as many games. Their mindset seemed muddled, and it was evident in their footwork. Tamim Iqbal got away with a couple of boundaries before he was cleaned up by Kemar Roach. Roach also beat Anamul Haque and Jahurul Islam with pace. Recovery from these early blows would be Bangladesh’s biggest struggle of the series.Mushfiqur and Mahmudullah decided to counter-attack, like Pollard had, and bring up the run-rate to a point from which picking up wickets in a clutter was the only way out for West Indies. The pair added 91 runs at 7.18 per over, Bangladesh using the advantage of having an in-form Mahmudullah promoted to No. 5 for only the second time in his career.Both the captain and vice-captain, however, fell within 20 balls of each other, leaving three youngsters the task of seeing Bangladesh home. Nasir, Mominul and Sohag Gazi then won Bangladesh yet another mini-battle, adding 53 for the sixth wicket and a further 28 for the seventh to take them just one hit away from victory.In a way, this was Bangladesh’s third final of 2012, after the Asia Cup final and the final day of the Dhaka Test. Having lost the previous two, questions were raised throughout the year about their ability to go all the way. The win against West Indies is a reward for the battles they fought, the small wins, even the two defeats. It is for now their most cherished trophy.

Batting, legspin gave Chawla the edge

His ability down the order and the presence of too many offspinners in the squad may have prompted selectors to pick Piyush Chawla

Sidharth Monga17-Jan-2011So the 15 to represent India in their home World Cup have been chosen, and barring the odd spot there is not much to complain about. Thirteen of the 15 players picked themselves, and it can’t be too bad a place to be at. The last two positions, which went to R Ashwin and Piyush Chawla, were always going to be the ones that would be debated.On skill and form alone, there is no doubting Ashwin is the second-best limited-overs spinner in the country, but because of the presence of many offspinners – full-time and part-time – the team management is believed to have preferred Piyush Chawla. Still, Chawla had competition from Pragyan Ojha as the bowler who takes the ball away from right-hand batsmen, and someone who has performed decently in whatever opportunities he has got. Chawla, on the other hand, last featured in an ODI in July 2008, and has never played an ODI in India, where his team will be playing all its matches bar one.MS Dhoni, not speaking directly about the selections, gave an insight into why Chawla might have been preferred. “It’s good to have him in the side when it comes to the variety in the spin department, and of course he is one guy who can bat a bit,” Dhoni said. “I am not saying he is a specialist batsman, but you know when he went to county cricket he scored a fair amount of runs, which means he can bat at No. 7 for us if we feel the five-bowler tactic needs to be employed.”That being the case, the selectors went for another slow bowler who could play as a lead spinner in case Harbhajan Singh gets injured. That put paid to Rohit Sharma’s hopes of making it to the World Cup, who didn’t do himself any favours by struggling in the ODIs in South Africa. Some might argue that the squad might be one batsman short, but you can’t have everything unless you have a genuine allrounder in the side.The reserve wicketkeeper is not a big issue because India will be playing all their matches after the World Cup opener at home, and if Dhoni does get injured, a replacement can be brought in at a short notice without any visa troubles. They could also keep one reserve keeper on notice, and have him travel to the match venues in case he is needed.Only fitness could have kept the other 13 out, but obviously the selectors would have made sure that none of the injuries or niggles is serious enough to last till the start of the event. Munaf Patel, thanks to a good comeback to the ODI side, and Ashish Nehra, despite two bad games in South Africa, have kept Ishant Sharma and Sreesanth out. It would have been unfair to drop Nehra after these two off days because ever since his comeback he has been Dhoni’s go-to man, especially during the batting Powerplay. Ishant’s form anyway doesn’t recommend him.Yusuf Pathan’s century against New Zealand in Bangalore, his good domestic season and Ravindra Jadeja’s continuous failures at No. 7 made that decision easy too.In the batting line-up, Yuvraj Singh has shown positive signs, making Dhoni breathe easier. Virat Kohli is as good a 12th man as any, if he doesn’t force his way into the first XI, that is.Overall, with the constraints India have – no allrounder, not too many options – the selectors have picked a fairly balanced team. The odd grumble-worthy issue might not even come into the picture because it revolves around the 15th player in the squad.

'I just want to enjoy cricket'

Three years after being banned for attempting to bribe two national selectors, Abhijit Kale is sadder but wiser – and an example of the problems in the pressure-cooker world of Indian cricket

Siddhartha Vaidyanathan22-Jun-2007


Kale: ‘I was mentally gone – I put on weight, I didn’t have the motivation to practice, I was totally blank’
© Mid-Day

In March 1988 he was chosen, along with Sachin Tendulkar, as the most promising junior cricketer in Bombay; in March 1992 he cracked 153 against the New Zealand Under-19 tourists, overshadowing a young Rahul Dravid; in December 1993 he rattled off 132 on first-class debut against Baroda; in November 2001 he made 122 against the touring English at Jaipur; in April 2003 he played his first and only ODI against Bangladesh at Dhaka; and in November 2003 he was accused of offering two national selectors a bribe for a place in the Indian side.Not many had heard of Abhijit Kale before November 2003, far fewer have heard of him since. On November 20, 2003, though, he was front-page material, when Kiran More and Pranab Roy, two former cricketers turned national selectors, accused Kale of offering Rs 10 lakhs (approximately US$21,900 ) for a place in the Indian side. A BCCI enquiry was instituted and Kale tendered a letter of apology to the BCCI in which he admitted that he tried to “influence the selectors” while insisting that he had never tried to bribe them. In June 2004 he was banned from the game, allowed to return only the following January.Since his return to first-class cricket, Kale has slipped into further oblivion. He’s changed his team and gone right across the country, leaving Maharashtra for Tripura, in the part of India that lies east of Bangladesh. He has struggled for runs. He’s a changed person too – “sadder, without as much humour, but more sensible” – and is trying his best to “start enjoying the game once again”. One of India’s most promising junior cricketers and one of the most consistent first-class batsmen is trying to figure out where it all went wrong.”It all happened in too much of a hurry,” he told Cricinfo, “and initially I didn’t have time to stop and think. Suddenly I realised that I’ve been banned for a whole season of four-day games. I was broken.”Being banned for most of the 2004-05 season had a traumatic effect. “I was mentally gone – I put on weight, I didn’t have the motivation to practice, I was totally blank. I used to go to work at Bharat Petroleum but it made things worse. I was so obsessed with the game that taking it away from me had a drastic effect.”There’s not an ounce of anger in Kale’s voice; instead it’s sober and indicates the process of introspection. It helps because the conversation turns into a discussion where he refers to his “big mistake” and “serving punishment”. He mentions “destiny” and admits he can’t blame anyone but himself and “circumstances”. He isn’t too comfortable recounting the details but is remarkably candid while analysing the possible motive.”When I look back now I have a clearer understanding. All my life I have been desperate about being selected in teams. Starting from Under-16, I always felt I was not rewarded for scoring big. I remember making 153 for India U-19 early on, yet I was never picked for Mumbai. For three seasons I was in the Mumbai reserves. I scored heavily in all the local matches, yet there was no recognition. At one point my only aim was to play one Ranji match.


‘I have served my punishment and look forward to 2-3 years of cricket ahead of me. My only wish now is to enjoy my cricket, something which I never did enough of’
© Mid-Day

“All this made me excessively focussed towards cricket. Every time I didn’t get picked I would go back and work harder, think more, be more desperate to make it. It used to eat into me almost. Looking back I regret that obsession – I shouldn’t have taken all this so seriously, I should have enjoyed my cricket more.”Kale doesn’t want to make excuses; yet he wishes there was some help at hand. “Maybe a team psychologist could have helped, someone to tell me not to take cricket so seriously, someone who could help me deal with disappointments. Anyway I have served my punishment and look forward to 2-3 years of cricket ahead of me. My only wish now is to enjoy my cricket, something which I never did enough of.”And perhaps get among the runs again. Since his return to first-class cricket he’s managed just two 35-plus scores in 17 first-class innings. “I made a mistake by leaving Maharashtra – they dropped me and I took an impulsive decision to shift states,” he says of his move to Tripura before last season. “It was a communication gap – they didn’t exactly tell me the reasons. Also, there were too many things going on in my head then – I hadn’t yet recovered from that incident. I am trying to move back to Maharashtra; I can’t think of playing for any other state now.”The Tripura experiment was a complete disaster. “It’s the first time in 14 seasons that I’ve failed in first-class cricket and I just want to put it behind me. Somehow nothing clicked.”Several years later, Abhijit Kale will be the answer to a quiz question. It won’t be about a teenage prodigy who dominated bowlers in the Bombay leagues, neither will it involve a ruthlessly consistent domestic cricketer. Kale knows that he will always be associated with that incident. Importantly he’s accepted that and is now trying to move on.

South Africa at full strength for crucial ODIs against Netherlands

They need to win the two ODIs to give themselves the best chance of qualifying directly for the World Cup in India

ESPNcricinfo staff27-Mar-2023Anrich Nortje and Kagiso Rabada have been selected in a full-strength South Africa squad to play two crucial ODIs against Netherlands on March 31 in Benoni and April 1 in Johannesburg. Both fast bowlers were rested from the recent ODI series against West Indies, which was drawn 1-1 with one match washed out.This series will be the first time South Africa are facing Netherlands since they lost to them and were eliminated from the 2022 T20 World Cup in Australia. If South Africa win both ODIs without over-rate penalties, they will qualify directly for the World Cup in India this year if Ireland lose at least one ODI against Bangladesh in a three-match series in May.South Africa’s captain Temba Bavuma will have a fitness test on Tuesday to make sure he has recovered from the hamstring niggle he picked up during his hundred in the second ODI against West Indies on March 18.”We have named our strongest possible squad for these games given the importance of these matches in the context of qualifying for the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup,” South Africa’s white-ball coach Rob Walter said. “We have a job to do and I am confident that with this group of players we can get the job done.”With the second ODI on April 2, Quinton de Kock (Lucknow Super Giants), Marco Jansen (Sunrisers Hyderabad), Heinrich Klaasen (Sunrisers Hyderabad), Sisanda Magala (Chennai Super Kings), Aiden Markram (Sunrisers Hyderabad), David Miller (Gujarat Titans), Lungi Ngidi (Delhi Capitals), Anrich Nortje (Delhi Capitals), and Kagiso Rabada (Punjab Kings) will be able to join their IPL franchises only on April 3 at the earliest.South Africa squad for Netherlands ODIs: Temba Bavuma (capt), Quinton de Kock, Bjorn Fortuin, Reeza Hendricks, Marco Jansen, Heinrich Klaasen, Sisanda Magala, Aiden Markram, David Miller, Lungi Ngidi, Anrich Nortje, Wayne Parnell, Kagiso Rabada, Tabraiz Shamsi, Rassie van der Dussen

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