Where have Australia's batsmen (other than Steve Smith) gone?

The Sheffield Shield isn’t producing tough run machines like it used to. State coaches tell us why not

Alex Malcolm09-Oct-2019Steven Smith’s elevated batting during the 2019 Ashes series might have helped Australia retain the urn but it also exposed concerns over their batting depth at Test level.This isn’t a recent discovery. Smith, and to a lesser extent until the Ashes, David Warner, have masked the fact the Sheffield Shield and Australia’s much-hyped talent pathway system hasn’t produced a bevy of players who can thrive consistently at Test level.While accepting that Australia entered the 2000s as a great – perhaps the greatest – Test side, there has been a significant drop in Australian batsmen averaging 40 in Test cricket. From 2000 to 2009, 16 Australian players averaged over 40. This decade the figure stands at nine (with a minimum of ten matches).

While there are global issues around batting to be debated, in Australia most of the focus, by commentators and pundits, has been on technique. However, state coaches are almost in universal agreement that this is too simplistic a view.”I think there is an element of people critiquing technique a lot,” Victoria coach Andrew McDonald said. “So players feel compelled to tinker and find the perfect technique rather than finding the technique that best works for them, which is something that’s repeatable.”Steve Smith has been a great advert for what is the perfect technique. It’s something repeatable for you as an individual. Stick to that philosophy, make good decisions around it, work out your method to each individual bowler – that’s what I’d love to talk about.”Jamie Siddons, South Australia’s coach, who scored over 11,000 first-class runs but never played Test cricket, agrees that Smith’s technique can’t be mimicked because players’ movement patterns and styles of play are all but set by the time they reach Shield level.”I don’t think we can necessarily coach what Steve Smith does,” Siddons said. “Smith is a genius through the leg side and doesn’t miss the ball. We’ve got to work with what we’ve got and work within their game, but we’ve also got to be really clear that they need a good forward defence and a good leaving game.”ALSO READ: Steven Smith’s Bradmanesque Ashes bashTasmania coach Adam Griffith has noticed that the difference between his young developing players and his captain, Matthew Wade, the only other Australian to score two centuries in the recent Ashes series, is a deep knowledge and trust of his own technique and method.”You watch the great players play, and they’re comfortable and at ease with the way they bat,” Griffith said. “They know their games inside out, they know how they play, how they score and what mental state they need to be in.”For Wadey, that’s probably been the biggest transformation – how much more relaxed he is about his cricket and how much he trusts what he does. All he talks about is staying still, watching the ball and staying still. That works for him.”One of the pillars of Smith’s success is how he has bedded down his method by hitting thousands of balls in practice. Smith hits more balls than any other player in the Australian men’s squad, just as Ellyse Perry does in the women’s team.India opener Mayank Agarwal credited five-to-six-hour batting sessions as the reason for his transformation from a mediocre first-class batsman into a Test match player after his recent double-century against South Africa.Tasmania’s coach finds that Matthew Wade’s recent success is owing to him sticking to the basics of staying still and watching the ball•Getty ImagesSheer volume in practice is nothing new. Ricky Ponting, Michael Clarke and Michael Hussey hit a huge number of balls in practice at their peak. When Justin Langer became Western Australia’s head coach in 2012, he was concerned by how few balls his players hit in comparison to what he had seen as Australia’s batting coach.But the current state coaches are less concerned about the sheer volume and more about the quality of practice their young players are getting.”When we see players do volume training these days, you’ve just got to walk past any net, whether it’s a first-class team or a school team, they’ll be on a bowling machine hitting cover-drives all day long – that’s the greatest fun ever,” Queensland coach Wade Seccombe said.”We need to be practising what the bowler is setting up to do. Every bowler is setting up to hit the top of off. That hasn’t really changed, so as a batting unit we’ve got to cover that first and foremost. We do talk a lot about discipline and when you’re not practising discipline, it’s very hard to go into a match situation and put that into practice.”Western Australia’s current coach, Adam Voges, joked that his arm nearly fell off during a recent coaching stint with the Australia A squad on the tour of the UK because of the number of throwdowns he gave the batsmen. But, like his fellow state coaches, he wants his players to train with a specific plan.”I guess what I challenge our younger players with is just to make sure they’ve got some purpose to what they’re doing and how they’re actually trying to improve. If they can answer that then I’ll throw to them all day long,” Voges said. “I don’t think volume is the issue. Particularly with young guys, it takes a little while to develop and get exposed to higher-quality bowling that tests your ability and your decision-making around off stump.”Trent Woodhill, Smith’s long-time batting mentor, talked in ESPNcricinfo’s Stump Mic podcast about setting players up to not only protect their off stump but to dominate bowling that consistently hones in on the top of off stump in long-form cricket.Coaches also agree that while players practise hitting the ball a lot, it matters more what sort of balls they are facing than how many•Getty ImagesOne of the challenges that state coaches are facing is that, unlike Smith, young players are struggling to strike the balance between defence and scoring, particularly scoring in a fashion that mitigates the risk of getting out.”For me, the big sort of framework around modern-day batting is decision-making,” McDonald said. “When you take more risk in your day-to-day environments, which is your white-ball game, and where Test cricket is at the moment, strike rates are up and we’re ingraining players to think runs the whole time.”Decision-making has been lost a little bit in this whole search for the perfect technique. We’ve been shown by a multitude of batters across so many generations that a technique is something that is repeatable for that individual. Around that, you’ve got to make good decisions. Steve Smith is a great decision-maker.”There is also a fine line between sticking to a repeatable method and not being able to adapt that method to different scenarios.”With the amount of white-ball cricket played, we are losing the ability to adapt to game situations,” Seccombe said. “We’re often seeing players play the one way regardless of the situation. When quizzed, the player will say, ‘That’s the way that I play’, which doesn’t sit well with me. Yes, that’s the way you play, but you’ve also got to adapt to the match conditions in front of you.”ALSO READ: Can the Sheffield Shield answer these Test questions?The challenge for young players is much harder than it used to be. This is the first generation that grew up trying to develop a game that can be successful across all three formats. Some younger players are now getting to the stage where they don’t play any long-form cricket in their youth. Cricket Australia removed red-ball matches from the Under-17 and U-19 national championships in 2015-16, making them exclusively limited-overs tournaments.”Young batters coming through the system up until the U-19 programme are only playing white-ball cricket, especially at interstate tournaments and national carnivals,” Griffith said. “All we’re doing is preparing them for white-ball cricket. When they get up to the next level, they don’t know how to construct an innings. They don’t know how to bat for time because they never have had to bat for time.”Despite this having been the case for the better part of four seasons, there are still widely held misconceptions about how well Australia’s young batsmen are being developed, as exposed in former England coach Trevor Bayliss’ recent interview with the Cricket Monthly.”Australian cricketers are tough and robust,” Bayliss said. “They come up through a system which prepares them for Test cricket. From age-group cricket into club and grade cricket, they play semi-finals and finals. So they get used to playing knockout cricket. They get used to playing under pressure. I think England could do with more of that.”Lots of young Australian players are bypassing grade cricket to go straight into Shield squads, and very few recent Test debutants have been picked off the back of dominating Shield form.

Smith was initially picked in Test cricket as a legspinner who batted at No. 8, but it hides the fact that he had scored 1012 Sheffield Shield runs at 56.22 with four centuries as a middle-order batsman prior to his debut. And he had got his Shield opportunity after dominating Sydney grade cricket for Sutherland. After his first two forays into Test cricket, he was sent back to Shield cricket to refine his methods before returning permanently in 2013.And Warner, who was picked for T20Is even before he made his first-class debut, averaged 60 in 11 first-class matches with three centuries, including 211 for Australia A, ahead of his Test debut.By contrast, only two of Australia’s last ten specialist batsmen to debut – Kurtis Patterson and Peter Handscomb – have averaged over 40 in first-class cricket.There are mitigating circumstances. The introduction of Dukes balls for half the Shield season has provided a new challenge, and some of the pitches have changed in nature and tend to feature far more grass than they used to.”When I played, there were some wickets where you basically couldn’t get out. I don’t see too many of them anymore,” Siddons said. “But I do think there’s a little bit to be said for having a very good forward defence and leaving game. I’m not sure we have too many players around that have those.”In the end, it’s about finding ways to survive and make runs, no matter how it looks.”The Indian system is all about output,” Woodhill said. “It’s all about scoring runs. [They] don’t care how you do it as long as you do it. In Australia there’s always, ‘We wanted you to score well, we wanted you to look good’, and players would get praised for a sexy or good-looking 30 and others who would score 60 or 70 that were unconventional were almost dismissed.”Australian cricket can’t ask players to imitate Smith’s technique, but they should be asking players to mimic his run-scoring at all levels before progressing up the ranks if they want to bridge the gap between one of the game’s greats and the rest.

Some stray thoughts and observations in the aftermath of Sarfaraz Ahmed's sacking

Sarfaraz is gone as Pakistan captain and it has looked like he’s been going for some time now

Osman Samiuddin18-Oct-2019Sarfaraz’s sacking wasn’t unexpected and neither is it entirely unjustifiedIf there is element of surprise in all this it is only because Pakistan cricket is coming off nearly a decade of unprecedented leadership stability. Otherwise, there remained this strange sense around Sarfaraz that he never really got hold of the Test side or the rhythms of a Test, not least when contrasted by his command of the T20 side and format. In itself this was surprising given that it was his Test performances that elevated him.Sure post-MisYou would’ve been tough on any captain but losing two out of three series in the UAE immediately after their exits, having not lost one at all in seven years, was alarming. His own batting form was poor, averaging just 25 across 13 Tests as captain; before being appointed he was averaging 41 in Tests. Put that form together with eight losses, never the tidiest wicketkeeping, persistent concerns over his fitness, and well, Pakistan captains past have been sacked for a lot less.His T20 sacking is unexpected and unjustifiedNot least by himself. It’s being said Sarfaraz was expecting to be removed from Tests and ODIs, but this has been the real kicker. For two reasons, that makes sense.One, it’s not Sarfaraz’s fault that he has led Pakistan in the one global cycle where there’s been a four-year gap between World T20s because a world title – rather than just a No.1 ranking – would’ve sealed the deal on the turnaround he has overseen. And make no mistake, it has been some turnaround. When he took over, after the 2016 World T20, Pakistan were so far behind the rest of the world, they may as well have been playing 60-over ODIs in whites and with a red ball. A couple of poor series results should not have led to this.Two, the blame for the clean sweep loss to Sri Lanka can, in considerable part, be laid at the door of chief selector-chief coach (seen this hyphen before?) Misbah-ul-Haq. Whatever questions he asked of the team when he took over, the answers could – and should – never have been Ahmed Shehzad and Umar Akmal. Both were needless selections and critically, selections Sarfaraz was not in favour of. He lost the series with a team that was imposed on him and he has now paid for it.There’s a third reason…Babar Azam (c)Babar Azam is the most gifted batsman Pakistan has produced in over a decade, maybe even two. This last year he has come into his own: a first Test hundred and runs at home, in South Africa (including an electric showdown with Dale Steyn), ODI runs anywhere he went, a killer season in the T20 Blast, the No.1 ranking in T20s. Now the captaincy: more like, why the captaincy? Why burden him just as he is blossoming so? When he is the one batsman Pakistan have who is unquestionably big league? When he is the one batsman who is vital to them across formats?It could all, of course, turn out just fine. In fact, a number of Pakistani batsmen have thrived when taking on the mantle of captaincy. But right now, without the guiding hand of Mickey Arthur (an important figure in Babar’s development) it feels like a risk, especially when Sarfaraz could’ve led the side to next year’s World T20 and then, more naturally, given way.Are we in 2015 again?It’s impossible to outrage against or celebrate Azhar Ali’s appointment to replace Sarfaraz as Test captain. He’s not a bad choice; he’s a safe choice; there are few other serious candidates. This is all just as it was in 2015 when he took over from Misbah in white-ball cricket. He also grew up as a player under Misbah’s captaincy so, for whatever it’s worth, that relationship will be stable.But he is now 34. He has well-documented knee issues. He has also been on a declining curve of productivity for over two years now – not coincidentally since MisYou went. He’s averaging 28 in 13 Tests since then and in his last Test series (in South Africa) he averaged less than 10. And he now heads to Australia, where Pakistan have lost their last 12 Tests. It’s not screaming out long-term is it?What is Misbah doing?With great power should come even greater scrutiny and so it is that just over a month into his dual role as coach and chief selector, Misbah is right under the scanner. It’s not been a great look so far.It isn’t the selections of Akmal and Shehzad alone. It isn’t the prickliness at press conferences alone. It isn’t only the excuses he has been making at those press conferences. It isn’t the reports – credible ones it turns out – of his unhappiness with the attitude of a number of players including Sarfaraz. It isn’t his unusually inaccurate analysis that Pakistan’s T20 success was all down to Babar (that sound you hear is the bowlers shouting, “Hell no.”)It isn’t any one of these but all of them put together, which draw a picture of a man with a lot of power and with nearly as much insecurity, that too so early in his tenure. Maybe we just need to be patient, because if there’s nothing else we learnt about Misbah during his playing days, it was that he takes time to come good.

How Rashid Khan turned the game his way

Twice he broke Bangladesh’s back in the Test. It was the Rashid factor that really got to the hosts

Mohammad Isam09-Sep-2019A set of six balls from Rashid Khan can be over in a flash. He runs in like a medium-pacer with a short run-up, and swings his shoulder around fast with his wrist and fingers sending down the ball. He walks back quickly too. But, when he has your number, when you cannot tackle him, his overs don’t seem to end. It can even happen in a T20, in which everything whizzes by so quickly. But in a Test match, when you are trying to rebuild an innings or block out everything for survival, a Rashid over can seem like forever.Twice he broke Bangladesh’s back in the one-off Test in Chattogram. On both occasions, the batsmen had been on the way to recovery, and if they had survived Rashid’s spell, they could have been more secure and confident. Had they played him out in the second innings, it would have lifted a huge mental barrier.But there were a few of those long overs from Rapid Rashid. On the second afternoon, with Bangladesh on 86 for 3, he struck Shakib Al Hasan’s front pad in front of the stumps, and had Mushfiqur Rahim caught at short leg in the space of three deliveries. For a side already without Tamim Iqbal, removing one of these two batsmen makes a huge difference to the game. Rashid delivered two knockout punches in one go. Bangladesh would have wanted that forget that over before tea quickly, but it turned out to be the decisive over in the first innings.For good measure, Rashid knocked over Mahmudullah too, with one that skidded through in his third over after tea. It was all rather quick, but for the Bangladesh dressing room, it must have seemed like an eternity.Bangladesh were once again in a reasonable position when he came on for his first proper spell in the second innings. And he removed Mushfiqur for the second time in the game, and sixth time in nine innings across formats. It was a googly that had Mushfiqur’s number this time, and in the next over, he spun back one sharply at the left-handed Mominul Haque. Wasn’t there time to bring the bat down to a legspinner? Shakib, Mushfiqur (twice) and Mominul didn’t seem to have enough of it. Rashid isn’t always pacy, but he is deceptive. He changes the whirl of his shoulder and wrist so subtly, that batsmen end up reacting like they are playing a fast bowler.Towards the end of the fourth day, he set up Mahmudullah by forcing him to go back and come forward several times, finally using a wrong’un to strike his inside edge, easily caught at short leg.Rashid Khan appeals for Mehidy Hasan Miraz’s wicket•BCBWhen Afghanistan really needed wickets, with very little time left in the game on the fifth evening, Rashid knew that he would have to make the difference. After a bit of resistance, Rashid burst through Mehidy Hasan and Taijul Islam and, with the overs running out, he again set up a batsman with his mix of fast and slow turners.He went through his usual motions, but he bowled the 60th and 62nd overs ever so slowly. Soumya Sarkar, knowing that he couldn’t attack with one wicket left, was set on defending every ball. Some squirted off his edge and fell short of the fielder, while others spun past his bat. The ones he defended struck the middle of his bat, but in that sort of situation, even a perfect defensive shot can’t make a batsman feel too confident.Soumya defended the first three balls of the 62nd over, but when Rashid spun one back into his pads with a hint of flight, he stepped out and tried to smother the spin. It took an edge and popped to short leg. The game was over.Rashid sprinted off with his team-mates, celebrating a memorable win. He was gone before Soumya could look up. The Afghanistan captain finished with 11 for 104 for the match.Rashid had also scored a fifty in the game, and the last man to take ten wickets and score a half-century in the same Test was Shakib, his opposite number here. “He has been a world-class bowler in T20s for a while now, although he is new to Test cricket,” Shakib said. “He has shown his ability against us that he can apply his skills to Tests too. He was a factor for us, he took 11 wickets. He was handy with the bat in the first innings. His half-century took his side forward at that stage.”Indeed, it was the Rashid factor that really got to Bangladesh, quickly and slowly, in turn.

A handy option, but how long does Kedar Jadhav have?

He’s done what the team has asked of him, but team combinations could play a part in giving him limited opportunities

Vishal Dikshit in Rajkot16-Jan-2020Earlier it was only about the No. 4 spot, now suddenly it is about fitting three openers in the XI and if Virat Kohli should go back to his No. 3 position. The accommodation of an extra batsman at the top has resulted in a logjam of sorts in the middle and lower order which earlier seemed settled, at least when Hardik Pandya was around. Kedar Jadhav was a stable No. 6, and when he was left out of the series opener in Mumbai, India lost some batting experience just above the tail and took a risk of playing only five bowlers at Wankhede Stadium. That they didn’t need a sixth bowler in the end was a different matter.The next two grounds in the three-match series are Rajkot and Bengaluru, and given the short boundaries, those pitches could easily turn out to be much flatter than what we saw in Mumbai on Monday. That should, ideally, make India also pick a part-time bowling option in their XI, apart from the usual five bowlers, given that they are 1-0 down in a three-match series and failed to pick a single wicket in the first ODI. That brings Jadhav back in the picture.Jadhav is currently the only sixth-bowling option in the India squad but he wasn’t dropped from the XI on form, which means he’s always a part of the conversation when a spot opens up due to team combinations, as it has now with Rishabh Pant’s unavailability. The bowling option Jadhav offers is one of the other reasons he’s still part of India’s plans. From a long-term point of view though, the catch is that he will be nearly 38 at the time of the next 50-over World Cup, in 2023, and since his fitness levels are not MS Dhoni-like, the selectors and team management might want to hone someone like Manish Pandey for the finisher’s role over the next three years.When batting coach Vikram Rathour was asked about Jadhav before the start of the ongoing series, he said Jadhav’s “long-term future is for the selectors to decide”, while adding that he provided an extra bowling option when someone was having an off day. “He hasn’t been used because our main fast bowlers have done well,” Rathour had said on Sunday.That makes Jadhav’s place a little more secure in the current squad. But what happens once Hardik Pandya returns, who even showed he is not far from international cricket by bowling in the India nets on the day before the first ODI? Once fit, Pandya could be slotted at No. 6, Ravindra Jadeja at No. 7 and with four proper bowling options to follow. The only problem India will be left with will be of filling five positions with these six names: Rohit Sharma, Shikhar Dhawan, Kohli, KL Rahul, Shreyas Iyer and Pant.One extra batsman for the line-up, Pandey, also on the bench and six bowling options in the XI. Will that mean the end for Jadhav? If the answer to that is yes, whenever it happens, it could lead to his ouster. When India’s first squad was picked after the World Cup last year for the ODIs in the West Indies, chief selector MSK Prasad was asked what the future was for Jadhav. Prasad had said, “Kedar has not done anything wrong for his non-selection, first of all. So we considered him and we are also getting back-ups ready.”And Jadhav has done no wrong in the limited opportunities he got after the World Cup either. In five innings since then, he has scored runs at 123.45 with 10 fours and two sixes at the end of the innings, stayed unbeaten in two (19* off 12 and 16* off 10), and not wasted balls when India wanted quick runs. He has delivered what was asked while batting, and he can’t be faulted for not being asked to bowl when the frontline bowlers are doing their job. Even when he was not playing for India, he went back to domestic cricket and set up India B’s Deodhar Trophy title win with an 86 off 94 at No. 5.Indian cricket, however, is not unfamiliar with having to leave out players purely because of stiff competition for spots. Be it the abundance of batsmen for several decades in domestic cricket or the extra fast bowling options even in the current times: once Deepak Chahar and Bhuvneshwar Kumar recover, someone will have to be left out because Jasprit Bumrah, Mohammed Shami, Shardul Thakur and Navdeep Saini are already playing.For now, Jadhav’s next job at hand will be to focus on his next match, which could very well be on Friday. If he doesn’t do well in whatever opportunities he gets from here, he knows time will run out for him quicker than he wants.

The Priyam Garg story: From standing up to Bhuvneshwar at 15 to leading India at 19

Can the precociously gifted Uttar Pradesh batsman emulate Kaif, Kohli, Chand and Shaw?

Shashank Kishore03-Dec-2019Bhuvneshwar Kumar has the ball. Facing him, a boy of 15. Priyam Garg.”He was standing two or three yards outside the crease while facing up to Bhuvi. As Bhuvi ran in, I stopped him and asked Priyam to look where he’s standing. He went back next ball and stood out [of his crease] again. After the over, I asked him and he said, ‘since the ball was swinging, I deliberately stood out to negate the movement’. Can you imagine, a 15-year-old kid doing that, against an India fast bowler? That is when his game awareness really shone through.”The narrator of the story is Sanjay Rastogi. That boy, Garg, is now set to lead India at the Under-19 World Cup in South Africa next year, hoping to emulate Mohammad Kaif, Virat Kohli, Unmukt Chand and Prithvi Shaw in lifting the trophy.Rastogi, a Meerut-based coach, knows a thing or two about spotting talent. Many years ago, Kiran Pal Singh, Bhuvneshwar’s father, brought his son to him. Kiran Pal was simply looking for something to keep Bhuvneshwar occupied with during his summer vacations; two months later, Rastogi went back to Kiran Pal to convince him that his son had a future in cricket.Bhuvneshwar, of course, is now an elder-brother figure who returns to Victoria Park in Meerut’s cantonment area to spend time with Rastogi and his trainees whenever he is in town. In 2015, one of the trainees happened to be Garg, all of 15 and just about beginning to churn out big runs in junior cricket.Victoria Park had already produced two India fast bowlers in Praveen Kumar and Bhuvneshwar, and it was quite natural that Garg had initially wanted to be a fast bowler too. But, Rastogi says, it was quickly apparent that there was something special about his batting.Garg has been training under Rastogi since 2011, when an uncle figured out the youngster’s interest in cricket. It was a World Cup year, and the 11-year-old Garg, who hadn’t previously been much of a cricket fan, would be glued to a 14-inch TV at a nearby shop, watching every ball of India’s matches.Garg’s father Naresh couldn’t afford a TV back then. Losses in business and the loss of his wife – Garg’s mother – around that time had left him facing not just financial difficulties but also the challenge of looking after three daughters and two sons.He eventually managed to establish a small business: selling milk, delivering newspapers and ferrying children to and from school in a mini-van. The business has grown since, and Naresh now runs school buses of his own. Two of his daughters, meanwhile, have gone on to complete degrees in nursing, while the third is preparing for her Civil Services examination. Garg’s brother is an instrumentation specialist.There may have been no TV at home, but young Garg was somewhat insulated from the family’s other difficulties. Cricket played a large part in this, and Rastogi’s encouraging words about Garg’s talent strengthened Naresh’s resolve to help his son become a cricketer.”I developed an interest in cricket in 2011 or thereabouts,” Garg tells ESPNcricinfo. We’re in his hotel room at a five-star hotel. Mid-August rains in Bengaluru have brought an early end to proceedings in the Duleep Trophy 2019-20 game he’s playing. Garg mutes the TV while we speak, but he still keeps an eye on the action.It’s the third Ashes Test, and Steven Smith is batting. Occasionally, when Smith hits a boundary, Garg’s eyes veer towards the TV. At other times, he speaks candidly about his childhood, and his memories of growing up in Parikshitgarh, 20 kilometres from Meerut.Priyam Garg is looking to become the fifth Indian Under-19 World Cup-winning captain•Priyam GargGarg was in the running for an India Under-19 berth even in 2018, but missed out on World Cup selection because of a dip in form. He was only 16 then, and the selectors decided to give him time to get regain form and confidence.”I knew I didn’t score runs, so I didn’t deserve to be picked,” he says. “If I sat there thinking why I didn’t get selected, I wouldn’t have progressed. My family always kept me going, motivating me that if not now, maybe I will get a chance two years later. That setback helped me figure a way out for myself. My coach only wanted me to get better at every training session.”Garg was fast-tracked into Uttar Pradesh’s Ranji Trophy squad on the back of his exploits at the KSCA Invitational tournament in Bengaluru in 2018. At Alur – where there are three grounds within the same complex – Rastogi remembers Rahul Dravid, the then India Under-19 coach, watching Garg’s batting intently. Garg was the highest run-getter in that tournament, and he made a roaring entry into first-class cricket with a century on debut against Goa.By the time his maiden Ranji season ended, Garg had amassed 814 runs in ten matches at an average of 67.83. It was the second-highest tally for Uttar Pradesh, behind Rinku Singh’s 953. In 12 first-class matches so far, Garg has 867 runs at an average of 66.69, with two centuries, and a best of 206. In List A cricket, he’s made 539 runs at 41.46 with one hundred.The Under-19 tour of England earlier this year gave a further boost to Garg’s young career. Since then, he’s featured in the Duleep Trophy, the Deodhar Trophy. and in the India emerging teams.”First-class cricket has given me a headstart, I think,” Garg says. “Playing against quality attacks is a lesson in how you temper your game to different conditions. In the Duleep Trophy, Faiz Fazal was my captain. I learnt a lot from him, he was a model of discipline in how to carry yourself. I learnt a lot watching him, the likes of Priyank Panchal and Abhimanyu Easwaran – it was a great experience.”As Garg speaks of those who left an impression on him, he’s also reminded of sessions with Suresh Raina. Upon his entry into the Uttar Pradesh team, Raina sat him down and helped him relax. “He made me confident, he came up and spoke to me,” Garg remembers. “Raina spoke of his growing-up days and how that time, there was a senior-junior divide, and how juniors didn’t speak much. He encouraged me and all others to speak freely. That was a good gesture.”Spending time with him and getting to know about him, his life – he spoke about getting a duck on [ODI] debut and what he was feeling at that time – has been really good. I’m thankful to him. His (drive to keep fighting) is something I’ve learnt a lot from. If you want something, you have to have that commitment.”Now as he gets ready to take the next leap in his career, Garg wants to slow things down, and not get too perturbed or carried away by the attention that will invariably follow. He only has to look as far back as January 2018 to understand the pitfalls of the kind of attention the Under-19 World Cup winners got. An IPL deal could be up for grabs too, but for the moment all that isn’t on his mind.”I played a bit of cricket with them, that [2018] batch was amazing,” Garg says. “I have fond memories of spending time with some of those boys. It will be amazing if we can win a fifth Under-19 World Cup for India.”

Better than Marmoush: Man City want to sign "one of the best CFs in Europe"

When will we next see Erling Haaland?

On Monday, it was reported that the Norwegian striker ‘will see a specialist’ after suffering a rather nasty-looking ankle injury during Manchester City’s 2-1 win over Bournemouth in the FA Cup.

As reported by Jamie Jackson of the Guardian, Haaland is expected to be back in time for the Club World Cup, but whether or not he’ll be able to feature again in the Premier League this season remains unclear.

Manchester City seeking to sign world-class striker

Given that the 24-year-old has scored 120 goals in 134 appearances for the Sky Blues, averaging a goal every 94 minutes, you may think signing a new striker would be low down on Man City’s list of priorities. Well, you’d think wrong, it would seem.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

As reported by TEAMtalk, Manchester City are ‘interested’ in signing striker Jonathan David this summer, but face competition from Premier League rivals Arsenal, Chelsea and Newcastle United, who have all ‘expressed interest’.

David is out of contract at current club LOSC Lille, and is widely expected to depart les Dogues as a free agent in the summer.

Lille'sJonathanDavidcelebrates scoring their first goal with Edon Zhegrov

Since joining Lille from Gent for a reported fee of €30m (£25m) five years ago, the Canadian has scored an impressive 107 goals in 225 appearances, winning a Ligue 1 title, while 12 of his goals have come in the Champions League.

So, where would he fit in at Manchester CIty?

How Jonathan David would improve Manchester City

Man City not only already have the goal machine himself Haaland, but they also signed Omar Marmoush for around £60m in January.

The Egyptian proved to be the match-winner by the South Coast on Sunday, his fifth goal in 11 Man City appearances so far, most notably bagging a hat-trick against Newcastle in February.

Nevertheless, if Man City can get their hands on David, they must grasp this opportunity with two hands.

Paul Almeida on Twitter describes David as ‘world-class’, while European football expert Zach Lowy labels him ‘one of the best young strikers in Europe’.

Meanwhile, Joe Callaghan of the Guardian notes that David often saves ‘his best for the biggest stage’, so let’s analyse how he compares to Marmoush this season.

Appearances

42

37

Minutes

3,371

2,766

Goals

23

25

Assists

10

15

Goals – xG

+2.2

+8.5

Shots on target %

44.2%

42.7%

Shot-creating actions

74

146

Take-on success %

48.9%

37.3%

Touches per 90

30.9

38.7

As the table outlines, Marmoush is actually having a better season than David, scoring two more goals to date, but, as noted by Anantaajith Raghuraman and Elias Burke of the Athletic, this is the best form of the Egyptian’s entire career.

Lille'sJonathanDavidcelebrates scoring their fourth goal

Marmoush ranks fifth across Europe’s top-five leagues, as well as second in the Bundesliga, when it comes to goals – xG, which is obviously great, but suggests his form may not be as sustainable as Man City might like.

David, meantime, has been a regular, reliable goal-scorer for many years now, as the table below outlines below he has been more prolific than City’s big January signing.

2024/25

23

25

2023/24

26

17

2022/23

26

6

2021/22

19

3

2020/21

13

8

2019/20

23

9

As outlined, this season is the first time ever that Marmoush has outscored David in a single-season; there’s still time for that to change too of course.

The Egyptian has enjoyed a meteoric rise, plying his trade in the Regionalliga Nord, Germany’s fourth-tier, as recently as 2019/20, as well as the Zweite Bundesliga the year after, the same season David won Ligue 1 with Lille.

David, on the other hand, has produced very consistent goal-scoring numbers ever since he first burst onto the scene at Gent in 2018, so a massive club in Europe is going to sign a top-class centre-forward for free this summer, but will it be Man City?

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Worse than Salah: Slot must axe 5/10 Liverpool ace who made just 2 passes

Liverpool fell to just their second Premier League defeat of the season this afternoon, losing 3-2 to Marco Silva’s European-chasing Fulham at Craven Cottage.

Alexis Mac Allister put Arne Slot’s side ahead after just a quarter of an hour but would trail 3-1 at the break after goals from Ryan Sessegnon, Alex Iwobi and Rodrigo Muniz.

Luis Diaz pulled a goal back in the second half, but it was too little too late, as the Reds squandered an opportunity to move one step closer to title glory in 2024/25.

They still sit 11 points clear of second-placed Arsenal with just seven games to go this campaign, still sitting in pole position to end their four-season drought for a league triumph.

It certainly was an afternoon to forget on the banks of the River Thames, with numerous players failing to deliver like they have done on so many occasions – undoubtedly contributing to the loss.

Liverpool’s poor performers against Fulham

Goalkeeper Caoimhin Kelleher has been a superb replacement for Alisson in his absence this season, but his showing today was one of his worst of the season.

The Irish international had a goals prevented xG of -1.22 whilst also conceding three times – the most he has in any game throughout the current campaign.

As for star man Mohamed Salah, he blanked for the second game in a row after failing to make an impact in the Merseyside derby against Everton in midweek.

The winger registered just 49 touches, missing one big chance and failing to complete any of his attempted dribbles – once again unable to have an impact in the final third.

However, despite the Egyptian’s lack of positive impact in the capital, one other Reds player failed to deliver, with Slot needing to drop him from his starting eleven next weekend.

The Liverpool player who was worse than Salah against Fulham

Ahead of the game, Slot decided to make just one change from the team that beat their local rivals on Wednesday night, with Cody Gakpo coming in to replace Diaz.

Such a decision proved that the Dutchman had faith in the side to claim another victory, but were unable to do so, falling way behind the high levels they have set for themselves.

Liverpool managerArneSlotbefore the match

Diogo Jota scored the winner against the Toffees, but failed to have any form of positive impact this afternoon, with the manager desperately needing to drop the Portuguese international from his side.

The 28-year-old featured for 67 minutes against the Cottagers, missing a big chance and only completing two passes, showcasing how poor he was when the ball fell his way.

He also notched just 22 touches, an average of one every three minutes, and lost the ball 100% of the time he tried to take on an opponent, unable to repeat his heroics from midweek.

Out of his 22 touches, he lost possession 13 times, meaning he gifted the ball away with 60% of his touches – with Slot needing to hand increased minutes to the likes of Darwin Núñez and Federico Chiesa.

Diogo Jota’s stats for Liverpool against Fulham

Statistics

Tally

Minutes played

67

Touches

22

Passes completed

2

Dribbles completed

0/1

Possession lost

13x

Big chances missed

1

Shots taken

1

Stats via SofaScore

As a result of his dismal showing, he was handed a measly 5/10 match rating by The Express’ Jack Mceachen, further highlighting how poor he was during the defeat.

Given his inability to take advantage of his starting position, Slot has to drop him from the side, with Jota simply not at the level required for a side at the top of the Premier League.

The summer could pose an interesting challenge for the manager, deciding whether to stick or twist, potentially ending his stint at Anfield after his inability to impress.

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Arteta must ruthlessly axe Kiwior & unleash Arsenal's "warrior" instead

It’s a massive season-defining week for Arsenal.

Mikel Arteta’s side are still technically in the Premier League title race, but with Liverpool now 11 points ahead with seven games to play, it is all but over.

The Champions League, however, is most certainly not. The Gunners play host to European royalty Real Madrid on Wednesday, and to ensure they have the best chance of heading to Spain with a lead to protect, Arteta has to make a few changes.

Heroes could certainly be made but whether Jakub Kiwior goes on to evoke memories of Philippe Senderos and Co remains to be seen.

Why Arteta has to drop Kiwior

Kiwior played most of the game against Fulham last week and then started against Everton on the weekend due to Gabriel Magalhães’ recent hamstring injury.

To his credit, the Polish international was fine against the Toffees, but against the Cottagers, some of the same issues which have plagued him throughout his time in North London showed themselves again, such as lacklustre ball-playing and questionable positioning.

For example, he was partially to blame for their late goal after getting into and losing a tussle with the rapid Adama Traore.

Moreover, we’ve already seen how he fared against top European opposition in the past, when he started at full-back at home to Bayern Munich last time and seriously struggled, picking up a 3/10 match rating from the Standard’s Dan Kilpatrick, who described him as ‘flat-footed’ while content creator and fan Alexander Moneypenny labelled him as “shakey.”

In all, while Kiwior is a useful squad player and perhaps someone who can come on towards the end of the game, he’s not got the quality to start, especially when there is already a perfect replacement in the squad.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

The Arsenal star to replace Kiwior

So, given the extent of the injuries to the team’s defensive options at the moment, there are only really two options to replace Kiwior at centre-back tonight, and Arteta should go with Ben White.

The Englishman started at right-back at the weekend and, when fit, has almost exclusively started off the right of a back four across the last three seasons.

However, the former Brighton & Hove Albion ace was initially signed as a centre-back and spent the majority of the 21/22 campaign there, with 34 of his 37 appearances that year coming in a back two.

Centre-Back

208

4

9

Right-Back

113

5

13

Defensive Midfield

13

0

0

Left-Back

4

0

0

Right Midfield

1

0

0

In fact, across his career to date, it’s been his most played position by quite some margin.

He has made 208 appearances there, so he should be able to slot in without an issue.

Moreover, by starting the Gunners’ “warrior,” as dubbed by talent scout Jacek Kulig, alongside Willliam Saliba, Arteta can once again start Jurrien Timber at right-back, where he has made 26 appearances this year.

Doing this would at least keep most of the team as they have been for much of the season, and when coming up against a team like Real, the rest of the starters need to be confident that those around them will know exactly what they are doing.

Ultimately, it’s not an ideal solution, but Kiwior has not shown enough in his limited appearances to warrant starting a game of this magnitude.

In contrast, White has been Mr reliable during his time at Arsenal and has yet another chance to show why his £50m price tag was more than justified all those years ago.

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"Aggressive" – Celtic could make 5 new signings amid Rodgers warchest claim

Celtic will look to tie up loose ends from a domestic standpoint ahead of next season before looking to strike while the iron is hot on the transfer market.

Celtic in hunt for domestic treble to reflect progress under Rodgers

Brendan Rodgers has led Celtic to within touching distance of another treble and will hope his side can push a fourth successive Scottish Premiership title over the line this weekend should permutations fall their way.

The Bhoys need to defeat Kilmarnock on Saturday to move within a point of the league crown, which could be handed to them the following day if Rangers lose out at Aberdeen.

Despite the promise of a fantastic end to the campaign, Rodgers has warned against Celtic complacency following a surprise 1-0 defeat for his side against St Johnstone last Sunday.

He stated: “It’s happened too many times. I’ve seen a trend now with us, and it will be interesting between now and the end of the season in terms of mentality.”

Losing three of his last seven Scottish Premiership encounters, the Irishman has possibly been given food for thought as the summer window approaches.

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Reports have suggested Celtic want to sign Augsburg midfielder Elvis Rexhbecaj to shore up their options in the engine room, which may go some way to indicating where he sees the most pressing need for reinforcements.

Delivering domestic trophies is deemed as the bread and butter in Scotland, but there is an ever-blooming expectation that the Hoops’ rude financial health should translate to regular impressive showings in Europe, with recent claims suggesting Rodgers has demanded a summer warchest to stay at Celtic.

Tapping into that theme, the manager could now be granted several new arrivals at Parkhead to help his cause, according to former Aberdeen chief executive Keith Wyness.

Wyness: Celtic boss Rodgers could line up five summer signings

Speaking to Football Insider, Wyness claimed Celtic could make up to five summer signings in what is set to be an “aggressive” window for all involved at Parkhead, citing their desire to grow in the Champions League as a critical factor.

He stated: “Brendan will definitely want to be aggressive this summer, every manager wants that. I’ve never had a manager work for me who isn’t two players short of what he wants. No matter what you give them, they always want at least two more.

Where are Celtic most likely to strengthen this summer?

Left-back – almost certain to happen

Greg Taylor likely to leave for free, cover needed for Kieran Tierney

Defensive midfield – possible but not at top of priority list

Callum McGregor is 32 in June and may need his minutes managed

Central midfield – if departures occur

Reo Hatate may be at the end of his cycle, so another body is likely

On the flanks – high likelihood

Daizen Maeda’s move to central striking role has created a void

Striker – almost certain to happen

Maeda and Adam Idah could use competition through the middle

“Brendan will, in this case, want another three, four, or even five – given the Champions League and the levels they want to be at. So it will be that usual battle.”

Although there is unlikely to be a sea change at Celtic this summer, a squad refresh may be needed to instill the hunger needed to claim a fifth Scottish Premiership title in a row alongside staking a claim in the Champions League.

Now, the onus remains on Parkhead recruitment chiefs to ensure the Bhoys are prepared by the time qualifiers come around, which won’t be an easy test so early into the new campaign.

Aston Villa working to seal deal for £12.5m player keen on Villa Park move

Aston Villa are now looking to a seal a deal for a “devastating” midfielder ahead of their Premier League rivals, and he is keen on the move, according to a report.

Aston Villa pursuing new midfielder

Villa are on course to have another successful season under the helm of Unai Emery, having reached the Champions League quarter-final and the FA Cup sem-final, and their midfield has been particularly impressive.

Youri Tielemans was dubbed “one of the best midfielders in the world” by analyst Raj Chohan earlier in the campaign, while Morgan Rogers has caught the eye in a more advanced role, with the Englishman ranked among the Villans’ most consistent performers.

However, it appears as though Emery is keen to bolster his midfield options even further this summer, with FC Barcelona’s Marc Casado becoming one of the latest players to be shortlisted, and talks over a deal have now been opened.

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Emery has green-lighted a move for Casado, but the Spaniard is not the only target in central midfield, with a report from The Athletic’s David Ornstein revealing Aston Villa are working to close a deal for Rosenborg star Sverre Nypan.

Arsenal and Girona have also been named as potential suitors for Nypan, but the Villans are now looking to move ahead in the race for his signature, and the 18-year-old is believed to be keen on a move to Villa Park.

Personal terms and a transfer fee are still yet to be agreed, so there is still work to be done before a deal is finalised, but there is now optimism that the move will be possible.

Previous reports have detailed a deal could amount to £12.5m, potentially making the youngster a low-cost addition to Emery’s squad.

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Given the talent Emery has at his disposal, it may be difficult for the young Norwegian to make an instant impact at Villa Park, but there are clear signs he could be capable of going on to be an important player.

The teenager has a very impressive goal and assist record in Norway, amassing 25 goal contributions in 62 appearances for Rosenborg, which is an eye-catching tally at such a young age.

The attacking midfielder has also caught the eye of football scout Ben Mattinson, with the starlet standing out due to his ability to pick out his teammates in dangerous areas.

Nypan could be a fantastic signing for Villa, and it would be a real statement of intent if they are able to beat the likes of Arsenal and Manchester City to his signature.

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