Rashid shines but Vaughan injured again in draw

Yorkshire 600 for 8 dec and 162 for 3 dec (Rashid 58*, McGrath 53*) drew with Warwickshire 422 for 8 and 60 for 1 (Bell 30*)
ScorecardJonathan Trott guides one out to the off side during his unbeaten 161•Getty Images

It says much about the nature of cricket at Edgbaston that it wassomething that didn’t happen on the final day which caused moreexcitement than anything that did.Michael Vaughan’s inability to bat shed further doubt on thelikelihood of an England recall. Vaughan felt pain in his hamstringwhile chasing a ball in the field early in the day and spent theremainder of the match in the dressing room. He will travel with theYorkshire squad for their Friends Provident game in Bristol on Monday,but is described by the team’s director of cricket, Martin Moxon as “adoubt” to play.There was a time when fears of an injured Vaughan would keep Englandselectors awake at night. Not any more. With Ravi Bopara nailing downEngland’s number three shot, Vaughan’s chances of a recall are dim.Out of contract with England and Yorkshire at the end of the season,it may well be that his days as a cricketer are coming to an end.There was little on-pitch drama on the final day. Though Yorkshiresurprisingly declared at tea, there was never much hope of themdismissing Warwickshire in 36 overs on this surface. The declarationwas little more than a positive gesture.The result puts both teams into a mid-table position, though neitheryet have a win. Warwickshire extend their unbeaten Championship run to19 games, which sounds impressive, but they have won only one of theirlast 16 matches at home. Yorkshire, too, have only won twice since thestart of 2008, with both teams favouring a safety first approach. Fourday county cricket has become an attritional affair.Perhaps things might have been different if either side had taken alltheir catches. Most crucially, Gerard Brophy’s failure to cling on toJonathan Trott when the batsmen had just 26 on the third day may havecost his side the game. The risk of playing a batsman with littlewicket-keeping pedigree in such a key position has rarely been betterillustrated.As it was, Trott and Jeetan Patel extended their overnight partnershipto 233 in 47 overs. It is the ninth highest ninth-wicket partnershipin first-class history and overhauled the record for the wicketagainst Yorkshire. The previous mark was 160, added by Denys Wilcoxand Ray Smith of Essex at Southend in 1947.Patel also had cause to celebrate his maiden first-class century.Reached with a cut for four that also averted the follow-on, Patelbecame the first man to score a century on Warwickshire first-classdebut since Kumar Sangakkara in 2007. Patel’s was a chanceless affairthat suggested a batting talent that has so far gone unfulfilled;there was nothing fortunate about it.The timing of his dismissal was somewhat unfortunate, however.Attempting to thrash the final ball of the 120th over back over thehead of the bowler, he succeeded only in lofting an easy catch whichgifted Yorkshire a full allocation of bowling bonus points in the nickof time. Boyd Rankin soon followed, trapped in front by a yorker, toearn Yorkshire a first innings lead of 118. Trott, who faced little ofthe bowling on the final day, was left unbeaten on 161.Yorkshire soon built on their lead. Though Joe Sayers edged hisattempted drive, Jacques Rudolph again looked in fine touch, drivingChris Woakes fluently and cutting the disappointing Boyd Rankin out ofthe attack.Rikki Clarke delivered another impressive spell, however. Againgenerating sharp pace and steep bounce, Clarke ran in hard andtroubled all the batsmen. Rudolph sliced a drive to point beforeBrophy played across a straight one.Anthony McGrath added to his first-innings double-century, however,and with elegant support from Adil Rashid, allowed Yorkshire thechance to declare at tea.Warwickshire lost Tony Frost early, drawn into an edged drive, but IanBell and Ian Westwood resisted without undue alarm.Afterwards Ashley Giles played down any suggestion that 20-year-oldChris Woakes was close to an England call-up. “He’s developingbrilliantly,” Giles said, “but he’s still just a kid. We all have ourfeet on the ground and there’s no need to rush him.”These wickets at Edgbaston are very similar to Test wickets, so if hecan learn to bowl here it will stand him in good stead for later inhis career. We’ve a very inexperienced bowling attack, but we’vetalked about playing dogged cricket. We’ve shown our resilience onceagain in this game and if we can start to take our catches, we maystart winning a few matches.”

How to lose the minnows tag

Cricinfo previews Sri Lanka’s prospects for the women’s World Cup 2009

Cricinfo staff06-Mar-2009
Medium-pacer Chamari Polgampola could give Sri Lanka some early breakthroughs © Tigercricket.com
Sri Lanka are pretty certain of making it to the Super Six for they just need a win over Pakistan to get there. But what next? A fifth or sixth place will promptly send them to the World Cup qualifiers in 2011. Making it to the top four certainly won’t be easy, but it’s the only way to lose the minnows tag, which their recent performances will show they don’t deserve.However, Sri Lanka have not played outside the subcontinent since the previous World Cup and more importantly will also be on their first visit to Australia. Captain Shashikala Siriwardene has said her side could be the “surprise package” of the tournament and she isn’t far off the mark. While Sri Lanka failed to beat India in the Asia Cup in May last year, they beat West Indies in an exciting 3-2 home series the following October.They come to Australia having won a tri-series in Bangladesh, which included the hosts and Pakistan, and while the victory may not give them confidence for the World Cup, it will give them an edge over teams who enter the tournament without match practice. They have a strong batting line-up led by opener Dedunu Silva. Their bowling is anchored by spinners Suwini de Alwis, who took 21 wickets in the Asia Cup and against West Indies, and Siriwardene, who took 19 in the same period. They also have useful medium-pacers in Chamari Polgampola and Chandi Wickramasinghe.Know your competitionIndia have rarely missed the opportunity to thrash Sri Lanka, especially in Asia Cup games. Their lowest margin of victory has been by 29 runs; de Alwis and Siriwardene took three each to hold them down to 227, after which Dedunu scored 74 off 87 balls but received no support from the others. Siriwardene knows that to make it to the next World Cup, Sri Lanka have a better chance of winning two group matches rather than fighting teams on momentum in the Super Six.England last played Sri Lanka in 2005 on their visit to the country and won both the ODIs by big margins. In their current form they will be virtually impossible to be halted on their way to the World Cup final.Pakistan is a team Sri Lanka have never lost to and will hold a psychological advantage following their comfortable six-wicket win in the tri-series final.Stars of 2009Indian batsman Mithali Raj has predicted the Australian wickets will be slower than they were during India’s visit in November. With the season coming to a close, the pitches would definitely have flattened and lost some of their zip. Left-arm spinner Suwini de Alwis will be looking forward to turning her arm over on such tracks which may offer turn.Shashikala Siriwardene will add pressure on the batsmen with her offbreaks. It should be interesting to watch the two bowl in tandem.In the last year Dedunu Silva has stepped up her game, scoring 413 runs, with three half-centuries, at a strike-rate of 64.93. Sri Lanka will bank on her for some good starts.Squad Shashikala Siriwardene (wk), Suwini de Alwis, Chamari Polgampola, Dilani Manodara (wk), Hiruka Fernando, Rose Fernando, Inoka Galagedara, Gayathri Kariyawasam, Eshani Kaushalya, Udeshika Prabodhani, Deepika Rasangika, Chamai Seneviratna, Dedunu Silva, Sripali Weerakkody.Group fixturesMarch 7 – England v Sri Lanka, Manuka Oval
March 10 – Pakistan v Sri Lanka, Manuka Oval
March 12 – India v Sri Lanka, Bankstown Oval

We've repaid those who had faith in us – Edwards

Charlotte Edwards has at last won a World Cup by leading England to their third overall title following a very successful year

Jenny Roesler in Sydney22-Mar-2009At the fourth time of asking, a tearful Charlotte Edwards has at last won a World Cup by leading England to their third overall title following a very successful year. And this might be the most important victory yet, with the triumph sending a message to the other boards that backing the women financially helps.”Now looking back on my sleepless nights there was an expectation for us to do well this tournament,” said Edwards after the match. “There has been a huge amount of money pumped in to develop our girls. We knew we were up against a really good team today. We’ve repaid a lot of people that have shown a lot of faith in the girls.”The maternal Edwards’ brand of leadership is full of tough love and it has paid off handsomely, with her charges playing consistent – if not quite perfect – cricket, and wanting to do well for their captain and themselves.”Unbelievable, really,” said Edwards of the win, although she might be the only one to think so. England’s victory has not come as a surprise. They always had the potential to win the trophy and, ominously, they do not feel they played their best cricket despite lifting the $35,000 trophy. “We’ve not played a perfect game of cricket in the tournament and there are a few areas we need to work on.”This is certainly true, but they were still the best side in the tournament and just winners. England will now regroup with several warm-up matches before the World Twenty20 at home.”I suppose it won’t sink in for a couple of days,” Edwards concluded. “It’s an amazing feeling and a day I will cherish for the rest of my life. I’m loving cricket, it’s my life.”A disconsolate Haidee Tiffen admitted that England had outplayed them, but still thought her side “had a sniff.” Tiffen was appearing in her second World Cup final, but had to experience the pain of losing for the first time. “It was just another day for us at the office,” said Tiffen. “Unfortunately it was a bad day for us, but I can’t take anything away from England.”And she can hold her head up high. Like Edwards, she has been a positive influence on her team who fully deserved their place in the final. They just could not do it on the day as the pressure told.England showed nerves too, but rose to the occasion just when it mattered. Their victory is not just one for themselves. As bizarre as it sounds, it could ultimately be a win for New Zealand, too, if their board can take note of how England won the final and what resources they could use in the future.That will be of little comfort to New Zealand right now as their players come to terms with the loss, but England have proven how to win the World Cup and just what a little faith can do.

Cinco anos depois, saiba como estão os campeões da Liberta pelo Timão

MatériaMais Notícias

Três aposentados, oito na Série A, seis na Série B, dois na Europa, cinco em países periféricos (China, Catar, Japão e Peru), dois indecisos sobre a continuidade da carreira e dois que seguem firmes e fortes no Corinthians após cinco anos. Os 28 jogadores que o Corinthians inscreveu na Copa Libertadores de 2012 seguiram destinos diferentes, mas estão na história do clube e celebram nesta terça-feira os cinco anos da histórica conquista.

Confira nas imagens acima o momento da carreira de cada um dos personagens que marcaram o título do Timão em 4 de julho de 2012.

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Everton must unleash Gordon this season

When Rafa Benitez first stepped foot in Merseyside again, he wasn’t exactly greeted very nicely by some Everton supporters.

Banners were hung outside his home and there were considerable protests against his appointment.

Therefore, the Spaniard needed to start quickly and impress from the off. The club’s transfer window wasn’t exactly a fair indication of what Benitez can do but their form has been superb.

Everton have taken seven points from their opening three league games but they do now have a problem on the cards.

On the chalkboard

That issue happens to revolve around James Rodriguez.

The Colombian looked a dead certainty to leave Goodison Park behind this summer and his lack of action in the opening few weeks of the season indicated that he was heading for the exit door.

Rodriguez hasn’t played a single minute of competitive action under the new manager but a move unfortunately fell through on deadline day.

Everton were confident of agreeing a swap deal with Porto to bring Luis Diaz to the club in exchange but Rodriguez ultimately didn’t move. His agent Jorge Mendes tried to engineer a move to Italy but he ended up staying in Merseyside.

Benitez has a dilemma on his hands now. Rodriguez has made his feelings clear and doesn’t exactly want to play for the Toffees again. He wasn’t even aware of who their opponents were a few weeks ago, for instance.

That being said, he clearly possesses immense talent. The former Real Madrid star contributed to ten Premier League goals last term and provided more key passes per match than anybody else in the Toffees’ squad.

However, their new signings look ready and raring to go. Demarai Gray has opened up his Everton account with two goals and a Player of the Month nomination after signing from Bayer Leverkusen.

Alongside Richarlison and Dominic Calvert-Lewin, the Everton attack looks vibrant.

Add Anthony Gordon into the equation and their forward line could become even more mouth-watering.

The 20-year-old has very rarely started for the Everton first team, featuring on just 21 occasions since breaking through. That being said, he’s clearly in Benitez’s plans, with the youngster earning minutes from the bench against Southampton on the opening day of the season.

Possessing the ability to play behind the striker and on the flanks, he feels like a player who is more deserving of game time in Rodriguez’s role. Although he’s not scored a senior goal yet, the future is bright for Gordon.

Greg Cunningham, his teammate on loan at Preston last season, said that the youngster was set for an “exciting” career, while David Unsworth was even more complimentary.

Speaking to The Athletic, he commented: “His balance sprinting with the ball and his balance going past people is something you don’t see every day. He’s got unbelievable pace and he’s a Scouser too, so he’s tough.”

With a rare set of traits in Gordon’s armoury, Benitez would be foolish not to unleash him.

AND in other news, “Being monitored”: Journo makes Celtic transfer claim, their next Ajer may arrive soon…

Aston Villa: Sergio Romero name-checked as possible target

Ashley Preece has name-checked former Manchester United goalkeeper Sergio Romero as a potential Aston Villa target.

The Lowdown: Steer against Chelsea

Dean Smith will have to rely on Jed Steer against Chelsea next weekend when Premier League action returns.

That’s because Emiliano Martinez is away with Argentina and will have to follow quarantine restrictions upon his return, missing the trip to Stamford Bridge as a result.

Tom Heaton departed for Manchester United in the summer, meaning Steer will be Smith’s only senior option against Thomas Tuchel’s side.

The Latest: Preece’s claim

Preece shared a story on Birmingham Live on Thursday, looking at the Villa squad and their respective contracts.

When it came to the goalkeeping department, Preece said Villa are to address their options ahead of another summer of change in 2022.

He then picked out Romero, who is available on a free transfer, as a potential option for Dean Smith.

The Verdict: Time for Villa to swoop?

Villa don’t want to be spending big on a ‘keeper, with Martinez first choice at Villa Park, so picking up Romero on a free could be a shrewd piece of business.

A fellow Argentine, Romero was described as ‘brilliant’ by Ole Gunnar Solskjaer and has over 250 games of senior experience under his belt.

A third shot-stopper on a free transfer would give Smith that extra security at Bodymoor Heath, so perhaps they should look at a cut-price move for a player they were linked with in a £10m transfer last year.

In other news: ‘This could get nasty’ – Many AVFC fans fume at Buendia and Martinez latest.

Leicester linked to Jannik Vestergaard

Leicester City have been tipped to make a move for Southampton defender Jannik Vestergaard this summer.

What’s the story?

The Foxes have been in the market for a new central defender all window following Wes Morgan’s retirement, and Wesley Fofana’s horrific injury has now significantly increased the need for reinforcements in that area of the pitch.

According to TalkSPORT reporter Alex Crook (as reported by the Leicester Mercury), Leicester are plotting a move for Vestergaard over the coming weeks, with the Saints reportedly set to demand £20 million for the Denmark international.

Fans will be buzzing

Vestergaard caught the eye with a string of impressive performances last season, achieving a highly respectable 6.89 WhoScored rating from his 30 Premier League appearances.

On average, the 6 ft 5 centre-back made a whopping four clearances per game in 2020/21, the highest amongst his Southampton teammates, as well as recording 0.5 blocks, the third-highest tally amongst his St. Mary’s colleagues.

However, with just one year remaining on his current contract on the south coast, speculation over the Scandinavian’s future has continued to rumble on throughout the summer.

And now Crook has revealed Leicester are the latest potential suitor for Vestergaard’s services, news that will surely have the club’s supporters buzzing due to his previous exploits.

“I would probably say 40%-60% in favour of him leaving at this stage, and one of the interested parties, as I understand it, is Leicester City, they’re in dire need of reinforcements at the back,” he told TalkSPORT.

“They were already light there with Jonny Evans unavailable, Vestergaard is someone they certainly tried to sign before, and he is in the last year of his contract like Danny Ings.”

Crook went on to explain that the Saints are expecting a bid for their prized asset and that Ralph Hassenhuttl’s charges may be in no position to turn it down.

“The impression I get is that Southampton are very much bracing themselves for a bid from Leicester, and if that bid did come in, they would have to seriously consider it given that contract situation,” he added.

“They want to get £20m, I imagine Leicester might go in at £15m and test Southampton’s resolve.”

Vestergaard would be a solid addition to the FA Cup holders’ backline, providing Brendan Rodgers with a natural left-footed option at the heart of his defence and delivering a boost to their chances of finishing inside the top four next season.

And, in other news…Heir to Wes Morgan: Rudkin must complete Leicester swoop for 6 ft 3 “monster” 

Newcastle transfer update on Mariano Diaz

Newcastle United have been offered the chance to sign Mariano Diaz before the summer transfer window shuts.

The Lowdown: Striker needed

With the departures of Andy Carroll and Yoshinori Muto, the St James’ Park club look awfully light in attack.

They only have Callum Wilson, Joelinton and Dwight Gayle to call upon as current centre-forward options (Transfermarkt), and so another striker is certainly needed before the window closes.

The Latest: Diaz offered

As per Jeunes Footeux, Newcastle have been offered the opportunity to sign Diaz and are interested in signing the Real Madrid marksman.

Although the 28-year-old is not their priority at the moment, they are keeping tabs on him as the transfer window progresses.

The Verdict: Avoid

While Steve Bruce’s squad is certainly short up front, they should avoid signing Diaz and instead move on to other targets.

The Champions League winner, who was praised by his teammate Luke Modric back in November, has not really lived up to the hype since signing for Real Madrid, managing just one goal in 22 games across all competitions last season (Transfermarkt).

Reportedly earning around £150,000 per week at the Bernabeu as well, those are the kind of wages which Newcastle simply should not be paying (and aren’t) for any player, let alone Diaz.

In other news, find out what worrying insight on NUFC’s takeover case has been dropped

Forest dealt Cyrus Christie transfer blow

Nottingham Forest have been dealt a major blow in their bid to bring Cyrus Christie back to the City Ground this summer.

What’s the talk?

That’s according to a report by Sky Sports (via Football League World), who claim that the right-back’s proposed move to Forest appears to have broken down, with it being reported that Dane Murphy failed to find a resolution regarding personal terms with the Fulham defender.

The report goes on to state that the 28-year-old has just one year remaining on his current contract at Craven Cottage, suggesting that, should Marco Silva’s side wish to receive any sort of fee for the Republic of Ireland international, they will have to sanction his sale this summer.

Hughton will be gutted

Considering just how impressive Christie was during his loan spell at Forest last season, in addition to the fact that Hughton is currently experiencing something of a defensive injury crisis at the City Ground, the fact that a move for the right-back looks to have broken down is sure to have left the 62-year-old gutted.

Indeed, over his 44 Championship appearances for the Garibaldi last term, the £1.35m-rated man helped his side keep a whopping 14 clean sheets, as well as making an average of 1.6 interceptions, 1.8 tackles, 2.2 clearances and winning 5.3 duels per game.

The player Martin O’Neill dubbed a “brilliant” talent also impressed in a creative capacity, registering three assists, creating three big chances for his teammates and making an average of one key pass per match.

These returns saw the £20k-per-week defender earn a seasonal SofaScore match rating of 6.99, ranking him as Hughton’s third-best performer in the second tier of English football.

As such, the addition of Christie would have certainly appeared to provide Hughton with a significant boost at a time when he desperately is in need of one, with his Forest side having lost all four of their opening fixtures of the Championship season, leaving them rooted to the foot of the table.

However, with a move for the Irishman now looking to be dead in the water, the Reds manager will have to turn his attention in what remains of the summer transfer window elsewhere regarding his search for defensive reinforcements – something that will undoubtedly be an extremely frustrating outcome for the 62-year-old.

In other news: Lost 100% duels: £720k-rated NFFC who made just 5 passes badly failed Hughton vs Stoke

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