McLeish discusses Rogic replacements

Celtic pair David Turnbull and Matt O’Riley can be the heir apparent to Tom Rogic at Parkhead, according to former Hoops manager Alex McLeish.

The Lowdown: Rogic departing Hoops

Rogic has enjoyed a wonderful Celtic career, winning seven Scottish Premiership titles, among other trophies, but his time at the club is coming to an end.

The Australian will depart during the summer in order to enjoy a fresh challenge, bringing an end to his nine-year stay at Parkhead.

Rogic could leave a big void in the middle of the park, given his influence in the final third in particular, and it could be that youngsters Turnbull and O’Riley step up to the plate.

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The Latest: McLeish confident over Hoops pair

Speaking to Football Insider, McLeish talked up the duo’s chances of kicking on and taking their opportunity from next season onwards:

“These guys have still got to get to Rogic’s level. We’ve seen they’re up and coming youngsters who have passed the test to be able to play for Celtic in the first instance.

“The next instance will be that higher level that Rogic reached. They’re both attacking midfielders so they obviously have to pitch in with the goals at the level Rogic has produced.

“That’s the task when you go to any club, that’s got to be your ambition. It doesn’t matter whether that’s a bottom team or a top team.

“You know Rangers and Celtic don’t allow players to stay there too long if they’re not producing.”

The Verdict: Huge opportunity for both

Sometimes, the exit of a great player can pave the way for a youngster to make their mark, and both Turnbull and O’Riley should be seeing this as a wonderful chance.

The former is arguably the most exciting prospect of the two, having been hailed as ‘phenomenal’ by Alan Hutton, also scoring and assisting five times apiece in the league this season before injuries took their toll.

Meanwhile, O’Riley has shone on loan at League One side MK Dons in 2021/22, enjoying 12 goal contributions (seven goals and five assists), and his return to Celtic is an exciting one.

In other news, a journalist has given a key Celtic transfer update. Read more here.

Sunderland handed Bailey Wright boost

Early Sunderland team news has emerged as they prepare to face Wycombe in the League One play-off final on Saturday…

What’s the latest?

Alex Neil has confirmed that Bailey Wright and Lynden Gooch should be fine for the showpiece occasion at Wembley after picking up knocks in the semi-final tie against Sheffield Wednesday.

Aside from that, the Black Cats have no other fresh concerns to worry about heading into the game this weekend and look set to have the same squad available to them.

The 40-year-old told the club’s official website, via Sunderland Echo: “I think that we’ve come through both of those legs relatively unscathed, which is good.”We’ve got a couple of bumps and bruises, Bailey Wright got a bit of a split round his eye and I think Goochy had one on his head as well. But there’s nothing too significant, so we’re hoping that we can get the lads through this week so that they’re fine and firing and ready to go.” Supporters will be buzzing

Sunderland supporters will be buzzing by this news for multiple reasons.

Firstly, there are no new injuries to contend with, which is a huge relief as it means that all of the players who contributed to the semi-final win will also be available this weekend. It is a gigantic clash at Wembley with promotion on the line, and Neil will need as many of his players fit as possible to give them the best chance of making it back to the Championship.

The Stadium of Light faithful will also be delighted to hear that Wright should be fine after sustaining a knock against the Owls. Having him in the team against Wycombe will be a big boost, as he leaves it all out on the pitch and will put his body on the line for the club.

After the second leg against Wednesday, Roker Report writer Philip West heaped praise on the 29-year-old, tweeting: “Bailey Wright, what a warrior. Bloodstained shirt, blood trickling down his face, but he was an absolute rock tonight. That’s what playing for this club is about. Heart of a lion.”

The Australian was magnificent at the back that night, winning six duel and making one clearance, block and interception (as per Sofascore). That kind of performance, perfectly summed up by West, is what Sunderland will need on Saturday to see off Wycombe.

This is why Black Cats supporters will surely be buzzing with this update from Neil and will now be hoping that Wright is named in the starting XI at Wembley.

AND in other news, Sunderland make move to land first summer signing, Neil will be buzzing…

Bruised but not broken, Hamid Hassan is ready for one final ride

He was once the most feared Associate bowler before injury put the brakes on his career. Now he’s back, looking for one last shot at glory with his country

Peter Della Penna31-May-2019The headband had been on since he arrived in the UK for the start of Afghanistan’s World Cup tour, but only later did he smear his cheeks like Rambo. After nearly three years out of international cricket, Hamid Hassan eased his way back into the swing of things throughout the month of May.He did his warm-up bowling off a few paces, wearing a wool beanie, on a bitterly cold weekend in Edinburgh. A few days later he suited up for his first ODI since July 2016, bowling off a significantly shortened run-up compared to his peak years – when he was the most feared Associate bowler on the planet, before a catastrophic accident robbed him of his share of the glory and financial reward for propelling Afghanistan to ODI status and toward Full Membership.Even when he took the field in Afghanistan’s warm-up win over Pakistan, he didn’t fully look like the Hamid Hassan of old. And when he took a wicket with his third ball, getting Imam-ul-Haq to drag onto his stumps, Hamid’s usually exuberant spirit was restrained in celebration. But the Stallone-inspired streaks of black, red and green across his dimples against England gave a hint that the old Hamid was back for a final rodeo in one-day cricket.Hamid will tell you until his face matches the blue of his jersey that he never officially retired. But why was he picked after all this time?”I have done a lot for Afghanistan in the past. I never give up. Whenever I’m in the ground, I have to give something for the team and for the country.”Rashid Khan, Mujeeb Ur Rahman, Zahir Khan. Heck, even Qais Ahmad – Afghanistan’s conveyor belt of teenage mystery spinners have been massively popular in franchise cricket all over the world. By extension they have brought greater fame to the national team. So it may be hard for some people to appreciate that Afghanistan’s standing as a team today owes much to its fast bowlers and their efforts a decade ago.

“My shoulders weren’t moving. My legs were gone. I thought the world is over. I thought, ‘Hamid, you are dead'”

“I’m looking at Hamid like it’s back in 2010,” said Afghanistan captain Gulbadin Naib just prior to the warm-up match against Pakistan. Gulbadin should know better than most. He had a front-row seat to the heyday of Hamid from a decade ago.With the exception of Rashid Khan, nobody has taken wickets at a faster rate for Afghanistan than Hamid. From the start of Afghanistan’s ascent from World Cricket League Division Five in 2008 on the isle of Jersey, Hamid was Afghanistan’s most consistent threat with the ball in white-ball cricket.In 50-over matches in particular, he was a dominant force, claiming 58 wickets in 29 games from the start of 2008 Division Five through Afghanistan’s maiden ODI 11 months later to cap the 2009 World Cup Qualifier in South Africa. Hamid terrorised the likes of Japan, Cayman Islands and Tanzania along the way from Division Five to Division One, swinging the ball both ways at 145-150kph. Many of the teams he came up against would have been over the moon to field someone who could top 130kph consistently.The start of 2010 produced one of the iconic moments of his career. Against USA in the 2010 T20 World Cup Qualifier in Dubai, Hamid turned in a Man-of-the-Match performance, striking with his first ball to claim opener Carl Wright, then proceeded to rip through a significant chunk of USA’s middle-order to help defend 135 with 3 for 14 in a 29-run win.One of his trademark inswinging yorkers accounted for USA’s most feared hitter, Timroy Allen, a man so confident, he walked out to face Hamid’s 90mph bowling without a helmet. Hamid ensured the moment would be preserved forever by doing a split on the pitch with arms stretched out parallel to his legs in celebration, stirring the thousands of Afghan fans present into pandemonium as Afghanistan went on to clinch a spot in the T20 World Cup for the first time.Hamid attempts one of his many trademark celebrations – the cartweel•Getty ImagesHamid conjured up images of Gilgamesh after slaying the Bull of Heaven, standing at a broad-shouldered 6’2″, with Popeye’s arms and a rugby prop’s legs. He was a larger-than-life figure during Afghanistan’s early rise.While Dubai was the venue of one of his greatest triumphs, it was also the scene of a career-altering catastrophe. Less than two years after that win over USA, just when the 24-year-old Hamid should have been entering the prime of his career, everything came crashing down in an exhibition match at the ICC Academy.Long before franchise T20 leagues became the gateway to greater recognition for the best Associate players in the world, the ICC provided something of a platform in the form of an ICC Combined Associate & Affiliate XI. A group of players from Afghanistan, Ireland, Scotland, UAE and Namibia were assembled to take on England, then ranked the No. 1 Test side in the world, in a three-day match ahead of England’s three-Test series in the UAE against Pakistan in January 2012.It was early on day two. After the combined side posted 281 batting first, Hamid bowled 11 overs to start the reply, claiming Andrew Strauss and Jonathan Trott. Lunch was approaching when Boyd Rankin was bowling to Alastair Cook, who drove firmly past Hamid at mid-off for a teasing boundary towards the two-foot-high white picket fencing that encircles the ICC Academy Oval.”I was quick in fielding, strong arm and strong sprint,” Hamid says. “I had bowled 11 overs. My body said ‘Leave the ball,’ but my mind said, ‘No, Hamid you can stop the ball.’ I chased to the end, but when I got closer to the boundary, it was not gonna happen. In one moment, my mind said, ‘Slide! Stop the ball!’ The next moment my mind said, ‘No, jump over the fence. Save yourself!’

“I have done a lot for Afghanistan in the past. I never give up. Whenever I’m in the ground, I have to give something for the team and for the country”

“So I went with the second option and jumped over the fence. The right foot crossed but the left foot slightly touched it. I lost my balance and hit my knee on the sightscreen rail grill with the tire. The left knee hit straight. It was the sightscreen rod, the big massive one. I hit it with the full speed.”He had got tangled up at impact with the metal support mechanisms that move the wheeled sightscreen. A long-time ICC employee who was at the match recalls thinking that Hamid might die. Once he regained consciousness, after having passed out initially for several minutes, Hamid thought much the same.”When I woke, I was face down on the ground,” Hamid says. “My shoulders weren’t moving. My legs were gone. I thought the world is over. I thought, ‘Hamid, you are dead.’ I wanted to get up but I couldn’t. Luckily my head was safe.”The game was stopped for a long time. They brought the stretcher. I didn’t know I was that hurt. Kabir Khan was there. I remember saying to the coach, ‘Can you please give me the ball? I got two wickets, I need to take three more against England. I want to be famous!'”He said, ‘Okay son. Take rest. When you get ready and well, I will give you the ball.’ They took me to the hospital. I cried the whole ride for a single injection or tablet to stop the pain. It was unbelievable. I saw my leg. It was a massive purple colour, both legs. I was worried for my right leg, it was massive.”Though the right leg looked worse initially due to the significant swelling and bruising from the collision, it was the left leg that had suffered more serious damage. An MRI revealed a torn anterior-cruciate ligament, requiring reconstructive surgery. The post-operative scene was almost as mentally scarring for Hamid as the accident itself.”I have big thighs, very strong,” Hamid says. “Massive, muscular, a proper bowler, you can say. After the operation, when I see my leg, it was like my hand. I said, ‘What the hell? Is that my leg?’ I started crying, asking, ‘Doctor, what have you done to my knee?’ He said, ‘After operation, it happens. You need to rebuild.'”So dire was Hamid’s collision with the sight screen, witnesses thought he might die from his injuries•Getty ImagesIn an overzealous attempt to recover as quickly as possible, Hamid overdid weight and strength training in the first month after the surgery. That caused severe complications that required him to have another surgery a month later, in which, he says, a chunk of his left quadriceps muscle was removed.”After that I was on crutches for five-six months,” Hamid says. The Afghanistan Cricket Board did not have proper sports-science support staff back then. Had they done, Hamid thinks he might have been able to avoid the second operation. “There was no one to guide me, to show me, ‘Hamid, take one year or eight months. Do proper rehab. This is the rehab centre. Go and do it.'”When I did my first operation, they put me very quickly into training. The chairman [of the board] at that time, Nasimullah Danish, he forced me to start training. Even I wanted to start quickly because every player wanted me in the ground quickly.”Hamid has been off the field far more than he has been on it in the years since. Aside from the knee surgeries, he has missed time with hamstring issues as well as surgery for a sports hernia on his right side in 2016. While Mohammad Nabi has played all but one of Afghanistan’s 113 ODIs since that game against Scotland in 2009, Hamid has played just 33.After being named in Afghanistan’s squad for a series against Zimbabwe in January 2018, he suffered yet another setback. But just when he might have lost all hope, he says he was inspired watching his team-mates in Zimbabwe at the World Cup Qualifier.”When I got injured, the people who worked in the ACB, chairman or CEO, they told me many times, ‘How do you feel? Do you think you can continue?’ They offered me a job also, to work in the ACB, but to be honest, I never ever wanted to sit at home and stop playing cricket.”But when we qualified, my dream became bigger and I decided. A few months back, I said to Phil Simmons [Afghanistan coach], ‘Sir, I want to play some matches in the World Cup and then I have to say goodbye to cricket.’ He said, ‘No. If you’re playing, you have to play all the tournament. Think bigger, don’t think smaller.'”

“There were many people talking that he’s finished, he’s done, he cannot bowl anymore”

So began an intense regimen of fitness training. Hamid even managed to squeeze in sessions in between his stints on air doing TV commentary during the Afghanistan v Ireland Test series in Dehradun last March. As for training his mind, he began reviewing his Sylvester Stallone library of and movies to inspire him. He says he has ditched the knee brace he wore from 2012 to 2017 but has shortened his run-up to reduce the pain and strain on his joints as a trade-off for the increased range of motion without the brace.In spite of the shortened run-up and seven years of injury bad luck, Hamid has still been able to crank it up higher than any of his fast-bowling team-mates on tour. He routinely hustled the Scotland batting order in his first ODI back since 2016 earlier in May, and was clocked at 140kph against England in the warm-up game.Simmons has tempered his expectations. He might not get the Hamid who took career-best List A figures of 5 for 23 against Simmons’ Ireland in 2009. However, Hamid’s presence creates a unique dynamic for the team, in that this World Cup will be the first opportunity for him and Rashid Khan to feature consistently in the same XI.The country’s two greatest strike bowlers have only ever featured together once in a completed ODI. Simmons believes Hamid will still be a potent weapon who can bring back balance to a bowling unit that has skewed more towards spin in recent years.”He is not going to be the Hamid Hassan of eight years back, but he has the ability to bowl in the right areas, he still has good enough pace and he still has the skills,” Simmons told ESPNcricinfo in a recent interview. “His lengths are still immaculate, his yorkers are still top of the line. It is just for his body to hold up and go through the tournament, but that is part of how we manage him.”I have to come back in the ground, do my performance. Then I will go”•Peter Della Penna”Other than experience, he has always been a wicket-taker. You need seniors like him and Dawlat [Zadran] to come in in the middle overs and get wickets. Both of them along with Aftab Alam have the capability and skills to take wickets in the middle overs. Combine that with the three spinners and we are good.”After making it through training camps this year in Bengaluru, Dehradun and Potchefstroom, Hamid appeared to be all systems go for England. After taking two wickets against Scotland, though, he suffered a gash on his bowling hand trying to field a return drive in his final over.It meant he had to frustratingly miss Afghanistan’s two ODIs in Ireland, but with some tape protecting his right pinky and ring fingers, he was able to bowl against Pakistan and England in the World Cup warm-ups. It gives him belief he’ll be able to stay fit and perform over the next six weeks, starting with Afghanistan’s World Cup opener against Australia tomorrow, on his 32nd birthday.”There were many things and people talking that he’s finished,” Hamid says. “‘He’s done. He cannot bowl anymore.’ Too many noise and things. Even from close friends inside the cricket board, people who worked in ACB said, ‘He’s finished.'”Whenever I see my team-mates playing, it motivated me a lot. And sometimes I watch motivational movies like , the best movie ever, and I’ve mentioned it many times. It’s still my favourite. It was all the time in my mind: I have to come back in the ground, do my performance. Then I will go.”

Domestic batting crew key to KKR's success

Experienced domestic batsmen should come in handy for a Kolkata Knight Riders squad that is light on bench strength

Sreshth Shah03-Apr-2017

Likely first-choice XI

Gautam Gambhir (capt), Robin Uthappa (wk), Manish Pandey, Shakib Al Hasan, Yusuf Pathan, Suryakumar Yadav, Chris Woakes, Kuldeep Yadav, Sunil Narine, Umesh Yadav, Trent Boult

Reserves

Batsmen – Sheldon Jackson, Darren Bravo, Chris Lynn, Ishank JaggiBowlers – Ankit Rajpoot, Nathan Coulter-Nile, Sayan Ghosh, Piyush ChawlaAllrounders – Colin de Grandhomme, Rovman Powell, Sanjay Yadav, Rishi Dhawan

Strengths

Knight Riders’ strength lies in their roster of experienced domestic cricketers, especially with the bat. Read: Gambhir, Uthappa, Pandey, Suryakumar. A measured start, with wickets in hand, followed by a late flourish from their allrounders has been the tested winning formula for the two-time IPL champions. And they have quite a few power-hitting allrounders to do that for them this time too: Yusuf, Shakib, Rovman. Knight Riders also have three spinners – each of whom have their own style – in Narine, Kuldeep – who will be raring to go after a memorable domestic season that culminated in a Test debut at Dharamsala – and Chawla. The spin-bowling department possesses variety that can unnerve even the best.

Weaknesses

Their bench strength is not the best, with the only experienced, big names in the reserves being Lynn, Coulter-Nile and Bravo. Furthermore, Knight Riders’ bowling remains over-dependent on Narine’s spin. The West Indies bowler has been crucial to the franchise’s successes and failures, and his average show last year – 11 wickets, at an economy of 7.12 – corresponded with his team’s moderate performance. In addition, Umesh’s absence for the first couple of weeks is likely to affect the team dynamics early on in the campaign.

Where they finished in 2016, and what’s different this year?

Lost to Sunrisers Hyderabad in the eliminator after finishing fourth in the league.Knight Riders have preferred to be sparing with their team changes, but will be forced to make some alterations this year. They have already had to make one with Colin de Grandhomme being called up to replace Andre Russell, who, considered “irreplaceable” by Gambhir, will miss the IPL after a doping-code violation ban. Lynn’s top form at the recently concluded Caribbean Premier League and Big Bash League, along with other new allrounder reinforcements in Woakes and Powell, might put pressure on Shakib – currently the world’s best allrounder across all formats. Boult, currently recovering from injury, is another new entrant and will spearhead Knight Riders’ pace-attack on a relaid Eden Gardens pitch that offered seamers more help in the recent India-New Zealand Test there than it would have previously.Kolkata Knight Riders will hope Kuldeep Yadav’s fine form continues•BCCI

What have their players been up to?

  • Chris Lynn – Having been on and off in the Knight Riders XI, Lynn’s superb recent form in T20s might get him many more opportunities this season. In the most-recent BBL season, he scored 309 runs in five games – including unbeaten knocks of 85, 84 and 98 for Brisbane Heat. He was also the 2016 CPL’s highest run-scorer.
  • Rovman Powell – With comparisons to Andre Russell already made, Powell has big shoes to fill for Knight Riders. With a penchant of hitting more sixes than fours, Powell was crucial to Jamaica Tallawah’s CPL title-win, and Knight Riders will look for more of the same from the young allrounder.
  • Kuldeep Yadav – A successful season where he took 35 wickets in the Ranji Trophy, Kuldeep also stood out with the bat, top-scoring for Uttar Pradesh with 466 runs, including a maiden first-class century. His Uttar Pradesh and Knight Riders team-mate Piyush Chawla’s presence in the squad might challenge Kuldeep for a first XI spot, but then his consistent performances helped him force his way into UP’s XI for the pink-ball Duleep Trophy, where he was the tournament’s highest wicket-taker.
  • Yusuf Pathan – Yusuf’s ability to change a game within a few deliveries keeps him relevant in the IPL year after year. Last year, he finished with an average of 72.20 and was Knight Riders’ third-highest scorer with 361 runs. Despite a lacklustre domestic season, Knight Riders will be hopeful Yusuf maintains his ability to not lose his wicket: last season, he was dismissed only five times out of the 13 times he batted.

Overseas-player availability

Two of Knight Riders’ overseas players have international commitments during the IPL. Shakib’s commitments in Sri Lanka will see him miss Knight Riders’ opening match against Gujarat Lions on April 7, while the Ireland-Bangladesh-New Zealand tri-series in May will see him and Boult leave the tournament before Knight Riders’ final league game against Mumbai Indians on May 13.

Home and away record in 2016

With four victories out of seven matches at the Eden Gardens, Knight Riders fared better at home than away, where their win-loss record stood level at four each in eight matches. Out of the eight times they won, six of them were while batting second.

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Buttler takes his second chance

ESPNcricinfo presents the plays of the day from the third one-day international in Sharjah

George Dobell17-Nov-2015Chance of the dayHad Jos Buttler been stumped before he had scored – as he probably should have been – England would have been 103 for five and in the midst of a familiar collapse against spin bowling. Buttler, facing just his third ball, had skipped down the wicket against Shoaib Malik and effectively yorked himself. But Sarfraz Ahmed could not take the ball cleanly and Buttler regained his ground. He went on to score an unbeaten 49 and added an unbroken 117 for the fifth-wicket with James Taylor in a partnership which settled the game.Run out of the dayThis was an unusually competitive category, with three Pakistan batsmen succumbing to run outs and each a contender for the most embarrassing. But perhaps it was Shoaib Malik who should take the accolade. As the last recognised batsman, Pakistan could well have done with him to shepherd the tail and ensure the team utilised all their overs. Instead, backing up to Wahab Riaz, he attempted an all but impossible run to the best fielder in the England squad, displayed the turning circle of an oil tanker and was run out by some distance to become the fifth wicket to fall in the space of just 29 runs. It is hard to imagine there would have been a run in any circumstance – Wahab turned the ball pretty much straight to midwicket – but the fact that it was Chris Jordan placed there made it all the more unlikely.Setback of the dayPerhaps the most significant blow in this encounter was struck the day before the game. Yasir Shah, the Pakistan legspinner, injured a knee in training the day before the match and was ruled out of contention. While he conceded 70 runs in the previous ODI, he took seven wickets in the Test on this very pitch barely a couple of weeks ago and would surely have relished the conditions. His replacement, Zafar Gohar, did pretty well but, bearing in mind England’s long term record against legspin, Yasir’s absence may have proved the difference between the sides.Milestone of the dayThe wicket of Eoin Morgan was Malik’s 150th in ODI cricket. Quite a ball it was, too. Drifting in to Morgan, it then spun sharply, beating the outside edge of the bat as he remained on the back foot and clipping the top of off stump. It seemed, at the time and with Morgan having batted so well, as if it may be the wicket to settle the game: England were 93 for 4 and 209 looked far away.Start of the dayWhatever their problems in developing another generation of batsmen, Pakistan’s ability to unearth new bowlers is uncanny. Here, with Yasir injured, they gave an opportunity to a 20-year-old with only 19 List A games behind him. And if Gohar’s first wicket – Joe Root – owed a little to fortune (Root slog-swept a full toss, just Zafar’s fifth delivery in international cricket, down the throat of deep square leg), his second, Alex Hales, was the result of a fine ball that drew the batsmen into a stroke but then spun sharply to take the outside edge. Zafar also drove David Willey for a straight six and, if he could improve his consistency and his fielding, looked a fine prospect for such an inexperienced cricketer.

Freewheeling on flat land

Cycling through the scenic countryside around Nelson is the best way to experience the New Zealand way of life

Peter Watson21-Nov-2014Biking has become the new cool way to get around while visiting Nelson. Dressed in their distinctive lime-green or orange high-visibility safety gear, people of all ages and levels of fitness are flocking to the region’s many cycle ways and tracks.While Nelson offers some of the best mountain biking in New Zealand, it is the opening of the first sections of the Tasman Great Taste Trail that has really sparked the boom. Though only two-thirds complete, the 175km loop trail is already on the verge of being named one of New Zealand’s great rides. Besides being easy to ride and cutting across some beautiful scenery, it is a safe and leisurely way to sample some of the Nelson-Tasman region’s best food, wine, beer and art.A growing number of tour companies now provide guided and self-guided trips and bike rentals. Most people access the taste trail from the Nelson city end.Here they have two options: They can either cycle 31km through vineyards, market gardens and farmland to the village of Wakefield, or they can do the first 33km stage of the coastal section of the trail to the seaside town of Mapua. This takes them around the edge of the Waimea estuary, which is rich in bird life, over boardwalks and along stop banks to Rabbit Island – an excellent swimming and picnicking beach. It is just a short ferry ride to Mapua with its charming waterfront restaurants, brewery and quirky arts and crafts galleries.Both these trips take on average about three hours one way (depending on how many stops are made at cafés and elsewhere), and are over flat land.From Mapua, the trail heads inland into the Moutere hills, but those making the slow climb past vineyards, olive groves and orchards are rewarded with panoramic views over the Tasman Bay and a quick descent into the town of Motueka, where they can relax and refuel. This 22km section takes about two hours and requires a bit more effort.Don’t end your trip at Motueka, though, because another 14km on is Kaiteriteri, one of the scenic jewels of the region and the gateway to the Abel Tasman National Park, famed for its golden sand beaches ringed by lush native bush. The short ride there is a splendid one along the waterfront, through more orchards and up into the forest, before it drops down into picture-perfect Kaiteriteri, which is a great place to swim and sightsee.If you are feeling energetic there is a purpose-built mountain bike park in dense bush above the village, offering an impressive variety of tracks for all skill levels, from wide and gentle to narrow and steep. It is one of six mountain-bike parks in the region, which mirror Nelson’s diverse terrain, ranging from the coast to high in the hills and covering bush, forestry blocks and open tussock land.Within 10km of Nelson city, there are over 30 trails of all types and grades.Codgers Mountain Bike Park, overlooking the city, is a good place to begin, as its trails start in the Brook Valley, just a ten-minute drive away from the central shopping area. It has tracks suitable for beginners and families through to fitness fanatics and downhill thrill-seekers. Based around three hills rising to about 400m, the tracks are well signposted and maintained and take between 30 minutes to two hours each to ride.For the more experienced and fitter bikers, the Dun Mountain Trial – rated one of the country’s top rides – is a must. It follows the route of New Zealand’s first railway up more than 800m above the bush line into an unusual alpine mineral environment, offering sweeping vistas before plunging back down into the city. Take a jacket, your camera and plenty of food and water, and allow all day to enjoy the 43km round trip.A cyclist on the Tasman Great Taste Trail enjoys the quiet solitude of the Moutere hills•Alden Williams/Fairfax MediaThere are many other excellent rides further afield, with one of the best being the Rameka Track, which starts on top of Takaka Hill, where some of the scenes were filmed amidst the limestone outcrops and beech forest. It takes about 90 minutes to get to the start from Nelson city. Before you start your descent, take time to check out Harwoods Hole, at a jaw-dropping 357m the deepest vertical shaft in New Zealand which leads to a major caving system under the mountain.The bike track – situated in the Abel Tasman National Park – is a 19km downhill adrenaline rush through bush and farmland into Takaka, a town noted for its arts and crafts and cruisy ambience. Make sure you stop to take in the stunning views overlooking Golden Bay. Be aware that the twisting track can be challenging, with tree roots, boulders, fallen logs, loose rock and creeks to negotiate.If this is all too strenuous, then Nelson city has a good network of paved cycling paths and underpasses, where you can pedal serenely from café to shop to beach without worrying about traffic, while taking in the sea air and views. It’s a good way to see the city, get some exercise and sharpen your thirst and appetite.

Fred's final fling

From Benjamin Matthews, United Kingdom

Cricinfo25-Feb-2013Getty ImagesThe retirement of Andrew Flintoff (MBE) after the current Ashes series is sure to ignite varying forms of debate over the next few weeks. Matters of opinion from the media pack may criticise the allrounder for the timing of his announcement, while other voices will no doubt pen glowing tributes to the talismanic Lancastrian. Flintoff will continue to make himself available for England’s future ODI and Twenty20 squads. The carrot of future IPL contracts looming large may cast doubts for some over the motives behind his decision to leave the longer format of the game, but none can debate the match-winning contributions he has made for the English team over the years.Charismatic, inspiring, down-to-earth are all compliments that spring to mind for a man whose appeal transcends class and cricketing opinion. Minor antics off the pitch have at times marred an underlying focus and dedication to the game that some have occasionally overlooked. Relentless pace and a fiery all-or-nothing attitude have been drawn from honing high levels of fitness which were doubted at the beginning of his career; many focussing on his heavy set frame. Such a build, whilst undoubtedly a major asset to his stinging bowling and power hitting, has also unfortunately been to his detriment.The reoccurring knee injury sustained while playing in the IPL flared up again after this series’ first Test and after multiple ankle surgeries, Flintoff has decided to call it a day. The relentless rigours of the five-day game have proven to be too much for his body to cope with, Flintoff having missed 25 of England’s previous 48 Tests. Flintoff took his bow into international Test match cricket in 1998 against a strong touring South African side. Unfortunately the prized wicket of Jacques Kallis was his only real reward of note in that series and subsequently, his county form suffered.There were always glimpses of his destructive capabilities during this uncertain period, most notably an explosive 135 from 111 balls in the quarter-finals of the Natwest Trophy in 2000. “We have just watched one of the most awesome innings we are ever going to see on a cricket field” gushed David Gower. A Man-of-the-Match 42 not out in a ODI against Zimbabwe followed, causing Flintoff to enthuse: “not bad for a fat lad!” High praise and high jinx indeed, but it wasn’t until the England management packed him off to Rod Marsh’s ECB academy in 2001 that he began to realise his huge potential.That short, sharp, shock culminated in a reformed, more dynamic Flintoff who toured India that winter; proving his startling revelation as a tight, aggressive seam bowler. The relief of his coming of age was plain to see when he ripped off his shirt in celebration after the final ball of that tour, Flintoff having bowled an exceptional over to level the one day series. His Test career really started to take shape on the 2002 tour to New Zealand, where in Christchurch on his 13th Test appearance, Flintoff scored his first international century. 137 from 163 deliveries signified a concentration and temperament well suited to Test cricket.By 2003, he had become a consistent performer in the Test arena. A magnificent 142 from 146 balls against South Africa, followed three Tests later by a match-swinging 95 to help England save the series cemented his position as an integral part of the English Test batting unit. An ability to force such a momentum change was testament to the fact he had become a player who could not just change the face of a one-dayer, but a player who could change the face of the modern English game forever.Despite having become England’s most consistent Test bowler by this stage, 5 for 58 versus the West Indies in Barbados 2004 (including the wickets of Brian Lara, Ridley Jacobs and Shivnarine Chanderpaul) was Flintoff’s first major haul. He was named the Man of the Series later that year for his performances in the home white-wash of the same touring opponents. Again, the indications of his leading influence with both the bat and ball – 603 runs and 24 wickets – were being displayed and were acting simply as precursors for yet even greater things still to come.2005 was his annus mirabilis largely due to his performances in the triumphant Ashes series of that year. It was the series in which he left an indelible mark on Test cricket not only for his contribution towards the series win, but for his contribution to the playing of the game: hard, but always fair. The iconic portrait of Flintoff consoling Brett Lee after victory at Edgbaston is a gesture of sportsmanship synonymous with the all-rounder, as well as an image etched into the consciousness of all cricket fans forever more. Being named ICC Cricketer of the Year was his reward for averages of 40.20 with the bat and 27.29 with the ball. His 402 runs and 24 wickets won Flintoff the Compton-Miller medal and inspire some to call it ‘Fred’s Ashes’.Memories of that series will linger forever in the mind of the man who inspired England to victory in that series, as they will in the minds of a cricketing nation whose love affair with the shorter modes of the game are somewhat supplanting their affections for the truest form of the game. So Freddie 2009 – one last hurrah? Reignite those final embers and bring that urn home.

India win with determination and a lot of luck

India never had a realistic chance of winning until Graeme Smith took the batting Powerplay when it wasn’t needed and inside-edged on to his stumps

Sidharth Monga at Wanderers16-Jan-2011On days like these, you realise the value of hanging in there until the bitter end. On days like these, you become cricket theists; you start acknowledging the concept of cricketing gods. On days like these, you can waste a solid start, a middle-order rebuild, end up with 190 on a fairly good batting surface, and still win. On days like these, the opposition captain can go for glory, asking for a Powerplay when he needs only 2.4 runs an over, and lose three wickets for 20 runs. On days like these, you can get lbws without hitting the pad. On days like these, you can miss a run-out and nearly miss another but still get that wicket. On days like these, you can be lazy at third man, costing the team three crucial runs, but still come back and bowl two short and wide deliveries to take the last two wickets, with one run to defend.Days like these are when you don’t pocket any of the first eight balls, but your opponent misses a simple shot at the nine ball. Still, you have to make that final pocket, put that nine ball in. When the opposition is offering you gifts, you have to be there to receive them. India were there to receive theirs today, nudging South Africa and the cricketing gods enough at the right times to make sure those gifts came their way.When Zaheer Khan didn’t get off to the best of starts with the ball, Munaf Patel made sure India got the early wicket. He extracted bounce from the pitch, and relied on that early seam movement to snare Hashim Amla, and went for just 18 in his first spell of four overs. When Ashish Nehra struggled against a rampaging Graeme Smith, Harbhajan Singh tied the other end up, coming on to bowl during the first Powerplay, keeping India in the game for longer.MS Dhoni commended Harbhajan’s effort later, to go with Munaf’s start. “Harbhajan’s contribution was really important,” he said. “The South African batsmen had momentum on their side. The way he bowled, that eight-over spell (for 27 runs), they decided to not take Harbhajan on, which meant they lost a bit of momentum. That really brought us back. After that every body contributed. Munaf’s contribution was brilliant. He bowls really straight, varies his pace really well, and he deserves to be the Man of the Match.”Still, with Dhoni dropping Colin Ingram, with the fielding not looking greater than it usually is, the game seemed to meander towards the obvious result, but this was not a night for the obvious results. Dhoni introduced part-time spin, JP Duminy went for glory too, and India were now into the inexperienced David Miller and the five bowlers, a ploy India have always avoided. And Dhoni was quick to point this game out to illustrate why he doesn’t play five bowlers.”Putting pressure on the South African middle and lower order order was important,” Dhoni said. “We knew [Johan] Botha and [Wayne] Parnell can bat, but pressure is a completely different ball game. When you put pressure on players like, from our side, Harbhajan or Zaheer, who we know can bat, but in a situation like this it becomes very different. That’s what we wanted to do. At times pressure makes you do things that you are not supposed to do.”The pressure didn’t quite work immediately. Smith and Miller added 32 runs, and while Miller looked shaky, it seemed Smith was back to his form of carrying the team through till the end. And suddenly he too seemed to want to make a statement by finishing it off in style, calling for the Powerplay. Then Munaf produced what Smith called a “good slower ball”, one that straightened enough to catch the inside edge onto the stumps.Now India started feeling it. Back came their hunter, Zaheer, who likes to prey on weak minds. He shouldn’t have got Botha’s wicket when he did, but the slower bouncer he bowled to Miller showed good awareness of how the pitch was behaving. It was a pitch on which Munaf showed that the slower ones gripped and bounced at the batsmen, and Zaheer started using that too.And again, when Parnell and Morne Morkel looked like they had sort of got used to Munaf’s rhythm, Dhoni brought Raina on. It might not have worked on the night, but the mind was working, an attempt was being made to try and make things happen, to try and encash that gift voucher. Dhoni was proactive again when he brought Munaf back with three runs required, keeping the fields up, unlike in Tests.His description of the events of that last over just reinforced the presence of cricketing gods, who smile at some and punish some others. “When you need one or two wickets, and the opposition needs three runs, you know they are just one stroke away,” Dhoni said. “There is pressure then as to whether the fielder should be in or out to save that boundary. When you come back after losing a toss, you blame yourself, thinking you could have called heads as opposed to tails. Bringing that point fielder in was a somewhat similar situation. I had just decided to bring Yusuf [Pathan] in, and the catch went his way.” Thus the nine ball went in.

Daring Young Men

Rob Steen reviews Daring Young Men by Alan Hill

Rob Steen06-Mar-2006



Forget 1981 and 2005. If you really want to play parallels, how about 1954-55 and 2005? Both provided famished Englishmen with a rare and convincing Ashes triumph, plotted by a Yorkshire batsman and executed by a versatile five-man attack. Both saw the victors go one down before snatching a close-run second Test. And both inspired too many hardbacks – more than a dozen apiece, most of them unimpaired by perspective. That England won only one more Ashes series before drawing a complete blank in the 1960s is not entirely propitious.”England, not being grotesquely bad at cricket like Australia, won the Ashes …” Thus that unfailingly contrary Australian opener Sidney Barnes began The Ashes Ablaze, his (ghosted) account of England’s most fondly remembered triumph down under since Bodyline. But then Australians are uncommonly adept at diminishing their vanquishers. A more disinterested view would be that England were further along the road to renewal, and could have reversed history’s tide
had Colin Cowdrey built more assertively on the rich promise of his maiden tour and Frank Tyson not been confined to a handful more Tests.This was the final Ashes trip for the postwar pillars – Len Hutton and Alec Bedser, Denis Compton and Bill Edrich – and it was Alan Hill’s “Daring Young
Men” who now walked tallest: Peter May and Cowdrey the batting heartbeat, Brian Statham and Tyson, whose pace capitalised on some iffy surfaces and consistently beheaded the opposition before Bob Appleyard (cut and spin) and
Johnny Wardle (left-arm orthodox and chinamen) tussled over the torso. Had Michael Vaughan held such a hand, September’s tense finale would have been unnecessary.Yet Hill reserves his most fervent (and not unbiased) admiration for Hutton. He scorns those – Richie Benaud among them – who criticised an intentionally slow rate of 60 eight-ball overs a day (about 80 six-ball overs) and skates over the enigmatic captain’s failure to apprise Bedser of his omission from the Melbourne Test. Still, if semi-blinkered idolatry is your thing, it is hard to conceive of a more deserving object. Hutton battled illness, nerves and the strain of a decade spent manning burning decks; he also carried the burden of being England’s first professional captain of the 20th century. He deserved a George Cross more than a paltry knighthood.One of the elite to have won the Cricket Society Literary Award twice (for biographies of fellow Yorkists Herbert Sutcliffe and Hedley Verity), Hill is a nostalgist of occasional elegance and vast industry. Here he has interviewed most of the surviving players, which is why, though this tour now seems almost too familiar, and nothing especially revelatory emerges, the book remains eminently worthwhile. One could be picky. Hill has been ill-served by both
editor and proofreaders, which may explain some atypical lapses: even pre-Laker, Tyson’s 7 for 27 in Melbourne were nothing like the best figures in Ashes history. More vexing is the lack of context: bar a snap of the four-shilling turnstiles at Adelaide there is little sense of time or place. Still it is a happy tale lovingly retold.

Usman Khawaja century caps confident performance by Australia

There have been few instances of visiting batters being comfortable against India in India and this was one of them

Sidharth Monga09-Mar-20232:22

Chappell: Khawaja’s calmness this series has been exemplary

Australia managed only the fourth opening stand of 50 or more for a visiting side in India in the last five years. Usman Khawaja and Steven Smith batted through the middle session, the first wicketless session of the series, the most comfortable any batting side has been in a session against India in India in the last 10 years. Khawaja scored a fine, patient hundred, only the sixth against India in India in the last five years.Yet it was India who controlled which way the game headed for the most part after losing the toss on a flat pitch. Only to lose the gamble with the new ball at the end of the day and hand Australia a slight advantage. Khawaja ended unbeaten on 104 having brought up the milestone in the last over of the day, and Cameron Green feasted on the new ball to score 49 in 64 in an 85-run stand that started after the loss of two wickets for 19 runs.The Ahmedabad pitch was a complete contrast to the first three Tests. Bowlers had to work hard to maintain control, defend with the fields and attack the stumps. Sometimes the payoff stretched across spells like when Umesh Yadav bowled a spell full of bouncers, and Mohammed Shami took the wicket with a full ball in the next spell, his second. R Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja managed one each, and Axar Patel provided control in his 12 overs for just 14 runs.A measure of how difficult it was for the bowlers is that India managed to draw only 34 false responses; there were 40 in the first session of the last Test. Yet through most of the day, India made sure the batters had to take risks to even go past 2.5 an over. Knowing they could trust the pitch, Australia waited for the loose balls, which also showed in an unusually high control percentage. The six false responses in 33 overs in the middle session was the highest control percentage for a visiting side in India in a session of Test cricket in India in the last 10 years.This is where the quality of Ashwin and Shami, and the depth in the attack, shone through. For long periods, Ashwin managed to keep the batters in check even though he didn’t beat the bat. The presence of a fifth bowler meant India could toil away tirelessly. It paid off with a break in concentration for Smith, who played Jadeja on, and a beauty from Shami to send Peter Handscomb back to reduce Australia to 170 for 4.The spinners then all but shut down Khawaja and Green, bowling five overs for three runs when Rohit Sharma asked for the new ball. Now this was a departure from how India usually operate on such days. They don’t risk taking the new ball with bowlers who have had a long day in the field. Usually they bowl around four overs with the new ball in the evening, and then have another shot at it on the next morning.India’s bowlers had to toil hard on a flat pitch•BCCI

Here, India took the new ball with nine overs to go, and Green took to it. A flat pitch, bowlers at the end of the day, and suddenly Australia had 54 runs in nine overs. Green did all the damage as Khawaja kept picking singles to start the final over of the day on 99. Then he got a half-volley to strike his 15th boundary having struck at just 41.43 despite having offered only 13 false responses in a 251-ball stay.This was a little like the start with the first new ball. Shami bowled the first ball straight to second slip, then offered more byes, a catch went down, and Australia raced away to 56 for 0 in the first 14 overs. This is when India would have been reminded of the Chennai Test of 2020-21, one of their only three home defeats in the last 10 overs.Led by Ashwin, India started to turn the screws. The second hour went for just 19. Travis Head tried to break the shackles but found mid-on. There was only a hint of reverse for a while, and Shami took out Marnus Labuschagne with that.With not much expected from their lower order, Australia had to be watchful in the middle session. It was also when all the bowlers gave Rohit excellent control. Just 74 were scored in the second session of 33 overs.Finally Smith defended one loosely, getting out to Jadeja for the seventh time, four of them bowled. Nobody has found his timber that often. With a 70-over old ball, Shami managed to hold the line to go past Handscomb’s edge and send the off stump on a cartwheel.The tension built towards the end of the day. Virat Kohli used to wait for the next morning and fresher bowlers to make the next big move. Rohit chose the evening. Green came out the victor.Amid all this, Khawaja just batted in the purest sense. No premeditation, no attempt to force the pace, just organically responding to what was bowled at him. He was severe off the toes, and also quick to work the ball square every time someone dropped short. Forty-six of his runs came between long leg and midwicket, which should tell you how he waited for the loose balls. As he said at the end of the day, it was a beautiful batting pitch and he just didn’t want to get out.

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