Chelsea eyeing 6’5 giant who has scored a goal every 86 minutes this season

Chelsea have shown glimpses of their potential under Mauricio Pochettino, but so far just that. The Argentine is yet to get a consistent run under his belt at Stamford Bridge, with the size of the project that he is responsible for quickly becoming apparent. He will hope that the promising signs shown in the Blues' draw against Arsenal will act as a springboard for a successful run in the Premier League, as Chelsea look to make a return to Champions League football.

Many of the headlines in the summer were centred around Chelsea's transfer business, with a flurry of talents heading for the exit door, whilst Pochettino began his rebuild with a number of arrivals. With their goalscoring problem very much still their biggest weakness, however, the Blues could now turn to a former academy player.

Chelsea transfer news

It could be argued that Chelsea's excessive spending is yet to solve many, if any, of their problems. They remain on course for a disappointing finish and have suffered defeats against Nottingham Forest and Aston Villa already this season, also drawing against Bournemouth. Nonetheless, it looks as though Todd Boehly could return to the transfer market once more, given the latest Miles Leaburn transfer news.

According to the Daily Mail, Chelsea and Brentford are mulling over a move for the Charlton Athletic striker, who still has two years remaining on his current deal at the club. Leaburn, of course, is all too familiar with Chelsea, having come through their academy before joining the Addicks in 2019. Charlton are in a strong position when it comes to keeping hold of their talented teenager, after they reportedly rejected an offer worth £3m from the Bundesliga in the summer.

When the January transfer window does open, as well as next summer's edition, it will be interesting to see whether Chelsea, or in fact Brentford, push ahead to sign Leaburn, who may still have dreams of Stamford Bridge success.

Miles Leaburn is "not just a goalscorer"

Leaburn's stats show just how well he has started for Charlton this season, scoring a goal every 86 minutes. The 6 ft 5 in giant has found the back of the net six times in just 515 minutes of action, which is just under six games. The fact is, the 19-year-old has been on fire this season, and has more than earned the reported interest of Chelsea.

His form has rightly received a lot of praise, including from former Charlton boss Dean Holden, who said, via London News Online: “It proves he’s not just a goalscorer. His all-round game, as much as he’s got to learn, is solid. He is not just a fox-in-the-box, he’s not just someone who will run in behind and he’s not just a targetman.

“All of those different parts of his game will improve because it is his first season in senior football. Why can’t he get to 12 or higher than that? He is such a great lad to work with – he wants to improve. He doesn’t for one second think he is the finished article, which is really exciting. Huge potential.”

'I became the best player I could have become' – Alastair Cook

Alastair Cook says that he will retire from international cricket at the end of the forthcoming Oval Test knowing that he managed to dredge every ounce out of his ability.Cook, who will retire after an England record 161 Test appearances, said that his decision to stand down had come during a six-month period in which he felt that he had mislaid the mental edge that had carried him to more than 12,000 Test runs over a 12-year career.”It’s hard to put it into words, but over the last six months, there’ve been signs in my mind that this was going to happen,” Cook told reporters at The Oval. “I told Rooty [Joe Root] before the game [at the Ageas Bowl], then told Trevor [Bayliss] during the game.””For me, I’ve always had that mental edge, I’ve always been mentally incredibly tough, and that edge had gone,” he added. “That stuff which I’d found easy before was just wasn’t quite there, and for me that was the biggest sign.”Asked if he had considered asking for a sabbatical to reassess his game after an extraordinary 158 Test appearances in a row, Cook insisted that burn-out was not the issue that he had been contending with, in spite of averaging less than 20 in nine Tests in 2018.”It did cross my mind briefly, as the decision became clear in my mind, but if you are looking over the last two or three years, I haven’t played a huge amounts of games, and I’ve never felt that getting on another plane has been the struggle. You can have six months off and come back, but I still don’t think it would have been there.”You ask people about [retirement] along the way, and they said that when you know, you know. And for me that was so true.”The rest of the team was informed of his decision the aftermath of England’s 60-run victory over India at the Ageas Bowl, a result which ensured a series win against the No.1 Test team and allowed Cook to go public with his decision ahead of a dead rubber in the final match.”In this day and age, it’s very hard to keep anything quiet,” he said. “If it was 2-2 I would have had to keep my mouth shut. But when you do media and are asked questions, it’s hard to constantly lie, to be brutally honest.”I was a couple of beers in and I needed to be, otherwise I’d have cried more than I actually did,” he added. “But I managed to hold it together. At the end of the game, I just said it might be good news for some, but sad for others, but it’s time. I’ve done my bit and, if picked, the next game will be my last game. That was all I said.There was a bit of silence, then Mo said something, and we got on with it and had a nice evening in the changing room.”The confirmation of Cook’s impending retirement was then announced on Monday morning, leading to a wealth of tributes across the cricket media.”It’s a bit surreal,” Cook added. “One of my friends rang to check I was still alive, because everyone had been talking as if I’ve died. It’s obviously nice to hear so many nice words said about you. For the last couple of days I’ve been back at home and hadn’t seen much of it, until I let myself have a look last night.”The eulogies were richly deserved, given how much Cook had given to England’s cause in the course of his record-breaking Test career. Inevitably, he picked out his central role in England’s victories in Australia in 2010-11 and India in 2012-13 as his finest hours.”You can’t really look past those two away series,” he said. “That was the best I could play, and in my career as a whole, I can look back and say I became the best player I could have become. That means quite a lot to me. I’ve never been the most talented cricketer, and I don’t pretend I was, but I definitely got everything out of my ability.”Cook admitted that his lowest ebb had come in the midst of the 2014 summer, when England lost first to Sri Lanka and then went 1-0 down against India, and all against the backdrop of the sacking of Kevin Pietersen, a situation that Cook admitted he wished had been handled differently.”The KP affair was a tough year, absolutely no doubt about that,” he said. “The fallout of that wasn’t good for English cricket or for me, but I was involved in that decision without being the bloke that made the final decision.”I think that’s when it was real tough but I didn’t throw the towel in,” he added. “I still believe I was the best man for the job and the right man to be England captain at that time. I could have taken the easy option and thrown the towel in, but I didn’t, and the team got the reward with the Ashes in 2015.”Asked if he was the last of a dying breed of Test specialists, Cook replied: “I think naturally kids are going to be more attracted by the razzmatazz of T20. I’ve seen it in the youngsters in the Essex team, their attacking game is better than their defensive game, and that is fact.”I’m not sure I’m the last of a dying breed but there are cricketers of my ilk who are naturally suited to the red ball rather than white ball. The kids have the diet of T20. We played T20 when we were younger, but we still built an innings in the first five overs, rather than whack it over the keepers’ head third ball.”As for his ambitions for the final Test of his career, Cook added: “It would be fantastic [to bow out on a high], but it would be great for England to win most importantly – 4-1 sounds better than 3-2. If I can play a good innings, that would be fantastic.”

Reece defies ankle injury to see Derbyshire through

Luis Reece reckoned he nearly ran out his runner, Ben Slater, about four times, but his unbeaten 92 was a triumphant end as he braved a swollen ankle

ECB Reporters Network23-May-2018
ScorecardLuis Reece overcame a damaged ankle to put Derbyshire on course for a victory over Durham in the Royal London One Day Cup match at Derby.Reece made his highest List A score of 92 from 107 balls despite batting with a runner – Ben Slater taking up the job – and although former Derbyshire seamer Nathan Rimmington took three quick wickets, it was not enough to save Durham from a third consecutive North Group defeat.The all-rounder also took two wickets and although Tom Latham top scored with 66, Durham’s 272 for 8 was not enough as Gary Wilson with 40 and an unbeaten 42 from Alex Hughes saw Derbyshire home in the final over.Reece said: “The foot’s a bit painful and a bit swollen but touch wood I can get it sorted in time for Friday and be ready to go again. It’s not much fun to bat with a runner, I think I nearly ran Ben out about four times but I wanted to get out there and have a bat.”Derbyshire’s bowlers settled after Ravi Rampaul went for 13 in the second over and Matt Critchley sent down three wides in his first to prevent Durham getting away on a flat pitch.A direct hit by Wayne Madsen from point ran out Cameron Steel in the 11th over and although Graham Clark and Michael Richardson passed 40, they both fell trying to force the pace.Clark was bowled by Critchley and Richardson under-edged a pull at Olivier before Reece’s consistent line forced Will Smith to edge a drive and Stuart Poynter to play across a full length ball.Derbyshire’s disciplined display restricted Latham to only three fours in a 67 ball 50 and although he pulled Olivier for six, Durham’s chance of a challenging total ended when he failed to clear deep midwicket.Chris Rushworth hit Critchley for consecutive sixes and Rimmington pulled Rampaul over the ropes but Durham’s total looked under par on a true pitch in sunny conditions.That was reinforced by the way Ben Slater and Godleman started before Matt Dixon bowled Slater for 24 although he stayed out as a runner for Reece who had been hit on the ankle bowling.Both should have been back in the pavilion before the end of the first powerplay but Poynter spilled an edge off Rushworth when Reece was on six which proved a big moment.Godleman scored a century in the first game at Edgbaston and he reached 50 from 79 balls before Reece completed his half century by sweeping George Harding for his sixth four.Durham sensed an opening when Godleman played around a good length ball from Rimmington who struck again in his next over when Madsen was caught behind and Critchley chopped on three balls later.Reece moved into the 90’s by straight-driving Rushworth for four but in the 40th over, he played on to Harding to leave the game in the balance with Derbyshire needing 81 from the last 10 overs.But Wilson and Hughes played positively to add 80 as Derbyshire sealed a second victory with two balls to spare.

Next Ampadu: Leeds in the race for “explosive” PL star who wants a move

Leeds United have now shown they can compete with the big boys in the Premier League, but can they pick up results against the sides nearer to them in the overall division?

Up next for Daniel Farke’s reinvigorated Whites, after facing off against Manchester City, Chelsea, and Liverpool in quickfire succession, is Brentford away, who are only four points better off than the West Yorkshire outfit, sat in 14th spot.

After that, more tough ties flood the calendar for the relegation-threatened side against Crystal Palace and Sunderland, before Arne Slot’s Reds do battle with Farke’s men back at Anfield to see in the New Year.

It will be more obvious by that point in time whether Leeds can go the distance in their survival aims, as plenty of new signings also begin to be linked with a switch to Elland Road, in preparation for the bumper January transfer window swinging open.

Leeds transfer latest

The Premier League newcomers have splashed the cash in January before, having once splurged a club-record £35.5m on Georginio Rutter back in 2022.

The same over-the-top spending is unlikely to be on the menu this time around, but Farke and Co. have been linked with a move for Hibernian midfielder Josh Mulligan, who continues to impress in Scotland.

Barcelona’s Roony Bardhji has also reportedly caught the eye, but the most tantalising rumour of them all now has them linked with Chelsea reserve talent Tyrique George, according to a fresh report from TEAMTalk.

Sources have allegedly revealed to the site that George is adamant about a permanent move away from Stamford Bridge, amid concerns about his lack of first-team opportunities.

That has generated interest in his services from the likes of Fulham, Everton and Leeds, with the Whites said to be monitoring the exciting Englishman, as they seek out depth in the attacking areas this January.

With goals such as this one put away in the Champions League earlier in the season, George should be able to come into Farke’s camp and stamp his authority, as another discarded Chelsea youngster potentially comes into his own at Elland Road, much like Ethan Ampadu.

Why George can be the next Ampadu

Ampadu would only go on to make 12 unmemorable senior appearances for the Blues before moving on from West London.

Transfer Focus

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

George, at the time of writing, sits on a far heftier 36, but he will still be itching for more consistent senior minutes.

The Welshman would, ultimately, never look back after swapping Stamford Bridge for Elland Road in the summer of 2023, with Ampadu now a Championship-winning midfield star under Farke.

He even had the last laugh against his ex-employers at the start of the month, when his six duels and two tackles won, as per Sofascore, gave Leeds some much-needed grit in the 3-1 victory over Enzo Maresca’s challengers.

George will look at Ampadu’s sharp rise from reserve fodder at Chelsea to leading star at Leeds with an eagerness to follow in his footsteps, with clear bursts of quality in the Blues’ first team picture, already, standing the 19-year-old in good stead to make waves in Farke’s main team, if a move is sealed.

Indeed, analyst Ben Mattinson dubbed the London-born winger “explosive” last summer when he was starting to make strides, while scout Jacek Kulig has also noted George as being “special” when chipping in with goal contributions in the FA Cup, Premier League and Conference League for Maresca’s men.

Games played

36

Minutes played

1601 mins

Goals scored

6

Assists

6

Still, despite having 12 goal contributions next to his name in the senior side in West London, George has been restricted to just four Premier League appearances so far this season, with Leeds perhaps the location that can finally hand him the minutes he longs for.

With one goal and one assist in the top-flight from just one start, George would surely be a worthy back-up option at the very least for Leeds.

But, in time, everything looks in place for George to become a dependable first-team presence under the German, with Ampadu’s patience in the reserve ranks at Chelsea, ultimately rewarded by breaking out in style at Elland Road.

Shades of Klich & Dallas: Farke's Leeds "monster" must now start every week

This Leeds star has become a key man in midfield

ByJoe Nuttall 2 days ago

بعد خطوبته لابنته.. أول تعليق من أحمد سليمان عن أزمة بنتايج مع الزمالك

تحدث أحمد سليمان، عضو مجلس إدارة نادي الزمالك، عن ملف محمود بنتايج، الظهير الأيسر للفريق الذي أنذر النادي بفسخ التعاقد بسبب مستحقاته المتأخرة.

وكانت الفترة الأخيرة شهدت حديث عن دور سليمان في حل الأزمة خاصة بعد خطوبة اللاعب وابنة عضو مجلس الإداراة.

وقال سليمان عبر قناة “إم بي سي مصر”: “مهم أن نفصل الأمور الشخصية عن النادي، فالقصة أنه إنسان مؤدب ومثقف ومحترم ومتعلم، ولم أجد تلك الأخلاق في كثير من الشباب”.

طالع.. بعد أرض أكتوبر.. الزمالك يواجه صدمة جديدة بشأن مصيف مرسى مطروح

وأضاف: “لست مسئولًا عن ملفه مع نادي الزمالك، هناك نظام في النادي ومشرفون وإدارة كرة، وهذا شيء جيد وتم توضيحه من قبل، حاليًا أصحاب القرار باتوا محدودين، وفي وقت سابق كانت الأمور مفتوحة”.

وتابع: “يعيب جون إدوارد عدم حديثه، ولابد كل فترة أن يوضح، ولابد أن يظهر للتوضيح للناس، صحيح أن المال مهم، لكن في الفترة الأولى عملنا حسب الإمكانيات، وتعاقدنا مع عبد الله السعيد وأحمد حمدي وبنتايج وناصر ماهر ومحمد شحاتة”.

وأتم: “المشكلة أن الطموح كان كبيرًا وتم التعاقد مع عدد من اللاعبين بأموال كثيرة، بعدها حدثت أزمة الأرض فأصبح هناك عجز مالي”.

The many moods and tempos of Jaiswal and Gill

Both are versatile batters and they missed out on big scores in Ahmedabad, but they were never going to miss out two Tests in a row

Karthik Krishnaswamy11-Oct-20251:39

‘Jaiswal has to blame himself for the run-out’

A little under an hour of the Delhi Test had elapsed when Yashasvi Jaiswal decided he had had enough of letting Anderson Phillip bowl on his terms. Phillip, at that point, had bowled 5.3 overs and conceded just ten runs.Jaiswal had mostly been away from the strike when Phillip had bowled. He had faced only four balls from him, and shouldered arms to all of them. He had batted watchfully against the other two West Indies seamers as well, and was on 10 off 36 balls. He had left alone 12 of those balls.Now, he decided he was done with all that. Phillip bowled this one full, angled a fair way away from off stump, and may have perhaps expected another leave. Instead, out of seemingly nowhere, came a straight wallop of fearsome wind-up and flat, lethal trajectory. This was no drive with head over the ball; this was an elemental hit with head thrown back. Phillip, following through, was fortunate head was a foot or so wide of the ball’s path.Related

Stats – Gill level with Kohli, Jaiswal only behind Bradman

Jadeja, Kuldeep strike after Gill ton propels India to 518

Everything about that shot, and the passage of play leading up to it, was pure Jaiswal. He can leave every third ball he faces. He can make a stadium sit up with a shot of pure violence. He can bat in all sorts of moods and tempos, often in the same innings, to the point where it becomes impossible to define the kind of batter he is in Test cricket.In one sense, though, it’s very, very easy to define him. Jaiswal is a run-scorer. Send him out with bat in hand, anywhere in the world, against any kind of attack, and you can be pretty sure he’ll find a way to score runs.One of many, many ways. Jaiswal has now gone past 70 on 14 occasions in Test cricket, and those innings have come at strike rates ranging from 40.38 – when he made 84 off 208 balls while attempting to save the MCG Test last year – to 141.17 – when he smashed 72 off 51 balls during India’s push to make victory possible in a heavily rain-affected Test against Bangladesh in Kanpur.Those 14 innings have ticked all but two of the ten strike-rate “decades” from the 40s to the 140s. Only the 120s and 130s are still waiting to be achieved.Over the course of three sessions on Friday and a small fraction of one on Saturday, Jaiswal scored 175 at 67.82, and that strike rate, so close to his career strike rate of 66.33, was an indication of just how comfortable he was on a flat Delhi pitch against a modest West Indies attack, scoring briskly while never looking in a hurry or getting too greedy, batting through a whole day’s play without ever looking weary or seeming to suffer dips in focus.We’ve become so used to this that we almost take it for granted, and forget that he’s not yet 24.2:57

Chopra: Gill destined for greatness

The dismissal, in the second over of day two, came first as a shock. Did he really get out, when 200 – even 300, who knows – seemed within reach? But then it began to make sense. If it had to happen, it had to be a run-out. It had to be that particular kind of run-out. It’s one of Jaiswal’s minor vulnerabilities that he often starts running as soon as his bat meets the ball; if he misjudges how firmly he’s struck the ball or how far it is from a fielder, he’s liable to realise this only when he’s already halfway down the pitch.Jaiswal, in short, was looking like only he could get himself out. Through most of day one, the other mode of dismissal that had seemed vaguely likely was a top edge off an over-eager square cut. He had been out like this in Ahmedabad last week, but he seldom misses a chance to attempt the shot, even when he doesn’t have a lot of room to work with.And it gets him a lot of runs, and quick runs. Against pace, he’s scored 399 runs off 243 balls through his Test career with variants of the cut – cut, late cut, upper cut, ramp, dab, steer, as classified in ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball data – while being dismissed five times. That’s an average of 79.80 and a strike rate of 164.19; so what if he’s achieved all that with a control percentage of just over 71?Those numbers are a small window into Jaiswal’s mind. It’s the mind of a batter who understands percentages, who knows that cutting so frequently can lead to plays-and-misses or edges, but understands that he’ll still be batting next ball if he’s played and missed, and that while top edges might occasionally get him out, the odds suggest they are likelier to send the ball flying over or past the slips cordon if he flashes hard enough.If these are indeed the workings of Jaiswal’s mind, it’s a mind fixated not on batting as a pursuit of technical perfection but on batting as a means of scoring runs.”On Jaiswal, I’ll say he’s very clever in terms of his batting,” Ravindra Jadeja said in his press conference at the end of day two. “He knows which bowler to attack and which bowler to play out. His maturity level is very good. It’s not like he looks to hit every bowler. He has a very good idea of which situation to attack in, and at which time to attack.ESPNcricinfo Ltd”I think it’s very good when a batsman knows what shot he needs to play at what time. I think this has contributed a lot to his success, and the fact that he’s made so many big scores, match after match.”Jaiswal has turned five of his seven Test centuries so far into 150-plus scores, and two of them into doubles. The highly memeable helmet-palm with which he greeted his dismissal in Delhi suggested that 175 was a long way short of the number he had set out to put next to his name when Saturday dawned.It fell to his partner, Shubman Gill, to take on the mantle of insatiable run-hooverer.Gill has always had the smarts to know where his run-scoring opportunities lie in any situation. He was just 20, and only in his third Test, when the then India batting coach Vikram Rathour asked him what his plans were if Australia went short to him after lunch on that magical final day at the Gabba.Here’s Rathour’s recollection of that conversation, from this profile of Gill by Nagraj Gollapudi:”And the kid had a great answer. He said that the end [Mitchell] Starc was bowling, it was a shorter boundary on the leg side. So he said, ‘I’m not going to pull from the other end if they bowl short, but I will pull from the end Starc is bowling if they bowl short, because I’m pretty sure that I can clear this boundary most times. If it’s below my shoulder, I’ll look to play it down, but if it’s up, I’ll look to play it over, and if it’s on this [on] side, I will leave. And if it’s on this [off] side, I will maybe play an uppercut.’ […] I told him, ‘Boss, you have it sorted. So do just that, whatever you want to do.’ He had a lot of clarity [about] what he was looking to do. And with logic – he was not just talking nonsense, he was not bluffing his way.”Shubman Gill and Yashasvi Jaiswal: The mainstays of India’s batting line-up•AFP/Getty ImagesAll that ability and all those smarts, but it took a while for Gill to translate them into consistent run-scoring in Test cricket, which only really began to happen during last year’s five-match home series against England. And it was only this year, in England, that Gill got his first chance to play a full Test series, home or away, on pitches that gave him a chance to think of batting big time and again.In retrospect, it should have surprised no one that he finished that tour with the second-highest bilateral series aggregate by any India batter anywhere, anytime. It’s exactly the kind of thing everyone’s expected from him ever since he was a teenager.For all that, though, he still gives the impression sometimes that he can get bored if the contest isn’t really challenging him. Last week in Ahmedabad, he had been out immediately after reaching his fifty, attempting a reverse-sweep, an echo of his dismissal soon after reaching his hundred in Visakhapatnam last year against England.He’s showing more and more frequently, however, that he can bat in that insatiable Jaiswal way too. He followed Visakhapatnam with the grittiest half-century of his career, a match-winning fourth-innings effort in Ranchi. He followed Leeds this year, where his first-innings dismissal on 147 was one of numerous dismissals of India batters not quite making the bowlers earn their wicket, with a monumental 269 in Birmingham.And now he followed Ahmedabad with a century of ruthless, getting-the-job-done batsmanship. He played his shots, and played them freely because the situation allowed him to, and asked him to, with India building up to a declaration, but he played Shubman Gill shots. He brought out the slog-sweep when the left-arm spinners left the leg-side boundary unprotected. He brought out the back-foot jab either side of point, a shot he nowadays shelves early on if there’s movement for the fast bowlers, but any movement off this day-two Delhi pitch was minimal. He used his feet with aplomb, against spin and medium-pace, and played that pick-up whip over the leg side that he employs so profitably in the shorter formats.1:51

Chopra: WI needed a little more application

Each time he played a shot like this, it seemed less a reaction to the bowling than an expression of what he felt he needed to do at that moment, against a particular bowler who had set a particular field. But he knew exactly whom to take on and whom not to: he scored at above four an over against six of West Indies’ seven bowlers, but just 12 runs off 64 balls from Jomel Warrican, who constantly challenged India’s batters with his deceptive trajectory and the odd instance of square turn.It was the kind of innings Sachin Tendulkar and Mohammad Azharuddin routinely played in home Tests in the 1990s, or that Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman routinely played in the 2000s, or that Cheteshwar Pujara and Virat Kohli routinely played in the period from 2016 to 2019, when India played many of their home Tests on traditional Indian pitches that produced big first-innings totals.India went away from those pitches in the 2021-24 period, with the pressure of World Test Championship points, the fear of draws on flat pitches, and the fear of toss-influenced results like Chennai 2021 pushing them to prepare a succession of square turners in home Tests. After going down 3-0 to New Zealand last year and falling prey to the pitfalls of dustbowls, India are now making an effort, as Gill confirmed before this series, to try and restore the balance between bat and ball in their home pitches.Jaiswal and Gill couldn’t have asked for a better time to be batting in home Tests. They missed out on big scores in Ahmedabad, but they were never going to miss out two Tests in a row.

Who is the leading allrounder in T20Is?

And who is the youngest player to feature in the IPL?

Steven Lynch01-May-2018Is Mujeeb Ur Rahman the youngest overseas player to feature in the IPL? asked Qadir Ahmed from Pakistan
The Afghanistan spinner Mujeeb Ur Rahman was born on March 28, 2001, and so was only 11 days past his 17th birthday when he made his debut for Kings XI Punjab against Delhi Daredevils in Chandigarh on April 8 this year. That doesn’t just make him the youngest overseas player in the IPL (a record formerly held by the Australian allrounder Mitchell Marsh, at 18 years 170 days in 2010), but the youngest from anywhere.Mujeeb took the overall record from Sarfaraz Khan, who was aged 17 years 177 days when he made his IPL debut, for Royal Challengers Bangalore against Chennai Super Kings in Bengaluru in 2015. Four other 17-year-olds have appeared in the IPL: Pradeep Sangwan (for Delhi Daredevils in 2008), Washington Sundar and Rahul Chahar (both for Rising Pune Supergiant in 2017), and Ishan Kishan (Gujarat Lions 2016).The oldest man to appear in the IPL is the Australian spinner Brad Hogg, who was 45 years 92 days old when he played his last match for Kolkata Knight Riders in 2016. Praveen Tambe (43), Muttiah Muralitharan (42), Shane Warne and Adam Gilchrist (41), Sanath Jayasuriya, Rahul Dravid, Azhar Mahmood and Sachin Tendulkar (40) all played when they were over 40 years of age. Tendulkar’s last IPL match, in Mumbai in 2013, came 19 days after his 40th birthday.Is it true that Frank Worrell’s batting average never went below 50 until his final Test? asked Craig Lewis from Barbados
The great West Indian batsman Sir Frank Worrell played 51 Tests, and finished with a batting average of 49.48 after being bowled by Brian Statham for 9 in his final match, at The Oval in 1963. Before that his average had been 50.01.After his first two Tests – against England in 1947-48 – brought innings of 97, 28 not out and 131 not out, Worrell had an average of 256. Not surprisingly it dropped a little after that, but it was still over 70 after 14 matches (by the end of West Indies’ tour of Australia and New Zealand in 1951-52). It remained over 50 almost throughout the rest of his career – but did dip just below that during the first two matches of India’s tour of the Caribbean in 1961-62. A duck in the first Test, in Port-of-Spain, took him to a career-low 49.79. An innings of 58 in the next Test took it back to 49.91, then 77 in Bridgetown got the average back above 50, where it stayed until his final Test, by which time Worrell was 39. For his averages throughout his Test career, click here.The only two players who maintained a batting average of over 50 throughout their Test careers were Herbert Sutcliffe of England, whose lowest was his final mark of 60.73, and Pakistan’s Javed Miandad (a lowest of 51.75).Australia’s 209 for 4 against England last month is the highest innings total in a women’s T20I•AFPWas Australia’s 209 the other day the highest total in a women’s T20 international? asked Jamie Stewart from Canada
Australia’s 209 for 4 against England in Mumbai last month was indeed the highest score in women’s T20Is. The only other total above 200 is South Africa’s 205 for 1 against the Netherlands in Potchefstroom in October 2010. Then comes England’s 199 for 3, to overhaul India’s 198 for 4 in Mumbai last month (six days before Australia’s record). Not surprisingly, that match, which featured 397 runs in all, had the highest aggregate for any women’s T20I.I wondered who the leading allrounder was in men’s T20 internationals – has anyone yet scored 500 runs and taken 50 wickets? asked David Powell from England
At the moment there are six men who have reached both 500 runs and 50 wickets in T20Is. The man nearest to the 1000-run/100-wicket double is Shahid Afridi: he’s the leading wicket-taker overall, with 97, and also scored 1405 runs – but he played the last of his 98 matches in March 2016.The others to have done it are Dwayne Bravo of West Indies (1142 runs and 52 wickets), Mohammad Nabi of Afghanistan (961 runs and 61 wickets), Ireland’s Kevin O’Brien (702 runs and 54 wickets), Thisara Perera of Sri Lanka (959 runs and 50 wickets), and Bangladesh’s Shakib Al Hasan (1237 runs and 75 wickets)Will the ECB’s new 100-ball competition require a whole new set of statistical records? asked Martin Sanders from England
I imagine it will: I can almost see some of the technical boffins in ESPNcricinfo’s offices scratching their heads about it even now, especially how to cope with the idea of a ten-ball over. (Bowlers everywhere are presumably doing the same.)I suppose it might be possible to lump the figures together with the T20 ones, perhaps calling it “short-form” or some similar name. The existing List A figures, after all, include matches played over a variety of innings lengths. In England alone there have been regular competitions over 40, 45, 50, 55 and 60 overs (and even 65 in the earliest days of the Gillette Cup), and all these are treated as one format for stats purposes.

Emery must drop 4/10 Aston Villa star who had fewer touches than Martinez

Aston Villa succumbed to their first defeat of the year in all competitions away at AS Monaco as the French hosts beat Unai Emery’s men by a single goal.

In truth, it wasn’t the most exciting Champions League spectacle but Monaco got over the line in the end to clinch three points in Europe’s most esteemed competition courtesy of an early Wilfried Singo header.

Aston Villa manager UnaiEmery

Emery will be praying this unwanted defeat doesn’t knock his side’s confidence heading back into Premier League action shortly, with a large portion of his first-team personnel underperforming on Tuesday night.

What went wrong for Aston Villa vs Monaco

It was a flat performance overall from the Villans who can play swashbuckling football when at the peak of their powers. After all, they have already beaten Bayern Munich in this season’s edition of the Champions League.

But, it was a tired showing from the majority of the Villa attackers in the principality, with Ollie Watkins unable to get on the scoresheet to gift his side a foothold in the contest.

On another day, the England international would fire home a chance like the one above after some excellent Emiliano Buenda trickery found him in space, but it wasn’t to be on a night where that was his only effort on the Monaco net surprisingly.

Away from the misfiring number 11, it could be argued Morgan Rogers also had a quiet night by his high standards, with only 33% of his dribbles successfully pulled off.

But, there is one player that hasn’t yet been named that put in another yet dire display for Emery’s men, with the 2024/25 season not being kind to him whatsoever after a blistering campaign prior.

Chalkboard

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

Leon Bailey's performance in numbers

It was always going to be difficult for the Jamaican attacker to live up to his 2023/24 numbers, with the ex-Bayer Leverkusen winger helping himself to a stunning 19 goal contributions in the Premier League alone.

But, nobody would have predicted how sharp of a decline Leon Bailey would take in such a short amount of time, with the out-of-sorts 27-year-old registering just three goal contributions from 18 league games this season, as his poor form domestically begins to be apparent in his forgettable showings in the Champions League.

Bailey’s numbers vs Monaco

Minutes played

57

Goals scored

0

Assists

0

Touches

20

Accurate passes

8/11

Shots

3

Big chances missed

2

Total duels won

1/3

Stats by Sofascore

Only managing 20 touches of the ball from his lacklustre 57 minutes on the pitch, that was fewer than goalkeeper Emi Martinez (41), which only goes to show the forward’s lack of influence on proceedings.

Bailey did manage to get himself into some promising areas for the away side on occasion, but two big chances would go begging for the 5 foot 10 forward to try and steer his side to a confident win in Europe.

With only eight accurate passes registered too, on top of just one duel being won from three attempted, it wasn’t a great shock to see Bailey hooked just shy of the hour mark as Villa’s first alteration, with Emery now left to ponder whether the 27-year-old should have his game-time cut back in the top-flight.

Handed a 4/10 rating by Birmingham World journalist Charlie Haffenden, it could well be time for Emery to ditch his winger and unleash Donyell Malen down the right instead.

The ex-Borussia Dortmund man is no doubt eager to make an impact having cost his new side around £21m to obtain last week.

Whatever side is fielded next, Emery will be looking for a response after this drab evening in Monaco saw his side’s unbeaten run in 2025 come to a disappointing end.

A better deal than Malen: Aston Villa close in on signing an "elite talent"

Aston Villa are closing in on signing a defender…

By
Ross Kilvington

Jan 21, 2025

Tottenham now in pole position to sign "super" £30m Premier League forward

Tottenham Hotspur are now seen as the main contenders to sign one Premier League forward, with a January transfer update now coming from a very reliable media source this week.

Tottenham in market to sign new attacker before January deadline day

Having fell short in their pursuit of PSG outcast Randal Kolo Muani, who ended up putting pen to paper on a straight loan to Juventus instead, Spurs boss Ange Postecoglou is still searching for a new forward.

Tottenham and Levy could now hijack Man Utd talks to sign £30m defender

Chairman Daniel Levy has been tipped to swoop in.

1

By
Emilio Galantini

Jan 21, 2025

Tottenham were in contact with PSG over signing Kolo Muani early last week (Fabrizio Romano), and were attempting to sway him with a move to north London until the very last minute. However, Juve proved a very tempting option for the Frenchman, with Spurs now returning to the drawing board.

The Premier League strugglers, who are yet to win a single top flight game this calendar year, languish 15th in the table and have suffered defeat on 12 separate occasions in the league alone already – so the under-fire Postecoglou quite simply needs inspiration from somewhere.

Tottenham are coping with vast injuries to first-team players right now, hamstringing Postecoglou’s squad, and it is safe to say that one signing in £12.5 million goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky won’t be good enough come deadline day on February 3rd.

Tottenham’s next five Premier League fixtures

Date

Leicester City (home)

January 26

Brentford (away)

February 2

Man United (home)

February 16

Ipswich Town (home)

February 22

Man City (home)

February 26

The Lilywhites are reportedly working hard on getting the required, quality fresh faces through the door before time runs out. Spurs remain in the market for a new attacker who can provide an injection of direct threat, with Postecoglou recently offered Lyon star Rayan Cherki (GiveMeSport).

Tottenham are also believed to be eyeing a move for Nice’s Evan Guessand, while other reported targets are emerging as we approach the business end of January.

Tottenham now the "biggest competitor" for Southampton starlet Tyler Dibling

One player who fits the mould of a potential Spurs signing – young, homegrown and good value – is Southampton forward Tyler Dibling.

The versatile 18-year-old has been a mainstay at St. Mary’s Stadium this term, scoring four goals and assisting two others in a wide variety of attacking roles. He could suit Postecoglou down to the ground, and Sky Germany’s Florian Plettenberg reports that they’re serious contenders for Dibling’s signature.

Indeed, Tottenham are the “biggest competitors” to sign Dibling, who Plettenberg dubs a “super talent”, but face stiff competition from RB Leipzig who are pushing for his services.

He is valued at around £30 million by the Saints, according to other reports, so Spurs would still have to make a significant mid-season investment despite being current favourites.

تشكيل برشلونة المتوقع أمام فيسيل كوبي اليوم وديًا

يخوض فريق برشلونة، بقيادة المدرب هانز فليك، مباراة ودية ظهر يوم الأحد، في إطار الاستعدادات للموسم الجديد المرتقب، 2025/26، الذي سينطلق بشكل رسمي في شهر أغسطس المقبل.

ويلتقي برشلونة الإسباني مع نظيره فيسيل كوبي الياباني على ملعب “كوبه المنزلي”، في أول الاختبارات الودية لكتيبة هانز فليك هذا الصيف.

طالع | تشكيل برشلونة أمام فيسيل كوبي وديًا.. ظهور صفقة جديدة

ولم يخض برشلونة أي مباراة ودية حتى الآن، حيث سيبدأ الجولة الآسيوية بمباراة اليوم، قبل لقائي سول ودايجو.

وشهدت قائمة برشلونة المستدعاة لخوض تلك الجولة الودية تواجد الثنائي الجديد ماركوس راشفورد وخوان جارسيا، إلى جانب الوافد الشاب روني باردجي.

في حين تم استبعاد الحارس مارك أندريه تير شتيجن الذي سيخضع لعملية جراحية في الظهر، وكذلك أرويول روميو وسط تكهنات مستمرة حول مستقبله.

كما استبعد هانز فليك اللاعب باو فيكتور، الذي رحل عن برشلونة بشكل رسمي أمس الأول لينضم إلى سبورتينج براجا. تشكيل برشلونة المتوقع أمام فيسيل كوبي اليوم

حراسة المرمى: خوان جارسيا.

خط الدفاع: جول كوندي، رونالد أراوخو، كوبارسي، بالدي.

خط الوسط: فرينكي دي يونج، بيدري.

خط الوسط الهجومي: لامين يامال، داني أولمو، رافينها.

خط الهجوم: روبرت ليفاندوفسكي.

ويمكنكم مطالعة مواعيد ونتائج جميع المباريات لحظة بلحظة عبر مركز المباريات من هنا.

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