INEOS fed up with £6m-a-year Man Utd star and now lining up deal for 'new Xabi Alonso'

A rising star who has been called a “young Xabi Alonso” is “one to watch” in the upcoming transfer windows as Manchester United seek to reinforce their midfield.

Man Utd set to replace Casemiro in 2026

Casemiro has enjoyed some improved form of late, rolling back the years and playing an important role in the 2-1 win away to Liverpool. It looks almost certain that the Brazilian will depart United at the end of this season, however, with the 33-year-old out of contract at that point and unlikely to be offered an extension.

Despite showing flashes of his former self, the Real Madrid legend has been criticised heavily throughout his time at United, including by Jamie Carragher, who famously told him to “leave the football before the football leaves you”.

Assuming Casemiro does move on for a new challenge, a top-quality younger replacement will be needed, in terms of someone who can provide a similar level of expertise in front of the defence and give Ruben Amorim midfield balance, allowing Bruno Fernandes to shine.

Chelsea midfielder Andrey Santos has been linked with a move to United, with the 21-year-old reportedly wanting to emulate Casemiro’s career, while Benfica ace Florentino Luis has also been backed to come in once his loan spell at Burnley reaches its conclusion next summer.

Man Utd eyeing move for Bayern Munich star

According to Caught Offside‘s Mark Brus, Bayern Munich midfielder Aleksandar Pavlovic will be “one to watch” at Manchester United and Sir Jim Ratcliffe next summer, as they do not believe Manuel Ugarte is good enough to succeed Casemiro.

“United see Pavlovic as one option to replace Casemiro. Manuel Ugarte is also not seen as a long-term option. A move in January is unlikely, but he’ll be one to watch next summer.”

Bayern Munich'sAlphonsoDaviescelebrates scoring their fifth goal Bayern Munich's Aleksandar Pavlovic

Ugarte makes £6,240,000-a-year at United, but this would certainly be a worthy upgrade – Pavlovic is an enormous talent who has already become a key man for one of the best teams in Europe at the age of just 21, already making 65 appearances for Bayern.

The German has even been compared to former Liverpool and Real Madrid star Alonso by Bayern president Herbert Hainer, which is high praise.

Whether Bayern are willing to let such a prized asset in Pavlovic leave the club in 2026 is certainly up for debate, though, so it won’t be easy for United to entice him to the club.

A return to Champions League football arguably feels like a must if the Red Devils are to have any chance of signing him, but it is clear why he would be a leading target to replace Casemiro.

The next Giggs: Man Utd's academy star is "already better than PL players"

Manchester United have yet another incredible young gem in the hands of Ruben Amorim.

By
Ethan Lamb

Oct 24, 2025

Pavlovic already plays with a level of maturity beyond his years, both in and out of possession, averaging 1.5 tackles per game and completing 95.2% of his passes in the Bundesliga so far this season.

Canadian Little Leaguer Trolls Mets’ Juan Soto in Interview: ‘Kind of Overrated’

Sometimes, little leaguers know best.

Canada's Misha Lee recently joined ESPN for an interview during the 2025 Little League World Series and dropped a savage one-liner about Mets star Juan Soto that's going viral.

Canada is advancing in the LLWS after beating Australia, 12-0, in a statement win on Sunday. Lee, one of the members of Vancouver's Little Mountain, was asked about the possibility of meeting Soto at some point during the Little League World Series. He appeared to give a little smirk before answering:

"Eh, he's kind of overrated." Lee added that Soto was no "Cal Raleigh."

Watch that funny interview moment below:

Safe to say many Yankees fans would agree with the kid.

EFL expert "pretty surprised" by latest Southampton manager update

An EFL expert has been left “pretty surprised” at a Southampton manager claim he has heard from St Mary’s.

Southampton manager latest on Tonda Eckert

After parting ways with Will Still at the beginning of November, Sport Republic have been on the hunt for a new permanent Saints boss.

However, no manager has arrived in the two weeks since Still’s sacking, with interim boss Tonda Eckert recording successive Championship wins over QPR and Sheffield Wednesday.

Eckert has already come in for praise from Southampton star Finn Azaz, and as time has gone on, there has been more speculation over the 32-year-old landing the job on a full-time basis.

There have been claims that Eckert is set to be given the Southampton job permanently, whereas reports elsewhere have claimed he will get the next three Championship fixtures to increase his chances of landing the role.

Southampton’s next 3 Championship fixtures

Date

Charlton Athletic vs Southampton

22nd November

Southampton vs Leicester City

25th November

Millwall vs Southampton

29th November

Meanwhile, Southampton fan pundit Ray Hunt stated that supporters “want to see an experienced manager” come in.

“Sport Republic have appointed five permanent mangers in their three full seasons in charge. During that period, they have overseen two relegations from the Premier League, and one promotion with their only success, Russell Martin, but failed to give him the tools needed to succeed in the top flight.

“Moving forward, fans will want to see an experienced manager, who’s widely respected with a clear structure. We cannot repeat mistakes from the past. It is a huge task they simply have to get right. Take your time, give Tonda time in that interim, but ultimately make the right decision. The fans won’t tolerate another failure.”

Sport Republic appointing Eckert on a full-time basis would get pundits and fans talking, and it has already done just that.

Expert reacts to Southampton claim on appointing Eckert

Reacting to reports of Southampton looking set to give Eckert the permanent job, EFL expert George Elek admitted to the Not The Top 20 Podcast that he would be “pretty surprised” if that materialises.

Eckert, who plays a 3-4-2-1 system, is on course to be in the dugout at The Valley unless something drastic happens, and he’s already surpassed Still in winning back-to-back second tier games.

Their own Clement: Southampton could hire "world-class" Eckert replacement

Greatest Tests: India's one-wicket epic vs NZ's four-run heist

Laxman playing the last-action hero in Mohali, or a stunning New Zealand fightback in Abu Dhabi? Pick between two thrillers as we begin to identify The Greatest Test of the 21st century

Alagappan Muthu02-May-2025Update: This poll has ended. The IND-AUS 2010 Mohali Test moves into the round of 16.

India’s one-wicket epic vs Australia – Mohali, 2010

Test cricket moves men. Even stoic ones like VVS Laxman, who once withstood the world’s best team for a full day’s play, but here lost his cool with just about seconds on the clock. A victory that had seemed so unlikely – India were eight down with 92 runs still to get – one that required him to strain so hard he hurt his back and needed a runner – was within their grasp. Laxman had added 81 with the No. 10 Ishant Sharma before Ben Hilfenhaus struck, leaving Australia one wicket from a 1-0 lead in the series. Then the No. 11 Pragyan Ojha randomly wandered out of his crease, opening himself up to being run out. Laxman was driven to a curse word. For the entire fourth innings, he had denied Australia. Strong, firm, unmoved, and yet scoring at an extremely brisk pace. Here he broke. India could have lost this game by five runs and it still would have been a classic. In the end, they won it by one wicket and Australia’s nemesis was unbeaten on 73 off 79 balls.

NZ’s four-run heist vs Pakistan – Abu Dhabi, 2018

No one knew when they were eating lunch on the fourth day in Abu Dhabi that the first domino had fallen. Pakistan went in 130 for 4 chasing 176 to win. They wouldn’t get there. They wouldn’t get there because a debutant left-arm spinner from New Zealand would bring them down like a house of cards.Ajaz Patel has spent his career doing unimaginable things – he’s picked up 10 wickets in an innings, he’s helped New Zealand beat India in India 3-0 – but this was where it all started. At 171 for 9, and with Azhar Ali still out there, Pakistan had hope. Then Kane Williamson remembered that he had a left-arm spinner in his ranks and that left-arm spinners have always troubled Azhar. It was a gamble – the kind that will get better with each retelling – because it worked. New Zealand began this Test in a way that made sense. Getting all out for 153 on a spinning pitch and giving up a first-innings lead of 74. Everything they did from that point on, however, made people wonder if what happened could even be real.

Mariners Name Game 1 Starter for ALCS vs. Blue Jays After 15-Inning Marathon

For the Mariners, winning the longest winner-take-all game in MLB history was one thing. Winning a game 48 hours later will be quite another.

During its surreal 3–2 victory over the Tigers on Friday to close out the American League Division Series, Seattle burned through seven pitchers en route to its first American League Championship Series since 2001. On Sunday, the Mariners will head east to open the ALCS against the Blue Jays.

Seattle announced Saturday that Bryce Miller—its starter in Game 4 of the ALDS—would start Game 1.

Miller, 27, pitched 4 1/3 innings against Detroit on Wednesday. He gave up two earned runs on four hits while striking out two, taking a no-decision in a 9–3 defeat.

The Texas A&M product struggled this regular season after a good 2024. In 18 starts, he went 4-6 with a 5.68 ERA and 74 strikeouts in 90 1/3 innings. He will oppose Toronto pitcher Kevin Gausman.

If Mariners fans have heard it once, they've heard it a thousand times: Seattle is the only MLB franchise never to have reached the World Series.

Indian and Pakistani players go about their business, game faces on, blinkers in place

There is a clear lack of camaraderie between the boys from the two teams ahead of the first semi-final

Sreshth Shah in Potchefstroom03-Feb-2020Potchefstroom’s Sports Village. It was Australia’s base when they won the 2003 World Cup. That’s where the Spain football team was based when they won the 2010 World Cup. It’s the residence of choice for elite South African athletes who wish to train away from the hustle and bustle of the city. The facilities are state-of-the-art and the buffets are calorie-counted. It’s also where India and Pakistan are camped at the moment, ahead of their Under-19 World Cup semi-final.The two teams met in the 2018 semi-final as well, in New Zealand, where Pakistan’s players didn’t miss a single chance to spend time with Rahul Dravid, India’s then coach, and pick his brains. This time, though, feels different. While “it’s just another game” and “we don’t focus on the opponent” ring out from every corner, it does seem like the two sets of players are on edge.Take Yashasvi Jaiswal, India’s left-hand opener. When asked where he thinks the game will be decided, the usually chatty Jaiswal says, “I don’t want to tell you that.”For Haider Ali, the Pakistan opening batsman who Ian Bishop has called “the next Babar Azam”, a simple question about what’s been most attractive about India’s playing style so far draws a similarly guarded response: “I’ll tell you after the game. How can I tell you right now?”A senior team support staffer, sensing the stress, asks Haider to answer the question if he can. “India’s top order,” he says in his second take.The mood is completely different where the two other semi-finalists, staying at the same hotel, are concerned. The Bangladesh players are to be seen by the swimming pool, waving to the New Zealand boys who are passing by. At the table-tennis room, one group of Bangladesh boys wait patiently for the New Zealanders to finish their game before they get a go.The India and Pakistan teams have no time for such frivolity.

Results are one thing, rivalries are another, but there are few sights in world cricket that warm the cockles of the heart more than Indian and Pakistan players smiling together, talking to each other in a mix of Hindi and Urdu, shutting out all the noise outside

After their training session, Rohail Nazir, the Pakistan captain, and left-arm spinner Arish Ali Khan were lounging near the pool, telling this correspondent about their day-trip to Sun City. They were cracking jokes about their other team-mates, being the teenaged boys they are. Laughter rang out, fist-bumps were exchanged, but in a matter of a second, things changed.In the distance were the Indian trio of Shubhang Hegde, Siddhesh Veer and Ravi Bishnoi, carrying their laundry baskets from the lobby to their rooms. Nazir and Arish stopped talking, waiting for them to pass, before resuming the conversation. But the flow of the chat never really got back, and we went our separate paths soon.Nazir had revealed that, earlier in the day, he had tried to chat with some of the India boys at breakfast. While he was sandwiched between two India boys in the queue for the food, he said he had looked and smiled at some of them. But, according to him, he received nothing in return. Is it fair to read too much into this? Perhaps not, but it had affected Nazir for sure.Later, as the sun began to set, at the north end of the swimming pool stood a few Indian players talking to each other, on the south end were the Pakistan players. In between, the great divide.Closer to dinner time, the Pakistan players congregated near the reception – which is very tiny, by the way – to head out to honour an invitation from a local resident, while members of the Indian team sat in the sofas. Both sets stared intently at the TV screen that was showing the Tottenham Hotspur v Manchester City game. One Pakistan player asked another, [which teams are these)? It was, maybe, simpler to stare at the TV screen than to allow your eyes to wander around the lobby.It’s a well-established fact that the Indians prefer to tread on the side of caution while choosing their words, especially during a world event. No other side is under as much of the spotlight as they are, after all. They were stoic most of the way, resembling men on a mission, focusing on the goal of defending their World Cup crown. For them, the Pakistan game is simply a stepping stone towards the ultimate objective, and that was evident in the way went about their day, blinkers on, not letting anything distract them.Such non-interactions will keep taking place till the teams walk out for Tuesday’s toss, but one hopes that goes away once the contest ends. Results are one thing, rivalries are another, but there are few sights in world cricket that warm the cockles of the heart more than Indian and Pakistan players smiling together, talking to each other in a mix of Hindi and Urdu, shutting out all the noise outside.There’s one final session of training remaining for both teams, but more crucially, there’s one final night to spend within close quarters. Whether all of these are tactics or nerves – from both sides – is difficult to say, but it’s clear that neither team is ready to remove their game-face masks. As semi-final time comes closer, the pot continues to simmer.

How are cricketers keeping fit in lockdown?

Some players have been affected more than others, and some have been more creative than the rest

Matt Roller and Danyal Rasool19-May-2020It is 5:30am. The birds are chirping more than usual, and the air, in a city whose population now exceeds ten million, is markedly fresher than it was until recently. In the heart of Chennai, R Ashwin, who has just woken up, is keen to enjoy the dawning day. Along with his younger daughter, an early riser like him, he heads up to the terrace.Their terrace doubles as a home fitness centre and an organic garden. While his daughter listens to music, Ashwin gets to work on the cycling machine and weights. By the time they are done, his wife and older daughter are up. With his parents also living in the same house, loneliness is unlikely to afflict Ashwin. Life in confinement has been, in his own words, “idyllic”.Not everyone is coping in lockdown with that sort of level-headedness. Nor do most cricketers have the resources to maintain the kind of fitness their job demands.In Pakistan, strength and conditioning coach Yasir Malik speaks about the challenges of keeping on top of players’ online fitness tests. “We needed a system that not only gauged their fitness levels,” Malik says, “but took into account the limited resources of the players, something that’s a problem for many of our players. That means limitations in terms of access to quality gym equipment, good training facilities and even the diet they need to follow. Above all, we need to ascertain whatever system we bring in ensures they maintain the professionalism that would be necessary in ordinary fitness tests.”In England, confirmation of a start date for the resumption of cricket cannot come soon enough. “Ideally we would want anywhere between four to six weeks’ training, but it depends a bit on the format we go into,” explains Rob Ahmun, the ECB’s strength and conditioning lead. “In Test cricket, if we’re looking at the bowlers, for example, it will take anywhere between six to eight weeks to build up enough volume in their bowling loads before they’re appropriately prepped to go and play. They can’t go from nothing to bowling 40 overs in a two-week period – that’s going to be a recipe for disaster.

“If you don’t have that end goal, then you feel like the training is a bit aimless, a bit pointless. You don’t know how to time that intensity as well”James Anderson

“At the same time, T20 poses a challenge because the intensity is so much higher: we know from our GPS data that players sprint more frequently [in T20], that the distances of their sprints are longer, and the time between their sprints is a lot less. You can’t have a two-week build-up period between sprinting once or twice a week to playing in a T20I – the jump is too high.”Players who were hoping to return from injury face setbacks. In England’s case, Rory Burns and Jofra Archer were looking to play early-season County Championship fixtures to ease themselves back towards fitness. Instead, they have both been left frustrated.”We need Jofra to be back bowling again, so as soon as we get the nod, we can start building up his bowling loads,” Ahmun says. “For Rory with his ankle, we need to progress his running to get up towards match intensity. It’s definitely posed a challenge – when we set rehab schedules and timetables, we factor in a building period of playing second-team cricket and being gradually exposed to the demands of international cricket, so that we know when they come back, they’re ready not just to play but to perform. There’s a big difference between the two.”ALSO READ: Space constraints could hamper Indian players’ training – John GlosterEquipment has been a problem for some cricketers. At one extreme, Andre Russell has been able to use the nets and bowling machine in his back garden to keep in shape, regularly posting Instragam videos of his training sessions with close friend Jermaine Blackwood. At the other, England batsman Keaton Jennings – often used as a medium-pace option in county cricket – found himself unable to follow the bowling drills given to him: he has no cricket or tennis balls in his apartment in Manchester. “I’ve scoured the house and I don’t have any tennis balls, only golf balls,” Jennings told the Lancashire Hot Pod. “I’ll have to get a potato out or something.”These constraints are magnified depending on lockdown restrictions, which vary significantly in different parts of the world. In the UK, for example, an hour of outdoor exercise a day had been permitted, allowing for runs outdoors; this has since been relaxed to unlimited exercise. But in India, the public were ordered to stay at home without exception. In Pakistan, parks and recreational centres across the country have been closed. While that is no major concern for players with home gyms or outdoor space, it is difficult for those stuck in small apartments.0:40

The PCB’s online fitness tests

“The physical constraints that the Indian players are now having seems to be a lot greater than that of the guys in say, South Africa, Australia or the UK, because space is an incredible constraint here,” Rajasthan Royals physio John Gloster told ESPNcricinfo in March. “I’ve seen some fantastic footage coming out of the players in the UK where they’re in their own gyms and they’ve got lots of space, and I think the Indian boys are going to be perhaps at a physical disadvantage there.”In England, most counties managed to split equipment from their gyms to their squad before the lockdown was imposed, but with the vast majority of players now on furlough, their contact with their clubs has been limited. Instead, the onus is on the individual knowing that they will be expected to be in shape when they arrive for the first day of training, whenever that may be: at Leicestershire, for example, players have been told that the start-of-season fitness tests will take place on their first day back.For centrally contracted players, resuming training will typically involve a day or two at the National Performance Centre at Loughborough, but that will be difficult to achieve while adhering to social-distancing guidelines. Instead, it is hoped that one-on-one sessions at county grounds might be possible before the end of May.ALSO READ: Video fitness tests for locked-down Pakistan playersIn Pakistan, meanwhile, the PCB wants to ensure centrally contracted players are able to have their fitness monitored over the lockdown. Players are being tested via video chat services and scheduled phone calls.”We observe six players at any one time,” Malik said to the PCB website. Players are told what the technique of the push-ups, sit-ups and other exercises needs to be; they meet international standards. We carry out a number of other tests – chin-ups, standing broad jumps, burpees, Bulgarian squats, reverse planks and the rest. For the yo-yo test, if someone can get to a park, well and good. If that is not an option, then they can use the street in front of their house. If that’s not convenient, they can use their roof. The monitoring equipment we have will take into account all these factors. The ultimate target is to make someone run.”The home-remedy feel to these stopgap solutions sits somewhat awkwardly with the high-performance culture of modern cricket. When the PCB conducted fitness tests on April 18, Sohaib Maqsood’s had to be interrupted when the glass top of a table shattered and pierced his knee. While it is unclear what precipitated the accident, it isn’t surprising that it happened to Maqsood rather than Russell or Ashwin.

“They can’t go from nothing to bowling 40 overs in a two-week period – that’s going to be a recipe for disaster”Rob Ahmun, England strength and conditioning lead

Even within the Pakistan side, there will be enormous variation in the inconvenience players face. A few weeks ago, Babar Azam posted a video of him working out in a room that appeared to have been designated specifically as his workout space. It is hard to imagine, say, Naseem Shah, having similar access to equipment and physical space at this nascent stage of his career.Physiotherapist Andrew Leipus, who worked with the Indian national side, as well as a number of T20 franchises, made the point in starker terms. “I saw a picture on Facebook of Chris Lynn training in his garage, and he looks sensational,” he says. “He’s training very, very hard, but there are guys in smaller towns in Pakistan, and they won’t have anywhere near those facilities. This is happening all around the cricketing world, make no mistake. The guys who have access to high-quality sports science, sports medicine and support staff are probably going to be better off than those who don’t.”Despite the limitations, Leipus points out, “the ability to communicate has never been better, with WhatsApp, Skype and Zoom calls. It’s not ideal. But everybody’s in the same position at the moment. The main concern is that guys don’t drift and become Netflix couch potatoes. They’ve got to maintain a certain level of fitness. It doesn’t have to be specific to cricket. Athletes train very hard to achieve a certain level of fitness in strength, flexibility, aerobic endurance, all those parameters. You take the stimulus away and the body, being a very, very lazy machine, will drop off to the next level of stimulus, which is nothing.”Players fail fitness tests even when access to facilities isn’t a problem. Stress injuries, which strength and conditioning coaches spend their careers trying to reduce, continue to happen, often because a player may not have hit the fitness goals their coaches expect of them. Not all cricketers are similarly wired; some need a coach constantly in their ear, and it is easy to imagine those players emerging from lockdown significantly less primed for elite competition.”The research tells us if you can do one or two high-intensity training sessions a week – and that could be anything from shuttle runs down your driveway or a stationary bike – you are doing well,” says Leipus. “If they’ve got a pool, they could do sprints in the water. You can do body-weight exercises like squats or lunges, and do lots of reps.Some cricketers, like Ollie Pope, have turned their garages into ad hoc workout spaces•Getty Images”That’s only half the battle, though. The other half is when they do come back, they should ramp up their training gradually. They mustn’t overdo it. That spike in stress or load to the body will put you at very high risk of getting injuries. Those that don’t have the more contemporary sports-science controls and advice, or access to guys who can help programme their return workloads, you’re going to see a spike in soft-tissue injuries. Hamstrings, shoulders, calves, and lower back problems.”* * *”I’m someone who needs aims and guidelines for my mind, to motivate me,” Stuart Broad told James Anderson in a recent Instagram Live Chat.”If you don’t have that end goal, then you feel like the training is a bit aimless, a bit pointless,” Anderson replied. “You don’t know how to time that intensity, as well.””I just bought off Amazon a little net – not a cricket net, just a little net to put by the hedge, but I don’t know whether to keep bowling a little bit,” Broad continued.ALSO READ: England set to resume training as ECB lay groundwork for West Indies Tests“At 21 or 22, if we went eight weeks without bowling, it probably wouldn’t be an issue. But I just feel at my age, our age, if I go six or seven weeks without getting the load through the bones in the body, I just don’t know how I’ll react when I want to get bowling again… I’m trying to tick over as much as I can, so that if we get a nod this summer to bowl and train together as a group, I don’t feel way behind. Although whatever anyone does, we know that it’s going to take a few weeks to get anywhere near match fitness, because bowling is such a unique thing.”The absence of a clear start date has been a common challenge. After the IPL’s initial postponement by a month, players were unsure how likely the tournament was to go ahead, yet they felt that had to train towards that date. Even as it became clear that it would be pushed back further, players felt the need to state publicly that they were training for a mid-April start – though they privately admitted that was not the case.”Goal-setting is critical in sports psychology,” says Leipus. “And if you don’t know what that end goal is, it’s very hard to set those small goals on the way to a big goal.

“The main concern is that guys don’t drift and become Netflix couch potatoes. They’ve got to maintain a certain level of fitness. It doesn’t have to be specific to cricket”Andrew Leipus, physiotherapist

“I do think it’s worth saying these guys earn millions of dollars so I would just tell them to suck it up. That’s their job; they have to do their training every day, and they have to listen to their sports staff. They can set smaller goals. There’s an opportunity to work on weaknesses. Say one guy’s got a weakness with regards to shoulder strength. The fitness trainer can say, ‘We’re going to test you in four weeks, and get you up to the requisite parameters.'”There is one positive aspect to the lockdown: rest. The most recent edition of the ‘s global workload survey found that Joe Root had played 81 days of international cricket between October 2018 and September 2019; several others spent well over two months on the field for their countries. Including domestic cricket, Marnus Labuschagne spent 129 days on the pitch out of 365, and plenty of the balance training or travelling. Only three weeks into the lockdown, Virat Kohli said to Kevin Pietersen on their Instagram Live chat that he had never spent so long in the same place as his wife Anushka Sharma.”If you look at some of the England guys,” say Ahmun, “they would have got back from Sri Lanka [the tour was postponed mid-way in March] and then gone straight out to the IPL, and if they weren’t in the Test team, they’d have been in the PSL after the white-ball series in South Africa [in February]. For some of them, this is probably the biggest break that they’ve had for a number of years. We will get some benefits from that, from the mental perspective, of not having to get up and play at the highest level every morning, and spending time with families instead. Any kind of break that they get is a bit of a blessing in disguise.”Players have used the break to find ways to lighten the mood of their training. Ben Stokes and Paul Collingwood – England’s assistant coach – spent the early weeks of lockdown filming their attempts to beat each other in the “Bring Sally Up” challenge, which involves slow press-ups in time with the lyrics of the Moby song “Flower”. Collingwood took an early lead, but Stokes had soon managed to get through the full three and a half minutes.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Ben Stokes (@stokesy) on Apr 20, 2020 at 11:33am PDT

Mayank Agarwal’s partner Aashita has accompanied him in home workouts, while Jos Buttler’s wife Louise had half of his England team-mates joining her pilates classes on Instagram in the early weeks of the lockdown. Scotland keeper-batsman Matthew Cross’ golf trick shots and Somerset legspinner Max Waller’s teabag challenges might be less relevant to their fitness regimes, but have continued to keep their hand-eye coordination active.The flip side of this break, though, is that when cricket does return, the calendar will be busier than ever. New Zealand, for example, faced a jammed summer schedule even before Covid-19, with five Tests, nine ODIs and 18 T20Is, plus the T20 World Cup, between October 2020 and March 2021. Throw in the possibility of a delayed tour of Europe and the Caribbean immediately after, and there will not be a moment’s rest.This further raises the risk of fatigue injuries. “When everything opens up, everyone will want to train every day,” Leipus worries. “And the body’s just not going to be able to recover in time to adapt to those new loads because it doesn’t have the fitness.”With different countries currently at varying stages of the pandemic, the only guarantee is that uncertainty is here for the foreseeable future. While in England, Prime Minister Boris Johnson believes the peak of the pandemic has passed, the numbers have been rising in India, which remains in cautious lockdown.The deep-rooted inequalities in world cricket are only likely to be exacerbated by the pandemic, but it remains important not to lose sight of a bigger picture that is as grim as it is unpredictable. Ashwin may have a lot more use for his terrace and Russell his bowling machine, while Jennings continues to scramble for cricket balls, and cricketers in Pakistan look for empty side-streets and abandoned rooftops they can use.

England's seam stocks: Who's up and who's down ahead of West Indies decider?

England have so far played two different pace attacks and are expected to rotate throughout the summer

Andrew Miller21-Jul-2020Excluding the ubiquitous Ben Stokes, England have used two completely different seam attacks in their first two Tests of the summer, and with four more Tests to come in the next five weeks, there’s sure to be a further shaking-up of the resources. But how does the current pecking order look with the West Indies series tied at 1-1? Stuart Broad (6 wkts @ 18.00)Words and deeds collided in some style in Manchester, as Broad channelled his righteous indignation after being dropped for the opening match of the summer. His rampage through West Indies’ batting came in two crucial spells, spanning the back end of their first innings and the top of their second. Six of West Indies’ designated top-seven fell in that time, with his fourth-evening burst of 3 for 1 in 14 balls deemed the match’s key moment by Phil Simmons, West Indies’ coach. England seem to have been planning for life after Broad for almost as long as his eight-year run of 51 home Tests in a row – the same one that came to an end at the Ageas Bowl. But he’s simply not ready to surrender his status just yet.Chris Woakes (5 wkts @ 15.20)Seventy-five wickets at 22.90 in 20 appearances. Stick that on a good length and snick it. Not even James Anderson, England’s Duke of the Dukes, can boast a better home Test average than the man dubbed England’s “Mr Dependable” by Joe Root. And if that sounds like damnation with faint praise compared to Root’s assessment of Ben Stokes as “Mr Incredible”, then Woakes’ landmark of 1000 runs and 100 wickets at Old Trafford was a quietly significant reminder of his merits. Neither Stokes nor Andrew Flintoff got to that mark in fewer Tests than Woakes’ 34. Nor, shockingly, did Garry Sobers.Jofra Archer (3 wkts @ 35.33)The England management has made the right noises about standing by their errant player during his self-isolation period, but the fact remains that the squad is all in this together, putting up with an unusually tedious off-field regime for the greater good of the sport, and Archer’s actions were a breach of trust as much as a breach of protocol. Nevertheless, he’s likely to slot straight back into the team from which he had to be dropped last week, because England know how good he could be when he gets the measure of Test cricket. Archer’s stats did not flatter him at the Ageas Bowl, but he shares with Stokes an ability to be the bowler that England need for any given situation: hit the seam with subtle movement in helpful conditions; hit the deck and the batsman in equal measure when the game needs a shake. He’s averaged 28.12 in his first year of Test cricket without yet getting on the sort of roll that you know he’ll produce sooner or later.James Anderson appeals•Getty ImagesJames Anderson (3 wkts @ 34.66)Jimmy, Jimmy … what’s to be done with Jimmy? Objectively speaking, there’s no quibbling with his status as England’s enduring attack leader. In his last three completed home seasons, Anderson has hoovered up 102 wickets at 15.84, including seven of his England-record haul of 28 five-fors and one of his three ten-fors. His mastery of seam and swing is unparalleled, and his hunger to keep pushing on beyond his next landmark of 600 Test wickets is tangible. And yet, it’s increasingly hard to make any exceptions for a man who is now a week shy of his 38th birthday, and whose body is beginning to protest at his 152-Test workload. Anderson has featured in just four of England’s last 14 Tests, and broke down midway through the third of those in South Africa after Christmas. If England were not so laden with options, you’d be tempted to bowl him until he drops. Right now, however, there’s simply no need.Sam Curran (3 wkts @ 33.33)Sam Curran “makes things happen”. Check Twitter if you don’t believe it. That search term alone will keep you scrolling for the duration of the third Test. His left-arm irritants are a set batsman’s nightmare – every ball on a skiddy full length, demanding a decision, risking a misjudgement if it nips off the seam, or tails through the air, or does none of the above and just thuds straight on. Picking a player as a specialist No. 8 and fourth seamer may seem hard to quantify, but Curran has won each of his eight home Tests since 2018, and is one of the four 22-year-olds in the current team on whom the next decade could be built. His stock continues to rise, even if his current opportunities do not.Mark Wood (2 wkts @55.00)England’s “jam tomorrow” selection. Hindsight suggests that Wood’s inclusion on a sluggish deck at the Ageas Bowl was a mistake, but then again, he’d been Man of the Match in two of his previous three overseas Tests, and in the process served up some of the most scorching exocets ever unleashed by an England bowler. It would have sent a curious message to omit him. Besides, this is squad with big ambitions for the coming years, not least England’s return to Australia to avenge their drubbings on their last two Ashes tours. Wood’s form and fitness will be a critical factor in that campaign. The latter can and will be managed with due care, but the former does require him to feature in the interim, even on surfaces that might not always suit his methods.Ollie Robinson/Craig Overton/Olly StoneOf the trio of unused quicks in England’s ranks, Robinson came the closest to a call-up in the second Test, as he was drafted into the squad but didn’t make the final cut. He impressed with his deck-hitting discipline in the intra-squad warm-up, and could yet be trialled as the sort of third-seam option that England haven’t really replicated since Toby Roland-Jones went lame before the last Ashes tour. Craig Overton cut his teeth on that trip in Roland-Jones’ absence, but has perhaps impressed with his Test-match temperament more than his actual performances to date. Stone, the quickest of the trio, may have to wait until Wood has another of his periodic niggles before he gets a run-out.

Three-dimensional Ravindra Jadeja covers for India's absentees

His all-round ability with the ball, bat and on the field has proven invaluable throughout the series

Sidharth Monga08-Jan-2021Ravindra Jadeja replaced Virat Kohli in this Indian XI. When it was done, it seemed – and still does – a move from a side that knew its attack was thin and was picking players to cover too many bases. India were hedging their bets a bit by replacing a specialist batsman and a pure wicketkeeper with a bowler who could bat and a wicketkeeper in Rishabh Pant who could bat too.While it can be called hedging the bets, there probably wasn’t an option available to India at that time. They had lost Ishant Sharma and Mohammed Shami, and would not want in their attack a debutant seamer and Umesh Yadav, who is not renowned for his control. They needed some bowling cover so they showed they had the courage to not reinforce the batting in a traditional way after the 36 all out in Adelaide.Ravindra Jadeja bagged 4 for 62 before also running out Steven Smith•Getty ImagesIt looked a little like England on tours of Asia, where their frontline spinners aren’t incrementally that good over the bits-and-pieces spinners to forego their batting. This was a different case, though. This was more like England playing Chris Woakes in place of a specialist batsman in Asia, which they rarely do.Related

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Six days of Test cricket later, Jadeja has scored a crucial half-century at the MCG, taken seven wickets including a four-for at the SCG at an average of 15, taken an exceptional catch to start an Australia collapse in Melbourne and also run Steven Smith out when he finally got back in the runs. Even though Jadeja has not bowled as much as the first-choice spinner R Ashwin, he has been in the game almost all the time. The impact that Jadeja has had almost makes you want to reassess the “hedge” category initially assigned to his selection.The big difference between someone like Woakes and Jadeja, though, is the vast improvement in Jadeja’s batting. He is likelier to score runs against fast bowlers than Woakes is against spinners. Jadeja is not quite a No. 5 batsman, but has begun to push from the Woakes category towards the Ben Stokes one.Since the start of 2016, only Quinton de Kock averages more than Jadeja’s 43.92 batting at No. 7 or lower. In the six Tests he has played outside Asia and the West Indies, he has averaged 45.16. Granted that Cheteshwar Pujara bats in tough periods, but since the start of 2018 Jadeja has more runs per innings than even Pujara. The big difference now is that he trusts his game and doesn’t back away and hit as he used to at the start of his career.At the press conference after day two in Sydney, Jadeja was asked if this change in approach to batting over the last 18 months or so meant he had started to think of himself as a genuine allrounder. “Not just the last 12-18 months,” Jadeja said. “Long before that – and in all three formats – I have to perform both in batting and bowling department. Since the day I have started playing, that has been my role. But it is all about getting the opportunity; whenever I have got the opportunity to score runs or take wickets, I have done that. Especially when I score runs outside India, it gets talked about more. But, according to me, I have always considered myself an allrounder.”The team management has recognised it and started to give him more responsibility. “The higher I bat, the more responsibility I take,” Jadeja said. “Batting with a batsman, you talk to them, [and] get the confidence. And most importantly, I have time to play a proper innings. If I can initially get that start with a batsman, I can play in my flow. The more I bat higher up, the better it is.”So far on the Australia tour, Ravindra Jadeja has a half-century, a four-wicket haul and some brilliant fielding to his name•Getty ImagesStill, he was batting at No. 7, which meant India were replacing a batsman with someone who was a bowler first, someone who wouldn’t ideally be playing, especially with another spinner in the XI, in Melbourne of all places. The last time two spinners played in a Test XI in Melbourne was when India went in with both Anil Kumble and Harbhajan Singh in 2007-08. The idea behind that selection was for India to choose their four best bowlers no matter the conditions.Ashwin averages 25.20 and Jadeja 24.50, but so good have India’s three quicks been that it has rarely been the case where they consider both of them to be along the four best bowlers for conditions outside Asia and the West Indies. Even when they have played two spinners in Tests outside Asia and the West Indies under this team management, the second spinner has been Kuldeep Yadav, who brings in the wristspin variety.The real merit in this selection of Jadeja has been that not playing both Ashwin and Jadeja together has been a perfectly reasonable thought process. To go against that is a bold move, one that the conditions demanded. Now it was up to Jadeja to vindicate that trust.Jadeja is a bowler who is slightly unfortunate to have operated in the times of Ashwin. With the more apparent guile of Ashwin, Jadeja’s bowing can tend to go unnoticed. His numbers are not too far behind either; in fact, his average is better. Jadeja has only one fewer Player-of-the-Match award than Ashwin, although the senior spinner has more series awards. Only ten Indians have won more Player-of-the-Match awards than Jadeja’s six. No one has a better rate than his: one every six Tests or so.It was perhaps fair that he enjoyed some luck on the crucial second day of the Sydney Test, which Australia started at 166 for 2 with the threat of batting India out of the game. There will be days when Jadeja will bowl much better than he did on this day and not end up with a wicket. Here he got four despite being cut away for four often and conceding an un-Jadeja-like 3.44 an over. This is perhaps a reward for someone who always stays in the game and keeps bowling at the wickets all the time.And in the game Jadeja well and truly was when he ran in about 25 yards for a one-handed pick-up and direct hit from about 35 yards to hit the only stump visible to him to run Smith out. He rated that higher than the wickets he took. Thanks to the extra dimension Jadeja’s inclusion has added, India too are in the game and the series.

Six talking points from the auction (besides the millionaires)

Why have back-up allrounders earned so much money? Why did CSK pick Pujara? And much more

Dustin Silgardo19-Feb-20213:31

Did Maxwell deserve the price he got at the auction?

Back-up allrounders still get big money…
It’s doubtful whether Tom Curran, Dan Christian or Moises Henriques will end up as first-choice players for their franchises if everyone is fit. Yet each bagged more than INR 4 crore (USD 550,000 approx.). Curran played 10 games for Rajasthan Royals last season, but Christian last played an IPL game in 2018, and Henriques in 2017. So why so much love for these allrounders with middling IPL records?Teams are always keen on allrounders, even if they are second-choice players who can come in when there is an injury or if the teams need a different balance. There were not a lot in this auction, and by the time these three names came up, there were five teams who had money to spend and wanted an overseas allrounder. The Delhi Capitals snapped up Curran, the Punjab Kings beat Royal Challengers Bangalore to Henriques and RCB then got Christian instead. The Kolkata Knight Riders lost out in that race and got Ben Cutting for INR 75 lakh (USD 100,000 approx.), while Jimmy Neesham went to the Mumbai Indians for INR 50 lakh (USD 69,000 approx.) and Fabian Allen to the Kings for INR 75 lakh.What happened to all the overseas top-order batsmen?
Jason Roy, World Cup star, Alex Hales, second-highest T20 run-scorer since 2019, Aaron Finch, Australia’s white-ball captain, Evin Lewis, a former INR 3.8-crore player; none of them got a single bid at the auction. Dawid Malan, the No.1-ranked T20I batsman, went for just his base price of INR 1.5 crore (USD 206,000 approx.), and Steven Smith, previously on an INR 12.5 crore (USD 1.3 million approx.) contract, went for INR 2.2 crore (USD 300,000 approx.) this time.The reason was quite simply that demand for overseas top-order players was low, since the teams that had big budgets had settled opening pairs and wanted to save overseas slots for other roles. The Punjab Kings, who had the biggest remaining purse, have a strong top order, as do the Rajasthan Royals. RCB did put in a bid for Smith, but they have already expressed their faith in Josh Philippe. Also, since the batsmen’s names were read first, teams were conservative as they knew they’d need big money for allrounders and fast bowlers. By the time they came back around, a lot of teams had exhausted their purses.RCB break the bank on three players
RCB had INR 35.9 crore (USD 4.9 million approx.) to spend in this auction and splashed INR 34.05 crore (USD 4.68 million approx.) on three players: Glenn Maxwell, Kyle Jamieson, and Christian. It’s an interesting strategy from RCB – they end up with the smallest squad, of 22 players, but they do seem to have most bases covered. RCB had done some important business before the auction, trading in both Harshal Patel and Daniel Sams from Delhi, so they probably felt they needed just one more top-quality pacer – with Navdeep Saini and Mohammed Siraj already in the squad. Hence, the splurge on Jamieson. In terms of batting, they have hinted they will use Philippe this season and already have Devdutt Padikkal, Virat Kohli and AB de Villiers. Adding Maxwell gives them a strong top five, so they might not have felt the need to have a larger squad with more options.Space for a third?•BCCIAn Afghan spin trio at Sunrisers Hyderabad
After adding Mujeeb-ur-Rahman to their squad, the Sunrisers now have him, Rashid Khan and Mohammad Nabi forming a trio that has been successful playing together for Afghanistan. It’s unlikely Sunrisers can fit them all in the same XI, since they need overseas slots for the likes of David Warner, Kane Williamson and Jason Holder, but playing Rashid and Mujeeb together would give them an attacking spin option, particularly if the IPL is held in India, where fingerspinners such as Mujeeb have been successful.Why did CSK bid for Cheteshwar Pujara?
Pujara had not got an IPL contract since 2014, but this time around the Chennai Super Kings signed him for his base price of INR 50 lakh (USD 69,000 approx.). CSK had released M Vijay, so Pujara adds some Indian batting depth. While his T20 strike-rate of 109.35 is not appealing, given how poorly CSK’s batsmen fared last season, he may be someone who can come in as an accumulator if they decide to pack the side with their best bowlers for low-scoring pitches.West Indies and Sri Lanka struggle for representation
West Indian players have historically played big roles at IPL franchises, and most auctions tend to feature their talents. This time around, however, just one West Indian was signed at the auction – Allen. Some of the recent buys from the Caribbean have not worked out – Sheldon Cottrell had a poor end to his 2020 season, Oshane Thomas and Lewis both lost their places at their franchises after the 2019 season, and Rovman Powell never played a game after getting picked up by KKR in 2017. None of them got bids this time.No Sri Lanka players were signed this year and there have been very few signed in recent auctions too. Speaking on the subject, the Mumbai Indians coach Mahela Jayawardene explained that most of the overseas shopping at this auction was reserved for allrounders and quicks, and Sri Lanka don’t produce enough of those.”I’m sure the younger generation will come through and till then, it is disheartening but that is what it is,” he said. “IPL is a place where you try and get the best players in world cricket to come and play. And it’s a good message for the Sri Lankan players to lift their game up, get competitive, so they could be part of the IPL on their merit.”

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