Aston Villa target Kamara wants Prem move

Aston Villa have been handed a boost over one of their midfield targets.

What’s the word?

It comes as a result of quotes relayed by Birmingham Mail, detailing Glen Kamara’s intent on playing Premier League football.

Speaking to Finnish TV, Kamara said:

“Playing against Rangers at first, I thought the level was good but I fancied trying England because the level is better. But when I came to Rangers, I realised the level is really high and this is the best place to develop. I’d never say I wouldn’t play elsewhere in Europe. I’d like to play in the Premier League.”

Kamara’s contract expires in the summer of 2025, though, a fee of £10m could be enough to sign him with Villa linked with a swoop on a regular basis now.

The suggestion that he’d like to play across the border, however, is surely a green light for Steven Gerrard to make his move.

Gerrard will love him

It’s easy to forget that Gerrard is the one who brought Kamara to Rangers, with the Fin playing 122 of his 158 total games for the Gers under the Liverpudlian.

In that time, he has established himself as a stabiliser in the centre of the pitch – something that the Villa boss will have identified about the player during their time together.

Quite simply, the Villans faltered in possession across the last season. They struggled for consistency and finished 14th in terms of the Premier League possession ranks, registering an average of 46.4%.

A signing like Kamara can unlock the likes of John McGinn, Philippe Coutinho and Emi Buendia by giving them more freedom to attack with the midfield gem previously labelled a “huge talent” by journalist Graeme Bailey.

In the transitional phase of the game, new signing Kamara will likely stay back and will need assistance from a central midfielder in Gerrard’s 4-3-2-1 system.

The Finland international can be just that for Villa and presents a stable option in midfield.

Amidst the 26-year-old’s latest claim on his footballing future, it bodes well for Gerrard who will surely have no qualms in making a move for his former asset, somebody he evidently already loves.

In other news: Gerrard is now unearthing AVFC’s next James Milner in “outstanding” £88k-p/w ace 

Newcastle transfer news on Sarr & Diaby

Dan Ashworth is reportedly now ‘looking’ at signing both Ismaila Sarr and Moussa Diaby for Newcastle United.

The Lowdown: Down to business

After confirmation that he has now started his role as Sporting Director at St James’ Park, Ashworth seems to be getting down to business straight away.

The Tyneside club have already been recently linked with moves for the likes of Yannick Carrasco and Diogo Costa, and they will be expected to strengthen their squad significantly with the influx of cash from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s (KSA) Public Investment Fund (PIF).

The Latest: Double swoop

Taking to Twitter, Sky Sports journalist Dharmesh Sheth has revealed that Newcastle are now ‘looking’ at the possibility of signing both Sarr and Diaby this summer.

He outlined: “Newcastle United looking at Watford’s Ismaila Sarr as well as Bayer Leverkusen’s Moussa Diaby. Sarr has 2 years left on his contract – Watford will consider “sensible offers”.”

The Verdict: Depends on Saint-Maximin

Signing both wingers will likely depend on the future of Allan Saint-Maximin at Newcastle.

The Frenchman has been linked with a move away this summer, but he could still be persuaded to stay put by Eddie Howe.

Nonetheless, should the 25-year-old depart, both Sarr and Diaby would be exciting signings for the Magpies. The former possesses freakish speed and Premier League experience, while the latter has enjoyed an outstanding season at Leverkusen, scoring no fewer than 17 goals and supplying a further 14 assists across all competitions, mainly operating from the flanks (Transfermarkt).

Sarr would likely come cheaper given Watford’s relegation to the Championship, but either of them would help bolster the squad at St James’ Park.

In other news, find out which ‘superb’ colossus Ashworth is also eyeing here!

Tottenham eye move for Raheem Sterling

Antonio Conte reportedly has his sights set on bringing Manchester City forward Raheem Sterling to Tottenham Hotspur this summer, according to The Telegraph.

The Lowdown: Sterling profiled

The 27-year-old joined the Sky Blues in a £49m move from Premier League rivals Liverpool seven years ago, and he has since gone on to make 339 appearances for his current club, scoring 131 goals and providing 95 assists during that time, as per Transfermarkt.

Despite still having just over a year remaining on his contract with Pep Guardiola’s side, the winger has been heavily linked with a move away from the Premier League champions, with the likes of Barcelona and Chelsea being named as potential suitors.

However, following a fresh update, it would now appear as though the most current interest is coming from the Lilywhites.

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The Latest: Spurs line up Sterling swoop

In a new article published by The Telegraph, it is claimed that Sterling is a player that Conte would ‘no doubt’ look at signing if he decides to leave City. However, it remains ‘highly questionable’ whether or not Spurs would be able to afford his wages and price tag, which is believed to have been set at around the £80m mark.

The report added that the 74-cap England international will ‘carefully weigh his options’ up whilst on holiday next month before making a return to the UK to hold ‘talks’ with City about his future, although it is thought that the attacker would aim to join a club ‘higher’ than the north London outfit.

The Verdict: Second time lucky?

Despite finding the net 17 times across all competitions this season, Sterling has slightly fallen down the pecking order under Guardiola in recent weeks behind the likes of Phil Foden, Riyad Mahrez and Jack Grealish, so it’s no shock to see him being rumoured with a summer exit.

The former Liverpool man, who was once dubbed a “beast” by former City centre-back Tosin Adarabioyo, has previously been associated with a switch to N17, after Spurs chairman Daniel Levy was offered the player as part of an attempted swap deal for Harry Kane just last year.

After successfully securing Champions League football for Tottenham next term, Conte is now said to be targeting between six and eight new signings to bolster his ranks ahead of the 2022/23 season, one of which is a forward who can play either centrally or out wide. If the price is right, the versatile Sterling might just be someone who comes back onto the club’s radar in the coming months.

In other news… Conte is believed to have made a major transfer decision involving this former Spurs star

Newcastle may find Joelinton 2.0 in Santos

Newcastle United have had a mixed start to the 2022/23 Premier League campaign as Eddie Howe’s side currently sit 11th in the table after six matches played.

The Magpies have only won one of their games this season but have also lost only once, with four draws taking them to seven points as it stands.

One of their standout performers in the top-flight so far has been Brazilian central midfielder Joelinton. The enforcer has averaged a superb SofaScore rating of 7.23, making 4.5 tackles and interceptions per game.

This comes after he averaged 3.1 tackles and interceptions per match in the 2021/22 campaign. He was converted into a midfielder midway through the season by Howe, after struggling whilst playing out wide or as a striker, and has been a machine in the middle of the park ever since.

Newcastle could now land their next Joelinton by securing a January deal to sign Vasco de Gama midfielder Andrey Santos, who is a reported target for the club ahead of the next transfer window.

The Brazilian outfit are said to be demanding a fee in the region of £30m for the teenager and that the Magpies may be willing to meet that price tag heading into the second half of the campaign.

Santos is a defensive-minded battler in the middle of the park, like Newcastle’s Joelinton, and has shown great promise in his short career to date. In Serie B in 2022, the 18-year-old has averaged a SofaScore rating of 7.17 across 24 appearances – making 3.7 tackles and interceptions per match.

The gem has won 60% of his individual duels, showing that he is not bullied by experienced professionals in spite of his age, and has also chipped in with five goals.

He would also suit Howe’s style of play at St. James’ Park. The Toon boss wants his team to press aggressively and high up the pitch and football talent scout Jacek Kulig described him as a “pressing machine”, whilst also dubbing him a “fantastic” talent.

This suggests that he is capable of operating effectively in that position for the Magpies as his style suits the way that Howe wants his side to play out of possession.

Joelinton is a similar player in the sense that he also excels at this part of the game. Journalist Chris Waugh stated that he “was everywhere” against Manchester United earlier this year and Mark Douglas named him as one of the Newcastle players who made the team’s pressing a “joy to watch”.

Therefore, Dan Ashworth and Howe could unearth their next tough-tackling, high-intensity, Brazilian presser in midfield by signing Santos in January.

The Navdeep Saini buffet of delight

A 148kph yorker, a 106kph offcutter, a 144kph lifter – there was a variety on display while Saini showed he could be more than just back-up

Deivarayan Muthu in Indore08-Jan-20205:53

Star Sports Match Point: Time running out for Dhawan in T20Is?

The Sarafa Bazar night market in Indore serves up delightful varieties of street food, ranging from the , the signature breakfast dish of the city, to . About four kilometres away from Sarafa Bazar is the Holkar Stadium, where tearaway Navdeep Saini offered the cricketing equivalent of those delightful varieties on Tuesday evening.There was a 148kph yorker, which torpedoed into the middle-and-leg stumps of opener Danushka Gunathilaka. Then, there was a 106kph offcutter that floated into the edge of Bhanuka Rajapaksa’s bat and streaked away to extra-cover. Then, there was a 144kph lifter that took off like a rocket and had Rajapaksa gloving it behind to the keeper. Having also breached the 150-kph barrier, Saini capped his spell with an excellent inswinging yorker that was just about dug out by Dhananjaya de Silva.Even as a fit-again Jasprit Bumrah had a low-key return, the 27-year old Saini led India’s revamped attack and had figures of 2 for 18 in his four overs, including 13 dots.Sheer pace has always been Saini’s calling card. When he left his hometown Karnal in Haryana to Delhi in October 2012, all he wanted to do was to bowl fast. After rattling batsmen in local tournaments, Saini then rushed Gautam Gambhir for pace at the Delhi nets.It was that pace that helped Delhi into the 2017-18 Ranji Trophy final. It was that pace that subsequently helped Saini break into India’s Test squad for the one-off Test against Afghanistan in Bengaluru in 2018. It was for that pace that Royal Challengers Bangalore had shelled out INR 3 crore in the IPL 2018 auction.Navdeep Saini is pumped after another wicket•BCCIDuring his international debut in 2019 in the Lauderhill T20I against West Indies, the gold standard in T20 hitting, Saini flaunted his pace and even bounced out Nicholas Pooran. Saini’s firecracker pace was also on display during his ODI debut against West Indies in Cuttack last December.ALSO READ: Saini’s firecracker pace lights up CuttackSaini is barely 10 internationals old, but he’s learning on the job and has added variations to his repertoire, lending more depth to the already well-stocked pace attack.”Saini is a different case [in T20 cricket] because he has come from the domestic set-up into the IPL and into the Indian team,” Kohli had said of the quick’s evolution in Guwahati. “So, he has bowled quite a bit and has good understanding of lines and lengths and he’s obviously got pace.”After Bumrah had given up seven runs in his first over on return, Saini entered as first-change in Indore and initially struggled with his lengths. Avishka Fernando laced a half-volley on the up through extra-cover before swatting a hip-high short ball to the midwicket boundary. Offspin-bowling allrounder Washington Sundar then gave India an opening by having Avishka holing out. In his following spells, Saini barged through that opening with a batting ram.After Washington had delivered two thrifty overs, Kusal Perera and Gunathilaka were aiming to line up Saini to ramp up the scoring rate. Saini, however, ran in hard, hit the pitch harder, and kept Kusal to one run off two short balls. Gunathilaka then left his crease only to swish and miss another short ball. Having pushed Gunathilaka back, Saini sucker-punched the batsman with a ripping yorker. By the time, Gunathilaka had jabbed his bat down, the middle and leg stumps had been tilted back. Saini took flight and celebrated, Sri Lanka’s batting went on a tailspin.Then, in his third over, Saini cramped Oshada Fernando for room before unleashing the yorker, but Oshada jammed his bat down in the nick of time to survive. The old two-card trick had also reaped reward for Saini in his most-recent ODI in Cuttack.By the time Saini returned to the attack for his last over, the 15th of the innings, Rajapaksa had got going with a whipped four off Shardul Thakur and Sri Lanka were 102 for 4. However, Saini cut down his pace and then cranked it up to bounce him out. Saini’s burst set the scene for Thakur’s triple-strike in the penultimate over of the innings. Game over for Sri Lanka.”The first thing is to be confident, and only then can you bring in variations,” Saini told , the host broadcaster, after winning the Man-of-the-Match award. “I liked the yorker [to Gunathilaka] more because I nailed it better than expectations. I play both red-ball and white-ball cricket, and hence the more I play, the better I will get at them. When I made my T20 debut, all I thought of was pace. But as I have played more, I have realised that variations are important too.”Saini’s range adds a new dimension to India’s bowling attack, particularly on flat tracks, and in the absence of Deepak Chahar, Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Mohammed Shami, he showed that he could be more than just a back-up.

Blackwell abides in changing times

From a nuggety get-out-of-strife type, the Australia batsman, who is set to play her 250th international match on Sunday, is now the side’s most versatile player

Adam Collins in Coffs Harbour28-Oct-2017The day after Alex Blackwell’s international debut in 2003, Belgium became the second country to legalise same-sex marriage. A fortnight after her 250th at Coffs Harbour on Sunday, Australia should finally begin the process to become the 24th.There are many ways to illustrate the longevity of a career that has spanned 5387 days, but marriage equality seems most fitting given Blackwell’s persuasive work to convince Australian voters.In both the current public campaign and women’s cricket as a whole, the terrain has changed strikingly since Blackwell made her bow at age 19. Now, she is Australia’s most-capped female player; on Sunday, the latest in a string of milestones.Professionalism has been the biggest transformation. When the national vice-captain started her journey, pay for women cricketers was not part of the conversation. Major tournament preparation would consist of a training camp squeezed into a long weekend, if they were lucky. “Everything was jammed together and you left in a world of hurt,” she had recalled earlier in the year.Then back to the university Blackwell would go, to continue her medical studies, then into a full-time career in genetics. “I never thought it would be professional for me,” she said of the game. “I always had to equally think about my academic life and the career I wanted to pursue to earn an income. You were stretched pretty thin.”It is a familiar story for women athletes worldwide. But in Blackwell’s case, full-time cricket was a welcome arrival a dozen years later. While there are many commercial indicators of a game on the rise, Blackwell’s batting embodies it better than any.From a nuggety get-out-of-strife type, she is now Australia’s most versatile player, something she attributes to recalibrating her game for T20. She excelled in the Women’s Big Bash league, leading Sydney Thunder to the inaugural title. That broader set of skills is now evident every time she sets up at the crease.”One of the best things Al’s been able to do is really adapt her game,” Australian captain Rachael Haynes said in toasting her deputy’s “outstanding” career. “You’ve always got to look to evolve. If you look at players over time who are able to do that, they’re generally the ones who have had the longer careers and the most success.”Blackwell is now equally comfortable with the straight bat as she is lapping or reversing or walloping. Her 56-ball 90 nearly saved the day in the World Cup semi-finals this July. It’s a game methodically curated for all seasons; a game that got Australia over the line in the opening match of this Ashes too, with an unbeaten 67.This narrative also applies to Haynes, previously known for compact accumulation rather than the plundering she subjected England to in the second Ashes ODI. “There were some good moments in there the other day,” she said modestly of her 56-ball 89. “And I’ve still got more to give as a player.”Alex Blackwell steers one into the off side•Getty ImagesHer task in the second Coffs Harbour contest – the last ODI of the multi-format series – is to avoid a Big Banana peel that would cede momentum to England ahead of the standalone Test Match. Haynes knows this is a crucial opportunity.”Don’t be satisfied,” was her message to her players. “This match is a really important game, we’ll be looking to really assert [ourselves]. That’s the really big thing. The moment you get comfortable and relaxed in what you’re achieving, perhaps, it leaves the door open.”Haynes will have the services of the dynamic 20-year-old all-rounder Ashleigh Gardner, who is likely to return after concussion had kept her out of Thursday’s 75-run victory. “You saw a glimpse of what she’s capable of, so it’s exciting that she’ll come back in,” the captain said. Legspinner Kristen Beams will likely make way.Thursday’s toss generated scrutiny, after Heather Knight gave Australia first use of friendly batting conditions. England coach Mark Robinson later elaborated on his captain’s decision to ESPNcricinfo.”Had that rain come an hour later and we looked at a shortened target, Duckworth-Lewis can make things look very, very simple,” he said. “Had we elected to bat first and it rained and Australia had an easy target you would be criticised with everyone knowing the forecast. As it happened, the rain came at the worst time. It’s a lot more clear-cut tomorrow.”Knight recognised that bouncing back from four points down is “potentially” the biggest test of her time in charge. “But, it is still very much a contest. There is still a hell of a lot of cricket to be played. We have got to wrestle back that momentum. But it is important that we move on from what has happened and don’t feel sorry for ourselves.”Robinson, however, wasn’t prepared to declare it a must-win game. “I don’t look it like that. It puts too much emphasis and can become too big and that can actually start to suffocate you.””We’ve given the girls all the space they needed yesterday then had all the chats we needed today,” he said of the mood in the camp. “What you have got to do is keep it simple as you can. We’re not trying to build anything up too much.”With the bat, only bowler Katherine Brunt has made it to a half-century so far in the two games, while both she and her fellow opening seamer Anya Shrubsole were wicketless and expensive in their last start. Knight, however, is backing her quick bowlers, whom she assessed as bowling “brilliantly” early before Australia’s aggression took over.Sophie Ecclestone, the 18-year-old left-arm spinner endorsed by Knight and Robinson, will play again after her Ashes debut on Thursday,. There is no sign of panic yet, as both the captain and the coach hinted they would go in unchanged. World Champions at home, this is a prized opportunity for England to show what they are made of away.

Younis gets in a tangle, Pakistan get out of one

For a while in the afternoon session it appeared Pakistan were losing their way but, after his role with the ball, Yasir Shah played a starring role again

Jarrod Kimber at Lord's16-Jul-2016Yasir Shah took his sixth wicket early on Saturday morning. It was a good ball that trapped Steven Finn straight in front of the stumps. A few balls later England’s innings is finished. Yasir can put his feet up.The problem is, he isn’t the only person with his feet up.You can see Younis Khan’s toe twitching well before Jake Ball is at the crease, the left foot is weirdly twitching towards the bowler, the right foot is rattling around in his boot. Then he moves into a weird half squat in front of his stumps. When the ball arrives there is a leap at it, across his stumps, towards silly mid-off, as if he has been tickled by a monster made of feathers, or electrocuted, or like he is trying to lead with his belly button.The only real problem is now after all that twitching, shuffling and jumping he has to play a cricket shot against very good bowling on a wicket that has started playing slightly oddly. His head is not over the ball, it is barely still on his shoulders, and his feet seem to be on hot coals, or allergic to grass, or covered with haemorrhoids.Younis isn’t batting, he’s surviving, somehow. Even what should have been a normal cover drive becomes an abnormal monstrosity that has a squat-thrust angled bat. It is only when the ball goes through the field that he moves into the correct foot position with an awkward shuffle that he seems to be doing so he just remembers how he is supposed to be doing this. His feet are playing several shots per ball, his hands, barely one. Neither agree with each other.And when he doesn’t play a shot, it’s like he’s doing an interpretive dance move to represent how a bird flies through a puff of smoke, but with a broken leg, terrible stage fright and no dance training.England just sat and watched, they clearly decided that whatever this was, it wouldn’t, or at least shouldn’t, last, and they went dry. They bowled very well, they kept the field in a ring, and waited for the implosion.It was Azhar Ali who broke first. He nearly ran himself out when he had thought to himself that there was only a single, and then something clicked in his head and he decided it was two. And then it was the pressure of the scoreboard’s stillness. In four overs they scored seven runs, and in the end of that period Azhar was out lbw. If there is a culture with a word that means both unlucky and inevitable at the same time, it was that.Then Misbah-ul-Haq came in. His first ball was a defensive shot that suggested we were going to get austerity Misbah, not world-record quickest-Test-hundred Misbah. Twelve balls come and go, and Misbah brings stability by watching Younis bat from the non-striker’s end and add only one more run. Then Misbah faces Moeen Ali for his second ball. Alastair Cook set a ring field, an outer ring field. Men simply scattered to boundaries, knowing that Misbah may and try to dine.What they didn’t know was that Misbah was going to enter the buffet, strip off his clothes and jump mouth first into the shrimp bowl. He had faced two balls and somehow transformed from Misbah to Shahid Afridi.Somehow, against all cricket logic, Younis survives the session. As does Asad Shafiq, who does it with much more clam and technique.Then Younis hammers a ball back onto his stumps. On a normal day it would be one of his worst shots, today it was among his best. It was the slowest scoring from him since his first Test match.Then there is a brief interlude of Pakistan batting so well through Shafiq and Sarfraz Ahmed that they looked like completely taking the game away before Shafiq misses a good one.And there he is again, Yasir Shah. Promoted four spots up the order, working on what should have been his day off.Not long into their partnership Sarfraz dropped the ball at his feet and tried to invent a single, Yasir said no, saving a horrible run out. The throw hit the stumps and trickled a metre or two away, and Sarfraz was off for another non-existent single. He was like the rat that touched the electric cheese, and went back to make sure. It was Yasir who took the cheese away.It was also another dot ball, and they had been growing, and during the next over, Yasir started to feel it. The further the over went, the louder the crowd got, and the more nervous Yasir bats. He’s not in the UAE now, Lord’s may not be a coliseum like Edgbaston or Old Trafford, but this isn’t home, even a neutral home.This is a real crowd, and they have noticed England’s chance. It is now 15 balls since a run and Yasir is 2 off 23. The last ball is full and stops a bit on the wicket, Yasir tries to turn it, it takes the leading edge and it floats. England fielders start celebrating as it does, the crowd rises with it, but the ball then dips. Broad is the fielder at mid-off and he is on his way in, but it’s low and in front of him, and it’s not a catch made for a man of his height. But he gets there just as it’s about to bounce, and there is grass, hand, and by the time the English players have returned to the ground from their celebratory leaps, it is clear so has the ball.Sarfraz is dropped by Jonny Bairstow, and just like that it is Yasir, in his first Test in England, who is the guy who can score the most runs, the safest way, so that he has a target to bowl at. He is less rattled than Azhar, less airborne than Younis, and less crazy than Misbah. His experienced team-mates at Nos. 3, 4 and 5 had made 48 runs, from a lot of balls, and Yasir gets better with every ball. When Sarfraz is out, he just continues to score runs and give Pakistan hope, right up until the second last over of the day.Yasir drop-kicks one over midwicket, gets his highest Test score and then artfully glances. Two clever shots and then an over later Pakistan’s day is finished.Tomorrow, like today, will start with Yasir. Tomorrow, like today, might finish with him as well. There just won’t be any time in between to put his up feet.

'The best match I've ever been to live'

How cricketers reacted to a humdinger of a semi-final between New Zealand and South Africa

ESPNcricinfo staff24-Mar-2015

Exhausted and broken

ESPNcricinfo looks at five reasons for England’s failure to compete in Australia

George Dobell17-Dec-2013Selection and coaching
When the England squad was announced, there was excitement over the inclusion of three unusually tall fast bowlers – Boyd Rankin, Chris Tremlett and Steven Finn – and the expectation that one or all could play a key role on Australian pitches offering pace and bounce.But anyone who had watched county cricket in 2013 could have confirmed this was always unlikely. There was a mountain of evidence to suggest that Tremlett was not the force he once was and that Finn was enduring something of a crisis of confidence as he weighed up conflicting advice from county and international coaches. It was naive to think that an England set-up with little track-record of improving bowlers – James Anderson and Stuart Broad were international players before the current management took charge – could revitalise such players. It might well have proved helpful to have Graham Onions, the best bowler in county cricket over the last two seasons, on the tour to provide cover and balance.Rankin may still prove a valuable player but he failed to shine in his few opportunities and, under the guidance of England bowling coach, David Saker, has regressed during the tour. Indeed, Saker’s influence requires some reflection: to have failed to capitalise on the substantial talents of Finn is a major stain on his record.Questions might be asked about Graham Gooch, too. There is little doubt that England have brought, give or take a name or two, their best batting line-up on this trip: the records of Alastair Cook, Kevin Pietersen and Ian Bell will stand the test of time. They have proved they are fine players. But England are failing to maximise their talent. While the primary responsibility must always lie with the individuals, it is fair and sensible to raise questions of a batting coach who seems so unable to coax the best from talented players.One man who could feel unfortunate not to make the tour is Nick Compton. He was dropped after two poor games at the start of the 2013 English summer – a decision that suggests cliques – but has continued to churn out runs in the county game. The last time England scored 400 in a Test, Compton and Jonathan Trott contributed centuries. His solidity and restraint would have been valuable.The inclusion of Jonny Bairstow is also questionable. He appears, through no fault of his own, not to be trusted with bat or gloves by the management. So why bring him?Losing Trott
The departure of Trott disturbed England. It was not just the absence of a top-order batsman, a vital buffer despite his drop in form, but the sight of a friend and colleague in obvious distress shocked the dressing room and disrupted the equilibrium of those left behind. All the planning, all the attempts to create a calm environment were dashed in that moment. England have never recovered.Jonathan Trott’s absence left a huge hole•Getty ImagesMental and physical overload
Trott’s descent into exhaustion may be extreme, but it is not unique. Several other members of this squad have progressed further down the same road than should have been allowed. A combination of a reliance upon a few key players in all formats and the ECB’s schedule – a schedule that prioritises income above a duty of care to their most important assets – has asked too much of too few.Since December 2011, no one has faced more deliveries in international cricket than Cook, with Bell and Trott also featuring in the top five. In the same period, no seamer has bowled more deliveries than Anderson or Broad and only R Ashwin has bowled more deliveries than Graeme Swann as a spinner. That is despite Swann undergoing surgery and missing games with a variety of injuries.But it is not just the quantity of cricket that England have been playing. It is also the environment in which they travel and train. The intensity of the England set-up has done nothing to dispel the pressure that can build up over time with the many virtues of Andy Flower – the attention to detail, the drive – slowly becoming vices as they are repeated over a long period of time without levity. It may be no coincidence that three of those who have fared best in this series are the three that have most recently come into the side: Joe Root, Ben Stokes and Michael Carberry.Somewhere, somehow, England forgot to enjoy the journey.Batting and fielding failures
It may seem odd to lump these two aspects of the game together, but the failures in both may well have the same root: weariness and a lack of belief.Fielding is often the barometer of a team’s morale and England’s in this series has been poor. By the time Australia declared in Perth, it had sunk to the level of appalling. England’s inability to take their chances in the field reached its nadir in Adelaide when an opportunity to dismiss Australia for around 350 was punished ruthlessly and fatally.The batsmen have failed to score 400 in an innings since March, 22 innings ago, with Stokes the only centurion in the series so far. The failure in England’s top order simply exposed a soft middle to lower order before the tail were blown away.The domestic system
It is no coincidence that, when the England side enjoyed its best years, it was on the back of a sharp improvement in the standard of county cricket. The move to two divisions, the introduction of promotion and relegation, the appearance of strong overseas and non-England-qualified players heralded a particularly competitive era in the county game, with the likes of Justin Langer remarking that it was as tough domestic cricket as he had experienced.But the ECB could not resist tinkering. It brought in young player incentives, tightened work-permit criteria, took the best players out of the county game for reasons as diverse as Lions matches, rest and gym sessions and created a schedule that squeezed the County Championship into the margins of the season. Furthermore, it allowed games to be staged on homogenised slabs of mud which bear little resemblance to those on which international cricket is played. Many of the initiatives were well intentioned but nearly all of them have backfired.Brydon Coverdale on why Australia were the better side

The AB scoop, and a lot of drops

Plays of the Day from the final day of the Wellington Test

Firdose Moonda in Wellington27-Mar-2012Audacious shot of the day
AB de Villiers occasionally gets so daring with the bat, it’s hard to tell whether he thinks he is playing a Test match or a club game. He unleashed one of his manic spells as South Africa looked for quick runs to give themselves enough time to bowl New Zealand out. de Villiers was puncturing the leg-side with boundaries but then improvised to reach his fifty with a bold move on the off-side. Mark Gillespie sent down a good length ball, de Villiers had backed away to his left and reverse paddled the ball over both gullies for four. It was so good, it may become known as the “AB scoop” in future.Drops of the day
South Africa were not up to their usual standard in the field in this match. Duminy put down three chances on the fourth day and another four were grassed today. Kane Williamson was let off by Alviro Petersen at gully when he was on 10. He was given a second life when de Villiers put him down on 22 at second slip. Dean Brownlie survived a chance when Graeme Smith had his body in an awkward position at first slip and could not hold on. By tea, fielding was obviously South Africa’s main concern and because the break was spent practicing slip catches, but by the wrong people. Gary Kirsten was doing the catching while assistant coach Russell Domingo offered the chances. Perhaps de Villiers should have been taking catches because he dropped Doug Bracewell on 8 at second slip as the day drew to a close.Words of the day
Vernon Philander usually does his talking with the ball but when he was at risk of finishing the innings without a wicket, he gave vent to his frustration. Kruger van Wyk was on the receiving end. Two balls after van Wyk got a thick outside edge over the slips off Philander, the fast bowler walked towards the batsman, stared him down and had a few words. The next ball was short and van Wyk defended. More words from Philander. Then, he had the ball to back up the words. A good length delivery that nipped away and beat the outside edge had van Wyk in no doubt about who had won the war of words. Philander did not have to say anything more. The battle was over as soon as the match was, though. Philander and van Wyk hugged and shared a joke as the players shook hands.Incomplete over of the day
South Africa took the new ball to bowl the last over of the match. They had to take four wickets with it and Philander was tasked with the job. Off the second delivery he had an appeal for lbw against Bracewell that was clearly going down leg. And after the third and fourth balls were defended, Graeme Smith pulled the plug on the series and the draw was called. The small Basin Reserve crowd had become more vocal as the day wore on and New Zealand hung on, and they were on their feet at the end – applauding both their batsmen and South Africa bowlers with the same gusto.Visitors of the day
Entry was free at the Basin today but the ground was not very full – an indication of what the hard-working people of Wellington were up to instead of being at the cricket. There was at least one notable figure in attendance though. American rugby player, Eric Fry, who represented the USA at the 2011 Rugby World Cup, was at the ground. Fry is a prop forward and is currently training with the Hurricanes franchise, who are based in Wellington. The other unexpected, but welcome, visitor came in the form of traditional caramel Anzac biscuits, provided to the journalists by one of the local reporter’s wives.

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