Nottingham Forest seal double move for "special" star and "intriguing" ace

Nottingham Forest have “sealed” the signings of two players from the same club, according to an exciting new update from journalist Fabrizio Romano.

Nottingham Forest raid South America in transfer market

After a fantastic 2024/25 season in the Premier League, in which the Reds exceeded all expectations and finished seventh in the table, it’s now a case of building on that success and making Nuno Espirito Santo’s squad even stronger moving forward.

Further signings will be needed, albeit ensuring they keep in line with financial rules at the same time, and Cruzeiro striker Kaio Jorge has been linked with a summer move to the City Ground. The Brazilian has scored 17 goals in 41 appearances for his current club, highlighting the quality he could bring to Forest in the final third.

Nottingham Forest managerNunoEspirito Santo is seen before the match

Another South American attacker, Goztepe’s Romulo Cardoso, has also been mentioned as a possible addition for the Reds before next season gets underway, with the club seemingly feeling that added firepower is needed, especially if Chris Wood fails to hit the same level as he did last term.

The summer transfer window may still be in its infancy this year, but Forest are already acting fast, with two different players now reportedly all but confirmed as new additions.

Nottingham Forest seal double signing

According to a key update from the renowned Romano on X, Nottingham Forest have “sealed” the double summer signing of Botafogo pair Igor Jesus and Jair Cunha.

Reds supporters will no doubt be buoyed by this news, with Nuno being backed in the transfer market by owner Evangelos Marinakis and being handed a couple of exciting signings in very different positions.

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He’s a wanted man…

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Jesus could be a fantastic addition to Forest’s attack, having scored one in four caps for Brazil and netted 43 times in 88 appearances for Saudi side Shabab Al-Ahli, also being described as a “special talent” by Bleacher Report.

Brazil

4

1

Shabab Al-Ahli

88

43

Botafogo

57

17

Coritiba FC

49

5

Meanwhile, Cunha is an exciting young centre-back with a bright future in the game, with scout Jacek Kulig describing the 20-year-old as an “intriguing” player who can become “top-class” in the future.

This business immediately strengthens Forest at both ends of the pitch, with Jesus and Cunha representing long-term signings who could mature into massive players at the City Ground as the year pass.

The next Sane: Man City looking at signing "special" £33m winger for Pep

Even if Manchester City do finish inside the top five positions in the Premier League and find themselves victorious in lifting the FA Cup again, this summer looks likely to be one of upheaval at the Etihad.

After all, it’s already been confirmed that Pep Guardiola’s men are waving goodbye to City royalty in Kevin De Bruyne, with the Belgian unlikely to be the only face moved to one side by the serial trophy winners.

Whilst there will be an obvious sadness in the air that notable figures like De Bruyne are departing, an exciting, new horizon on offer will still be met with lively anticipation, with the light blue half of Manchester expected to open its doors to a whole host of fresh signings.

The potential new-look Man City

Guardiola’s flashy spenders did show off their intimidating might in the transfer window just this January when acquiring the services of Omar Marmoush for a hefty £59m.

Now, they could be about to splash even more cash on another equally exhilarating attacker in the form of Florian Wirtz, with the German midfielder rumoured to be leaving Bayer Leverkusen behind for a wild £102m.

Morgan Gibbs-White might also relocate to the Etihad for a whopping £100m, but City could win themselves a potential bargain by signing former Wolverhampton Wanderers winger Francisco Trincao.

A report from Caught Offside has revealed that Guardiola’s men could snap up the 25-year-old for as little as £33m, but Manchester United are also waiting to pounce alongside Arsenal and Newcastle United.

Whilst his prior stint in England was choppy, the Sporting star would surely relish an opportunity to strut his stuff again in the Premier League, with a potential here for Trincao to be the Spaniard’s next version of Leroy Sane patrolling down the City right flank.

How Trincao could be Man City's next Sane

Whilst City fans will likely wax lyrical about the past exploits of Raheem Sterling and Riyad Mahrez when commenting on memorable ex-wingers, Sane doesn’t always find himself in the same glowing conversation.

Indeed, after only bagging five Premier League goals during his debut season, the German would go down as a slow burner to the City masses when finally improving, with an impressive tally of 83 goals and assists eventually coming his way from 135 total contests.

Trincao – much like Sane – has unfortunately been negatively impacted by the bright lights of the English game before.

Indeed, only three goals came his way from 30 appearances at Molineux. However, unlike the Bayern Munich number ten, the Portuguese forward was never given the platform to kick on and rebuild his dented reputation until now.

Since this one season misfire in the West Midlands, the 25-year-old has been able to transform his fortunes on home soil and turn into a menace up top for his current employers, with the Sporting winger left-footed in approach much like his German counterpart, despite being able to line up down both the left and right channels like the 29-year-old.

24/25

51

9

18

23/24

48

10

10

22/23

52

13

4

Looking at the table above, City would be winning themselves a golden bargain snapping up Trincao for just £33m, with a jaw-dropping 18 assists picked up by the former Wolves reject from 51 games this season.

He definitely has the potential, therefore, to reenter the English game and take it by storm as a tricky, left-footed attacker in a similar vein to Sane.

Sporting Club's Francisco Trinaco and Viktor Gyokeres.

Once lauded as a “special” talent when emerging up the ranks at Braga by football talent scout Jacek Kulig, this move could finally be the opportunity for Trincao to rip up the Premier League, with Sane’s eye for picking up goals and assists aplenty at the peak of his powers seen in the 25-year-old’s unbelievable game in Lisbon.

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May 7, 2025

Slot has struck gold on Liverpool star worth far more than Kerkez & Huijsen

Liverpool’s season will live long in the memory, but FSG won’t want the 2024/25 campaign to stand as an outlier in the post-Jurgen Klopp years.

Luckily, that doesn’t look likely, not when Arne Slot is at the helm and thriving. The Dutch coach has been a remarkable success story, arriving last summer after several trophy-laden years in his homeland with Feyenoord.

The record-equalling title triumph must now be used as a foundation, built upon over the coming years to create another dynasty on Merseyside.

Arsenal and Manchester City will both feel their campaigns have been laced with disappointment, and they will be determined to strengthen over the next few months.

Liverpool need to do the same, especially after such nominal transfer activity in recent years. While a striker is among the priorities, it’s Anfield’s defence that could see the most dramatic shifts.

Liverpool's defensive plans this summer

Trent Alexander-Arnold will leave Liverpool, but he will leave a two-time Premier League champion and one of the harbingers of the illustrious modern age for the club.

Liverpool'sTrentAlexander-Arnoldcelebrates after winning the Premier League

Liverpool are going to need to replace their vice-captain, even if Slot is willing to give Conor Bradley the chance to prove himself as the first-choice option. However, matters are complicated by the urgency for a new left-back, with Andy Robertson showing signs of decline.

FSG do have a name in mind. Milos Kerkez is the far-and-away favourite to join Liverpool’s ranks this summer, having enjoyed an exemplary campaign on the south coast with Bournemouth.

The Telegraph claim Wolves are growing in confidence that they can tie Rayan Ait-Nouri down to a new deal, with Liverpool ready to bin their interest in the Algerian in favour of signing the £45m-rated Kerkez.

That’s not all. Andoni Iraola is doing a fine job at the Vitality Stadium, and the Reds are keen on raiding the European contenders for their star centre-back Dean Huijsen too.

Huijsen, 20, has been one of the most exciting prospects in the Premier League this term, with analyst Ben Mattinson even going as far as to call him “the most in-demand centre-back in the world.”

With a £50m release clause, the young Spain star is wanted by every top team, but Liverpool need a long-term Virgil van Dijk replacement.

And there’s more going on in central defence too, with one of Slot’s superstars continuing to pad along without any real clarity on their future, and whether that will remain on Merseyside.

Liverpool manager ArneSlotlooks on before the match

In any case, Liverpool have struck gold on their towering titan.

Slot has hit gold on "monster" defender

Liverpool have a self-sustaining model under the ownership of FSG. This has rankled at times, but who can say the Premier League champions have been unsuccessful over the past decade?

This model does mean that certain hardships have to be endured, with some talented players warming to the idea of a pay rise that simply won’t be granted. Van Dijk and Mohamed Salah, it must be said, are the two exceptions to the rule.

Liverpool's MohamedSalahreacts after conceding their second goal

However, in the case of Ibrahima Konate, it feels we have an incipient transfer saga on our hands, Reds, with the France international about to enter the final year of his £70k-per-week contract.

It’s understandable that he should want a new deal to better reflect his “monster” defending alongside the skipper, as has been said by Liverpool writer Josh Williams. However, if reports are to be believed, Konate is looking for a £200k-per-week salary to stay put.

Liverpool's IbrahimaKonatecelebrates after winning the Premier League

This would make him the third-highest-paid player in Slot’s senior squad, perhaps not an unfair reflection of Konate’s worth, but maybe a little tall.

There’s also the matter of Real Madrid. That ever-present and ominous shadow that lurks over Liverpool. They are taking Trent, and now they want Konate too, disassembling and then piecing back together the right side of Slot’s backline, though in a shiny white hue.

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According to Spanish outlet Marca, Konate is very much a transfer target for Los Blancos, but given that he is valued at €100m (£85m) by Liverpool’s chiefs, they are hoping to call upon more dark magic and sign another world-class player on a free transfer.

This is quite the hike in value for the 25-year-old, who first arrived in Liverpool from RB Leipzig in 2021 after his £36m release clause was met.

Ibrahima Konate in the Premier League

Season

Apps (starts)

Goals

Assists

Clean Sheets

24/25

29 (27)

1

2

12

23/24

22 (17)

0

0

5

22/23

18 (17)

0

0

7

21/22

11 (11)

0

0

4

Stats via Sofascore

It’s a neat reflection of Konate’s improvements on the fitness front; never has the 6 foot 4 star been so consistently available in a Liverpool shirt.

His value as one of Europe’s elite defenders is further underscored by how far he is currently away from up-and-comers like Kerkez and Huijsen, whose combined transfer value would only exceed Konate’s by about £10m.

Bournemouth's DeanHuijsencelebrates scoring their first goal with AFC Bournemouth's Ryan Christie and AFC Bournemouth's Milos Kerkez

Both talented players, the young Bournemouth duo are worthy of a move to Merseyside this summer, but they are not yet the finished article.

Konate has spent several years learning from Van Dijk beside him, completing 90% of his passes in the Premier League this season, winning 71% of his aerial battles, as per Sofascore.

He’s athletic and imposing, technical and tenacious. Liverpool have reaped the fruits of his labours for several years now, but he’s truly made himself known as an elite player under Slot’s wing, so important in winning the title.

Liverpool have hit the jackpot on their French defender, but it won’t feel that way in 12 months, if the ghost of Alexander-Arnold returns to take another top-tier player away from Slot’s ranks on a Bosman.

It’s paramount that FSG manage to engineer a new deal for this wonderful player. Maybe £200k-per-week demands aren’t so absurd after all.

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He'd be perfect for Aarons: Martin has exciting "colossus" on Rangers radar

Glasgow Rangers sealed their first summer signing at Ibrox earlier this week, announcing the arrival of defender Max Aarons on a season-long loan deal.

Russell Martin is under no illusions that the next few weeks are vital. But by bringing in several high-profile targets, he sets up the Light Blues nicely ahead of the Champions League qualifiers against Panathinaikos next month.

The capture of Aarons badly bolsters a defence which, at times last season, performed dreadfully, having shipped 15 more goals than their Glasgow rivals in the Premiership.

Supporters will be hoping that Martin can add another centre-back or two before the first competitive game of the season to improve that record in an attempt to close the gap.

Russell Martin watches on whilst in charge of Southampton.

It looks as though he is monitoring a player down south…

Rangers search for a new defender

Leicester City defender Conor Coady has been earmarked for a move to Glasgow, with one report claiming the club are in advanced talks to secure his signature.

Luka Jelenic is another defender linked with a move, although he is a left-back rather than someone who can play at the heart of the defence.

According to the Daily Record, it is reported that Peterborough defender Emmanuel Fernandez is currently on the club’s radar as Martin seeks more defensive reinforcements.

No fee has been mentioned, but the centre-back still has two years remaining on his contract with the English side, meaning Martin will have to spend it to secure his signature.

If he can add Fernandez to his squad in the coming weeks, it would be another step forward regarding Martin’s aim to improve the defence. Not only that, but he could shine alongside Aarons.

Why Rangers must sign Emmanuel Fernandez

Joining from Bournemouth on a temporary basis, Aarons will offer competition for James Tavernier at right back next term, and he has plenty of experience in England.

Game time was limited last term, but throughout the 2023/24 season for the Cherries, Aarons won 60% of his ground duels per game, while also succeeding with 54% of his dribbles and recovering 3.8 balls per game.

Season

Games

Goals

Assists

2024/25 (Bournemouth and Valencia)

9

0

0

2023/24 (Bournemouth)

21

0

1

2022/23 (Norwich)

48

1

2

2021/22 (Norwich)

35

0

2

2020/21 (Norwich)

47

2

2

2019/20 (Norwich)

40

0

2

2018/19 (Norwich)

43

3

6

He even ranked in the top 18% for successful take-ons per 90 in the Premier League that term, showcasing his attacking abilities.

This could mean Aarons is able to create plenty of chances for the Light Blues next term. With him bombing up and down the flank, Fernandez will be tasked with covering his runs.

Emmanuel Fernandez for Peterborough.

The English centre-back was hailed as a “colossus” and “aggressive” by Posh chairman Darragh MacAnthony last season, and given his stats, this praise is spot on.

Indeed, the 23-year-old won an impressive 60% of his total duels last term, along with making 1.1 tackles and being dribbled past only 0.3 times per match.

As such, he offers plenty of quality defensive attributes which would help the Ibrox side shore up their defence. With Aarons likely to be pushing forward often, Fernandez will be tasked with tucking in and providing cover, providing an exciting, new-look partnership on that right-hand side.

He may have played in League One last season, but there is no doubt Fernandez and Aarons could work wonderfully alongside each other for Rangers, both domestically and in Europe.

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Bats in the belfry as England prepare to live down their self-made image

England have said, over and over, that they are prepared to chase anything. Could that be about to change?

Vithushan Ehantharajah05-Jul-20252:26

Were India too careful before declaration?

Black Sabbath playing their farewell gig at Villa Park while, five miles down the road, Rishabh Pant’s bat was soaring through the air at Edgbaston recalled one of the more iconic rock tales.During a gig in 1982, lead singer Ozzy Osbourne picked up what he thought was a toy bat – Sabbath fans would often toss animals or parts of animals (real and fake) on stage – and bit off its head.It was, unsurprisingly, disgusting. Not least for Osbourne, who remembers it all too well. And yet, it could not have been better for his and Sabbath’s legend.Heavy metal is as much about rough distortions of decency as guitars, and while Sabbath do have the latter, it is hard to argue their reputations, especially Osbourne’s, were not enhanced stratospherically by that misguided chomp. The flipside is the action itself remains, for Osbourne, a tedious subject to address. Its bitter aftertaste lingers not just on the tongue, but in decades of reminders of his moment of misguided impunity from all who cross him.And so, as Pant, bat in hand, strummed a half-century in keeping with his own reputation to put an absurd target of 608 in front of England, the expectation still hung heavy on England that, even at three-down for 72 overnight, they’ll still go for this. It’s an expectation rooted in a view of them of heroes or fools, depending on quite literally where you have been sitting at Edgbaston.This a team that famously chases anything. They have shown as much, chewing off six 250-plus targets chucked to Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum by darers. That includes their record of 378 achieved here, against India three years ago to the day, and last week’s 371 against them at Headingley. Akash Deep left Ben Duckett’s stumps in a mess•Getty ImagesHarry Brook’s aerial flick just beyond midwicket’s grasp – for the first of two boundaries in the final over of the day, as he walked off with a run-a-ball 15 alongside Ollie Pope, 22 off 43 with a 71 percent control – was more than a nod to the ambition that remains.”I think that’s their style,” Morne Morkel, India’s bowling coach, said when asked if he expected England to go for the remaining 536 runs. “Harry Brook is a guy who likes to take the game on, and is an entertainer.”You could argue that England’s failures in the fourth innings have been every bit as much a part of the narrative as their well-documented successes. The two previous times they have been asked to chase more than 400 runs (658 against New Zealand and 557 against India, both last year) they have lost by more than 400 runs (423 and 434 respectively). On neither occasion did they make it into the 49th over. Their fourth-innings mantra is get rich or die trying.Meanwhile, their words – oh God, their words! – have been so much louder. So loud, they squealed like feedback from the annals as the number required went up and up. Take Stokes’ comments after the 2022 success here, that a bit of him wanted India to get 450 “to see what they [his team] could do”, suggesting 378 had come a little too easy.And then there were the comments from Joe Root a year later. As revealed on documentary by Nathan Lyon, Root had told Australia’s offspinner during a break in the first Ashes Test – again here at Edgbaston – that England were “in the entertainment business – no more draws”. They lost that one. In Vizag last year, during the second Test against India, James Anderson said McCullum had gathered the players on night two, with England 171 behind having been skittled in their first innings, to tell them that they’d chase 600 if it was put before them. Set 399, they set themselves up nicely before succumbing to a 106-run defeat. Related

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A couple of weeks later, in Rajkot, we were treated to Ben Duckett’s immortal “the more the better” quote when asked what a reasonable target would be. Faced with 557, they lost by 434. Even last night, Brook basically shrugged when stating “everybody in the world knows we’re going to try and chase whatever they set us”. India did, too, with Brook’s words picked up by their management group and used as vindication for the third innings descending into a slow trudge. India, after all, are not the ones with a reputation to uphold, and it is no slight on their tactics to suggest their approach to this situation has simply been to call England’s bluff.As stumps approached, those same fans chanting “boring, boring India” rose in voice and from their seats as renditions of “stand up, if you still believe” coursed through the stands. Goading England with a monstrously big target and saying “go on then”, and swathes of the home support this evening looking at 5.96 an over for day five’s 90 and thinking “you know what …”: both sentiments come from the same place.India are wary of what England can do, especially on this deck, having somehow restricted their first-innings deficit to 180, having been 84 for 5 in reply to India’s 587. It is why they want three cracks with a hard ball – tonight, tomorrow morning and the second one due 64 overs into Sunday. And why it would be inexplicable in any other context for Shubman Gill to deploy a sweeper to the off side after Duckett lashed four boundaries in his first 11 deliveries.England, just as inexplicably, think there’ll be a time tomorrow when they might be in a position to have a reasonable go. Assistant coach Marcus Trescothick offered some logic to this apparent absurdity: “We’ve got a few overs, probably about another 10 to 15 overs, of the ball at its hardest before it gets a little bit soft. And then we’ll see how we’re going from that point really.”There is a clear halfway house here, which would involve England going at a steady rate – the runs so far this Test have come at 4.40 – without taking outlandish risks. It would be a positive way for the team to play for their first draw in 38 Tests under Ben and Baz, if you will.Would that pass the sniff test? Some fans may bemoan a shutting-up of shop at some point on day five. And there will be derision further afield of a team breaking their own promise to themselves. A lot will depend on how many wickets they have in hand.But there is clear value in the draw in this five-match series, particularly in a second Test that could preserve a 1-0 lead. And at no point should they fear their reputation will be harmed if they pass on the outlandish and stick to more conservative practice. Opponents will still fear them. Fans will still love them.Osbourne has not chewed the head of a bat in 43 years, but Villa Park is still sold out.

Which has been the best era for batting in Test cricket's history?

And when have bowlers dominated? Over 2500 Tests have been played so far – we analyse the numbers

S Rajesh02-Jun-2023The Wellington Test between New Zealand and Sri Lanka earlier this year – which the home team won by an innings and 58 runs – was the 2500th Test match in men’s cricket. It wasn’t a particularly memorable contest, but the landmark was a reminder of how long the format has been around.The very nature of the five-day game means only a limited number of them can be fitted into an annual calendar. In 2022 only 43 Tests were played, compared to 161 ODIs and a whopping 531 T20Is (that last number is also a function of the huge number of teams that play the shortest format). While it has taken 146 years for Test cricket to reach 2500 matches, the other two formats have been rapidly adding to their numbers: in 52 years of the 50-over ODI, 4578 matches have taken place, while 2076 T20Is have been played in only 18 years.That by itself means milestone matches come far less frequently in Tests. The 2000th Test was played almost 12 years ago, in July 2011, and the 1500th about 11 years before that. And that is super quick compared to the first 500, which took 83 years. (Even accounting for the 11 years lost to the two world wars, that’s a long time.)So how has Test cricket changed in this period, and which teams and players have been the most dominant in each of the five non-overlapping 500-Test blocks? Let the numbers tell the story.Overall numbers in Test cricket, 1877 to 2023For a format that has been played for more than 145 years, it is remarkable how similar the batting averages are in the five blocks. The early part of the first block featured lower averages due to uncovered pitches, but since then the number has hovered around the early 30s. The averages in the third and fifth blocks vary from each other by a minuscule 0.01, while in the second block (1960-1984), it was only about half a run higher.ESPNcricinfo LtdIn the first decade of the 2000s, the overall batting average jumped to almost 35. That was clearly the batting era, characterised by relatively flat pitches, several batters who averaged above 50, and bowlers who struggled to achieve sub-30 averages. That is the only block of 500 Tests in which more than 1000 centuries were scored – 1042, compared to 766, 854, 791 and 951 in the four other blocks (in chronological order). Since then, bowlers have fought back to re-establish equilibrium, and in the last five years, they have even turned the tables on the batters.What changed, though, are scoring rates, and the number of non-draw results. From a dour 2.54 runs per over in the first block, the run rate has gone well past three now, which seems to be the influence of the 50- and 20-over formats. That’s the one data point where the number has consistently gone up in every period, apart from the last decade, when it dipped marginally in comparison to the previous one, largely due to the more bowler-friendly conditions on offer. The percentage of draws has drastically decreased too, from around one in every two games in the second block of 500 Tests, to one every five games in the last decade.Team-wise trends in each 500-match block of Test cricketTo start with, England and Australia were the dominant teams. Of the first 500 Tests, in 178 those two teams were pitted against each other, while 310 involved at least one of them. South Africa were the only other team to play more than 100 Tests in this period. However, while Australia and England won many more Tests than they lost, South Africa largely struggled in this period, winning only 27 against 72 defeats.

West Indies emerged as an outstanding Test team in the next period, winning twice as many Tests as they lost (57-28). They had a wonderful period from 1962 to 1967 (15 wins, three losses), and then from 1980 were dominant through the rest of that decade. In the last 44 Tests they played in this block, West Indies won 22 and lost only two.

The third block of 500 Tests (between 1984 and 2000) was notable for Pakistan’s rise and South Africa’s return after their apartheid-era ban. Pakistan won 43 and lost 29, giving them a healthy ratio of 1.48, bettered only by Australia (1.84), West Indies (1.65) and South Africa (2.28), who came back international cricket with a formidable line-up in 1992. England struggled in this period (36 wins, 66 losses), but picked themselves up in the next, winning 65 and losing only 38. The last two blocks are also notable for India’s rise (111-63 across the two periods), and West Indies’ stunning decline (44-115).

In fact, India’s win percentage of 52.99 since July 29, 2011 is the second best by any team in any of these five 500-Test blocks, bettered only by Australia’s 65.32% wins in the 1501-2000 block.ESPNcricinfo LtdIn terms of win-loss ratio, though, India’s 62-35 record in that post-2011 period (ratio 1.77) is in seventh place. Australia’s record in the fourth block (2000-2011) was 81 wins against 24 losses, a stunning ratio of 3.38, which sits far ahead of anything any team has achieved. West Indies’ slump is apparent from these stats: from a win-loss ratio of 2.04 between 1960 and 1984, the fourth best in any block, they have lost more than 50% of their Tests in the last two blocks (63 out of 113 and 52 out of 98), among the worst performances by any team.

Batting: which were the best and worst periods?From the five non-overlapping blocks of 500 Tests (the last block is 503 games), it’s clear that the period between Tests No. 1501 and 2000 – the first decade of the 21st century – was an extremely good one for batters: the average runs per wicket was 34.62 in that block of matches; excluding extras, the batting average was 32.48, compared to 29.7 and 30.41 in the 500-Test blocks either side of it. That’s an increase of around 8% in that decade, compared to the periods before and after. Thirty-six batters made over 4000 runs in that period, of whom 16 averaged at least 50. In none of the other four blocks did so many batters enjoy so much success.

In fact, after July 29, 2011, only five out of the 25 batters with 4000-plus runs also averaged over 50: Steve Smith, Kane Williamson, AB de Villiers, Younis Khan and Joe Root. Virat Kohli, with an average of 49.94, just misses out. In the period between November 1984 and June 2000, it was five out of 23 – the chosen ones were again the cream of the lot: Sachin Tendulkar, Brian Lara, Allan Border, Martin Crowe and Steve Waugh (batters like Graham Gooch, Mohammad Azharuddin and Inzamam-ul-Haq missed out).Within each period – which spans more than ten years – there could be specific periods when the averages went further higher or lower. That can be recorded by calculating the moving averages for a smaller number of matches. The next couple of graphs plot the moving averages calculated over 100-Test spans, which means the first plot point is at the 100th Test (the average over matches 1-100), the second is the at the 101st Test (average over matches 2-101) etc. There are thus 2404 plot points in the graph.The highest peak among those points is 34.92, which is the batting average (excluding extras) for the 100 Tests played between August 8, 2008 and December 16, 2010. That period falls towards the end of the fourth block of 500 Tests. On the other extreme, the lowest average over a 100-Test period was in the very early days of Test cricket, between December 31, 1881 and July 26, 1909, when it slumped to 22.27. If you consider the last 60 years, the lowest phase came recently: between January 5, 2018 and August 5, 2020, the batting average dropped to 27.65, which is a 21% drop on the highs of 2008-10.

Breaking up these numbers by the top seven and bottom four batters in XIs, the dominant batting periods remain largely the same. The best 100-Test phase for the top seven was between October 17, 2008 and December 26, 2010, when they averaged 41.41. That average was matched in the 100 Tests between October 25, 2008 and January 3, 2011. On the other hand, in the period between April 30, 2017 and August 30, 2019, the average for Nos. 1-7 dropped to 32.87, which is also the lowest in the last 60 years. The percentage drop was again a significant 20.6%. Thus, the last 15 years have seen some of the best periods for batters bowlers.

For tail-end batters too, the best phase was in the late 2000s and early 2010s: a batting average of 17.82, between December 2008 and June 2011. However, their worst lows were in the 1990s and early 2000s: they averaged 13.17 in 100 Tests between October 1990 and February 1994. And if you’re wondering if lower-order batting has indeed improved overall through the years, here are the averages in the five blocks, in chronological order: 14.75, 15.34, 14.85, 15.77, 15.52.When did bowlers thrive, and when did they need to toil?If the batters had the time of their lives in the early 2000s, then it’s obvious the bowlers didn’t. Nineteen of them took 200 or more wickets between June 2000 and July 2011 (the fourth block of 500 Tests), but only eight of those had sub-30 averages. In each of the other blocks, almost all the bowlers with 200-plus wickets also had sub-30 averages. The first block of 500 Tests only had three bowlers with 200-plus wickets, simply because of the relatively small number of Tests played per year: till 1960, there were only two years with 20-plus Tests, and eight years with more than 15 Tests. That meant bowlers needed to have much longer careers to give themselves a chance of taking 200 wickets.

Alec Bedser, Ray Lindwall and Clarrie Grimmett were the only bowlers with 200-plus wickets in the period before 1961, and they all averaged under 25. In the next 500-Test block, both those numbers went up five-fold, and all 15 bowlers who took 20 or more wickets averaged under 30, from Joel Garner (20.73) to Graham McKenzie (29.78). Others on the list included all-time legends like Imran Khan, Michael Holding, Dennis Lillee, Richard Hadlee, Ian Botham and Kapil Dev. The 1984-2000 block had a 100% sub-30 record too, and included the likes of Malcolm Marshall, Curtly Ambrose, Allan Donald, Glenn McGrath, and the two Ws from Pakistan.In the fourth block, though, only eight out of 19 bowlers passed the sub-30 Test. While McGrath, Shane Warne, Dale Steyn and Muthiah Muralidaran were all in that club, those who missed out included James Anderson, Anil Kumble and Zaheer Khan. In the most recent block, bowlers have again regained some of their pre-eminence, with 16 out of the 18 who have 200-plus wickets also averaging under 30. They include Pat Cummins, Vernon Philander, Steyn, Anderson, R Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja. The only bowlers outside the 30 bracket are Nathan Lyon and Yasir Shah, and even they have averaged under 32.Like for the batters, a 100-Test moving average will reveal a more nuanced movement of averages as opposed to the single number we have for each block of 500 Tests. Since the overall bowling average will obviously resemble the overall batting one, let’s look at the numbers for pace and spin. Which were the best years for each of them, and were there periods when either type did well when the other didn’t?

The moving averages graph for pace looks largely similar to the one for overall bowling averages, but there’s a sharp dip in three places – 1956-60, 1980-84, and then again, more recently, in the last three years. The most recent dip is the most pronounced and reveals what a dominant period this has been for fast bowling. In the period from January 5, 2018 to August 5, 2020, fast bowlers averaged 26, which is the lowest they have averaged in any 100-Test period in around 100 years. The last time they did better was between December 29, 1894 and July 2, 1921, when they averaged 25.93.For spinners, the returns haven’t been as impressive, with the average hovering around the mid-30s for a while now. The last time they averaged under 30 over a 100-Test span was way back in the period between February 18, 1956 and January 19, 1962, when they conceded 29.62 runs per wicket. That was when Jim Laker, Gary Lock and Richie Benaud were all at their lethal best, taking 100-plus wickets at sub-24 averages. Since 2018 (100-Test sequence ending in 2018 or later), the best spinners have done is 31.60, in the 100 Tests between February 23, 2017 and February 28, 2019.

The return of the Newlands beast – the review Cricket Australia forgot

Rick McCosker is firm that CA allowed the team review to be “swamped” by Simon Longstaff’s culture review

Daniel Brettig21-May-2021In the midst of the Newlands scandal, on the day Cricket Australia announced drastic penalties for David Warner, Steven Smith and Cameron Bancroft, the chief executive James Sutherland made two things clear.First, the penalties were not for ball-tampering itself, but for the subsequent cover-up and the massive reputation damage it had done to the game in Australia. Secondly, and as importantly, Sutherland stated that a further review would go deeper with members of the Australian team about how they got to the sorry point reached in Cape Town.That review is little remembered. It was chaired by the respected former Test opener and New South Wales captain Rick McCosker, and facilitated by the longtime ethics expert Peter Collins. It featured a panel of cricketers that included the current Test captain Tim Paine and his now deputy Pat Cummins, and also the Australia Women captain Meg Lanning and deputy Rachael Haynes.Related

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Three years on, McCosker has told ESPNcricinfo he believes the review served its purpose, in that it helped provide a framework to improve the behaviour of the Australian team and enhance the focus on peer accountability within the dressing room. He is proud the standard of behaviour glimpsed on the field has improved immensely, as three years of matches have demonstrated the change more fully than words possibly could.But McCosker is equally firm about the fact that CA allowed the team review to be “swamped” by the unveiling of the wider culture review, helmed by Simon Longstaff, that led to the resignation of the board’s then chairman David Peever in November 2018. Three years later, the public view is that the players were never confronted about Newlands and its precursors after the initial code of conduct investigation by CA’s then head of integrity, Iain Roy, which resulted in the bans.That reading of events would be to ignore what McCosker and his review panel did: isolate the behaviour patterns that allowed Newlands to happen, and find a point of collective responsibility for all the players involved, not just the three banned.McCosker and Collins spoke first with the bowlers who played in South Africa: Cummins, Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Nathan Lyon. They also spoke to Smith at his home. These discussions were frank. It suffices to say that all took place in a far less anxious atmosphere than the one pervading the Australian team hotel in Cape Town after the Newlands Test: the environment in which Roy had interviewed ten of 15 touring players and six of 12 touring staff for his code of conduct investigation.

One of the enduring problems of any form of leadership is to forget the lessons of history. But it is another thing entirely to first allow the substance and presence of a players’ review that you had commissioned be swamped by other events, and then to forget it had even happened in the first place. Little wonder the rough beast of Newlands has come round again.

Not every member of the Newlands XI was consulted by McCosker either. Bancroft was not interviewed because it was felt that he had suffered enough; Warner was not interviewed because his management discouraged the idea on the basis that things were still too raw at the time. Nevertheless, McCosker’s review did settle on some key findings shared with Longstaff for inclusion in the culture review, and it also put in place a players’ pact, designed to distil the Australian team’s sense of ownership by the public.”One of the first meetings we had was a very frank and productive discussion with the bowling group who played in the Test match in South Africa,” McCosker wrote in a column for in 2018. “Soon afterwards, Peter and I visited Steve Smith at Steve’s home to discuss his thoughts on what happened and what led to it. Steve, like the bowlers, was very open and co-operative.”What we found, in summary, was that there were players in the Australian team who knew things were not right, that aspects of the team’s responsibilities had been overlooked, and that expectations to win had, to some extent, obscured other parts of what it meant to be an Australian cricketer.”Throughout the period, McCosker found the players to be genuine in their contrition about Newlands and what led up to it. But he had less co-operation from CA in terms of recognising the importance of the players review in making clear that the national team had engaged in further, wider introspection after the bans were handed down.Adamant that the findings of the players’ review and the drafting of the players’ pact should be announced and discussed separately from the Longstaff review, McCosker was rebuffed by CA’s preference for all to be discussed together on the same day. In practice, this meant that Paine and Hazlewood – who, alongside Mitchell Marsh, was part of a final meeting to draft the pact – were present for a few brief minutes at a national press conference where attention was focused squarely on Peever and the board.It was a measure of how the cycle of public discussion had moved on from Newlands itself that after Paine read out the pact, only a handful of questions were asked to him and Hazlewood by a large media contingent at the MCG, before they left the stage to Peever. The sorts of questions being asked of a lot of players this week, about wider responsibility for the ball-tampering attempt and its cover-up, were scarcely given the chance to be aired at the moment they most needed to be.Paine and Hazlewood were present the player review at the CA press conference•Getty ImagesFlicking through the 145 pages of the Longstaff review, there are multiple examples of the players’ acceptance of collective responsibility for the dysfunctional culture that led to Newlands, but also their views on the wider CA system and cricket landscape in which that took place.On page 76: “A number of elite players made it clear that they would not challenge the bad behaviour of a gifted player – in case doing so would put the player off their game – making the difference between a win or loss.”On a heavily redacted page 84: “According to a wide array of respondents, one of the precipitating factors to the ball-tampering incident at Newlands was an inability among players to exercise the level of self-control, good decision-making and interpersonal skills required of professional international cricketers. In particular, a number of senior players failed to question poor behaviour – in case doing so affected performance on the field.”Most tellingly, the Longstaff review acknowledged that the ball-tampering itself had evolved out of a period of the game’s history where efforts to gain reverse swing had been escalating for quite some time.On page 89: “Players speak openly of all manner of artificial measures being employed to enhance what would otherwise be left to nature. We have heard accounts of the power of certain brands of sugary mints to aid shine; of finger splints fashioned to abrade the ball, of pebbles in pockets … a whole gamut of tricks and tools designed to ‘manage’ the ball.”Umpires are clear. Any interference with the ball – even deliberately throwing the rough side into a hardened pitch – is against the laws of cricket. Yet, it seems that the rules are imperfectly enforced; that sanctions vary considerably and that some teams are more willing to tamper than others. Taken together this means that there is not a ‘level playing field’ – and thus an inducement to push the boundaries of acceptable behaviour up to the point that umpires intervene … and sometimes beyond.”These passages were seldom quoted at a time when most felt it was the turn of CA’s board and executive to be accountable in the way that Warner, Smith and Bancroft had been some months before. And their absence then has contributed to the sense of unanswered questions at the considerable distance of May 2021.Once the reviews were announced, McCosker had no follow-up from CA. The administration, forever reacting to the next spot-fire, had moved on. Three years later, the players review has been more or less forgotten, not just by the general public but by CA itself. Of the board sub-committee members who worked on the reviews and their release – Jacquie Hey, Mark Taylor, Michael Kasprowicz and Earl Eddings – only the chairman, Eddings, is still with the governing body.One of the enduring problems of any form of leadership is to forget the lessons of history. But it is another thing entirely to first allow the substance and presence of a players’ review that you had commissioned be swamped by other events, and then to forget it had even happened in the first place. Little wonder the rough beast of Newlands has come round again.

موعد والقنوات الناقلة لمباراة السودان والبحرين اليوم في كأس العرب 2025

يخوض منتخب السودان مباراة مرتقبة ضد نظيره البحرين، مساء اليوم الثلاثاء، ضمن منافسات بطولة كأس العرب 2025 المقامة في قطر.

ويلتقي منتخب السودان مع البحرين، في إطار مواجهات الجولة الثالثة والأخيرة من عمر مواجهات دور المجموعات لبطولة كأس العرب.

ويتواجد منتخب السودان والبحرين، في المجموعة الرابعة من بطولة كأس العرب 2025، مع منتخبات العراق والجزائر.

وكان منتخب السودان تعادل في لقاء الجولة الأولى مع الجزائر سلبيًا، خسر في الجولة الثانية أمام العراق 2-0.

بينما منتخب البحرين، نال الهزيمة في المواجهتين الأولى والثانية أمام العراق والجزائر 2-1 و 5-1 على الترتيب.

وينافس منتخب السودان نظيره الجزائر على خطف بطاقة التأهل الثانية إلى دور ربع النهائي من بطولة كأس العرب من المجموعة الرابعة، بعد أن حسم منتخب العراق البطاقة الأولى، بينما تلاشت حظوط منتخب البحرين في التأهل.

طالع.. بالمواعيد | مواجهات دور الـ 8 من كأس العرب 2025 موعد مباراة السودان والبحرين اليوم في كأس العرب 2025

تقام مباراة السودان والبحرين، اليوم الثلاثاء 9 ديسمبر 2025، في تمام الساعة 7 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسودان، 8 بتوقيت السعودية بتوقيت البحرين. القنوات الناقلة لمباراة السودان والبحرين اليوم في كأس العرب 2025

– قناة بي إن سبورت المفتوحة.

– قناة الكأس 2.

– قناة دبي الرياضية.

– قناة أبو ظبي الرياضية 2.

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

O'Neill must drop Yang to unleash Celtic star he's given 54 mins to so far

Celtic’s interim head coach Martin O’Neill has confirmed that Wednesday night’s clash with Dundee at Parkhead will be his final match in the dugout for the Scottish giants.

The experienced manager stepped in after Brendan Rodgers resigned at the end of October and has won six of his seven matches in all competitions, per Transfermarkt, to date.

Columbus Crew boss Wilfried Nancy will then take over as the permanent successor to Brendan Rodgers and will face a baptism of fire at the weekend against league leaders Hearts in the Scottish Premiership.

The French boss will be watching on from afar for the clash this evening and will have one last chance to assess the players who will soon be at his disposal before being tasked with organising them in training.

O’Neill will also be keen for his last game to be a memorable one, leaving Nancy with the team in the best possible position, by claiming all three points against Dundee.

The experienced boss may look to make some changes to his starting line-up from the side that beat Hibernian 2-1 at Easter Road on Sunday in order to secure the win this evening.

The Celtic players who could be dropped against Dundee

Football FanCast have already suggested that right-sided winger Luke McCowan should be dropped from the team after he failed to impress against Hibs at the weekend, with no shots on target or ‘big chances’ created, per Sofascore.

The former Dundee man has been tasked with filling in out wide in recent games, due to the lack of natural options in that position, but he was ineffective last time out, which could provide Benjamin Nygren with a chance to play in that role.

On the other side of the pitch, Marcelo Saracchi could make way for Kieran Tierney at left-back, as the two defenders have shared the workload so far this season in the Premiership.

Appearances

7

10

Starts

6

6

Minutes

405

609

Big chances created

2

2

Assists

1

2

As you can see in the statistics above, they have both started six league games this term, and it could be Tierney’s time to start this evening after coming off the bench against Hibs.

Another player who could be dropped from the starting line-up, alongside Saracchi and McCowan, is left-sided attacker Hyun-jun Yang, who played a part in Arne Engels’ goal with a deflected cross for the Belgian on Sunday.

Aside from that deflected cross, the South Korean forward offered little to the side in or out of possession on the left flank. Per Sofascore, he played 86 minutes without registering a key pass, a ‘big chance’ created, or a shot on target, as his part in Engels’ goal did not count as an assist.

The 23-year-old star, who scored against Feyenoord last week in the Europa League, also lost 75% (3/4) of his duels throughout the game, per Sofascore, which shows that he was not strong enough in his physical battles.

With this in mind, and the fact that they have Hearts to play on Sunday, O’Neill should ruthlessly ditch Yang from the starting line-up to provide another player with an opportunity to impress.

Chalkboard

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

Dropping the South Korea international could allow the experienced boss to finally unleash rarely-seen winger Michel-Ange Balikwisha on the left flank against Dundee tonight.

Why Celtic should unleash Michel-Ange Balikwisha

The Belgian forward played 59 minutes across three substitute appearances in O’Neill’s first three games in charge, but has been an unused substitute for the last four matches in all competitions.

We are not privy to what goes on behind the scenes, in training and in tactical meetings, and the experienced boss will have his reasons for not giving Balikwisha much game time in recent weeks.

However, in a three-game week, this clash with Dundee ahead of the meeting with Hearts on Sunday provides the manager with a chance to give the summer signing from Royal Antwerp a start for the first time.

In fact, Balikwisha has not started a game for Celtic since the 2-1 win over Kilmarnock away from home in September under Rodgers, per Sofascore, which means that the winger has not had many opportunities to showcase his quality.

Hibernian

0

St Mirren

0

Kilmarnock

0

Falkirk

29

Hearts

30

Dundee

26

Motherwell

12

Hibernian

16

Kilmarnock

58

Rangers

65

As you can see in the table above, the Celtic winger started his first two games in the Premiership against Rangers and Kilmarnock, after signing from Royal Antwerp, but has not gotten a look-in since then.

There is more to come from Balikwisha in a Celtic shirt because his form for Royal Antwerp in Belgium suggests that he does have the potential to carry a threat at the top end of the pitch.

Per Transfermarkt, the 24-year-old wing wizard scored 30 goals and provided 17 assists in 145 matches for Antwerp, yet he has only managed two assists and no goals in 12 outings in all competitions for the Hoops.

The only way he will improve and adapt to Scottish football, though, is by playing matches and getting used to the intensity and physicality of the division, which he cannot do from the bench.

That is why O’Neill should give Balikwisha a rare opportunity to start against Dundee as a parting gift to Nancy, as it would provide the winger with another opportunity to develop as a Celtic player ahead of a fresh page under the next manager.

Therefore, the interim manager should ruthlessly drop and rest Yang from the starting line-up this evening, bringing the rarely-seen Belgian in to give him a chance to stake a claim for a place in the side moving forward.

Nancy could bin Celtic star who's been the biggest winner of O'Neill's reign

Incoming Celtic boss Wilfried Nancy could drop this star who has been the biggest winner of Martin O’Neill’s reign.

1 ByDan Emery Dec 2, 2025

A’s Manager Had to Take a Comical Walk of Shame After Ejection Thanks to Tiny Stadium

A's manager Mark Kotsay was ejected from Sunday's game against the Phillies after yelling at the home plate umpire about balls and strikes. Usually when someone is tossed from a MLB game we don't get to see their sad walk back to the clubhouse. But that wasn't the case Saturday thanks to the A's playing in a minor league park in Sacramento.

In case you didn't know, the A's clubhouse at Sutter Health Park is located behind the left field wall. So in order to get there you have to walk through the field, which can lead to some awkward moments.

Poor Mark Kotsay had to do a walk of shame after his ejection, which was captured in this tremendous video:

That is just hilarious.

The A's are scheduled to play in Sacramento until the 2028 season when they will move to Las Vegas. Seems like this walk of shame could happen a lot more before then.

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