Harry Kane sends out heartfelt message to Lionesses after England retain Euro title with dramatic shoot-out win over Spain

The Lionesses retained their European Championship crown in thrilling fashion, defeating Spain 3-1 in a penalty shootout after a 1-1 draw in the Euro 2025 final. Chloe Kelly scored the decisive spot-kick, with goalkeeper Hannah Hampton producing heroics. Harry Kane led the tributes with a heartfelt message praising the team's incredible achievement in Switzerland.

England beat Spain on penalties to win Euro 2025Chloe Kelly scores decisive penalty in shootout victoryKane praises Lionesses’ 'incredible achievement'Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

England came from behind to beat reigning world champions Spain on penalties in the Euro 2025 final. Mariona Caldentey gave Spain the lead, but Alessia Russo equalised after the break, assisted by Chloe Kelly. The match finished 1-1 after extra time, before Hampton’s shootout saves and Kelly’s decisive penalty sealed the win for Sarina Wiegman's Lionesses.

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The victory in Switzerland marked a sweet revenge for England, who lost the 2023 World Cup final to Spain. It also confirmed Wiegman’s tactical gamble, replacing Lionesses legend Mary Earps with Hampton, as a masterstroke. With back-to-back Euros triumphs, England have firmly cemented their place at the top of European football, and Bayern Munich striker and Three Lions captain Kane was full of praise for the European champions.

WHAT KANE SAID

England men’s captain Harry Kane posted on Instagram: “Back-to-back! Incredible achievement. Congratulations to all the players and staff."

Instagram (@harrykane)

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WHAT NEXT FOR THE LIONESSES?

The Lionesses will celebrate their second straight European title before preparations begin for the 2027 World Cup qualifiers. Wiegman’s bold decisions have been vindicated, but competition for spots will only intensify. For now, England can bask in their glory and another momentous milestone.

Giants seal first win after Mooney-Wolvaardt opening act

Openers’ 140-run stand helps Giants get off the mark after four straight defeats

Firdose Moonda06-Mar-2024Gujarat Giants 199 for 5 (Mooney 85*, Wolvaardt 76, Molineux 1-32) beat Royal Challengers Bangalore 180 for 7 (Wareham 48, Gardner 2-23) by 19 runs It was fifth time lucky for Gujarat Giants who won their first match of this year’s WPL in Delhi, after four defeats in Bengaluru. The change of venue worked a charm for Giants who bucked the Chinnaswamy chasing trend by choosing to bat first and racked up the second-highest total in their WPL history thanks to their first century stand. Laura Wolvaardt and Beth Mooney put on 140 for the first wicket and though the middle order fell away, they asked Royal Challengers Bangalore to pull off the highest successful WPL chase of 200.If any team was up for the task, it was them. RCB chased down 189 against Giants last year, when Sophie Devine scored 99 from the opening berth and she looked in the mood for a repeat. Batting at No.4, Devine was at the crease two balls after the powerplay, with RCB on 42 for 2. She took them to halfway in a good position in 76 for 2 but then was bowled by left-arm spinner Tanuja Kanwar to leave RCB’s middle order to finish the job.Richa Ghosh played a spirited hand with 30 off 20 balls and shared in a stand of 33 with Georgia Wareham, who scored 48 off 22, but skied an Ash Gardner full toss to Meghna Singh at cover and all but ended RCB’s hopes. The result means Giants have their first points and will enter the race for the knockouts, with three more league matches left to play.First fifties for Giants Lack of runs was the main problem for Giants after the Bengaluru leg of the competition, with no top-order partnerships of more than 50 runs (Ash Gardner and Phoebe Litchfield had a 52-run fourth-wicket stand against UP Warriorz) partnerships and no individual scores of fifty or more. They put both of those right in their first outing in Delhi. Mooney and Wolvaardt’s opening combination worked well for the second time in three matches. After posting 40 against Warriorz, they got to 50 off 27 balls in the fifth over with Wolvaardt the aggressor and Mooney the accumulator. Theirs is the only opening stand in Giants’ history that has gone past a half-century, with no fifty-plus opening stands in 2023 either. Wolvaardt went on to record the first fifty by a Giants batter this year and she did so off just 32 balls with a stunning straight drive past Ellyse Perry and their stand grew to 140 – Giants highest in their history.Laura Wolvaardt notched up 76 off just 45 balls•BCCIBisht – and RCB – vs Umpires Wolvaardt’s dismissal for 76 gave RCB an opportunity to get back into the innings and the two overs cost just 15 runs. But after Devine was brought back and her third over costing another 15 runs, the pressure was on the left-arm spinner Ekta Bisht. Mooney hit the first ball straight past her for four, then couldn’t get the second away. For the third, Mooney brought out a reverse-sweep and missed, prompting a loud appeal from Bisht for lbw, which was denied. RCB reviewed. Replays showed Mooney had inside-edged onto her front pad. Bisht kept the next ball full, Phoebe Litchfield tried to scoop and missed, RCB appealed again and were denied again. RCB reviewed again, only to see the ball pitching outside leg. Later, the same umpire gave Smriti Mandhana out in the chase when she missed a pull off Gardner and she reviewed the call. Replays showed the ball was hitting leg stump and Jayapal was right again.All RCB at the end Mooney’s onslaught didn’t blunt RCB’s fielding efforts and Mandhana was quick to respond when Mooney called Litchfield through for a non-existent single in the penultimate over. Her throw found Richa Ghosh in time to catch Litchfield out of her crease and run her out for 18. Giants promoted hard-hitting Gardner to No.4 and she sent the first ball she faced to Simran Bahadur at long-off to depart for a duck. Wareham conceded two wides and a single to close out the over. With Mooney off strike to start the last over, D Hemalatha stepped out of her crease to try and smack Sophie Molineux through the in-field but missed and was stumped. Four balls later, Mooney was facing again when she hit the ball to point and called Veda Krishnamurthy through for a single. Veda was never going to make her ground and became the third Giants batter to be run out. RCB closed out the innings with two overs that cost only 12 runs and brought them four wickets.Mooney gets her own back Mooney was on strike for all three Giants run-outs, and it was her calls that left her partners in tricky situations, but she made up for that when she completed a run-out in RCB’s innings. S Meghana was coming back for a second run off Meghna Singh but took on Wolvaardt’s arm and always looked in trouble. The throw came in and Mooney collected and whipped the bails off to give Giants a clear advantage just after the powerplay.Wareham mayhem at the death RCB’s hopes of a win were almost certainly out of mind when Wareham decided to have some fun. She’d just seen Ghosh dismissed, her team needed 71 off 24 balls and Tanuja Kanwar delivered a juicy full toss on offstump which she could not resist. Wareham cleared the front leg and boshed the ball over deep mid-wicket for her first six and RCB’s sixth. She hit one more, off Meghna over wide long-on, and RCB finished with eight sixes, an interesting statistic considering Giants only hit one six, but ended up on the losing side.

Melbourne Renegades set to part ways with coach David Saker

Saker was under contract for next season but Renegades are set to search for a new coach after another disappointing BBL season

Alex Malcolm29-Apr-2024Melbourne Renegades are set to part ways with BBL coach David Saker despite him having a year to run on his contract after another dismal season where they finished seventh.Saker, 57, was contracted to coach the Renegades for the 2024-25 season, which would have been his fourth in charge after taking over in 2021. But following a disappointing season where Renegades finished second last and won just two games, and also axed their captain Nic Maddinson, it is understood Renegades will seek a fresh start yet again with Saker’s tenure set to end early.Renegades have been the poorest performing club in the BBL since Andrew McDonald coached them to their inaugural title in 2018-19. McDonald left the role immediately after claiming that title when he joined the Australian team as an assistant before eventually becoming the national head coach in 2022.Related

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Michael Klinger took over as Renegades coach for the 2019-20 season but lasted just two summers as Renegades finished bottom of the BBL for two seasons running. Klinger departed to take up an administrative role with Cricket New South Wales.Saker was brought in for 2021-22 but Renegades finished last for a third straight year before bouncing back to finish third in 2022-23, winning seven games and hosting the Knockout where they were beaten by eventual finalists Brisbane Heat.But 2023-24 saw Renegades regress again. They were winless in their first five games and only managed to win two of their last five. They experienced a high turnover of players, with Maddinson axed as captain while Aaron Finch was in and out of the side before eventually calling time on his BBL career. Shaun Marsh also only managed five games due to injury issues before announcing his retirement.Renegades have made some list changes already in the off-season signing Brisbane Heat opener Josh Brown in the hopes he can form a dynamic opening duo with Jake Fraser-McGurk.Renegades are also seeking to appoint a new high performance manager who will oversee the cricket program. Melbourne Stars have advertised for a similar role. Cricket Victoria created the two roles to try and build a better link between the Victoria men’s program and the two Victoria BBL clubs, given they have been run as three separate entities without much connection in recent years.

Partnerships – at the crease, and in the church

The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questions about (almost) any aspect of cricket

Steven Lynch14-Aug-2006The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questions about (almost) any aspect of cricket:

Kevin Pietersen’s 135 at Headingley included two separate fifty partnerships with Ian Bell © Getty Images
During the third Test, Kevin Pietersen and Ian Bell shared two fifty partnerships, one of them when Pietersen resumed his innings after retiring hurt. Is this unique in Tests? asked Richard Unwin
Rather surprisingly, it isn’t unique, although our database throws up only 32 instances of two batsmen resuming a partnership in Tests after one of them retired hurt. Pietersen and Bell added 67 at Headingley before cramps forced Pietersen off, then 74 more when he returned. But the record, with 199 added in two partnerships, is by Larry Gomes and Jeff Dujon, for West Indies against Australia at Perth in 1984-85. They put on 50 before Dujon briefly retired hurt, complaining of blurred vision after earlier being hit by a ball from Terry Alderman: he returned at the fall of the next wicket and they added 149 more. The only other double instance was also against Australia: after putting on 69 with Jeremy Coney at Christchurch in 1985-86, Martin Crowe was hit in the jaw by Bruce Reid and retired hurt to have ten stitches inserted, but resumed later and helped him add a further 73 runs.What is the highest partnership for England in Tests? asked Barry Brentnall from Worthing
England’s highest Test partnership, which also remains the overall record for the fourth wicket, is the 411 added by Peter May and Colin Cowdrey against West Indies at Edgbaston in 1957. England had been skittled for 186 in their first innings, with “mystery spinner” Sonny Ramadhin taking 7 for 49, and after West Indies made 474 England were up against it. Ramadhin took two early wickets, but then May, England’s captain, and his deputy Cowdrey decided to play “Ram” as an offspinner, often padding the ball away deliberately: Ramadhin shouted himself hoarse in appealing for lbws during his 98 overs, which is still a record for a single innings in first-class cricket. He couldn’t interest the umpires, finished with 2 for 179, and is said never to have been quite the same bowler again. For a list of England’s record partnerships in Tests, click here.What is the highest Test partnership by a pair of debutants? asked Saif Mohammad from Peshawar
There have been a total of ten century partnerships in which both players were making their Test debut. The highest one – and the only one of over 200 – was an opening stand of 249 by Abdul Kadir and Billy Ibadulla for Pakistan against Australia at Karachi in 1964-65. Ibadulla made 166, but Kadir (a wicketkeeper, not the later legspinner) just missed out on his century with 95. Oddly, they both played only three more Tests. For a complete list of hundred partnerships between Test debutants, click here.Has anyone ever shared a hundred partnership for the first and last wickets in a Test? asked Irfan Fazal from Lahore
Four men have done this – two Englishmen and two Australians. Wilfred Rhodes (who started at No. 11 and ended up as an opener) and Alec Stewart did it for England, while the first man to achieve this odd double was the New South Welshman Reggie Duff, in the early 1900s. The latest addition to the list is Mike Hussey, who shared an opening stand of 231 with Matthew Hayden in his second Test, against West Indies at Hobart in November 2005, and a tenth-wicket one of 107 with Glenn McGrath in only his fifth match, against South Africa at Melbourne a month later. McGrath became only the second man, after New Zealand’s Nathan Astle, to feature in two hundred partnerships for the last wicket in Tests.Has a male Test cricketer ever been married to someone who has played in a women’s Test? asked Robert Everitt from Hampshire
I believe the only married couple to play Test cricket are Roger Prideaux, the Northamptonshire opener who won three England caps in the late 1960s, scoring 64 against Australia on his debut at Headingley in 1968, and his wife, who played 11 Tests as Ruth Westbrook between 1957 and 1963 before they were married. She later became a leading women’s cricket administrator. Karen Hadlee, who was married at the time to the great New Zealand allrounder Richard Hadlee, played one one-day international for New Zealand, against England in 1977-78.Has a player ever got married in the middle of a Test match? asked Shani Griffith from Preston
The only one I know of is Andre Nel, the South African fast bowler, who was married after close of play on the second day in the fourth Test against West Indies at Centurion in January 2004. He was lucky when bad light ended play early, allowing him to speed off and marry his fiancĂ©e Deanne. The next morning he took the wicket of Brian Lara. There was a near-miss in New Zealand in 1983-84: after a rash of injuries England called up Sussex seamer Tony Pigott, who was coaching nearby, for the second Test at Christchurch. It was Pigott’s first (and as it turned out, only) Test, so he was understandably keen to play – the only snag was, he was due to be married on the scheduled fourth day of the game. He decided to play, and postponed the wedding – but needn’t have bothered, as New Zealand won on the third day. Those last two questions might give you a clue as to why this column won’t be appearing for a while. Steven will return, after his wedding, on September 11.

Big winners, big players, big scorers

The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questionsabout (almost) any aspect of cricket. This week it’s a World Cupspecial

Steven Lynch20-Mar-2007The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questions about (almost) any aspect of cricket. The World Cup dominates your questions again this week:

Down on luck: Graham Gooch was the bridesmaid in three World Cup finals © Getty Images
Has anyone played in three World Cup-winning teams? asked Michael Docherty from Brisbane
The only team which has won the World Cup three times is Australia (1987-88, 1999 and 2003), and no-one played in all three games. But three members of the current team were on the winning side in both the last two finals – Ricky Ponting, Adam Gilchrist and Glenn McGrath, who thus stand to become the first three-time winners if Australia can justify their favourites’ tag again this year. Graham Gooch played in three finals for England … and, uniquely, lost the lot.I’m just watching Ireland play and they seem to have a lot on non-Irish-born players. How many of them are there, and what are the qualification rules? asked David Thompson from Huddersfield
The Irish squad includes four players who were born overseas – the captain Trent Johnston, Jeremy Bray and Dave Langford-Smith, who were all in Australia, and Andre Botha (South Africa). The full regulations are rather complicated, but basically a player born outside the country he wishes to represent can do so provided he has lived there for most of the preceding four years (and has not played for any other country in that time). Scotland’s squad also includes four players born outside the country – as does England’s – but the “leaders” in this regard at this World Cup are Canada, who have only three home-born players in their squad (John Davison, Ian Billcliff and Kevin Sandher) and Holland, who have eight players in their squad who were born outside the Netherlands. The full qualification rules can be found on the official ICC siteWho won a World Cup winners’ medal as a player but never played a World Cup match? asked Siddharth Ramesh from Chennai
I think the man you’re looking for has an even more remarkable claim to fame than that: Sunil Valson was in India’s World Cup -winning squad in 1983, but didn’t play in the competition – and in fact never played in a one-day international at all. Valson was a left-arm medium-pacer who took 212 wickets in first-class cricket, most of them for Delhi. In 2002-03 the offspinner Nathan Hauritz replaced Shane Warne in Australia’s squad when Warne was banned after a positive drugs test: Hauritz didn’t play in the tournament, but he has played in eight ODIs outside World Cups.Is Bermuda’s Dwayne Leverock the heaviest man to play international cricket? asked Savar Kashif from Kolkata
Bermuda’s genial left-arm spinner Dwayne Leverock is variously reported as weighing in at between 19 and 20 stone. I’m sure this makes him the heaviest player to appear in a World Cup, and probably in any one-day international, but there’s at least one player who outweighed him in Test cricket: Warwick Armstrong, the Australian captain who inflicted the first Ashes whitewash on England in 1920-21. By the time of the 1921 tour of England, Armstrong – who was known as “The Big Ship” – was thought to weigh around 22 stone. I read in a recent interview that Leverock lives above a curry house – and, he admitted with a twinkle in his eye, “there’s another one next door.” A recent Cricinfo column looked at some other beefy batsmen and bowlers.Ricky Ponting reached 1000 World Cup runs early in his hundred against Scotland. Is he the first Australian to do this? asked Colin Matthews from Perth
Ricky Ponting started this World Cup with 998 runs, and his first scoring shot in this tournament (a four off Dougie Brown) took him into four figures. And his next scoring shot – another boundary off Brown – took him past Mark Waugh (1004 runs) as Australia’s leading scorer in World Cup history. Ponting ended that match with 1111 runs (quadruple Nelson, perhaps?), behind only Sachin Tendulkar (1732) in the World Cup lists at the time. For updated details of the competition’s all-time leading runscorers, click here.Regarding the recent question about the current players who also appeared in the 1992 World Cup, didn’t Sourav Ganguly also do so and score 3 against West Indies … asked Pradyumna Dhore
No, Sourav Ganguly didn’t play in the 1992 World Cup, although I can see why you might have thought he did – he made his one-day international debut in Australia in 1991-92 – against West Indies at Brisbane – and did indeed score 3. But that was in the traditional Australian three-way one-day series, which was played before that season’s World Cup in Australia and New Zealand. Ganguly didn’t make the Indian squad for that tournament – or the 1996 one.

Handle with care

India’s Under-19 World Cup winners may be barely old enough to drink but they’ve got big money chasing them. It’s important that they get help to stay grounded and make sure they don’t lose their way

Jamie Alter06-Mar-2008

Barely 19, Manish Pandey has been signed by Reebok, and the IPL George Binoy
“Nothing can be judged from Under-19 cricket,” Robin Singh, the former India cricketer, said after the 2004 Under-19 World Cup. “It is several notches below first-class standards. The most important phase in a cricketer’s development is between 19 and 24.”The sad part is, U-19 gets more hype than a Ranji final,” he added. His words ring truer than ever now as, a few days on from India’s victory in the 2008 edition of the tournament, in Kuala Lumpur, the nation toasts the young side’s success. There has been a parade through Bangalore, a grand ceremony at the Chinnaswamy Stadium, and plenty of keen advertising agents ready to latch on to these young players’ success. The Indian board has announced a cash reward of Rs 15 lakh (US$37,500 approx) for each of the players, and brands like Reebok and United Breweries are eager to cash in on the young stars. Reebok already have Ravindra Jadeja, Manish Pandey, Iqbal Abdulla and Shreevats Goswami. Pandey, not yet 19, has also been signed on for US$105,000 by the UB-owned Indian Premier League Bangalore team. Other brands are reportedly interested as well.Too much too soon? Chandrakant Pandit, a former player with plenty of coaching experience, thinks the players need to keep themselves grounded. “The money will come later. What remains to be seen is what’s important for players,” he told Cricinfo. “Let us see how seriously they take the game. It depends purely on the individuals and how they handle their success.”Even Rahul Dravid, the only one from the U-19 class of 1991 to go on to play for India, has weighed in with a word of caution.The lost generation
Why the worry? Shouldn’t the side just be appreciated? Well, yes, but there are lessons to be learned as well – especially from India’s 2000 U-19 World Cup team. That side, led by Mohammad Kaif, included Yuvraj Singh, Ajay Ratra and Reetinder Sodhi. Pause for a moment to ponder these names who were also there: Manish Sharma, Ravneet Ricky, Venugopal Rao, Niraj Patel, Shalabh Srivastava, Anup Dave and Mrityunjay Tripathi.Sharma and Ricky were stars at the 2000 tournament but failed to register much success afterwards. Ricky once admitted he made the mistake of thinking he would definitely play for India. Sodhi played 18 ODIs but couldn’t make the cut in the long term. Rao (16 ODIs) and Patel ended up domestic giants but not much more. Ratra captained the U-19s to victory over England in a home series but became a victim of poor handling, and despite becoming the youngest wicketkeeper to score a Test hundred, struggled to find a Ranji team for a while. Srivastava was third on the wicket-takers’ list in the 2000 U-19 World Cup but wasn’t given his due. Disillusioned by the powers that be and unemployed, he switched to a Plate Group team last year, Railways, and subsequently joined the Indian Cricket League. Dave and Tripathi simple faded away. Only Yuvraj and Kaif made the step up.There will be transitional phases in the lives of the current lot, not to mention distractions. The ICL, which will conduct four additional tournaments in 2008, has attracted plenty of youngsters with lucrative contracts. The flip side? They have been barred from competing in any other form of domestic cricket. The BCCI has instructed junior cricketers to wait before signing with the Indian Premier League, but when huge sums of money are up for grabs for a two-month extravaganza, will these youngsters – at an age when decision-making isn’t the strongest suit – be able to resist? There are also plenty of agents monitoring talent who are eager to pitch the U-19 stars to IPL teams in order to influence their equity. These young players can earn sizeable packets from signing with brands, much like their role models, the senior cricketers.The difference between the Under-19 level and first-class cricket is huge. You can’t play the same way and expect to consistently excel. Bowlers around the country can sort you out in no time and within a few weeks all the players know your weaknesses. You need to constantly adapt your game, which most of these players are not used to at the lower levels Chandrakant Pandit First-class first
Venkatesh Prasad, bowling coach of the India senior side, hopes the myth that the next step after U-19 success is the senior side is debunked. “When I was the coach, as soon as they played U-19 their next expectation was the Indian team, which I couldn’t understand. I don’t agree with that, unless a player is exceptionally good,” he says. “At that level it’s a learning curve. They need to be playing a minimum of two years of first-class competitions, and probably from there they could graduate to the next step, the Duleep Trophy. That’s the right approach.”Prasad believes four or five years of domestic cricket would do a U-19 player plenty of good if he is ever selected for India. “They would be more mature, they would understand what it requires to succeed at this level. They have to wait for the right time. That’s where it is very important the respective coaches in their states handle them and show them the right direction and don’t overload the players or burn them out.”Singh thinks it is the job of the state associations to nurture youngsters. “At 19 you don’t know much about what is right and wrong, and if they go astray the states should take care of them. What are the academies for? They need to make sure the players are making use of the various structures properly.”It is a view that Lalchand Rajput, who coached an U-19 team to successful tours of England and Pakistan in 2006, echoes. “The key is to get them mentally strong. It’s the responsibility of the coaches and the state association to monitor the same. If opportunities are not given at the right time then the player loses his appetite and gets frustrated.”It is in Ranji Trophy cricket that players really make the transition, say those who have been there. “The difference between the Under-19 level and first-class cricket is huge. You can’t play the same way and expect to consistently excel,” says Pandit. “Bowlers around the country can sort you out in no time and within a few weeks all the players know your weaknesses. You need to constantly adapt your game, which most of these players are not used to at the lower levels.”Ratra agrees. “Ranji is where a player really learns and matures. You play tougher teams and older players and that matters tremendously. At 19 your body may seem ready, but mentally you still have a ways to go. These players need to play with seniors – and plenty in this side already are – to hone their skills.””Most of the youngsters are happy to perform at the U-19 level, but unless it’s an outstanding talent, those performances don’t matter much at the higher level,” adds Rajput. “I look for people who perform above their potential.Feet on the ground
The need for sound management seems to be the running theme. In the day of satellite television, brand endorsements and Twenty20 cricket, these youngsters need a firm hand guiding them and keeping them grounded.

Ajay Ratra started promisingly but has faded away since © Cricinfo Ltd
With the win comes an overdose of adulation and big bucks, and there are more distractions today than ever before, Roger Binny, who coached the 2000 winners, points out. Binny says market forces now virtually dictate the game and believes India needs to follow the Australian prototype. “In Australia the development of junior cricketers is based completely within the state programme. Playing in tournaments is then just a part of the process. Their young players are groomed, there are counselling sessions where specialists tell them how to conduct themselves and what to expect.”These players are too young to take big decisions. The management here should have similar training sessions for our stars. For example, have a marketing or media expert come in and conduct a seminar on how to handle money and all the excess attention.”Ravi Shastri, a member of the IPL’s governing council and chairman of the National Cricket Academy, recently said young players would be given much-needed financial advice. Shastri spoke of Dav Whatmore, the coach of the U-19 side, as an advisor, and even suggested that parents of cricketers be invited for counselling with their sons. Ian Chappell said on Cricinfo that with all the IPL money pouring in, what Shastri said about advising young players must be followed through with or the board runs the risk of players falling by the wayside.Whatmore may be the best man for a crucial role in this regard. In his first season in India he has displayed that he is an extremely hands-on coach, always participating in any exercise and training drill he conducts. His reputation as a skilled professional precedes him, and the results have been impressive. A couple of the players have said that Whatmore was more involved than any of the other coaches they saw during the World Cup, and how, even if someone had a bad day, he would never belittle or criticise them. The team respects him and believes in him. Whatmore could forseeably be a father figure.To counter the rising concern over young cricketers being paid so much money early in their careers, the BCCI has decided that U-19 cricketers will be eligible only for one-year IPL contracts. In the wake of the elaborate auction of the bigger stars on February 20, the IPL franchises have been busy trying to sign up their quota of Under-22 players and other local players from the catchment areas. The BCCI is said to be considering a rule to have U-22 players play for their home teams. Franchises are also advocating that there be a limit on the amounts that can be paid for junior players, but will all this come to pass?It’s difficult to tell what route India’s U-19 winners will take. Many, if not all, will have to decide between whether to pursue a cricket career or study further. Age may also factor in. If some cannot find places in their respective state sides, after a point they may just leave the game. At this point in time, you can only hope they use the wonderful platform they have and go further.

Time to hang up the bats and boots

During the season a number of players announced their retirements, including some major forces on the county scene. Cricinfo recaps those who have decided their playing days are over

Andrew McGlashan29-Sep-2008.For a full list of player movement click here
Graeme Hick waves goodbye after his final innings for Worcestershire © Getty Images
A county colossus, an international enigma. Even though Graeme Hick was 42 when he announced his retirement it still seemed like something of a surprise, as it felt as though he could go on forever. An injury-hit farewell wasn’t what he deserved, but he left a host of memories for the Worcestershire faithful to savour. From his 405 not out against Somerset, to 1000 runs before the end of May through to his 100th hundred, which he scored at New Road.He was always happier in the surrounds of Worcester than the glare of the international stage, but it is one of the unanswered questions as to how he might have managed under a more understanding management. As it was he finished his Test career with six centuries and an average of 31. He had his moments – 178 against India and 141 against South Africa – but he never appeared totally comfortable. One-day internationals were different. He nearly had a World Cup winner’s medal in 1992 and enjoyed a prolific series in Australia in 1998-99.His final England appearance came against Sri Lanka in March 2001. Then he settled back into a full-time county life and continued to be a run machine. Whenever someone thought he was fading, back he would come with another crushing display. He revelled in Twenty20 – showing no one is ever too old to learn – and lost none of his power or timing.A last innings at New Road would have been perfect, but careers don’t often end that way. At least his final Worcestershire knock came at a home venue, at Kidderminster, after floods forced a change of venue. He left with a wave of the bat to a standing ovation and county cricket won’t feel quite the same in 2009.Click here for information on the Graeme Hick tribute being featured on ESPN Classic
The end of the road: Darren Gough leaves the field after his final Championship match © PA Photos
Darren Gough was the heartbeat of whichever side he played for. There’s no doubt that when he turns out in a legends beach match, during the Stanford week, in Antigua that he’ll be going all out to win. He doesn’t know any other way.At international level Gough was the link between England’s underachieving side of the mid-1990s and the more successful unit of the early 2000s forged under Duncan Fletcher. He played a starring role in the consecutive series victories against West Indies, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, but often saved his best for the Aussies – even if no one else did. From his flamboyant first adventure down under in 1994, to his Sydney hat-trick in 1999, via Edgbaston 1997, Gough was one of the few England players the Australians respected.His own desire for top-level competition made him extend his ODI career too long. When he made his finally appearance in 2006 he was a shadow of the bowler that became England’s greatest in one-day cricket. His skill of bowling yorkers has only been matched by Andrew Flintoff in the current generation.First-class cricket became an increasing struggle for Gough during his final couple of season’s, but one final challenge presented itself when he returned to Yorkshire as captain in 2007. He couldn’t quite end with a final piece of silverware, but was at least able to bring down the curtain in his own time. TV beckons, but there’s a strong chance we haven’t actually seen the last of Darren Gough on a cricket pitch.
Mushtaq Ahmed finally gave in to injury after a prolific Sussex career © Getty Images
Is he the greatest overseas player in county history? There are a few competing for the title, but any Sussex supporter will certainly vote for Mushtaq. His career was revived when he joined Sussex in 2003, as his international career was waning after 52 Tests and 144 ODIs. Some thought it a foolish signing of a fading star who would clog up the system, but how wrong they were proved. Mushtaq enjoyed the game and played with a constant bounce and smile.He was still far too good for many county line-ups, taking 103 wickets in Sussex’s maiden Championship title in 2003, and passed the 100-mark again in 2006. His form earned him a brief Pakistan recall, but it proved a rare failure for Mushtaq and his Test career ended in 2003.Time started to catch up with Mushtaq at the beginning of the 2008 season when his knees began to cause problems. In an interview with Cricinfo in April he said there was a chance this could be his last season, even though there was a year left on his contract. His enthusiasm never wavered, but his body was starting to creak. He tried to return mid-season, but succumbed again and announced his retirement. He finished with 478 first-class wickets in six seasons for Sussex.However, it may not quite be the last of Mushtaq on the field. He has a contract with the ICL and wants to continue playing, then a coaching career beckons. Some people find it hard to give, especially when they love the game as much as Mushy.Although Jeremy Snape’s 10 ODIs came in 2001 and 2002 his career really took off with the arrival of Twenty20. He was a key part of Leicestershire’s great success in the competition, constantly innovating and thinking how to test the percieved boundaries of the game. His ‘moon ball’ became a hallmark of Leicestershire’s cricket and made many batsmen look foolish. His Twenty20 success was so great that it earned him an England recall for the first global event in South Africa in 2007. However, at the highest level his on-field skills didn’t quite stand-up. Already, though, he was thinking of his next career and made a name for himself as a sports psychologist. Firstly he was part of backroom team for the Rajasthan Royals, who won the inaugural IPL, and was then poached by South Africa as part of the their support staff.
A thinking man’s cricketer: Jeremy Snape found his home in Twenty20 © Getty Images
A hard-working and at times destructive left-arm swing bowler, Kevin Dean finally gave into injury, but not before a distinguished career for Derbyshire where he took 401 wickets. His best season came in 2002 when he was joint-leading wicket-taker with 83 scalps. He had one famous moment with the bat, too, when he struck the winning runs against the Australians during a tour match in 1997.A gritty left-hander, Iain Sutcliffe moved to Lancashire from Leicestershire in 2003 after being part of the Championship winning sides at Grace Road in 1996 and 1998. He slotted in at the top of Lancashire’s order, forming a long-term partnership with Mark Chilton. Slowly, though, he was pushed aside as Paul Horton made his mark and the club went for a host of overseas batsmen. Mid-way through this season he announced his retirement to focus on business interests. His highest score for Lancashire was 159 against Warwickshire in 2006, and his career-best 203 came for Leicestershire in 2001, while he finished with 9464 first-class runs.Often the forgotten men, umpires also come to the ends of their careers at this time of the season. Allan Jones is calling time so he can take up a contract with the Indian Cricket League, while Barrie Leadbeater ends his umpiring days after 28 years on the circuit as does Graham Burgess after 18 years. They are as important as the players.

Sachin helped me decode Mendis – Yuvraj

Yuvraj Singh reveals how he tackled Ajantha Mendis after his nightmare series against him Sri Lanka last year

Sriram Veera in Colombo04-Feb-2009
Yuvraj Singh: “I just had a few bad games. I wanted to prove what goes round comes around” © AFP
Last year, before heading to Sri Lanka for the previous ODI series, Yuvraj Singh called on Sunil Joshi in Bangalore for tips on how to tackle Ajantha Mendis. Joshi complied, mimicking the grip and flicking the tennis ball across to Yuvraj. The time constraintsdidn’t allow for a lengthy practice but it showed that Yuvraj was seriously thinking about preparing for what he perceived to be his chief threat.He didn’t succeed; he was mesmerized by Mendis’ variations andrepeatedly succumbed to the new sensation. He returned home to find he had lost his place in the Test squad for the series against Australia.His first action at the time, he said after Tuesday’s century, was to hit the gym.”I felt I was a bit overweight in the last series and I knew I should be in top fitness,” Yuvraj said. He also worked on his front-foot technique: he was taking his right foot a touch late and couldn’t adjust quickly if the length was different from what he perceived it to be and ended up losing balance and following the ball.He hit peak form in the England ODI series but the Mendis threat wasalways round the corner. Criticism hurt but also motivated him. “What better joythan proving the critics wrong,” he said. He sought Sachin Tendulkar’s help to tackle the Mendis threat. “He actually gave me plans to play Mendis in this series. I can’t tell youwhat the plans were but whatever he told me was really helpful.”That explained his celebrations after reaching his century on Tuesday, making a point of acknowledging Tendulkar, who was on his feet applauding in the dressing room.For all his celebration, though, the contest doesn’t really have a winner yet. Yuvraj has faced 48 balls from Mendis in the three ODIs, scoring 38 runs, including a six. That’s not any conclusive proof but there are clear signs of progress. While that six would have given him great thrill, what would have satisfied him are the 15 singles. Previously clueless, Yuvraj is now beginning to show he can stay in there and defend Mendis. In the last game, in the batting Powerplay, he rotated the strike to Virender Sehwag, who went after Mendis and Muttiah Muralitharan.It’s learnt that the team is trying to play Mendis as a mediumpacer.Another key tactic is to not press the front foot across but to take itstraight adjacent to the line. Play with the bat and not the pad isthe mantra. Another factor is that the ball has spun a little in the second half but hasbeen slow; it has not skidded on for Mendis as he would haveliked to do. In the Asia Cup, and even in some games in Sri Lanka, thepitch was doing more under the lights and the ball would really skidfrom Mendis. It hasn’t happened so far. Mendiswill now have to adjust.Yuvraj? He has prospered and now has the confidence needed to take on a class spinner. “Doubts are created by the media,” he said on Tuesday.” I never had doubts. Myself nor the team had any doubts on me. I just had a few bad games. I wanted to prove what goes round comes around.”

Fighting Australia fall short

Though Australia lost, Ricky Ponting was proud of the manner in which his team battled in tough conditions

Sidharth Monga at the Feroz Shah Kotla31-Oct-2009For a side without six first-choice players and also one of their replacements, Australia did pretty well tonight. Led by the two of the most senior members of the side, Ricky Ponting and Michael Hussey, they got themselves a defendable total.Ponting opened the innings only for the second time in his 327-match career to provide balance to a line-up that needed an allrounder in Moises Henriques, in place of specialist batsman Shaun Marsh.Then he played an innings completely out of character and yet the kind of fighting innings Ponting usually conjures when put in a corner. He was watchful, kept getting on to the front foot as often as he could to negate the low-bounce lbws, cut out the horizontal shots until absolutely sure of them.But it was one of those days, his first mistake proved to be his last; the first time that he played across the line he was trapped in front – at a crucial juncture too, having played 17.1 overs without a boundary. His 92-ball 59 had set Australia up for a total of about 250, but his wicket took away the momentum.Boundaries wouldn’t come for another four overs, but even without the big hits Hussey played an innings completely in sync with his character. He dabbed, he nudged, he swept, he reverse-swept (once), and all along he maintained a strike-rate in the 90s. He crossed the rope only three times, the first one was a misfield, and the last two came in the last three overs. Yet he scored 81 off 82. Hostile spells from Peter Siddle and Mitchell Johnson gave Australia a glimpse, at 53 for 3 in their defence, but MS Dhoni and Yuvraj Singh took the game away.It was a big improvement from Nagpur where they were clobbered, and Ponting was graceful in defeat. “I don’t think we can blame ourselves too much, to tell you the truth,” Ponting said. “India played very well, there is no doubt about that. They certainly batted a lot better than us, in probably slightly more difficult conditions. The wicket was probably slightly worse, but I think our spinners in particular got a bit negated by how wet the ball was.”The dew did remain a point of contention because Ponting couldn’t convince the umpires to change the ball besides the mandatory 34-over switch. “Spinners couldn’t grip the ball,” he said. “Hence [Adam] Voges bowled only one over, and [Nathan] Hauritz had to come on very early on when the ball was fairly dry, and then come him back after the 34-over ball change, because the ball was so wet. We were only granted one ball change tonight, which frustrated us a little bit.

Opening the innings, Ponting played an innings completely out of character and yet the kind of fighting innings he usually conjures when put in a corner

“We found it really difficult to hang on to the ball, so we asked numerous times to have the ball changed, and it was knocked back, and we had the one ball change. As you saw the ground was incredibly dewy tonight. Very wet. Probably as wet as I have ever played in.”Ponting didn’t seek to make an excuse out of the pitch, one that both Yuvraj and he reckoned was the slowest ODI track they had ever played on. “It was a difficult wicket, but it was the same for both teams. We just weren’t good enough today.”There was praise for Yuvraj-Dhoni partnership, and awareness that the 148-run stand was what separated the teams. “We tried everything to separate Yuvraj and Dhoni, but it was an excellent partnership,” Ponting said. “They kept finding the boundaries whenever they needed to, unlike us in the middle of our innings. We found it hard to get boundaries. That was probably a bit of a difference in the game.”They don’t have much time before the fourth ODI. It was already midnight by the time they left the Feroz Shah Kotla. It would be around noon by the time they reach Chandigarh. And in about 24 hours after that, they will be at the PCA Stadium in Mohali, warming up for the next match. But Ponting said he could take positives from this game. “I’m pretty proud of the guys tonight, they stuck it out, we got close but not close enough. Today wasn’t a bad game of cricket for us. We lost, but we didn’t play badly. We have got to focus on the positives out of this game. We have got to think about it pretty quickly.”

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