Newcastle: Targett was "on point again"

Eddie Howe’s Newcastle United side fell to a disappointing defeat on Saturday afternoon, with Liverpool running out 1-0 winners at St James’ Park.

The Magpies had some of their own chances, but if it were not for Martin Dubravka’s highly impressive display between the sticks, the scoreline may well have made much worse reading, with the 33-year-old making a whopping nine saves throughout the match.

However, despite the result, it was not only the Slovakia international who turned in an impressive display for Newcastle against the Reds, with Matt Targett being “on point again” – in the words of Jamie Carragher – against Jurgen Klopp’s side.

Targett impressed for Newcastle

Indeed, over his 90 minutes on the pitch, the 26-year-old was imperious in a defensive capacity, making three clearances, one interception and six tackles, blocking one shot and winning eight of his 12 duels – a success rate of 67%.

While the £35k-per-week talent did not offer much going forwards – a story which was consistent throughout the majority of the Magpies side – he still had 62 touches of the ball (the second-most for Newcastle) while also completing 21 passes and two long balls.

These returns saw the £15.3m-rated left-back earn an impressive SofaScore match rating of 7.2, ranking him as Howe’s joint second-best performer on the day behind Dubravka. The Chronicle’s Lee Ryder also awarded the defender an eight in his own player ratings, in addition to stating: “A solid display with half a dozen successful tackles. Did well.”

Indeed, from this performance, it is easy to see why the 44-year-old Magpies boss is reportedly eager to make Targett’s temporary stay at St James’ Park a permanent one this summer, as the former England under-21 international has already proven himself to be a key part of Howe’s first-team squad since his January arrival.

AND in other news – Forget Almiron: “Sloppy” 18-touch Newcastle passenger failed Howe against Liverpool

Tottenham: Reliable journalist shares Harry Winks exit update

Reliable journalist Dan Kilpatrick of The Evening Standard has now shared a significant exit update involving Tottenham Hotspur midfielder Harry Winks.

The Lowdown: Winks tipped to thrive…

The Englishman, appearing to work his way back into Spurs’ first team under Antonio Conte at one point this season, was backed to press on and thrive in his system.

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Former Tottenham goalkeeper Paul Robinson, speaking to Football Insider, tipped Winks to ‘flourish’ under the Italian – calling him a ‘perfect fit’ and ‘the exact type of player that Conte wants’.

However, the 26-year-old has gone to barely feature past late February, last starting a Premier League game in Spurs’ 4-0 demolition of Leeds United (Transfermarkt).

The Latest: Kilpatrick shares update…

Following his lack of opportunities, Kilpatrick of The Evening Standard now claims that Winks is ‘likely to push for a summer exit’.

He would apparently want to join a club with the greatest chance of reviving his career in England as Conte sets his sights on a midfielder with similar characteristics to Chelsea star Jorginho.

The Verdict: Time to part ways…

Winks’ brief resurgence back into the team was short lived thanks to the form of both Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg and Rodrigo Bentancur recently.

Oliver Skipp’s pending return from injury may also push Spurs’ homegrown ace further down the pecking order and we believe now may be the time for Tottenham to sell.

Conte heaped praise on Winks for his form just before the new year but with more midfield additions expected it seems inevitable that the Three Lions ace will be sacrificed this summer.

In other news: Tottenham expected to move for ‘phenomenal’ £101m star after Conte request, find out more here.

Leeds eyeing Daichi Kamada move

Leeds United are plotting a summer move for Eintracht Frankfurt attacker Daichi Kamada, according to Football Insider.

The Lowdown: Kamada profiled

Kamada, a Japan international, is 25 years of age who plays as an attacking midfielder and second striker.

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He made the move to Frankfurt back in 2017 and has seen his Transfermarkt valuation rocket from £675,000 to £19.8m in the Bundesliga.

Kamada has netted 56 goals and registered 46 assists during his club career so far, with 50 of those goal contributions coming in Germany.

The attacker will be entering the final 12 months of his Frankfurt contract in the summer, and it looks as if he is firmly on Leeds’ radar.

The Latest: Source shares update

FI shared a story early on Thursday morning regarding Leeds and Kamada after being informed by a recruitment source.

They claim that the Whites sent club scouts to Germany to watch Kamada in action against West Ham in their Europa League semi-final second leg.

Jesse Marsch is thought to be a big fan of the Frankfurt man, but a summer move hinges on Leeds’ Premier League status.

The Verdict: Needed

The Whites currently don’t have a senior attacking midfielder on the books, while their forward ranks have been hit hard this season due to numerous injuries to Patrick Bamford.

Therefore, providing Leeds remain in the top flight, a move for Kamada appears to be just what Marsch needs ahead of his first full season in charge.

He can play in multiple attacking roles and appears to be approaching his prime at the age of 25. A transfer also appears to be within the club’s reach financially, especially as he’ll be into the final 12 months of his contract in the summer, but first, Leeds need points in their final four Premier League fixtures.

In other news: ‘What’s next?’, ‘Should be punished’ – Sky Sports man fumes after what’s happened at Leeds. 

Man City Transfer News: When will Haaland be announced?

Manchester City are expected to announce the signing of Borussia Dortmund star Erling Haaland by Friday, according to The Athletic’s ever-reliable transfer guru David Ornstein.

The Lowdown: City win the race

The 21-year-old first joined the Bundesliga outfit in a £17m move from Red Bull Salzburg back in 2020, where he has since gone on to make 88 appearances for the club during that time.

The forward still has two years remaining on his current contract with the German side, but in recent months, has been attracting plenty of interest from several clubs across Europe, with the likes of Real Madrid and Manchester United being linked with a potential move for Haaland in the summer.

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Despite this though, it appears that the Sky Blues are the team to have won the race for the Norwegian’s signature, after reports have claimed that City are prepared to active his £63m release clause, with the striker agreeing a deal to make the switch to the Etihad ahead of the start of next season.

The Latest: Haaland move ‘a done deal’

The reliable Ornstein has basically confirmed this development by taking to Twitter on Monday to share the huge news:

“Erling Haaland to Man City a done deal + confirmation expected this week, according to sources in Germany. Personal terms complete & Dortmund anticipate City informing them in coming days of intention to activate release clause.”

The Verdict: Perfect Aguero replacement

If the Premier League giants do manage to pull off the Haaland signing, it would be absolutely huge for Pep Guardiola, especially considering that the highly sought-after attacker already has previous connections to the club, with his dad Alf-Inge having a two-year spell with City many moons ago.

The £135m-rated talisman has been in prolific form in the final third this term, having scored 28 goals and registered eight assists in just 29 outings across all competitions for Dortmund, as per Transfermarkt.

After missing out on Tottenham captain Harry Kane last summer, it’s about time that the hierarchy invested in a new centre-forward having not yet signed a replacement since the departure of Sergio Aguero, and it looks like Haaland could be about to follow in his father’s footsteps by making the move to the top-flight.

In other news… Guardiola has delivered a huge injury update on a first-team trio.

Kieran Devlin hails ‘special’ Tom Rogic

Kieran Devlin has sung the praises of Tom Rogic’s after his final appearance for Celtic in their emphatic win over Motherwell on Saturday afternoon.

The Lowdown: Hoops bow out in style

The Hoops completed their triumphant Premiership campaign in style at the weekend, thumping Graham Alexander’s side 6-0 at Parkhead.

There was a party atmosphere in Glasgow after clinching the title in midweek, and Ange Postecoglou’s side turned on the style and showed exactly why they have been the best team in the country this season.

Rogic may not have scored or set up a goal for the Hoops on the day, but it was a fine farewell performance from him in a Celtic career which has brought so much success. He won two tackles and enjoyed an 82% pass completion rate against Motherwell to bring the curtain down on a glorious nine-year spell at Parkhead.

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The Latest: Devlin hails ‘special’ Rogic

Taking to Twitter as he shared a corresponding article from The Athletic, Devlin lauded the Australian’s all-round brilliance as a player and the impact he has made since arriving in 2013, offering gratitude to Rogic for producing some special memories in a Celtic shirt.

The journalist gushed: “If you analyse Rogic’s career by the stats and trophies he’ll come out brilliantly. But it would ignore what made him special. Few players in living memory have inspired as many moments of joy, relief, awe, and uncut, unbridled emotion.”

The Verdict: Modern-day Celtic legend

There is no doubt that Rogic now has to go down as a genuine Celtic legend, having been a vital performer in the middle of the park for so many years now. As Devlin outlined in The Athletic, the Australian’s legacy will live on thanks primarily to his last-gasp winner in the 2017 Scottish Cup final, which ensured a historic unbeaten domestic treble for the club.

The 29-year-old made a total of 272 appearances for the Hoops, not to mention the small matter of winning an incredible seven Premiership titles, along with five Scottish Cups and five Scottish League Cups.

The emotional scenes involving Rogic on Saturday illustrate how much he is adored by Ange Postecoglou and the Parkhead faithful, and he can certainly be classified as a modern Celtic legend given his aforementioned contributions in green and white.

In other news, a pundit has discussed a potential big Celtic blow this summer. Read more here.

Nathan Gilchrist helps Kent roll Derbyshire for big win

After setting hosts 341 target, Gilchrist’s 4-30 ensures 130-run victory

ECB Reporters' Network15-Sep-2021Kent completed a hat-trick of LV=Insurance County Championship victories when they beat Derbyshire by 130 runs in the Division Three match at Derby.After Kent declared on 211 for 2, setting Derbyshire an unlikely 341 for victory, the home side were bowled out for 210.Nathan Gilchrist took 4 for 30 after Grant Stewart claimed the first two wickets to start another feeble Derbyshire collapse.Only an eighth-wicket stand of 70 between Anuj Dal, who was 58 not out, and Ben Aitchison, with 36, spared Derbyshire from complete humiliation.Kent batted on for nine overs in the morning, adding 64 with Jordan Cox falling for 81 attempting a big shot against Matt Critchley.Daniel Bell-Drummond dispatched Critchley for six on his way to an unbeaten 51 and the declaration set Derbyshire a target that was purely notional given their batting woes this season.A more realistic target was to bat out the day but once again, the top order crumbled and by lunch, Derbyshire were facing defeat.Harry Came was the first to go when he followed one from Stewart that moved away and Leus du Plooy bagged a pair when he was pinned in front first ball by a full delivery.Billy Godleman denied Stewart a hat-trick but after a brief recovery, two more wickets fell before the interval.Wayne Madsen played across a swinging delivery from Harry Podmore and was lbw for 13 and although he passed 6,000 first-class runs for Derbyshire, Godleman followed him to the pavilion in the next over. The Derbyshire captain miscued a pull at Nathan Gilchrist and was caught at square leg for 27 to leave his side in disarray on 67 for 4 at the interval.It was now just a question of how long Derbyshire could delay Kent but the visitors were soon back in business.Tom Wood lost his off stump as he played forward to Jas Singh and Gilchrist claimed his second wicket in the next over when Critchley edged to second slip.Gilchrist found late movement to have Brooke Guest caught behind but Dal and Aitchison finally offered some resistance along with a few muscular blows before the latter miscued to mid off.Sam Conners, batting with a runner after turning an ankle, helped Dal take the game to tea but Gilchrist sealed victory with the fifth ball of the final session.

Sam Billings, Daniel Bell-Drummond fifties help Kent to victory over Birmingham Bears

Billings calls critics “deluded” as Finals Day becomes an all-southern affair for the first time

Cameron Ponsonby27-Aug-2021Half-centuries to Sam Billings and Daniel Bell-Drummond helped Kent to a 21-run victory against Birmingham Bears, meaning that Finals Day will be an all-southern affair for the first time in Blast history.Billings, Kent’s captain, was playing only his fourth match for the county this season and termed his fiercest critics “deluded” as he reached his first Finals Day after three previous quarter-final defeats.”It means everything,” he said. “This has always been our hurdle to get over. I haven’t been around as much as I would have liked due to England stuff and getting Covid. I was injured a couple of years ago so it’s been a pretty weird couple of years. To be back here playing cricket with this team, it means so much. I’ve been at the club since I was eight. People don’t think I care, I think they’re deluded to be honest.”Chris Woakes’ return to competitive action after seven weeks was a lift for Birmingham – and England – and the early stages of the match suggested that he was going to steal the show. In his first over, he dismissed Zak Crawley and had Joe Denly dropped at slip with a delivery that the England selectors will no doubt hope he can replicate if selected at the Oval in a week’s time. Three runs and a wicket off his first over, but that was as good as it was going to get for Woakes, and as it turned out, Birmingham.Kent’s batting line-up is exceptional, comprising a top four of Crawley, Bell-Drummond, Denly and Billings, and on Friday night it was Bell-Drummond and Billings who led the way.Just one boundary had come off the first four overs before the return of Danny Briggs to the attack prompted Bell-Drummond to dump him over square leg for consecutive sixes. However, just as Kent seemed to be wresting control of the contest, Tim Bresnan had Denly caught on the square-leg boundary to tip the momentum slightly back into Birmingham’s favour as the Powerplay ended with the score 46 for 2.With the bounce making players look rushed, early, late, or just uncomfortable, Bell-Drummond was at ease. He struck three of Kent’s five sixes with two sweeps off Briggs and one scarcely believable sweep off Woakes, a normal, 85mph length delivery, slog-swept over midwicket.Related

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However, much to the disappointment of non-Birmingham supporters, Bell-Drummond’s innings came to an end in bizarre fashion. Jake Lintott bowled to Billings, who crashed a straight drive back into the base of the non-striker’s stumps where it stopped almost stock still. As Bell-Drummond took a pace down the wicket looking for a run that didn’t exist, Lintott pounced on the ball with one hand before lunging with the other outstretched to pull the two stumps that remained standing out of the ground.The responsibility for Kent’s innings at that point transferred to Billings and he accelerated well to turn 23 off 22 into 56 off 37.On the whole, it was a bizarre first innings. Birmingham bowled well, with Bresnan – who took 4 for 26 – and Craig Miles in particular managing to force the issue against a Kent line-up that folded apart from Bell-Drummond and Billings. But the Bears fielded poorly. Four chances were missed as Denly was dropped first-ball, Briggs missed a run-out, Michael Burgess missed a crucial stumping off Billings and Chris Benjamin had a chance at a spectacular catch on the boundary that went down. Combined with the fact that their key wicket of the innings came through a large slice of fortune and the overall opinion at the halfway stage was one of a shoulder shrug.Birmingham’s reply was greeted with the sound of Billings barking support to his bowlers.”Highest dot-ball percentage in the comp this lad!”, he yelled about Bears opener Adam Hose. Sure enough the dot-balls started coming. Just three runs came off the first over, four off the second, eight off the third, but so too a wicket, Hose, stumped for eight. At 15 for 1 off three overs, 162 was looking alright.The stumping, however, was tinged with controversy. The ball appeared to spill from Billings’ hands upon contact with the stumps. Given that Hose was well out of his ground when the bails were broken, the square-leg umpire simply nodded in agreement that indeed Hose was out and that was that. It was only upon replay where some questions were raised.As the innings continued, the slightly sticky nature of the pitch struck again as Benjamin fell to a Matt Milnes length ball that slightly stopped on him and which he spooned straight back to the bowler. Milnes launched the ball into the night sky with a yell that told of the importance of the moment. Benjamin, having scooped the first ball of his innings for four, appeared to be in the mood, but his departure saw Birmingham finish the Powerplay at 40 for 2 and Kent’s 162 was still looking alright, just.Qais Ahmad entered the attack and immediately took the wicket of Robert Yates. “We like this match-up!”, yelled Billings moments before the ball had crashed into the stumps.Soon after, Jack Leaning’s occasional offspin took the vital wicket of Sam Hain, who was struck plumb in front, before a rank full toss was missed completely by Will Rhodes and clipped leg stump. At that point, even Billings was stunned into silence.The six-to-ten-over period had seen a Birmingham capitulation which continued into the eleventh as Burgess hit another full toss to cow corner. Between innings, Bresnan had quipped that the best delivery on this surface was the “pie”. Not only had he turned out to be correct, but he was now at the crease alongside Woakes needing 12 runs an over.Despite a period of slight recovery, the four wickets that fell for 11 runs had effectively ended the contest. Had it not been for a late flourish of 41 off 20 from Lintott, the last rites arguably should have been read out at the moment Woakes was caught at long-on off the bowling of Milnes.Kent will play Sussex in the semi-finals at Edgbaston on September 18 and Hampshire will face Somerset ahead of the final.

India coach Ramesh Powar: We are looking at Smriti Mandhana 'as a leader'

Says her reading of the game makes her a top contender for full-time captaincy after the 2022 ODI World Cup

Shashank Kishore11-Oct-2021India have to “address some future roles for leadership”, perhaps after the 50-over World Cup in March-April. When they do, it’s possible Smriti Mandhana will become a top contender to take over the leadership.While no timeframe has been set, head coach Ramesh Powar insists a chat will have to be had “at some stage” after the event where India will be gunning for their maiden World Cup title. As things stand, Mithali Raj captains in the longer formats while Harmanpreet Kaur remains T20I captain. Mandhana, deputy to Harmanpreet in T20Is, however, was the vice-captain throughout the multi-format series in Australia in Harmanpreet’s injury-enforced absence from the three-ODI leg and the standalone pink-ball Test.”See at some point we have to address some future roles for the leadership,” Powar said after the third T20I against Australia on Sunday. “There are some talks around it. We will take it after the World Cup, and we will decide exactly what [needs to be]. We are not going to hurry it up, we will give it good thought and then will we decide what’s happening.”Within the set-up, however, Mandhana is as such part of the leadership group as a senior player, even if she may not be full-time captain. Her reading of the game and the experience of playing around the world, Powar believes, is invaluable.”We are looking at her (Mandhana) as a leader as always,” Powar said of her role. “She has been the vice-captain and at some point, she will lead this side. I don’t know the format now; BCCI, the selectors and me will get together and decide the next course of action.”Seniority has also brought about a slight shift in her main role – batting. While Mandhana’s power game and the ability to provide fast starts has undergone a transformation in recent years, the coaching staff have impressed upon her the need to occupy the crease and bat longer, like she did in the second ODI where she held the innings together to make 86. The emergence of a dasher in Shafali Verma, Mandhana’s opening partner across formats, may have helped make this change to a certain extent.”She has been very expressive in her batting for the last two-three years,” Powar clarified, when asked of an imminent captaincy switch after the World Cup. “Let’s not make it spicy. We want her to change in the sense if you’ve seen her batting, she is trying to spend a lot of time in the middle, that is the strategy. We want her to spend a lot of time in the middle. It’s just a change of role for her.”As such, Powar’s ringing endorsement of Mandhana’s credentials follows former head coach WV Raman’s. The former India batter, who was in charge of the team until March this year, is convinced the 25-year-old, who is now into her eighth year in international cricket, is ready.”Captaincy has got nothing to do with age, but I am convinced that Mandhana can be the captain [after the 50-over World Cup],” Raman had said during a virtual interaction organised by Sony Sports India last week. “She is a good reader of the game and has already played few years of cricket. It can be a good time and giving captaincy to a younger cricketer means they can lead the side for a stretch for some years.”Mandhana has had a consistent run of form in the multi-format series, hitting a chart-topping tally of 352 runs across seven innings. The left-hand batter, who has in the past been a stand-in for Harmanpreet in T20Is, hit the high notes during the pink-ball Test, where she struck 127, her maiden Test ton, in what was India’s first-ever day-night Test.Related

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“Smriti has been a consistent performer for us. A patch will come where a player will not score runs but as a unit, as a core team, we back our players like Smriti Mandhana,” Powar said. “We knew she will come good in this tour. She is a character who, if challenged, will come out good. We never thought of anything, we just wanted her to spend some time in the middle and which she did.”The way she batted in [the] Test match was amazing, something which all of us take a lot of pride in. Playing pink-ball Test under lights for the first time after losing toss toss on a wicket that was, she scored a hundred. It makes a huge impact on the young generation because she inspires a lot of our current team players, and it makes a huge difference to all of us.”Mandhana will extend her stay in Australia, along with seven other Indian team-mates, having signed up with defending champions Sydney Thunder for the WBBL starting October 14. This will be her third stint in the competition after previously playing for Brisbane Heat and Hobart Hurricanes. In July-August, Mandhana was part of Southern Brave for the inaugural Hundred in the UK.”Smriti is there, if she gets more consistency, there’s nothing like it,” Powar said. “That’s what we addressed after the first ODI and she has applied herself. After one season, you will see a different Smriti. She has been playing around the world. She plays WBBL, she plays (the) Hundred, she gets a lot of game time and that makes a lot of difference because we don’t get that many matches in India.”

Kyle Coetzer: 'Eye-opening' defeat will help Scotland improve

“I’m extremely proud of this group, where we’ve got to and where we are at the moment”

Deivarayan Muthu05-Nov-2021Despite suffering an eight-wicket drubbing at the hands of India in Dubai, Scotland captain Kyle Coetzer was hopeful of a bright future for his side. Scotland’s progress to the Super 12s of this World Cup has already ensured them a berth for the first round of next year’s tournament in Australia.”Look, the experience is everything for our group of players and our organisation,” Coetzer said at the post-match press conference. “Obviously, today’s result didn’t go the way we wanted, but we have to go through days like today to see the better days later on further down the road.”It was very important for our guys to experience that, see the high class that was on show today from the Indian team. We were certainly not at the races ourselves, but I think they forced us to not be at the races with the skills that they put on show, so that was high-class execution from India today.Related

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“I’m still extremely proud of the guys, but we’ve got a lot of learning to do, and we have to go through days like this to improve.”Coetzer conceded that Scotland were outplayed and that they didn’t have answers to India’s bowling attack in particular. Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Shami were accurate with their yorkers while the spin trio of Ravindra Jadeja, R Ashwin and Varun Chakravarthy thrived with their variations, as Scotland were rolled over for 85 in 17.4 overs. In reply, India knocked off the target in just 6.3 overs, giving their net run rate a big leg-up.”Yeah, you stack up the number of games some of those players in that team have played in comparison to what we have in T20 cricket, as well as stacking them up against playing in these conditions and using the skills on show that they showed today… we were going to be up against it,” Coetzer said. “They showed how to use the surface. They showed how to bowl, execute their yorkers. Their spinners had variations, plenty of mystery about some of their bowlers.”When you face stuff like that for the very first time, which we did today, it was always going to be hard. Not to say that I don’t back every one of our players, because I really do. I think we’ve got a fantastic group of players, and we’ll just go from strength to strength after this.”

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Scotland will face Pakistan – one of the two unbeaten sides in the tournament; England being the other – in Sharjah on Sunday before heading back home. Coetzer said they were looking forward to having a crack at Pakistan and ending the tournament on a positive note.”We’re going to go into that game full of confidence as we possibly can,” he said. “We took a few heavy punches today, that’s for sure, and the guys will be hurting, but we need to pick ourselves up and be prepared to put on a show in our last game.”It’s our last opportunity for a little while to play a game of cricket together. It’s been a good seven weeks or so as a group, and we’re extremely proud of what we’ve achieved. A few doors left open that we didn’t quite go through, I think, but that’s for us to deal with when we go home, and we have to deal with that and be willing to improve.”We know where the bar is, like I keep saying, and that’s where we need to get to. It’s an eye-opener at some stages, but I’m extremely proud of this group, where we’ve got to and where we are at the moment, and where we’re going to go to.”

Pakistan penalised for slow over-rate for fourth time in five ODIs

Apart from the three ODIs in New Zealand, Pakistan were guilty of a slow over rate in their opening game of the Champions Trophy too

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Apr-2025Pakistan have been fined for maintaining a slow over-rate for a third game in a row after they were found to be one over short in the third ODI against New Zealand in Hamilton.They have been fined 5% their match fees to round up what was a dismal tour of New Zealand, where they lost the T20I series 4-1 and the ODIs 3-0. This is the fourth time in the last five ODIs that Pakistan have been guilty of maintaining a slow over-rate. They were also fined 5% of their match fees in the 2025 Champions Trophy opener against New Zealand in Karachi.Pakistan captain Mohammad Rizwan pled guilty to the charge levelled by the on-field umpires Chris Brown and Paul Reiffel along with the third umpire Michael Gough and fourth umpire Wayne Knights.The sanction was imposed by Jeff Crowe, the match referee, in accordance with article 2.22 of the ICC code of conduct for players and player support personnel, which relates to minimum over-rate offences, for which players are fined 5% of their match fee for every over their side fails to bowl in the allotted time after the time allowances are taken into consideration.Related

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After losing the T20I series, they lost the opening ODI in Napier by 73 runs. In that match, they were found two overs short and fined. In the second ODI, Pakistan went down by 84 runs. Batting first, New Zealand racked up 292 for 8 and then bowled out the hosts for 208. They were docked 5% of their match fee after this game as well.In the third ODI in Mount Maunganui, New Zealand scored 264 for 8 in the rain-affected 42-overs-a-side clash. In reply, Babar Azam scored a fifty but Ben Sears’ five-wicket haul restricted Pakistan to 221 in 40 overs. There was also an altercation between Khushdil Shah and spectators during the match, which led to the ejection of two spectators from the venue.

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