Nottingham Forest want Alex Moreno

Nottingham Forest are reportedly looking at signing Real Betis’ Alex Moreno.

What’s the word?

That’s according to David Ornstein, who claims that the club are working to sign the defender.

He notes that whilst negotiations are in the early stages the Spaniard is open to the move.

Forest are actively looking for additional wing-back cover.

He revealed in full: “Nottingham Forest working on deal to sign Alex Moreno from Real Betis. Negotiations at relatively early stage & 29yo Spaniard believed to be open to possibility but no agreement as yet. NFFC looking for cover in wing-back positions.”

A deal for Huddersfield left wing-back Harry Toffolo was supposedly in place, but financial disputes seem to have scuppered it late in the day.

Could spell the end for Colback

Although he has deputised well at left wing-back, Colback has only ever been a round peg in a square hole for Forest.

With their influx of Premier League cash, it appears that Steve Cooper is wasting no time in replacing him with this high-scoring, bombarding defender who could do all of what Djed Spence did last season and more.

Moreno currently holds the record for most goals scored by a defender since 2005 for his current club, having bagged five last season.

Having featured 30 times across La Liga for the Spanish outfit, the 29-year-old managed nine goal contributions. This exceptional return could certainly be improved upon further, as he reaches the prime years of his career.

Available for £10m per reports in Spain, this represents great value in today’s market for a newly-promoted side.

Dubbed “quality” by journalist Ethan Lamb, he certainly provides that in spades. He helped Real Betis to a remarkable fifth-place finish.

His 6.85 average SofaScore rating will have aided this, and although Colback boasts a slightly higher 6.94, at the age of 32 his powers will certainly start to decline.

There’s no way he’d be able to go on the marauding runs that Moreno does, and with Spence gone Forest will need a new injection of dynamism.

The Spaniard actually ranks in the 94th percentile for non-penalty goals whilst also recording 6.27 progressive carries per 90.

That’s not to say that he’s not a capable defender, as he still ranks in the 88th percentile for blocks, 87th percentile for clearances and 84th percentile for tackles.

He truly is a wing-back that can do it all, and he would represent a huge coup in the market for Cooper. His arrival would definitely spell the end for the £7.1k-per-week defender.

AND, in other news: Romano: Forest get green light to sign “fantastic” £5k-p/w target, he’s John Terry 2.0.

Spurs: Gold drops transfer update

Alasdair Gold has dropped an update on the remaining transfer business of Tottenham Hotspur this summer.

What’s the latest?

In a recent post on Twitter, the football.london journalist revealed that, despite Fabio Paratici confirming his fifth signing of the summer transfer window in the shape of Clement Lenglet, the sporting director is not done with incoming transfers just yet.

In his tweet, Gold said: “Five down. Still more to come and just under two months left. What a remarkable transfer window so far at Spurs.”

Supporters will be buzzing

Considering the fact that Paratici has already sealed a number of much-needed additions to Antonio Conte’s first-team squad this summer, Gold’s claim that the Italian’s business in the market is yet to conclude is sure to have left the Tottenham Hotspur faithful buzzing.

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Indeed, with Spurs having already welcomed the likes of left wing-back Ivan Perisic, backup goalkeeper Fraser Forster, central midfielder Yves Bissouma, forward Richarlison and left-sided centre-back Lenglet to Hotspur Way over the course of last month – spending a little over £78m in the process – it would very much appear as if Conte already has a much stronger squad at his disposal ahead of the 2022/23 campaign than he did throughout 2021/22.

However, with Tottenham also reported to be in negotiations with Middlesbrough regarding a £20m deal for 21-year-old right-back Djed Spence, as well as potentially lining up a £45m move for Villarreal centre-back Pau Torres, Spurs’ window looks as if it boasts the potential to transform from being extremely impressive to – quite frankly – unbelievable in the coming weeks.

Either way, one thing is for sure – Daniel Levy and Paratici are doing everything they can to keep Conte happy heading into the upcoming campaign, with Tottenham’s business so far very much leading to the conclusion that the 52-year-old manager and his side will be serious contenders for trophies both domestically and in Europe next season.

AND in other news: Fabrizio Romano reveals “full agreement” for £45m Spurs target, Paratici will be livid

Newcastle must secure Evan Ndicka swoop

Newcastle United brought in a number of new players during the January transfer window who ended up helping the club to avoid relegation and finish 11th in the Premier League.

Now that the summer transfer window has opened for business, this could see another flurry of business being conducted at St James’ Park.

In terms of potential outgoings, as Eddie Howe looks to freshen up his squad, one man who we feel shouldn’t continue with the Toon is Ciaran Clark.

Getting just 13 league appearances in 2021/22, the 32-year-old’s final squad inclusion came back in January when he made a 21-minute cameo in the 1-0 win over Leeds United at Elland Road. This doesn’t say much for his chances of playing regularly under Howe next season.

Whenever the Irishman did get a chance to play, he was more often than not a liability for his team, as Jamie Carragher made clear when he slammed the centre-back for his “shocking” defensive error against Manchester City just before Christmas. In the same month, he was given a red card nine minutes into Newcastle’s home clash against Norwich City.

In terms of who could come in to replace Clark, one player who has recently been linked with a £17m move to Tyneside and who could fit the bill is Eintracht Frankfurt defender Evan Ndicka.

Having made 138 appearances for the German club across all competitions, the 22-year-old has scored 10 goals and delivered nine assists, showing that he can be a rather useful goal threat at times.

In terms of his defensive capabilities, the centre-back has racked up a total of 114 successful tackles, 221 blocks, 161 interceptions and 473 clearances for the Europa League holders.

To further highlight how imposing he is at the back, the Frenchman ended his latest Bundesliga season with the highest average of clearances per game (4.1) and the joint-highest average for tackles (1.9) and interceptions (1.6) at his club.

This shows that he certainly has what it takes to be a solid defensive unit and why he could be a great long-term option for Newcastle given his young age.

Labelled an “enormous” player by Frankfurt journalist Christopher Michel, Ndicka should definitely be in the Magpies’ transfer plans should they get rid of Clark this summer.

In other news: Howe could land big Longstaff upgrade as Newcastle now plot bid for £228k-p/w “wizard”

Celtic linked with Vinicius Souza transfer

Celtic have been linked with a move for Lommel midfielder Vinicius Souza.

What’s the news?

According to a recent report from the Daily Mail, the Hoops have joined the list of clubs pursuing the player this summer. The report claimed that Celtic have “scheduled discussions with the Brazilian’s representatives” over a potential move to Glasgow.

After starting his career with Flamengo, the 22-year-old – who is currently valued at £4.05m by Transfermarkt – joined his current club in October 2020.

The midfielder spent the recent campaign on loan with fellow Belgian side KV Mechelen, making 35 appearances across all competitions. In that time, the Brazilian scored two goals and provided one assist, showing that he can be a useful figure in front of goal on occasion.

Also, of his 13 shots at goal throughout the campaign, seven were on target, leaving him with the second-highest percentage for shots on target (53.8%) out of players that had more than one attempt at goal for the club.

However, it was his defensive output which stood out throughout the campaign, as he ended the season with more interceptions (64) and more tackles won (66) than any other player at Mechelen.

Postecoglou’s new warrior

This backs up why Souza was labelled as a “warrior” on Twitter by football scout Mikail Serin, who also described the player as a “complete contact game freak.”

Taking all this into account, it seems as though the 22-year-old is a very well-rounded midfielder despite still being quite young.

In terms of a potential move to Parkhead this summer, the fact that the Hoops recently said goodbye to Tom Rogic and Nir Bitton makes it easy to see why the club are set to hold talks over a move for the Brazilian midfielder.

If Ange Postecoglou wants to add a new midfield warrior to his squad as they prepare to not only defend their Premiership title but try to go as far as they can in Europe as well, securing a deal for Souza could be a very astute prospective move by the Hoops.

In other news: Ange can land the next Carter-Vickers as Celtic eye swoop for “aggressive” £6.3m-rated machine

Leeds: Whites now make £23.9m transfer

Leeds United are closing in on a deal for RB Salzburg midfielder Brenden Aaronson after securing their Premier League status. 

The lowdown

Leeds’ 2-1 victory over Brentford on Sunday, in conjunction with Burnley’s 2-1 defeat against Newcastle United, saw the Whites avoid relegation.

Sky Sports pundit Gary Neville referred to Jack Harrison’s winner at The Brentford Community Stadium as a ‘£100million goal’ given the financial rewards associated with PL football.

Manager Jesse Marsch can now begin preparing for his first transfer window at the club without the cloud of uncertainty hanging over him.

Leeds made two offers for Aaronson in January while Marcelo Bielsa was manager, the second around £20million, but Salzburg stood firm.

Marsch is more than familiar with the player too, having overseen his development at the Red Bull Arena.

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The latest

MLS and USMNT ‘insider’ Tom Bogert revealed what he’s heard from ‘sources’ on Sunday evening.

“Sources: With their Premier League survival, Leeds United are finalising a deal to acquire RB Salzburg’s USMNT attacker Brenden Aaronson. Deal around $30million (£23.8million) was previously agreed to, pending relegation. Final steps now.”

The verdict

Aaronson is an exciting addition for Leeds.

He scored six goals and provided ten assists for the Austrian champions this term, setting up a pair of goals in their Champions League Round of 16 tie against Bayern Munich.

The supremely versatile attacking midfielder, who also has plenty of experience on the left wing and has even appeared on the right flank this term, has just won his second league title, and his sixth trophy overall.

And even though he’s still only 21 years old, Aaronson has already been capped 18 times by the United States, bringing a decorated young career with experience on the top European stage to Yorkshire.

A former coach said ‘he looks like he should be in a boy band’ and is ‘a sweetheart’ but, on the pitch, ‘he’s a killer and he’s relentless’.

In other news, this Leeds star faces a lengthy injury lay-off. 

Aston Villa: Ollie Watkins a doubt against Crystal Palace

Aston Villa striker Ollie Watkins only has an outside chance of featuring against Crystal Palace this afternoon due to injury.

The Lowdown: Injury scare

Watkins, who Gregg Evans labelled as the ‘real deal’ back in 2020, has been a regular this season, missing just one Premier League game under Steven Gerrard.

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The 26-year-old has attracted interest from West Ham as a result of his displays this season, scoring 10 times in 32 top-flight fixtures.

The England international picked up an ankle injury in the 2-1 defeat to Liverpool on Tuesday, and it looks as if he may not recover in time for the clash with Patrick Vieira’s side this afternoon.

The Latest: Preece’s post

Villa correspondent Ashley Preece relayed injury updates from Gerrard’s pre-match press conference on Twitter, one of which was on Watkins.

The forward was yet to train as a result of his ankle issue and only has an outside chance of featuring against Palace. However, there was some good news, with Jacob Ramsey set to be back in the squad following a groin problem.

The Verdict: Options

Gerrard has gone with three different systems in Villa’s last four Premier League games, and this update on Watkins could result in more tactical changes.

He stuck with a 4-3-1-2 formation against Liverpool, however, with Watkins a doubt, he may have to resort back to either a 4-3-3 or 4-3-2-1, with a winger coming in for Watkins and Danny Ings going as a lone striker.

Club-record signing Emiliano Buendia was on the bench last time out, so perhaps he’ll come back into the XI, or Bertrand Traore is another option after replacing Watkins in the week.

In other news: NSWE now close to agreeing deal for another midfielder alongside Coutinho.  

How does Ashwin-Jadeja stack up against Kumble-Harbhajan?

India’s current spin duo has already been part of more Test wins than their predecessors, but have they been favoured by conditions?

Dustin Silgardo07-Oct-2019R Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja are more successful as a pair than Anil Kumble and Harbhajan Singh were – it’s a fact. After all, India have now won 25 of the 33 Tests Ashwin and Jadeja have played together as compared to just 21 out of 54 for Kumble and Harbhajan.So, are they are just better match-winners? Or are there other explanations for the fairly large statistical gap between the two pairs? Harbhajan has himself tweeted about how pitches in India offer more spin now than before. It’s also true that Kumble and he played more Tests together overseas. Then there is a difference in the quality of India’s support bowling cast. And, perhaps, opposition batsmen were better against spin then than they are now.So how do the numbers compare when we try to take at least some of these factors into account?ESPNcricinfo Ltd

The home-and-away factor

First, we limit the comparison to home Tests. Kumble and Harbhajan played 20 Tests outside India, while Ashwin and Jadeja have played just four. With India finding a set of impressive pace bowlers over the past decade, there has not been a need to play two spinners in places such as South Africa, England and Australia. But, even in home Tests, Ashwin and Jadeja have a superior bowling average and strike rate than Kumble and Harbhajan. The team has also been more successful of late: India have won 22 and lost only one out of 29 Tests Ashwin and Jadeja have played together at home. In comparison, India won 14 out of 34 with Kumble and Harbhajan in the XI.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Who got the friendlier pitches?

Have Indian pitches been more spin-friendly in the Ashwin-Jadeja era as Harbhajan feels?It’s hard to measure, but when you look at the records of other spinners – both for and against India – playing in the same games as Kumble and Harbhajan, they averaged 41.11 compared to the 42.82 that spinners playing alongside or against Ashwin-Jadeja have.Before concluding that the pitches have been more or less the same, let’s look at who we are talking about. When Kumble and Harbhajan were playing, Shane Warne, Muttiah Muralitharan, Saqlain Mushtaq and Danish Kaneria all toured India. Of these, only Saqlain outbowled the Indians. During Ashwin and Jadeja’s time, the quality of visiting spinners has not been nearly as good, but when Nathan Lyon came with Australia in 2017, Ashwin and Jadeja, as a duo, did better than he did. It’s hard to say what Muralitharan and Warne may have done on the pitches India have prepared over the past few years – not to mention the difference in the quality of the Indian batsmen too. Equally, it’s tough to measure whether batsmen of the past would have played Ashwin and Jadeja better.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

The support cast

One significant difference between the time Kumble and Harbhajan bowled together – 1998 to 2008 – and now is that India’s seam attack is much better. Ashwin and Jadeja have Ishant Sharma, Mohammed Shami and Umesh Yadav taking key wickets even on dry tracks to take the burden off. Thanks, in part, to their own batting skills, Ashwin and Jadeja have also had the advantage of, at times, playing with a third spinner, and the Yadavs Jayant and Kuldeep have both been competent allies, the latter even outperforming his senior team-mates on occasions.ESPNcricinfo LtdDuring Kumble and Harbhajan’s time, the rest of India’s bowlers averaged 41.40 at home. So it was often down to the two of them to win games. That goes a long way in explaining the much lower win percentage India had then. When you compare Ashwin and Jadeja to their bowling colleagues, and Kumble and Harbhajan to theirs, it’s the older duo who actually come out looking marginally better, averaging one-and-a-half times less than their team-mates and striking at a much better rate too. Ashwin and Jadeja’s support bowlers actually strike at a decent rate of 62.6 balls, which tells you a lot about India’s overall bowling improvement.ESPNcricinfo LtdClearly, there are several factors that have worked in Ashwin and Jadeja’s favour. But it might be incorrect to say that they have thrived only in tailor-made conditions, as evident from the averages of other spinners on the same tracks. But so many intangibles – they make forming a solid argument one way or the other difficult. That said, with a win percentage of 75.75, it’s hard to argue against the impact Ashwin and Jadeja have had.

A batting order with clear roles to fulfil in hostile conditions

If M Vijay and Cheteshwar Pujara protect Virat Kohli and Ajinkya Rahane from the new ball, India know they can score plenty of runs in the quick-scoring grounds of South Africa

Sidharth Monga31-Dec-20172:15

Prepared to face balls that may surprise us – Kohli

Since December 2013, when he replaced Sachin Tendulkar as India’s Test No. 4, Virat Kohli has been the most prolific No. 4 in the world. Steven Smith has averaged more than his 62.04, but the Australian captain hasn’t played as many innings at that position. Kohli has achieved these incredible numbers despite having two utterly forgettable series in between. He did, however, have the advantage of, on an average, walking out later than any other No. 4 in the world.Over this period, India have lost their second wicket at roughly the end of the 27th over, six balls later than Pakistan and 10 balls later than Australia. In England in 2014, India were two down at around the 21st over, and somewhere near the 29th in Australia later that year.In England, Kohli averaged 13. In Australia, 87.Kohli is not a batsman without weaknesses – the moving quick ball troubles him often – but if the bowlers are even slightly off or if there isn’t swing or seam, he takes full toll. The bowler knows Kohli can be taken out but he also knows the margin of error is almost non-existent. It will be unfair to attribute all the difference between Kohli’s England and Australia tours to it, but for a batsman such as him, walking out to face an older ball and less-fresh bowlers makes a sizeable impact.Every side needs players like Kohli, frontrunners who demoralise opposition attacks, but, as he himself would have realised, India need M Vijay and Cheteshwar Pujara to shield him from the new ball. Kohli the captain has a history of dropping them for more exciting batsmen, and in the one Test they both missed, Kohli – batting at No. 3 to accommodate Rohit Sharma – was exposed to the new ball and lasted 25 balls across two innings.Virat Kohli smashed a double-hundred at his home ground•AFPThe man who follows Kohli in the batting order also likes to dominate bowlers. Ajinkya Rahane, in fact, matched him shot for shot in the Boxing Day Test of 2014 as both batsmen scored superlative hundreds. The thing is, Rahane is also one of the worst starters in Test cricket. He has been dismissed for less than 20 in 47% of his innings over the last three years. Only Kusal Mendis fares worse among middle-order batsmen, and even if batsmen from the top three were added to the mix, only five of them paint Rahane in better light. To complicate matters, he is coming off his first series without a meaningful contribution in even one innings.Having said that, and quite like Kohli, Rahane is an extremely important player for India. Apart from having the ability to run away with the game quickly, he is that rare batsman who plays better away from home, who has to work harder against spin than pace. India’s only win in their 13-Test jaunt in England and Australia in 2014 and 2015 came on the back of a Rahane century on a green seamer.For various reasons, these two domineering batsmen need a bit of tender care. India can’t have them exposed to fresh bowlers and the moving ball too often. That is exactly why they need Vijay and Pujara at their best. Since December 2013, visiting No. 4 batsmen have been walking out, on an average, in the 20th over in South Africa. It is a tough place to face the new ball. You will see the seamer’s version of intended offbreaks that don’t turn. The top order will have to negotiate high-speed outswingers that pitch and suddenly either hold their line or nip back in. So when the ball is new, you almost have to play to have your outside edge beaten. Cover for the seam back in, never mind the one that beats your outside edge.Ajinkya Rahane lifts one over midwicket•AFPYou have to leave a lot of balls, and as it turns out, since December 2013, only Alastair Cook has done so more often against fast bowling, because he faces more of it, than Vijay (1158 balls). Pujara with 1065 leaves is not far behind. In terms of percentage of balls left alone, only Tom Latham is ahead of Vijay. Over the last three years, on an average, only four players have dealt with more fast bowling per innings than Vijay (59 deliveries).You look at numbers outside Asia, and Vijay comfortably faces more fast bowling than any other Indian – 80 balls per innings to KL Rahul’s 64 – and he faces them at their freshest. However, much like winter clothing, this is a game he leaves in the loft when playing at home or in similar conditions, which he has been doing a lot of over the last two years. He leaves alone 38% of quick deliveries outside Asia, and only 24% in Asia.It is surreal that India toyed with the idea of not playing Vijay until as recently as the Sri Lanka series; he has appropriately come back with successive centuries, but he will have to quickly go back to being watchful again. He will be physically challenged, forced to duck and weave, and mentally taxed, with a lot of effort spent for few runs. He is also 33 now and has had a wrist surgery to go with back issues this year. It will be tough for him to replicate the restraint and technical expertise he displayed over long periods on India’s last leg of tours outside Asia.M Vijay and Cheteshwar Pujara rehydrate during the drinks break•AFPA similar batsman, Pujara will have to fight what he doesn’t always like: extra bounce and metronomic bowling. His last hundred outside Asia came in South Africa, but it has been four years now. He has always maintained that he didn’t have technical issues. He got quite a few starts; 41% of his innings outside Asia since Johannesburg 2013-14 have been under 20, which, for the sake of comparison, is a better rate than Rahane overall. Now he goes to South Africa in the form of his life.Between Pujara and Vijay, their first job is to shield Kohli and Rahane, strike-rates be damned. The other opener will take care of scoring quickly. India seem to have locked in on Shikhar Dhawan for the first Test, not least because he is the only specialist left-hand batsman in the squad. Dhawan has one hundred outside Asia and an average of 30, and seems to struggle against the moving ball, but it seems India are willing to gamble, at least at the start of the series. And even if Rahul gets his chance, you suspect he will be briefed to bat with urgency to balance the approach of the other two top-order batsmen.Over the last two tours to South Africa, India have had only two real shockers with the bat: the first innings in Centurion in 2010-11 and the second innings in Durban in 2013-14. They all know – most of them from experience – that there are runs to be had on quick-scoring grounds. They will go into the New Year’s Test with form, confidence and clarity of roles. They will back themselves to be all right if they start well. And if the pitches have extra spice, the batsmen will have to adjust on the fly and a find a way to not collapse in a heap.

Cover drive vaults bottom-handed Kohli to top of T20 run charts

Always a monster at scoring on the leg side, Virat Kohli has become so adept at playing inside-out drives that he can now pierce any gap from point to mid-off, and this evolution has contributed to some insane numbers

Alagappan Muthu in Bangalore19-May-2016There was one thing Virat Kohli failed at on Wednesday night: trying to restrain his grin as he walked off with a century . He bit his lip. That didn’t help. He bowed his head. But that only made him look cooler.There was a time when Kohli simply seemed agitated playing Twenty20 cricket. He wasn’t always as strong as he is now. He couldn’t thwack sixes as often as he does now. It had bred frustration, which clouded his mind and reduced him to base instinct. For a bottom-handed player such as him, that roughly means slogging into the leg side. Until December 2015, he averaged 35.37 with a strike-rate of 128.97. No centuries. Thirty-two fifties.Kohli’s first boundary on Wednesday came off the first ball he faced, standing tall to dispatch a back of a length delivery through the covers. A shot like that depends on the top hand for timing and direction, so bottom-handed players have trouble getting the maximum out of them. The same holds true for inside-out drives through the off side.But Kohli is a master of those, against pace and spin. He has become so adept that he can pierce any gap from point to mid-off and this evolution has contributed to some insane numbers. Since January 2016, his average is 99.33 and his strike-rate 148.11. Four centuries. Twelve fifties. That is half as many 50-plus scores in one year as he had made in the previous eight.Kohli was always a monster on the leg side with the power he generates with his wrists. Now he is a phenom on the off side as well.You have to put yourself in the bowler’s shoes to understand the impact of that. You think you can be safe with a nice, fifth or sixth stump line, but he can carve it to third man, drill it through the covers or thump it back over your head. Okay, target the stumps then. But the bottom-handed meanie will whip it anywhere between square leg and mid-on. Is it any wonder that Kohli has hit 443 runs on the off side and 422 on the leg side in this IPL?A bottom-handed player being more productive on the off side is a sign he has broken his limitations. Kohli has done so by developing a shot that could eclipse his flick and become his new trademark, at least in one-day cricket, when there is considerably lesser swing and seam movement. The cover drive.It was the first thing he practiced when he got to the middle – off the front foot and the back foot – and it brought him the first of his eight sixes against King XI Punjab when he charged at KC Cariappa and hit with the legspin. He can play it from the crease, or outside it, on the up and any which way he pleases. Kohli’s strike-rate through the covers in this IPL is 156.20. In all T20s prior to the start of the season, that figure had been wallowing at a mere 118. Party to this improvement is his knowledge of when to use the shot.”Your head should always be where your toe is, that’s how your body is dictated when you’re playing the drive,” Kohli demonstrated in a batting masterclass for in April. “And that’s how you connect [with] the ball close to your body, close to your head and it stays in control.”If the ball pitches ahead of [where] your foot [can reach], you have to play it along with your pad and make sure your follow through is such that the ball bounces right in front of you. If the ball is a bit fuller, the sensible thing to do, which I do most often, is I collapse my back foot rather than bending on the front foot.”So many factors at play. So many decisions to make. And all Kohli gets is a split second. In addition to that, a bottom-handed player has to let go of his natural inclinations to play the drive well. Otherwise, he might hold the bat too tightly, the wrists lock up and a full flow of the arms is not easy.Creditably, Kohli hasn’t been pushed into overhauling his technique to expand his range. He has adjusted by moving his feet and himself into a position – usually quite a distance outside leg – where the bottom hand does all the work to get the cover drive away. There have been times when he has nailed the shot without making room too. Remember the fours he shovelled through the off side against West Indies and Australia in the World T20? The wristy flourishes at the end are a clear indication of his bottom-hand dominance.So Kohli, it appears, hasn’t abandoned his natural game. He has merely augmented it in the quest to become a complete batsman.Victory may not be that far off.

Stats provided by Shiva Jayaraman and Bharath Seervi

My Richie era

How Richie Benaud’s passion for work and attention to detail precipitated a relationship with me that lasted until his death

Ric Finlay14-Apr-2015Today is the first day of my life in cricket without Richie Benaud in it.I know where I was on November 30, 1962, because my database tells me. I was at home in bed afflicted with the cursed bronchitis that frequently interfered with my primary education. I know this because it was the first day of the 1962-63 Ashes series at the Gabba, and Richie was captain of Australia. I must have had some idea of cricket before this date, but I have no memory of it. That day, therefore, marked the start of my conscious cricket life.I was permitted to have my mother’s transistor radio, and I tracked the performance of the Australian batting that day in my father’s ABC cricket book – but not accurately enough for him. He noted that I hadn’t entered the batsmen in the order in which they batted, and I was made to rub it all out and start again. My first scoring lesson.Brian Booth made 100 that day (112 in fact: I can still remember the individual scores made that day without recourse to a scorecard), and thus became my first cricket hero. In this day of high definition TV and slo-mo, I find it amazing that a child can generate heroes in his mind without the images that would seem to be essential. Radio still has its place in developing a strong affinity with the game, even with the very youngest. It may not be a coincidence that radio has been the dominant environment in what I call my cricket career.Booth was out before the day’s end, and Richie came in. Not out overnight. Tonight, over 52 years later, will be the first night for me where Richie is not “not out” overnight. The end of an era.I remember my disappointment when Richie retired the following season. I had only caught the tail-end of his career, of course, but that was my first brush with the phenomenon of retirement, and the first realisation that cricketers don’t play for ever. I sulked for a week.In my first year of high school not long after, we were asked by the school library what books we would like to see added to it. I plumped for Richie Benaud’s , not expecting much joy since it was hardly the erudite tome that I assumed would be favoured. To my surprise and joy, the book was duly acquired.For my pains, I had to present a book review of it to the whole school in assembly one day. I tackled the assignment feverishly, and delivered the resulting masterpiece with all the aplomb of Rahul Dravid delivering the Spirit of Cricket lecture, and at an intellectual level that was clearly above the listening recipients. The silence that followed it was a salutary reminder that that not everyone, in fact, hardly anyone, shared my passion.Richie rushed back into my life a decade later when Kerry Packer bulldozed his way into Australian cricket. I remember Richie being placed on a proscribed list created by the ACB because he was involved in the setting up of the rival cricket structure that threatened to destroy life as we knew it. I was initially angry at Packer, but when it became known to me that Richie was involved, my personal opposition to it softened.In time, as we now know, the two parties united, and Richie was on our television screens, splendidly attired in his trademark coat. Channel 9 replaced the ABC as mandatory summer watching, although the ads were always a pain. But Richie was the swing to the advertising roundabout.In the early ’90s, a work colleague and I devised a computer Test cricket database, and released it to the unsuspecting public in 1994. When covering an ODI at Bellerive, I received a phone call from Ian Chappell, working for Channel 9 at the other end of the ground. He had seen the database somewhere, and wanted it. Not long after, Richie made contact, and precipitated a relationship that lasted until his death.Richie’s insatiable desire to master our software knew no bounds. In his late 60s by then, I was astounded by his understanding of what it could do for the reporting of the game. Early in his involvement with our product, Richie, the consummate journalist, came up with the testimonial, “There’s a story in every table”. In time, we added ODIs, the Sheffield Shield, women’s cricket and T20 to our offerings. Richie wanted the lot, yesterday. He would follow each acquisition with the question, “Are you sure I have everything?”It was one thing to drive the database, but quite another to manage the incessant files that come with updating. One day, Richie was surprised to find himself appearing in the women’s database. He had taken a wrong turn in the updating procedure. Every time he came to Hobart to cover a Test, we would get an invitation to his hotel room to make sure his files were in order. Over a civilised glass of red, we would work together to ensure his system was functional and efficient. During the winter, I would frequently receive emails from his summer house in France asking for technical advice. When in Sydney, he would utilise the excellent expertise of his computer man, Greg Culpan. He spared nothing to ensure all was in working order.I held my breath when I sent out the annual call for re-subscriptions shortly after his recent car accident. I needn’t have worried – his positive response was by return email, and so for the 21st time, he continued being my client. I am genuinely sorry that he wasn’t able to see it to its conclusion. He was never anything but a delight to liaise with. I will miss him.So far, my life has had a pre-Richie era, and a Richie-era. The post-Richie era starts today. The game will never be quite the same.If you have a submission for Inbox, send it to us here, with “Inbox” in the subject line.

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