Newcastle must sign Edson Alvarez

The summer transfer window slams shut in less than two weeks and Newcastle United have only brought in three players so far.

Dan Ashworth has snapped up Matt Targett on a permanent deal after his loan spell from Aston Villa and brought in Sven Botman and Nick Pope to bolster the defence.

However, the recruitment chief is yet to sign a midfielder or attacker and has until next Thursday to get any remaining business over the line.

One player who could end up at St. James’ Park before the window slams shut is Ajax defensive midfielder Edson Alvarez.

Former GOAL reporter KeryNews recently claimed that the Magpies made an offer for the Mexican and that they will need to pay roughly £42m (€50m) to sign him.

He Tweeted: “Newcastle is the club most interested in Edson Alvarez. The Magpies were willing to offer 30 million euros and Ajax rejected them. The proposal was verbal. It seems that the negotiations have not completely fallen apart and they will make another more important offer.”

The reporter followed that up by adding: “Ajax does not want Edson Alvarez to leave the team in these last days of the market. After rejecting Newcastle’s first offer, they have valued it at 50 million euros. The reason for the price is to scare away those interested (and a hint of what they hope to get after Qatar).”

By snapping up a deal to sign the Mexico international, Eddie Howe could have his own version of Leicester midfielder Wilfred Ndidi.

FB Ref lists them as similar players and their respective statistics back that up. They both rank in the top 2% for clearances per 90 among players in their position over the last 365 days in Europe’s top five leagues and European competition, whilst Alvarez’s 2.91 aerial battles won per 90 puts him seven percentiles higher than Ndidi at 2.49 per 90.

This shows that they are two of the best holding midfielders around when it comes to their positioning and strength in the air, which allows them to repel opposition crosses and long balls – providing an excellent shield in front of the back four.

Interestingly, the Ajax man – who was dubbed “tenacious” by scout Jacek Kulig – ranks in the 99th percentile for tackles in the final third per 90 with 0.65, whilst the Leicester enforcer sits in the 39th percentile with 0.21 per 90.

This indicates that he would suit Howe’s pressing style of play as he is one of the best players in his position at pushing high up and attempting to win the ball back off the opposition near their own box.

So, whilst he could be the manager’s own Ndidi in the sense that he is terrific at cutting out balls forward from teams, he could be a better option for the way that Newcastle wants to play.

Everton remain interested in Jesse Lingard

Everton have been linked with a move for free agent Jesse Lingard this summer, and now a new update has emerged on the player’s future.

What’s the latest?

According to 90min, Everton remain interested in the former Manchester United star’s services this summer.

In a more detailed report from the Daily Mail, Lingard continues to weigh up his options with a £10m-per-year offer tabled by a Saudi Arabian club and talks held with MLS teams last week, as well as a number of Premier League clubs vying for the signature of the player.

Lampard’s very own Odegaard

It is no secret that Frank Lampard is keen to bolster and improve his squad following a relegation scrap in the Premier League last season and Lingard could certainly add some much-needed quality to the team if Everton can seal a deal this summer.

The Manchester United academy graduate spent a decade at Old Trafford scoring 35 goals and delivering 21 assists, but with his game time dwindling at the club, he joined West Ham United on a six-month loan in the second half of the 2020/21 season – proving his worth to the football world and former manager Ole Gunnar Solksjaer.

Over 16 Premier League appearances for the Hammers, Lingard – who was hailed “infectious” by Andy Cole – scored nine goals, delivered four assists and created six big chances, as well as making an average of 1.1 key passes, hitting the target with 1.4 shots and winning 3.4 duels per game.

Lampard could even land his very own Martin Odegaard with the signing of Lingard ahead of next season, as the Arsenal star was named as the most comparable player to the former Red Devil last season.

Despite Odegaard making more appearances (36) and offering more goal contributions (11), Lingard outperformed his position peer with a better shot-on-target accuracy (75%), better pass completion rate (85.2%) and was more successful in his dribble intercepting tackles (66.7%).

With that being said, the signing of Lingard would be a major coup for Lampard as he sets out to improve the creativity and performances in his Everton team and the 30-year-old could definitely have a positive influence on that.

AND in other news: Fabrizio Romano reveals big transfer development that’ll have Everton supporters livid 

Newcastle keen on Atalanta’s Duvan Zapata

An update has emerged on Newcastle United and their pursuit of Duvan Zapata in the summer transfer window… 

What’s the talk?

According to Tutto Mercato Web, the Magpies are set to reignite their interest in the Colombia international after missing out on him in January.

The report claims that they attempted to secure a loan deal for the second half of the 2021/22 campaign, with an option to sign him permanently in the summer.

Atalanta refused their offer and it is now claimed that Newcastle are eyeing a bid to sign him on a permanent basis in the current window. His club value him at €40m (£34m) but it remains to be seen how much PIF are willing to pay for him.

Eddie Howe’s own Harry Kane

The Magpies can land their own version of the England captain by securing a deal to sign the 31-year-old centre-forward in the coming weeks.

FBRef lists the pair as being similar players based on their statistics for their respective clubs over the last 365 days of action domestically and in Europe.

Zapata ranks in the 90th percentile or higher in his position for shot-creating actions, non-penalty xG + xA, assists and shots per 90. Kane, meanwhile, ranks in the 86th percentile or higher in those categories, which shows that both players are adept at scoring and creating from a number nine position.

The Atalanta man has proven his quality over the course of a number of years in the Serie A. In four top-flight campaigns for his current club, he has scored 66 goals and assisted 29 in 126 matches – averaging a goal contribution more than once every two outings.

His former teammate Papu Gomez previously lauded his strength, saying: “Zapata’s shorts look like underwear, he is so big. Sometimes I don’t even want to get close to him in a match because he’s a beast and it hurts. When he is feeling good he’s like a train – you throw the ball forward and ‘ciao!’” 

This suggests that he also has the physicality required to compete in the Premier League and that will then allow him to showcase his prowess in the final third as he is able to hold off defenders to get his shots and passes away.

He can, therefore, be Howe’s own version of Kane at St. James’ Park next season – scoring and assisting goals on a regular basis.

AND in other news, PIF could land their own Aguero as NUFC eye deal to sign “exceptional” £13m phenomenon…

Forest linked with Lewis O’Brien transfer

Nottingham Forest have been linked with a move for Huddersfield Town midfielder Lewis O’Brien.

What’s the news?

According to journalist Alan Nixon from his Patreon page (via Nottingham Forest News), the Midlands club are looking to add the midfielder to Steve Cooper’s squad in addition to Harry Toffolo.

As a product of Huddersfield’s youth system, the 23-year-old has gone on to make 131 senior appearances for the Yorkshire club across all competitions.

In those appearances, the Englishman has found the net eight times and delivered ten assists in the process.

Cooper would love him

Last season saw O’Brien show just how important he was for the Terriers and how much of a capable player he is.

Having played more minutes in the Championship than any other Huddersfield player, the midfielder won more tackles (59) than any of his teammates.

His overall performances earned him a solid season rating of 7.09/10, making him the highest-rated outfield player at the club according to WhoScored.

In the recent Championship play-off final, which saw Forest beat the Yorkshire club to secure their place in the Premier League, O’Brien once again showed how impressive he is on and off the ball.

The Englishman successfully completed all four dribbles he attempted, in addition to winning ten of the 13 ground duels he was involved in.

This display ultimately earned the player an overall match rating of 7/10 from SofaScore, making him the second-highest rated Huddersfield player on the day.

This backs up why Huddersfield manager Carlos Corberan described the midfielder as an “exceptional” player.

Taking all of this into account, it’s safe to say that the Huddersfield star certainly has what it takes to be a standout player in the Championship and therefore could be ready to make a name for himself in the Premier League.

Therefore, it would presumably be an exciting prospect for Forest manager Steve Cooper to have a player like O’Brien in his ranks that he can help develop and grow into a top-flight star.

With a reported price tag of £10m, this is an investment that the newly-promoted side should definitely consider making as the potential benefits could be massive for the club on the pitch.

AND in other news: “Advanced talks”: Sky Sports journo drops claim that’ll leave Forest supporters gutted

Leeds youngster Caprile set to leave

Leeds United goalkeeper Elia Caprile is set to leave Elland Road on a permanent deal, with Serie B outfit Bari closing in on a deal.

The Lowdown: Caprile unwanted at Leeds

The 20-year-old has made 19 appearances for the Whites’ Under-23 side but he is yet to make his first-team bow, having arrived from Chievo Verona back in 2020.

Caprile spent last season on loan at Pro Patria, with Marcelo Bielsa unable to promise him even a hint of playing time at Leeds.

The young shot-stopper’s contract at Elland Road expires at the end of this month but it looks as though he will wrap up an exit sooner than that, heading to Italy for a fresh challenge.

The Latest: Youngster set for Bari move

According to Sky Sports journalist Gianluca Di Marzio on Twitter, an agreement is in place for Bari to sign Caprile imminently.

“Bari: agreement in principle for Caprile, goalkeeper of Leeds United,” the reporter wrote on Monday, sharing that it will be a permanent transfer in an attached article.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/latest-leeds-united-news-45/” title=”Latest Leeds United news!” poster=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/cropped-2022-03-10T184055Z_1834933207_UP1EI3A1FW561_RTRMADP_3_SOCCER-ENGLAND-LEE-AVA-REPORT-1-scaled-1.jpg” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

The Verdict: Right decision by Whites

While Caprile is a talented young goalkeeper, it has been clear for some time that he wasn’t going to make the grade at Leeds.

In Illan Meslier and Kristoffer Klaesson, Jesse Marsch already has two gifted young stoppers at his disposal, meaning there is no real pathway into the first team.

Caprile could instead blossom into a key player in Serie B with Bari, thriving back in his homeland and being afforded far more playing time than he would ever get at Leeds.

In other news, another Leeds player is thought to be ‘very close’ to leaving the club. Find out who it is here.

Aston Villa set to sign Olsen permanently

Aston Villa look like they are about to announce their fourth summer signing as Steven Gerrard continues his early transfer business.

What’s the word?

That’s according to Fabrizio Romano, who tweeted: “Robin Olsen will join Aston Villa on a permanent deal, agreement done and set to be announced.”

Roma will receive €3.5m (£3m) for the goalkeeper and Villa look set to confirm yet another transfer, which will be their fourth in what has already been a very productive off-season for Gerrard and the club’s hierarchy.

Villa fans will be buzzing

The signing of Olsen on a permanent deal would follow already-completed moves for Philippe Coutinho, Boubacar Kamara and Diego Carlos.

Gerrard has built a solid spine to his new-look team, and he will be hoping that Olsen can challenge Emiliano Martinez for the number one spot next season.

The Swede joined Villa on loan from Serie A outfit AS Roma in January until the end of 2021/22 to provide cover for the Argentine, although he didn’t make his debut until the final match of the Premier League season, a 3-2 defeat to Manchester City which was marred by crowd trouble at the end.

While he may have conceded three goals on the day, the 32-year-old still pulled off two saves during a pulsating encounter at the Etihad Stadium, while he also boasts the vast experience of 58 caps for Sweden, being their first-choice ‘keeper at Euro 2020 and the 2018 World Cup.

Olsen played on loan at Everton in the 2020/21 season, where he kept three clean sheets in 11 appearances, and he appears a more than capable deputy for Martinez.

There is no doubt that Villa struggled defensively over the last few months, conceding 54 goals in the Premier League. This is something that Gerrard will be aiming to improve next season, and the signing of Carlos should bolster the heart of that shaky backline.

Tyrone Mings and Ezri Konsa underperformed in 2021/22, with WhoScored ratings of 6.74 and 6.43 putting them 10th and 17th respectively among the Villa squad, so Gerrard could certainly do with making his team harder to break down.

Supporters would surely be buzzing with yet another signing in Olsen and this could give them a taste of what is still to come over the next couple of months as the manager continues to rejuvenate the squad.

AND in other news, Gerrard must axe “frustrating” Aston Villa liability in deal for “unreal” £10m dynamo

Man United transfer news on Osimhen

Victor Osimhen is ‘definitely’ on the ‘radar’ of Manchester United ahead of the summer transfer window, transfer insider Dean Jones has told GiveMeSport.

The lowdown

The Nigerian striker joined Napoli in a £67.5m move from Lille in September 2020, and his £112,000-per-week contract at the Stadio Diego Armando Maradona still has more than three years to run.

He has scored 27 goals in his 60 appearances for Napoli to date, including 17 in 30 games this season. According to Gianluca Di Marzio, the Azzurri will demand at least €100m (£85.6m) to let him leave in the summer.

United are gearing up for Erik ten Hag’s first transfer window in Manchester after he was announced as Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s permanent successor as manager. However, the Red Devils appear to have lost out in the race for Borussia Dortmund’s Erling Haaland, who now looks set to join local rivals Manchester City.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/latest-man-utd-updates/” title=”Latest Man Utd updates!” poster=”” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

The latest

Jones has said that Osimhen is an option for United as a centre-forward target in the upcoming transfer window. The player appears to boast the desired profile for Ten Hag, but his price tag could apparently be an issue.

The journalist told GiveMeSport: “He’s a really good player, and definitely somebody that’s on United’s radar for the summer.

“He is extremely expensive. That is a big drawback in terms of pursuing it. He does fit what they’re going to be looking for, though.”

The verdict

You can understand why Ten Hag would want to add a new number nine at Old Trafford.

Cristiano Ronaldo has scored 24 goals this season but he is now 37 years of age, and he could leave at the end of 2022/23 when his contract expires. Meanwhile, fellow veteran Edinson Cavani is poised to leave in a matter of weeks as his deal winds down.

Marcus Rashford is capable of operating as a centre-forward, but he has endured a difficult campaign, scoring only five goals.

Osimhen may come with an eye-watering price tag, but he is only 23 and looks like an elite striker in the making.

The Serie A player of the month for March is a ‘thoroughbred bomber’ who can become ‘world-class’, in the opinion of his manager Luciano Spalletti, and he definitely appears to be a viable alternative to Haaland for United in the transfer market.

In other news, Sky Sports have dropped a live-on-air Paul Pogba update. 

Meticulous Rachin building on father's cricket genes

Playing his second U-19 World Cup, Rachin Ravindra is benefting from a lot of efforts his father has put in too, by founding a cricket club in Wellington and making his son play across South India

Shashank Kishore15-Jan-2018″I tried to get my daughter into cricket and she didn’t. With Rachin, I didn’t try, and he did.” Ravi Krishnamurthy, the proud father of New Zealand Under-19’s most-promising allrounder, tells ESPNcricinfo, even as his son prepares for a second crack at junior cricket’s biggest prize.Krishnamurthy couldn’t help but notice the passion when little Rachin would keep tucking at his Slazenger bats and then spend hours together hitting plastic balls spread across their backyard as a five-year old. It was this initiation into cricket that eventually took proper shape in the form of schools cricket, inter-districts, where he earned the reputation of being an elegant strokemaker who was hard to dismiss.At 16, Rachin Ravindra was the youngest New Zealander to feature in the 2016 World Cup in Bangladesh, where he impressed with his left-arm spin, but couldn’t quite replicate his success with the bat. He has started the 2018 tournament well, picking up three wickets that set the base for New Zealand’s eight-wicket win over West Indies. In home conditions, Krishnamurthy hopes the two years of hard work since will pay off.A software system architect, Krishnamurthy played a decent level of cricket in his hometown Bengaluru, before he left India to settle down in New Zealand after stints in England, Singapore and Australia. He, however, continued to remain in touch with some of his club team-mates like Javagal Srinath and J Arunkumar.Srinath, who Rachin fondly calls as “Sri uncle” turned out to become a close family friend, who they often visit in Bengaluru whenever Krishnamurthy is down meet his extended family during summer holidays. Srinath also often visits the Krishnamurthy household if in Wellington on match referee duty.”He’s my gym buddy, but I can’t lift the kind of weights he does,” Rachin laughs. “He is always happy to chat cricket with me whenever he’s here. He’s been very kind to spend time with me and talk about experiences that shaped him in his cricket career. How India’s outlook is towards cricket, cricketers and stuff like that. I’ve been fortunate to have been able to spend time with some former cricketers.”Until 2010, a trip to India meant family holidays. Since 2011, the annual India holidays have been intercepted with plenty of day’s cricket across Hyderabad, Chennai, Bengaluru and Anantpur, courtesy the Hutt Hawks Cricket Club, which Krishnamurthy founded in 2011 to give “serious cricketers” an opportunity to play day’s cricket and not just 30-overs cricket, as is the norm in New Zealand at the junior levels.NZC”The age-group limited-overs format wasn’t going to teach resilience. It was more participation than anything,” Krishnamurthy, a Level 3 certified coach by New Zealand Cricket, explains. “I kind of knew, unless Rachin went out and got good number of games as match practice, he won’t progress. The number of dropouts in cricket is staggering in New Zealand. We started Hutt Hawks, named after our suburb in Wellington, with a few like-minded guys. The idea was also to get these boys to enjoy travel on the road, the journey, the team spirit and mateship. The fun you have with all the boys on and off the field is what defines Hutt Hawks.”The club’s aim was to play teams from across New Zealand’s districts and across different countries, largely India.”Playing in different conditions in India has helped my overall game,” Rachin says. “It’s allowed me to work a lot more on my batting, especially on turning pitches which our climate and soil doesn’t allow us to prepare. Also bowling on turners has been a tough experience, because as a spinner, you are in the game a lot more, and not just playing a holding role that you’re invariably asked to do back home.”The exposure over the last two years for a lot of age-group cricketers has been particularly significant because New Zealand haven’t played too much Under-19 cricket bilaterally. In fact, since the conclusion of the 2016 World Cup in Bangladesh, the team hadn’t played a single international in the build-up to the edition they are now hosting.Last year, Bruce Edgar, the former New Zealand opener, asked to be included in Hutt’s touring party after a number of first-class cricketers from Wellington Firebirds were part of the India tour. Krishnamurthy, who also runs a cricket sports shop in Wellington outside of his day job, partially funds these trips, of which Rachin has been a part every year except the current one, since he’s a part of the World Cup squad.Krishnamurthy was incidentally in India until a couple of days ago, coaching a Hutt Hawks team and simultaneously working on his “billion-dollar proposals and corporate presentations” while his boys were on the field. The huge time difference between India and New Zealand didn’t leave him too stressed about his son.Krishnamurthy has a trusted ally in Ivan Tissera, who has been Rachin’s childhood coach and now trains the Wellington Under-19s. Tissera, a Sri Lankan born New Zealander, played for the Bloomfield Cricket Club in Colombo and migrated to Wellington around the same time as Krishnamurthy. The two became close friends, a bond that has naturally extended to their families too, so much that Tissera took Ravindra under his wings immediately and would train him alongside another teenaged prodigy Amelia Kerr, who represented New Zealand at the Women’s World Cup in June last year at the age of 16.ICC/Getty Images”He is such a humble boy. He never has any ego in terms of ‘I’m doing well.’ I keep telling him as long as you don’t let that get to you, you’re fine,” Tissera says. “His priorities are clear. He has the support from his father in every way possible, without the pressure that he has to play cricket.”Rachin clearly knows what he wants, and is looking to play club cricket in England to further strengthen his game. But that would mean carrying his books along and study to cover up for his exams that he must appear for to pursue a law degree which he wants to after his Grade 12. “I have had no problems balancing cricket and studies,” he says. “I want to either do law or computer engineering. My parents have always encouraged me to do what I want. It’s just coincidence that my passion coincides with my dad’s passion.”Krishnamurthy resonates that view. “His favourite pass-time is cricket. No cellphones, girlfriends just yet. He trains crazy. Honestly, I wouldn’t do what he does to himself, but I won’t tell him that. He’s also very aware of nutrition, body anatomy and biomechanics. It’s quite crazy.”But my wife Deepa and I always said to him to do a lot of things in life, education is important for everyone. He’s been a very good student. He doesn’t necessarily put in the effort like my daughter does, 95%, but as long as he gets good marks, we’re all good,” he says. “We have all the comforts, more than we’d asked for, but we don’t want him to be comfortable. He has to work for what he gets.The crazy routines, Krishnamurthy believes, will go a long way towards Rachin becoming a better person, even if he doesn’t become a great cricketer. The systems Rachin has meticulously followed, he hopes, would help him emerge a better cricketer. Along the way, he hopes Rachin can also pick Rahul Dravid’s brains during the course of the tournament.”I’m sure Rahul will have some plans for him, whenever India and New Zealand play,” Krishnamurthy laughs. “After the tournament or our game, I’m sure he’ll be kind enough to have a chat with Rachin. If he can learn from them and continue to get better, sky is the limit. If not a better cricket, he’ll surely emerge a better person.”

Shambolic snapshots from a failed title defence

Sri Lanka’s came into the World T20 as defending champions. They also came into the World T20 with a last-minute change of captain, a last-second change of selectors, and a startling shortage of recent success

Andrew Fidel Fernando in Delhi27-Mar-2016In the 24 hours before Sri Lanka left for the World T20, the board sacked its five-man selection committee and installed a new one, which in turn made minor changes to the side. It was suggested at the time, that this was a little like rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. That is probably unfair to the Titanic.Sri Lanka had then lost seven of its last eight T20Is against Full Members – a 2-0 sweep by New Zealand in January, a 2-1 series loss to India in February and three losses in the Asia Cup – and was facing a crisis of confidence. Rather than shuffling deck chairs, the board was replacing the boat-builders just as the ship was tooting a forlorn farewell, and exiting the harbour with half the hull missing and bits of engine in its wake.Lasith Malinga was dealing with an injury situation so delicate he could be ruled out of the tournament if someone so much as whispered too loudly at him. Angelo Mathews turned up in India in charge and suggested he shouldn’t have ideally got the captaincy at such short notice, before later going on to state he shouldn’t have ideally said that he shouldn’t have got the captaincy at such short notice.Of the two late additions to the squad, Suranga Lakmal is yet to play a match. The other, Lahiru Thirimanne, played his pretty shots but the most solid connection during his time in the middle was fans’ palms hitting their foreheads. His scores this tournament: 6, 5 and 3.To be fair to Thirimanne, though, he was run out by Mathews in this match, in a situation that would have suited his accumulative style of play. This is slightly ironic. Mathews had been among those who had pushed for Thirimanne to be shoehorned into the squad in the first place. This is not dissimilar to a doctor working all night to bring a patient out of a coma, then, at the very moment the patient comes to, whacking him in the face with a bedpan.Angelo Mathews on…

What went wrong
If you look at the style we played in, we are not deserving of a semi-final place. Our plan in this match was to score a lot of runs in the first six overs, and lose no fewer than two wickets. Unfortunately we lost four wickets. After that it was difficult. Still, we could have won, but we needed another batsman to be there at the end.
His hamstring injury
I will probably go for a scan with the physio tomorrow. As far as I know, it’s not great. It feels like a tear. But the physio will assess it and let me know if I can play the next match or not.
What lies ahead
We haven’t played good cricket at all. All we can do is try and stick to our combinations and not try and change the team too much. Try to pick about 20 players and reevaluate them over six months – give them an opportunity to settle down and see what they come out with.

There are plenty of similarly shambolic snapshots from this title-defence campaign. Legspinner Jeffrey Vandersay was among the two young players who were kicked out of the squad to make way for Lakmal and Thirimanne, but then he replaced the injured Malinga midway and delivered Sri Lanka’s spell of the tournament, against West Indies. His eventual arrival of course, means that SLC made five times as many changes to its selection panel, as it did to its actual team. Just mull that over for a minute. The press-conference introducing the new selectors lasted longer than Sri Lanka’s average team innings, and featured no fewer than two politicians at the head table.And then ahead of this game, it sounded like Sri Lanka’s team management wanted to shake the side up and make a bold statement. But they ditched a frontline bowler, Nuwan Kulasekera, for a batting allrounder, Dasun Shanaka. So this statement turned out to be: “We have collectively lost function of our short-term memory.”Given how consistently Sri Lanka’s use of an 8-3 team combination has backfired, maybe everyone should be sat down, shown the film , then taking cues from the protagonist, had Thisara Perera’s latest figures tattooed on their arms. Perera is clearly a talented batsman, but his bowling has been unreliable for some time now. Having had an economy rate in the double figures this year, he was still given the death-bowling job on Saturday. His first over – the 16th of the innings – cost 18 runs, at which point Mathews lost faith and switched him for Dasun Shanaka, who was hit for almost as many. The last five overs cost Sri Lanka 72 runs, and quite possibly lost them the game.Later on, Mathews launched his characteristic late, heroic charge to raise hopes for Sri Lanka. He is so often an industrial pump, desperately bailing water out of the vessel, while his team-mates race around in a panic, bumping into stuff. He blasted five towering sixes, some on one leg as his right hamstring gave way and possibly ruled him out of their final group match against South Africa.For the first time since the 2009 Champions Trophy, Sri Lanka have exited a world event before the knockout stage has begun. It is a team in transition, they say, but for now all this team have transitioned to is more transition. With Kusal Perera out of action following a positive drug test, there is still no permanent opening partner for Tillakaratne Dilshan. The top order continues to falter. The death bowling is uninspired, and the bowling resources are strangely utilised.There are bright young talents in the next generation, and a potential great in Mathews himself, but despite all the fighting innings, and bowling sparks, Sri Lanka have still lost 10 of their last 11 matches against Full-Member sides. It’s just as well that the unofficial motto of Sri Lanka’s fans is “”. Even if the ship sinks, they say, the party must go on.It has been a rough few months for everyone, and in that time, this team has tested even the Sri Lankan capacity to party. It is important that you understand, that takes quite a lot of doing.

Rahul's six disastrous days of Test cricket

By all accounts it has been a horrendous start to Test cricket for KL Rahul, both with the bat and in the field

Sidharth Monga in Sydney06-Jan-20153:53

‘KL Rahul under pressure’

Eighty-first over of Australia’s innings…
The new ball has been taken. R Ashwin and Suresh Raina are the two slips, Ajinkya Rahane is at gully, and KL Rahul at backward point.Twenty-fourth over of Australia’s innings…
Rahul is fielding at point. He doesn’t move in as R Ashwin delivers. His preparation is sideways steps either way. David Warner looks to push at a shortish ball, which gets a little big on him. It sort of flies off the shoulder of the trunk that he carries for a bat. It flies towards point. Rahul is on his heels. He is late to move in. He dives forward. It is too late. He catches it on the half-volley. He looks down, doesn’t look up for a few seconds. This is not technically a drop, but Rahul knows he should have caught it.Eleven overs ago…
Rahul is alone, looking lost, standing next to the pitch, rubbing his hands on it, trying to get rid of the sweat. He doesn’t know where he has to field with R Ashwin being introduced. Suresh Raina moves into first slip. Rahul looks at captain Virat Kohli, who sends him to point.Minutes ago…
The first drinks break of the Test. Australia have galloped along to 0 for 72 in 13 overs. All the India players stand in a circle, eating chocolates, drinking their energy drinks and water. Trying to encourage each other. The extras are on the field. Rahul is not to be seen. Towards the end of the break he emerges from behind the drinks truck. He has been standing there alone. Now Shikhar Dhawan, whom he has replaced as opener and as second slip, offers him a drink. He doesn’t need it.Five overs ago…
Rahul is second at slip. Relaxed in his stance. Hands on his knees. Knees neither too wide nor too close. As the bowler enters his delivery stride, he prepares for a catch, elbows inches away from the knees, hands cupped for a catch. After the ball is delivered, his hands move low and then give as if plucking one inches from the ground. Except that the ball has been middled, and he is just visualising what might have been.Two balls ago…
Rahul is moving from second slip at one end to second slip at the other. Players are patting Mohammed Shami’s back, consoling him, encouraging him. Rahul is all alone. He stops by the wicket, and goes down on the pitch. Rubs his hands on it. It’s sweaty palms. Ajinkya Rahane jogs up to him, and gives him a low-five, as if to say, “It’s all right, happens to the best of us.”Rahane should know. He was nervous on debut himself, scratching around for 7 before playing a horrible shot. Even the usually judicious Harsha Bhogle tweeted doubts over Rahane’s Test credentials then.Two minutes ago…

Shami has been bowling well, perhaps the best he has this series. He has come on to bowl at 0 for 39 after five overs. He is not bowling short, he is not bowling on the pads. He has had an edge fly between the wide third slip and gully. He has asked questions of Chris Rogers. In his second over, he gets some extra bounce off a short-of-a-length delivery. Rogers is not quite behind it, and edges it to second slip.Rahul looks relaxed, he is ready, he is in a good position to take this calf high, but his hands don’t give. There is no time for him to absorb the impact. The ball hits the hands, and pops out. For what looks like an age Rahul doesn’t look up. He doesn’t want to know what looks he is getting from his team-mates. He has dropped Rogers, who has scored four fifties in four previous innings, on 19. On a road of a pitch. On a hot unforgiving day. After Australia have raced away. There aren’t going to be many more opportunities. Rogers will get out on 95, Warner on 101.Rahul is not an expressive one. Ravindra Jadeja once dropped Alastair Cook in Southampton, a series-turning event, and came up smiling. Rahul looks like the one who will let this eat him up inside.December 27…
Someone has found a KL Rahul tweet, and responded thusly: “WTF!! was that? brain freeze”Nearly two months ago…
The original tweet by Rahul, the day India’s Test squad for Australia is announced: “Words can’t explain how I feel at the moment. Very excited n looking forward to starting a new innings in my career.” The first response to his tweet: “All the best 🙂 I am pretty sure we have found a replacement for The Wall :)”

****

Oh how Rahul must hate cricket at this time of his life. Carrying the weight of the name – Rahul, from Karnataka, touted as a proper technical Test batsman by all his coaches including the IPL one in Tom Moody, a name accidentally given to him because his father wanted to name him after Sunil Gavaskar’s son but got it wrong… Rahul went into the biggest stage of them all for his Test debut: a Boxing Day Test at MCG. An opener for his state, he was not slated to bat at No. 6.While India were in the field, he would have seen fellow debutant Joe Burns get a rousing reception when he came out to bat, when he scored his first run, when he hit his first boundary. He walked in at 4 for 409 on a flat drop-in pitch. He couldn’t have asked for a better situation to start his Test career in.Rahul had a personal battle to fight, though. He was doing what everyone has been saying he was equipped to do. He had scored 1158 runs in the first-class season leading up to his Test selection. But that’s all he had had. One bumper season. At 22 he was in the Test side. His namesake, Rahul Dravid, liked him. His IPL coach Moody liked him. His captain liked what he saw in the nets. Surely so many people can’t be wrong? But a Test debut can do strange things to people. That too a Test debut in an unfamiliar slot.Rahul was clearly nervous. He stepped out to Nathan Lyon, was beaten in the flight, and chipped one straight up. He was dropped. Then he tried a slog sweep. This time Rahul was caught, for 3 off 8. Gone for 1.In the second innings, with India needing to bat two sessions to save the Test, they sent Rahul up at No. 3. Two reasons for it: they wanted to send in Rahul closer to his natural batting slot, and wanted to save Cheteshwar Pujara should the need arise for a block-for-your-life session. Mitchell Johnson bowled one short, and brought a forward short leg in for the next. You could see Rahul had made his mind up. He saw four easy runs on the pull. He was going to go after the next ball that was pitched marginally short. He didn’t have to wait. The next one was short, but not short enough. He top-edged it. Shane Watson took an excellent catch over his shoulder, running back from first slip.Sweaty palms, hard hands, stiff at point, premeditated boundary shots, by all accounts it has been six disastrous days for Rahul as a Test cricketer. Four runs in two innings, two catches muffed. And we haven’t really had a chance to see how good or bad his game is. He never got himself into a position where he could play his game. What we see is just a bundle of nerves. Not a batsman, not a fielder. We don’t know how he would have gone had he got that first confident shot in. We don’t know if he – a slips fielder for his state side Karnataka – would have taken blinders had his hands given a little and that catch had stuck. Chances are, we might never.The beauty of cricket is, Rahul still has a chance. Two actually. On what is right now a flat pitch. He can still make amends. This evening, though, he could do with a hug and an arm around his shoulder. Somebody to beat into his head that life will go on regardless, when in fact it won’t quite.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus