Once valued at £100m: Leicester now hold strong interest in “special” striker

Leicester City now hold a strong interest in signing a “special” striker in the January transfer window, as they look to recover from a difficult start to the season.

Foxes still within touching distance of play-offs despite slow start

After being relegated from the Premier League last season, Leicester would’ve been hoping for an instant return to the top flight, but as we approach the half-way stage of the Championship season, they are still languishing in mid-table.

However, there is very little separating a number of clubs in the Championship, with the Foxes still just three points off the play-off places, meaning promotion is still very much a realistic goal, and Marti Cifuentes’ side are unbeaten in December thus far.

That said, some new additions in the January transfer window could boost Cifuentes’ side’s chances of promotion, and the manager is currently lacking top-quality options at centre-forward.

Midfielder Jordan James is Leicester’s top scorer in the Championship this season, having netted five goals, with Jordan Ayew finding the back of the net just three times in his opening 18 games.

As such, signing a new striker is on the agenda, and the Foxes are now showing strong interest in signing Brighton & Hove Albion striker Evan Ferguson, who is currently on loan at Serie A side AS Roma.

However, with the once £100m-rated forward’s spell at the Italian club not going to plan, Brighton are set to make a decision on his future this winter, and a number of clubs are lining up for his signature.

Everton and Celtic are named as potential suitors, with the Irishman’s camp now assessing their options, and a move to the King Power Stadium could be on the cards, with Leicester prepared to take him.

"Special" Ferguson needs to get career back on track

In many ways it is surprising the 21-year-old’s career has panned out the way it has, scoring just one goal in ten Serie A games on loan at Roma, given that he exhibited some very promising signs at Brighton.

Indeed, the 26-time Ireland international scored a combined 12 Premier League goals across the 2022-23 and 2023-24 campaigns, which is an impressive feat, considering how young he was at the time.

During his time working under Roberto De Zerbi, the youngster also received high praise from Jamie Carragher, who said: “I think that lad he has got up front, I think he’s pretty special. He is only going to get better with him as his manager.”

Live Football Streams: Watch Premier League, Championship, La Liga & more

All the fixtures and channels to watch live football on TV this week can be found here.

By
Charlie Smith

Nov 20, 2025

Dropping to a lower level, such as the Championship, could serve Ferguson well when it comes to regaining his confidence, and his previous exploits in the Premier League indicate he could help fire Leicester to promotion.

Mohamed Kader Meite: Rennes' towering teenage striker who's grabbed the attention of Chelsea, Man Utd & PSG

Rennes are no strangers to producing some of the best players around, and Mohamed Kader Meite looks primed to become the next elite talent to step off the conveyor belt after the likes of Ballon d'Or winner Ousmane Dembele, Desire Doue and Eduardo Camavinga. Still just 18, the towering striker is already said to be turning heads across Europe.

Already standing at a mountainous tall, Meite is – to put it bluntly – an absolute unit, and he is already learning how to use his imposing physique to his advantage in those marginal situations that make all the difference in top-level football.

But the Frenchman isn't your classic, lumbering 'big man' up top, instead bringing a mix of technical ability and the kind of nous in and around the box that is so crucial in the modern game. Indeed, a first-team breakthrough in 2025 has seen him linked with some of Europe's biggest hitters already as the January transfer window looms, including Premier League giants Chelsea and Manchester United.

But just who is Meite, and why should you be taking notice of Rennes' latest big prospect? GOAL brings you everything you need to know…

  • Where it all began

    One of the latest prospects to emerge from the hotbed of talent that is Paris and its surrounding , Meite was born to Ivorian parents in the Creteil neighbourhood in the south-east of the city in October 2007.

    Taking his first steps on the path to a professional career at local club CA Paris 14 in 2013, the striker would develop at a clutch of youth teams in the French capital before catching the attention of Brittany-based Rennes and joining their academy setup in 2022 when he was 15 years old – a reflection of the potential the Ligue 1 side saw, as that is the earliest possible age a player can leave their local area for opportunities elsewhere, per French rules.

    There, Meite would make swift progress through the age grades, mixing it with the big boys as he regularly turned out for the Under-19s in the 2023-24 campaign after making his debut at 15, and even featured for Rennes' reserves in February 2024. He was also included in France's squad for the U17 European Championship in the early summer.

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  • The big break

    After a fast start to the following season with the B team, a first-team breakthrough felt inevitable, and five days removed from signing his first professional contract with the club, Meite was handed his senior debut in a 10-minute cameo against Toulouse in Ligue 1 in November 2024. That didn't lead to him establishing himself immediately, but after the turn of the year he was a regular feature in the squad, even earning a start against Paris Saint-Germain in March.

    He would score his first two senior goals in back-to-back games against Nantes in the Breton derby and Lyon towards the end of the campaign, before firing the U19s to glory in the prestigious Coupe Gambardella in late May, netting a dramatic late winner in the final against Dijon. However, it is only this season that people have begun to sit up and take notice more broadly – including his admirers in the Premier League.

    A match-winning foray off the bench in September thrust the young striker into the spotlight, as he turned the Ligue 1 clash with Lyon on its head in the space of 21 minutes. With Rennes 1-0 down, Meite had already forced a good save when he drew a game-changing red card challenge from ex-Liverpool man Tyler Morton with a quarter of an hour remaining.

    Five minutes later, he made a nuisance of himself in the penalty area to assist Anthony Rouault's leveller, and in stoppage time he forced an own goal to snatch the win, pinning a defender out wide, rolling his man and crashing in a shot from an acute angle that somehow ended up in the back of net via the post and a double deflection. There was still time for the teenager to add a richly-deserved goal of his own, as he rose highest to guide a header into the bottom corner.

    This was a cameo that exhibited all of Meite's very best attributes, with the performance even going viral on social media.

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    How it's going

    The goals haven't exactly flowed in the weeks and months since that September night but, at 18, Meite is already a fully-fledged member of the Rennes first-team squad, picking up regular minutes and starting three consecutive games between later October and mid-November. His four goal involvements to date have come in a little over 400 minutes of action.

    He was decisive again in the second of those matches against Chelsea-owned Strasbourg as Rennes secured a convincing 4-1 victory, first showing quick reactions to volley in his side's second from close range before turning provider by pinning his man and firing a pinpoint cutback into the path of strike partner Esteban Lepaul.

    That was the catalyst for a four-game winning run, but it's clear that Meite is going to have to be patient for opportunities in the team and in front of goal as his development continues. At international level, he has already made his debut for France's U21s.

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    Biggest strengths

    As we've touched upon, Meite is an absolute unit, and it's clear that he is already understanding how best to use his imposing 6'4" frame to his advantage. "He knows how to stay in the box and use his physique," Rennes head coach Habib Beye – a former Newcastle defender – said recently.

    As demonstrated by a couple of his goal involvements so far this season, the 18-year-old is already adept at hold-up play, proving to be an immovable object when he has a defender pinned, and he has the strength to be in control of whatever happens next. He certainly won't shy away from a battle, as he showed when going toe-to-toe with PSG stalwart Marquinhos last season.

    Unsurprisingly, he is also utterly dominant in the air, with two of his four senior goals to date coming from headers. What's more unexpected, though, is Meite's willingness to drop deep to help his team, using his physique to wrestle back possession in midfield and get his team moving upfield.

    Although he is proving to be deadly inside the penalty area, Meite is not your classic, lumbering, 'big man' No.9, often popping up out wide, in the half-spaces and in the No.10 role – reflecting that he has plenty of confidence with the ball at his feet.

Mariners to Acquire First Baseman Josh Naylor From Diamondbacks

The Seattle Mariners have acquired Arizona Diamondbacks first baseman Josh Naylor, according to a report from Ken Rosenthal of

Naylor is slashing .292/.360/.447 with 11 home runs and 59 RBI for Arizona this season.

In exchange for Naylor, the Mariners are sending left-hander Brandyn Garcia and righty Ashton Izzy in the deal, according to ESPN's Jeff Passan.

The 25-year-old Garcia has appeared in two games for Seattle this season, and has posted a 4.50 ERA across two innings of work in relief. Izzy, meanwhile, is a 21-year-old who has pitched this season for high-A Everett. He has accumulated a 5.51 ERA across 41.1 innings.

Slot has found a "frightening" talent who will end Chiesa's Liverpool career

It hasn’t been the start to the season that Arne Slot might have hoped for at Liverpool, with a shaky start, albeit a winning start, now preceding a three-match losing run that has accentuated the flaws running through the squad.

But adversity is there to be overcome in football, and the Premier League champions have so much quality and confidence in themselves. Teething problems after a summer spending spree are to be expected, and now the onus is on returning to action after the October international break with fresh impetus and focus.

Chelsea struck late to win against the Reds on Sunday, but there’s no hiding from the lack of attacking coherence in the second half. Some fans were confused by Slot’s decision to keep Federico Chiesa on the bench.

Slot must use Federico Chiesa

Last summer, Liverpool’s only addition, purchased from Juventus for a cut-price £12.5m fee. The versatile forward has long been highly regarded for his technical quality and potency in the final third, but injuries have eaten away at his one-time prodigious potential.

Federico Chiesa for Liverpool

But he scarcely played last year, with fitness problems and criticisms from Slot keeping him on the fringes. Excluded from Liverpool’s pre-season tour across the pond, Chiesa’s time on Merseyside looked to have wrapped up.

And yet he stayed, and yet he now plays a big role at Liverpool, one of the most dangerous and effective attacking threats across the opening months of the season.

Liverpool’s Frontline in 25/26 (all comps)

Player

Apps

Goals (assists)

Hugo Ekitike

10

5 (1)

Mohamed Salah

10

3 (3)

Federico Chiesa

6

2 (2)

Cody Gakpo

10

2 (2)

Alexander Isak

6

1 (1)

Rio Ngumoha

5

1 (0)

Data via Transfermarkt

This revival is nice to see. Will it last? Slot continues to be hesitant in giving Chiesa a star role, and given that Mohamed Salah’s eventual departure will warrant a big-money replacement, Chiesa might find his renaissance is short-lived.

Because Rio Ngumoha has already disrupted FSG’s transfer plans, and his rise to the top could come at the expense of the Italian’s game time.

Rio Ngumoha could end Chiesa's Liverpool career

Liverpool poached Ngumoha from Chelsea in 2024, and what a coup it is turning out to be. John Terry knew it, saying he was “gutted” to watch the electric winger leave for a Premier League rival.

Liverpool star Rio Ngumoha

But Chelsea’s loss is Liverpool’s gain. The 17-year-old Ngumoha showed flashes last season, starting for the seniors in the FA Cup against Accrington Stanley, and now he has raised his game under Slot’s wing, having featured five times already.

His dribbling and directness have been met by promising physical growth that has not yet finished.

Ngumoha will continue to be guided through adolescence, but the coaches are very much aware they have a prodigy on their hands, with the lad’s long-time youth coach Saul Isaksson-Hurst saying, “I don’t say it lightly, he is one of the best academy talents I have come across, and I have seen some top players become superstars.”

The composure and awareness to find space and score against Newcastle in August tells of the potential, and though he predominantly plays off the left flank, Ngumoha’s bearing is such that he could play across the frontline, an art mastered by teammate Chiesa.

Chiesa, 28 this month, will play a big part at Liverpool this season, but it’s difficult to see him reach the highest level in Slot’s squad. This, however, couldn’t be further away from Ngumoha’s pathway, for the “frightening” talent – as said by reporter Lewis Bower – is viewed as a one-of-a-kind prospect.

It’s crazy to think that Ngumoha only turned 17 in August, four days after firing the winner into Nick Pope’s net. The best, surely, is still to come from this one, and as he develops into a Premier League starter, and hopes of Chiesa establishing himself in an even bigger role at Liverpool are likely to come to nought, sad as that may be.

Better than Guehi: Liverpool dreaming of signing "best U21 player in the PL"

Liverpool may need to dip back into the transfer market in 2026 after a disjointed start to the season.

By
Angus Sinclair

Oct 8, 2025

Red Sox Rookie Roman Anthony Loved Getting Booed During First Game at Yankee Stadium

Boston Red Sox rookie phenom Roman Anthony got his first chance to play at Yankee Stadium on Thursday night and more than made the most of it, blasting a two-run homer to put his mark on the storied rivarly. There will likely be many, many more chapters as he embarks on what is expected to be a long and productive career in Boston.

He punctuated the moment with a well-earned bat flip. After the game he revealed that he didn't even know he was doing that.

“It just happened. I don’t even know. I don’t usually do that,” he said.

Anthony also spoke about his first time in hostile territory and how the Bronx crowrd lived up to his expectations, and then some.

“It’s probably what I imagined and maybe even a little more,” Anthony said. “For me, I love playing in that atmosphere. I love getting booed. I love everything about it.

It's just a single game but that sounds like bad news for Yankees fans. If an opposing player feeds off the negativity and then shuts it up by blasting a tape-measure home run that's perhaps a sign that a new strategy is in order.

Not that New York is suddenly going to be super nice to the presumed future face of the Red Sox or anything. Let's not get crazy. And of course it's way easier to enjoy the boos when one is winning and contributing. They might hit a little different during a prolonged team slide or slump on the plate.

Clayton Kershaw’s Iron Will, Maniacal Work Ethic Ensured His Incomparable Legacy

It was a steamy September Sunday night in Cincinnati in 2013, just another game in the inclined treadmill that is a single baseball season that, before you know it, becomes a career. It was Clayton Kershaw’s night to pitch, but there was a problem. His back was killing him.

Dodgers manager Don Mattingly and general manager Ned Colletti did not want him to pitch. Los Angeles had a fat, 11-game lead atop the National League West. Sure, the Dodgers had lost three games in a row. But there was no need to take a chance with the best pitcher in the game.

“Sorry,” Colletti told Kershaw. “We can’t risk it.”

“I’m pitching,” Kershaw replied.

“Well, we don’t think it’s a good idea.”

“I’m telling you, I’m pitching. I to do this.”

Remembers Colletti, “He begged me to pitch. We let him go.”

Kershaw grinded through seven innings in the 85-degree heat and left in a 2–2 tie. He threw 104 pitches. He gave up two solo homers to Jay Bruce, the third and final time he allowed two homers to a left-handed hitter in the same game. The Reds walked off the Dodgers, winning 3–2.

The final score or even his pitching line do not matter. What matters from that night is what best defines Kershaw. It was not the parabolic beauty of his curveball, which arrived one day in a spring training game in Vero Beach, Fla., in the same frightening manner of what the military calls an Unidentified Anomalous Phenomenon. It was so scary that the great Vin Scully immediately called it, “Public Enemy No. 1.”

It was not that herky-jerky, stop-and-start delivery, in which he mimed a man trying to step over a curbside puddle, only to change his mind midway, then resume the quest.

It wasn’t that backfoot slider that was to right-handed hitters—no matter how many times they read it they still could not figure it out.

It wasn’t the 222–96 record, the three Cy Young Awards, the three strikeout titles, the five ERA titles or the MVP Award.

It was a ferocious, almost maniacal will to compete. Kershaw, one of the great competitors of his generation, is leaving the arena by his own choice, the best way to go out. He announced Thursday that he will retire after this season, literally taking it to the house to be with his wife, Ellen, and their four children, with a fifth due in December. He will take the ball at Dodger Stadium Friday night in what could be his final appearance there, where he became as much of a fixture as the golden light at sunset on the San Gabriels. Nobody ever struck out more batters in any ballpark than Kershaw did at Dodger Stadium (1,645), having surpassed Steve Carlton’s total at the Vet in Philadelphia (1,615) earlier this year.

This is Kershaw’s greatest legacy, if not the source of his greatest unspoken pride: he is the toughest pitcher to beat in the 132 years since the mound was set at 60 feet, six inches from home plate. His career winning percentage of .698 is the greatest among all the pitchers who threw more than 1,500 innings in that time.

Hall of Famer Tom Seaver liked to say he was most proud of finishing his career more than 100 games better than .500 (311–205). Kershaw pitched 18 seasons—his start Friday will be career start No. 450—and he still has not lost 100 games.

No one is close to Kershaw when it comes to the most wins without losing 100 games. Behind him is Ron Guidry, with 55 fewer wins, and Sandy Koufax, his spiritual guru in both spin and Dodger blue and white, with 57 fewer wins.

“Sometimes,” Colletti says, “you almost had to protect him from himself. He would go out there in pain. The drive, the quest to always get better, never, ever wavered. I don’t think I ever saw him rest on his laurels, or say, ‘This is good enough.’”

When Kershaw won his first Cy Young Award in 2011, Joe Torre, his first manager, texted him to congratulate him.

“Next year,” Kershaw replied, “I have to be better.”

Kershaw made his debut just after his 20th birthday against the St. Louis Cardinals. / Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

Kershaw debuted for Torre’s Dodgers May 25, 2008, two months after his 20th birthday, in a start against the Cardinals. It was so long ago the Cardinals had no video on Kershaw; just written scouting reports. Skip Schumaker was his first strikeout, fanning on a 95-mph fastball.

“He definitely has good stuff,” Schumaker said then. “And he challenged us. You have to be impressed with what he did.”

Kershaw threw six innings, walked one and struck out seven.

“I thought he had good stuff,” Albert Pujols said. “He came at you pretty much. I think it’s fair to say he can have success at this level.”

His curveball was almost too good. Hitters did not want to swing at it. So, with the help of pitching coach Rick Honeycutt, Kershaw developed a slider to slip between his fastball and curve, in terms of velocity and break. He became a beast with such a fearsome three-pitch mix that he never really needed an off-speed pitch, though his tinkering with a changeup became something of a running gag.

At the height of his prowess, Kershaw put together a seven-year run (2011–17) in the dominant manner, if not the volume, of Koufax: 118–41 with a 2.10 ERA, three Cy Youngs, one MVP and seven straight years in the top five in Cy Young Award voting.

Proper acclaim eluded him because of his postseason record. Through 2019, Kershaw was 9–11 with a 4.43 ERA in 32 games. But what was lost in those numbers was the burden Kershaw carried. Only Andy Pettitte has started more postseason games on three days' rest than Kershaw. Mattingly and Dave Roberts would leave him in games because no one in the bullpen was better than a tiring Kershaw. And too often, as Colletti says, “when he was in trouble, he looked to throw hard, harder and harder.”

Kershaw did have his moments. In the 2016 NLDS, Kershaw beat Max Scherzer in Game 1, pitched two outs into the seventh inning of Game 4 on short rest, and volunteered to close Game 5 just 48 hours and three time zones later. That same year, he started the first postseason shutout at Wrigley Field.

In the 2017 World Series, after a gem in Game 1, he was undone by a ridiculous 13–12 loss at Houston during the height of the Astros’ sign-stealing scheme. He threw 39 sliders that night. The Astros swung and missed at only one of them. Houston pitchers were using multiple signs even with nobody on base. Kershaw was not. He was playing by an old honor code in a den of thieves and paid for it.

When I revisited that night with Kershaw the next spring, he told me, “The only thing that bothers me is the real-time stuff. I’m sure a lot of teams were going up to that line, but once [Houston] started doing it in real time and using technology in real time that’s what separates it.

“I’m sick of people saying that everybody was the same, that everybody was doing it. No. We weren’t all doing that. That was separated from everybody else.”

Kershaw celebrated his first World Series in 2020 after years of disappointments in the postseason. / Tim Heitman-Imagn Images

True satisfaction finally came in 2020. The Dodgers won their first World Series since 1988. Kershaw that postseason was 4–1 with a 2.93 ERA in five starts, including 2–0 with a 2.31 ERA in the World Series.

It seems odd now, as it was for the likes of Peyton Manning and Michael Jordan, to think Kershaw was once thought to be lacking in big moments. The drive was in his heart all along. Torre remembers Kershaw’s first spring training appearance with the Dodgers. They brought him over from the minor league complex. Kershaw was 19.

“It was a night game,” Torre says. “The first pitch he threw, he gives up a home run. I didn’t watch the home run. I watched him and his response. All he did was hold up his glove to the umpire to say, ‘Give me another ball.’ I absolutely loved it. A kid 19 years old pitching with the big club, normally he cringes at giving up a home run. That was impressive to me.

“He had a great confidence in himself. He never backed off anything. That first year I had to call him into my office to send him back to the minors. He could have burned a hole in me with the look on his face. This is where he wanted to be, and he felt he had the ability to be here.

“He’s got that fierceness. I remember how hard he worked on his hitting and his bunting. You trust him. That’s the bottom line. You trust him with your life.”

Many years ago, Braves Hall of Fame executive John Schuerholz gave Colletti a piece of advice: if you want to know about a player, just ask yourself if you can trust that player.

“And I always ask myself, do I trust the player, the person?” Colletti says. “There was never a moment since the day he showed up that I did not trust Clayton Kershaw. Never a moment where I wondered what I was getting from him or if there was more in there. Never.”

Over these 18 seasons, there are so many memorable nights. A no-hitter. World Series wins. Three thousand strikeouts. There are even more nights with less fanfare, like that sweatbox in Cincinnati for a meaningless game, when his effort knew no other level but the maximum.

And there are the many late afternoons at Dodger Stadium, when Kershaw, like Monet heading to the garden in Giverny, would walk alone to the Dodgers’ sun-drenched bullpen in his sleeveless T-shirt and shorts with a baseball and his glove. There he would pantomime his signature delivery over and over, without letting go of the baseball. In these shadow boxing sessions, while saving his arm from the wear and tear of throwing, Kershaw perfected this Rube Goldberg contraption of a delivery. Nobody ever released a baseball from darn near the exact same spot, regardless of the pitch or the inning or the year, than Kershaw. It happened not by accident. It happened in the same way Kershaw became the toughest pitcher to beat in the history of this game: with an iron will that never wavered.

IPL 2020 – Devdutt Padikkal, Ruturaj Gaikwad in power-packed band of uncapped Indian batsmen

Here’s a look at seven young Indian batsmen who could make a mark at the 2020 edition of the IPL

Varun Shetty and Sidharth Monga07-Sep-2020

Devdutt Padikkal

Team: Royal Challengers BangaloreWhy we’re excited
Padikkal finished as the top-scorer in both the 50-over Vijay Hazare Trophy and the Syed Mushtaq Ali T20 Trophy last season. In the latter, the 20-year-old opener scored 580 runs at a strike rate of 175.75 and struck a 50-plus score every two innings on average.How will he fit it into the XI?
Assuming Aaron Finch and Josh Philippe fight for one opening spot, Padikkal and Parthiv Patel will fight for the other. With AB de Villiers as an option to keep wickets as well – apart from Philippe himself – Padikkal is well-placed to beat Patel to a starting spot.

Ruturaj Gaikwad

Team: Chennai Super KingsWhy we’re excited
A compact and aggressive batsman, Gaikwad has scored more List A runs than anyone for India A in the last two years – 843 runs in 15 innings, at a strike rate of 105, and has a “sharp cricket mind,” according to MS Dhoni.How will he fit it into the XI?
Gaikwad bats as both an opener and a No. 3. In Suresh Raina’s absence, he is considered as the front-runner at one-down.Abdul Samad is a brutal hitter of spin bowling•ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Abdul Samad

Team: Sunrisers HyderabadWhy we’re excited
Samad is a finisher at the domestic level, handpicked by VVS Laxman himself. He is a brutal hitter against spin bowling and led the fight with team-mate Shubham Khajuria when Jammu & Kashmir nearly managed to pip Karnataka to a Ranji Trophy semi-final spot. He hit the most number of sixes in the last Ranji season despite playing two matches fewer than possible, and has a career strike rate of 112.97 in first-class cricket.How will he fit it into the XI?
If Sunrisers continue to keep Manish Pandey in the top four, two spots open up for finishers at six and seven. He will potentially fight Virat Singh, Mohammad Nabi and Fabian Allen for those.

Yashasvi Jaiswal

Team: Rajasthan RoyalsWhy we’re excited
There isn’t a level of limited-overs cricket that the 18-year-old hasn’t dominated so far. He has six 50-plus scores and averages 70.81 in 13 List A matches, with a double-century in there, and was the leading run-scorer at this year’s Under-19 World Cup.How will he fit it into the XI?
Assuming Jos Buttler has one opening slot reserved for himself, Jaiswal will be up against the likes of Manan Vohra and Robin Uthappa – maybe even Sanju Samson if Royals want Steven Smith no lower than No. 3 – for the other spot. He’s likely to get a go in his best position, even if that means he isn’t a regular in the XI.Sarfaraz Khan had a breakthrough first-class season in 2019-20•BCCI

Sarfaraz Khan

Team: Kings XI PunjabWhy we’re excited
Khan has been caught in many crossfires, some of his own making, others to do with team management; but he is only 22, and has come screaming back to top-level cricket with scores of 301*, 226*, 78, 25, 177 and 6 in his last six first-class innings. He is an instinctively aggressive batsman, and format means little in comparison to confidence.How will he fit it into the XI?
Played eight innings for Kings XI last year in various middle-order roles, and that is likely to be the case this season too.

Riyan Parag

Team: Rajasthan RoyalsWhy we’re excited
At 17, he became the IPL’s youngest half-centurion last year, and showed a wide range as a cricketer – whether in his 29-ball 43 in a winning chase against Mumbai Indians, or with his many variations that make his bowling style difficult to classify. He was one of the finds of last season.How will he fit it into the XI?
Parag is only 18, but seems a frontrunner for the middle-order spot among domestic batsmen in the Royals squad.

Mahipal Lomror

Team: Rajasthan RoyalsWhy we’re excited
Lomror likes to hit straight and then not watch where the ball has gone. There are fears, though, that this fluency is restricted to power-hitting against spin. In a Royals video, he is heard telling his batting coach Amol Muzumdar that he is not quite comfortable against high pace. A spin power-hitter, though, is a valuable commodity in T20 cricket, which is why Royals would be trying hard to take his game to a level where he can be a regular starter in their XI.How will he fit it into the XI?
Royals seem to have set up for a largely Indian middle and lower order. Lomror could slot in at No. 6 for them occasionally, perhaps higher depending on Ben Stokes’ availability.

Talking Points: Why did Virat Kohli open the batting for Royal Challengers Bangalore?

Also, why did David Warner not keep Rashid Khan for the death? Was it to attack AB de Villiers early?

Nagraj Gollapudi06-Nov-20204:04

Gautam Gambhir: Royal Challengers Bangalore still heavily reliant on AB de Villiers

Why did the Royal Challengers Bangalore pick four spinners?Yuzvendra Chahal, Washington Sundar, Moeen Ali and Adam Zampa. At the toss, it seemed like a bold call by the Royal Challengers to go for as many as four spinners, having made four changes of which only one was forced. Bowling allrounder Chris Morris was unavailable due to injury, but his absence was offset in the fast bowling department by the return of Navdeep Saini, who took the spot of Shahbaz Ahmed. Aaron Finch replaced fellow Australian Josh Philippe, while Zampa was preferred over Isuru Udana. Ali took the place of Morris, possibly more for his batting in the middle order than for his offspin.It was a courageous move planned by Virat Kohli along with the Royal Challengers’ coaching staff led by Simon Katich and Mike Hesson and nearly worked out.ESPNcricinfo LtdWhy did Virat Kohli open?Kohli did that to address two issues that have affected the Royal Challengers this season. They had hired Finch to provide robust starts in the powerplay, but he has struggled for fluency all tournament. That has, in turn, hurt the team’s run rate and Finch was benched after playing 11 matches during the league phase, where he got 246 runs at a strike rate of just 111. At the toss too, Kohli did not reveal where Finch would bat.Finch’s other handicap is the incoming delivery, which is a strike weapon for the Sunrisers’ new-ball bowler Sandeep Sharma. Hence, it did not come as a surprise when Kohli walked out as Devdutt Paddikal’s opening partner.The Virat Kohli as opener tactic doesn’t come off – Jason Holder with the key wicket•BCCIThe plan to open with Kohli had substance. Kohli would bat deep and that would address the issue of a slow run rate in the middle overs, a phase where the Royal Challengers have been the weakest among all sides. Kohli playing the anchor would help Paddikal, Finch, AB de Villiers and Ali to play with freedom.However, Kohli had not opened even once in the 14 matches during the league phase; and that meant starting afresh. He remained watchful in the first over against his nemesis Sharma, who has got him the most times in the IPL, including twice in the league phase this year. But a rising delivery at the other end from Jason Holder still got him out early and exposed the Royal Challengers to trouble.They were 32 for 2 after the powerplay and managed to hit just one boundary by the end of the tenth over. Feeling the pinch, Finch holed out in the deep in the next over as the Royal Challengers’ strategy flopped.Why did Rashid Khan not bowl at the death?Firstly, Khan hardly bowls from overs 17-20 – he has only done that twice this IPL before Friday. In this game, he started his spell immediately after the powerplay and even finished it with five overs to go.The move may have raised eyebrows as to why David Warner wouldn’t save his best bowler for the death, especially with the threat of de Villiers looming. Today, though, the Royal Challengers’ top order collapse followed by a slow recovery meant the pressure was on de Villiers to force the issue. Also, with Khan having had a grip over de Villiers in the past and with the latter out to bat early this evening, the Sunrisers stuck to the plan of bowling out Khan in the middle overs.Though Khan went wicketless, his sole aim today was to attack de Villiers and get his wicket. And even though de Villiers denied him that joy, he managed just 12 runs off ten balls against Khan with just one boundary. And T Natarajan, with his excellent scrambled seam yorker, ensured de Villiers never find the space or the freedom to hurt the Sunrisers at the death.Did the TV umpire err in giving Warner out?Warner was folded into two by an angled delivery from Siraj, who was bowling his third straight over in the powerplay. Warner had moved down the leg side attempting a premediated shot, but Siraj cleverly followed the Sunrisers captain cramping him for any room. The ball zipped past Warner’s cocked right glove and at the same time seemed to kiss his trousers before de Villiers brilliantly pouched it by diving to is right and appealed for a caught behind.S Ravi, the on-field umpire did not budge. With a couple of seconds left for the 15-second DRS countdown, Kohli asked for the review. UltraEdge indicated a spike just when the ball passed the glove and the trouser without any conclusive evidence about what exactly it touched. However, after several replays TV umpire Virender Sharma concluded there was enough evidence that the ball had touched Warner’s glove. Sharma overruled Ravi, denying Warner the benefit of doubt, by ruling the batsman out.

Kyle Jamieson hits the heights with absurdly brilliant beginning

He’s taken four five-fors in six Tests, and he’s kryptonite to left-handers. How far can he go?

Danyal Rasool06-Jan-2021It’s the height you notice first. At 6’8″, he’s the tallest man to ever play cricket for New Zealand, and that’ll lead you to make assumptions about the kind of bowler he might be. He is perhaps a length bowler who exploits the bounce. Or a short-ball fiend being groomed to take over from whenever Neil Wagner has to be dragged off the cricket field. Or an enforcer following on from the nice-guy acts of Tim Southee and Trent Boult.Kyle Jamieson is all of those things, and yet if you feel you have a read on him, you’re wrong. In the six Tests he has played so far, he has shown he can take wickets at every stage of an innings, and it isn’t the height that appears to enable him – though it must surely help – as much as the frightening skill he possesses. He has taken wickets because of that frame – the ball to dismiss Fawad Alam in the first innings at Hagley Oval the most striking example – but he has struck with new ball and old ball, with swing and seam, at the top and tail of the order, and against right-handers and left-handers.Kyle Jamieson averages a scarcely credible 8.61 against left-hand batsmen•Getty ImagesOf the 11 wickets he claimed during the second Test against Pakistan, five were of right-handers and six of lefties. Five wickets fell to length balls, two to shorter deliveries, a further two to bouncers, while the full ball claimed another couple. He broke partnerships, and he ran through innings.But for now, he remains kryptonite for left-handers. When he finally did the decent thing and brought Haris Sohail’s miserable tour to an end – he had provided a similarly generous service for the struggling Shan Masood yesterday – it was his 12th career wicket against left handers. His 13th, Faheem Ashraf, brought his average against that type of batsman down to a scarcely credible 8.61 runs per wicket. This Test was the first time in Pakistan’s Test history that they fielded six lefties; for Jamieson it was like Christmas had come, a week late.But it was the man he would dismiss for his fifth second-innings wicket – the one that brought up a 10-wicket haul that showcased his prodigious talent. The ball was 52 overs old, and Southee, the most in-form New Zealand quick of the past couple of years, was having limited success with it. Facing him was Pakistan captain Mohammad Rizwan, and man with five successive Test half-centuries before this innings.Related

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Looking to be positive, Rizwan transferred his weight forward convincingly to lean into a cover drive. It’s a motion he has repeated often, on the treacherous tracks of Pakistan’s domestic cricket as well as against Mitchell Starc and Pat Cummins, Stuart Broad and James Anderson, and each New Zealand bowler this series. The gap between bat and pad was small, but with Jamieson in this sort of mood, so was the margin for error. The ball landed outside off stump and tailed in so sharply and at such pace there was no hope of readjusting. By the time Rizwan was through his cover-drive motion, the bails lay flat at the feet of the stumps. It was the Aucklander’s 35th Test wicket, his average a shade over 13; he has so far struck every 33.4 balls in Test cricket. Among bowlers with at least 30 wickets, only Duanne Olivier boasts a better strike rate.So little is known about Jamieson outside New Zealand that cricket’s equivalent of the CIA might well be maintaining a dossier on him. While being among the top three wicket-takers in each of the three series he has played has catapulted him to global attention, he has ploughed his trade impressively for years, albeit in the relative obscurity of New Zealand’s domestic circuit, for over six years. Jamieson’s first-class average of 21.14 across 34 matches outdoes the equivalent numbers of any of Southee, Boult, or Wagner, but while Southee was handed his Test cap as a teenager and Boult shortly after his 21st birthday, Jamieson was allowed to continue developing without the distractions and pressures of international cricket until last year.

The ball might not do as much some days, the lengths might be off some others. But even over leaner periods, Jamieson will appreciate the value of being part of this tight-knit, well-managed and supportive unit

This is both the best and worst time to be a New Zealand fast bowler. The level of competition for those slots is beyond compare, but in the secure hands of Kane Williamson, Gary Stead and New Zealand’s management skills, the harmony of the squad is beyond reproach. It is a side that continues to feel niche and in touch, far away, (literally, geographically speaking) from the big-time trappings that have made England, India or Australia powerhouses in a more palpable way. But when it comes to the stuff they produce on the field, New Zealand match, and at times exceed, what those three produce; the fact that they played the last two World Cup finals, and are in pole position to qualify for the World Test Championship final at Lord’s next summer, are evidence of this.Jamieson won’t need telling, but it can only get worse from here. He hasn’t yet played abroad, which will offer a deeper glimpse of his adaptability, as well as a sterner test of his quality. You dread to say it, but that frame and the exigent demands of modern cricket means there likely will be injuries. The ball might not do as much some days, the lengths might be off some others.But even over leaner periods, Jamieson will appreciate the value of being part of this tight-knit, well-managed and supportive unit. Boult has been relatively injury-free for this long because he’s been taken good care of. Southee remains lethal in both Test and T20I cricket because his back injury and drier spells have been handled with sensitivity, and Wagner bowled out Pakistan on one foot through excruciating pain because he believed this was a group he was willing to suffer for.After the series was all wrapped up, Jamieson said he viewed himself “very much as the fourth prong of this four-man attack”, and that he was looking to “sit back and learn from what these world-class bowlers have done over a number of years”. In just a year of Test cricket, he’s brought a whole new dimension to an attack that was already New Zealand’s greatest. Imagine how much scarier he can get with all that sitting back and learning.

Ishant Sharma on Perth, 2008: 'At 19 you don't plan. You just bowl'

Thirteen years ago, a greenhorn fast bowler announced his arrival on the world stage with a fiery spell to Ricky Ponting. Sharma revisits that spell

Interview by Nagraj Gollapudi23-Feb-2021On Jan 19, 2008, Ishant Sharma, still in his teens, bowled a defining spell against Australia at the WACA in Perth. Playing only his fourth Test, Sharma rattled Australia captain Ricky Ponting with his lengths and pace in nine overs in the second innings – a spell so good that even Steve Waugh, not one quick to praise, complimented it. It possibly also changed Sharma’s life: a month later, he was bought for $970,000 in the inaugural IPL auction.Weeks before the Perth Test, India were playing Pakistan in Bengaluru in a home series. Sunil Gavaskar reckoned, in a syndicated column, that perhaps it was “too early” for Sharma to play that Test. Sharma went on to pick up his maiden five-for there, in just his second Test. It is the story of his life: to surprise when no one expects him to. And Perth 2008 remains perhaps the most memorable such example.Now on the verge of his 100th Test, Sharma looks back at his battle with Ponting, and at his other memorable spells down the years.You were not even supposed to go on that tour to Australia, but injuries to Sreesanth and Munaf Patel gave you the spot.
I don’t remember that. But I thought I got selected for the Australia tour because I took a five-for against Pakistan in Bangalore, which happened just before the selection.Then you played in Sydney because Zaheer Khan returned home. You took 0 for 146, which did not really showcase the effort you put in. Can you talk about your first time in Australia and understanding what lengths to bowl?
The biggest adjustment I had to make was that we had not played any practice match [before the Test series]. It was my first tour of Australia. I didn’t have much of an idea of the bowling conditions. I had never bowled with the Kookaburra ball, [didn’t know] how much it swings, what kind of lengths to bowl in Australia.We were on top in the first innings. We had taken their top four or five wickets early [134 for 6]. Then Andrew Symonds edged early on, but Steve Bucknor did not give him out. If he had been given out, that series would probably have been totally different, because Symonds scored 150 or something [162], Brad Hogg scored [72]. After that, the situation changed completely for us.At the time I felt I was bowling short. I spoke to Venky [Venkatesh Prasad], who was our bowling coach at that time. He told me I was bowling a bit short. It was proving very difficult for me to find the right length. It was not like I was playing at home, bowling with the SG ball, which swings even late [when old], which Kookaburra does not. It was a learning experience.You played in the practice match in Canberra, before the Perth Test. Richie Benaud on commentary said he’d spotted that you’d made adjustments between the Sydney and Perth Tests, and how there was a big difference in the lengths and how consistent you had become. What did you work on?
Once you know that you are playing all the games, you get more confident. Then you prepare yourself accordingly. When I played the practice match, I bowled as if I was bowling in a Test match. I was trying to bowl fuller, to get more swing. I was talking with Venky about that in the practice game. Even Anil [Anil Kumble, India captain for that series] said, bowl as if you are bowling in a Test match with the new ball.In fact, I bagged three wickets in my first spell with the new ball. You then get the confidence. You bowl long spells. My body is such that the more I bowl, the better my bowling becomes. Venky helped me a lot at that time.

“Sometimes a fast bowler achieves rhythm: when you want to bowl where you want to, and that starts happening, suddenly things start changing”

You were 19 years old when you played your fourth Test, at the WACA. Had you heard about the history of the ground before the match?
I remember one incident. I was marking my bowling run-up. Sunny [Sunil Gavaskar] was there at the time of the toss [as TV commentator]. He told me I was doing well, but he cautioned me, saying, “Don’t bowl too short. Don’t get carried away.” He said he was alerting me because every fast bowler thinks since it is Perth you can bowl bouncers. I told him I will try and bowl fuller. He said that was the best way to go. In the first innings I got Michael Clarke and Ricky Ponting [by sticking to that plan].[During the Perth Test] I also remember Gary Kirsten had come just for one match [as consultant coach], because he was taking over as India head coach after that series. The evening before Australia’s second innings we spoke about how I should go about it. It was a good experience for me [talking to Kirsten].On the third evening I had bowled just three or four overs, but I was literally bowling full tosses because I was trying to pitch fuller. So I was unable to stick to the plans. On the way back to the team bus that evening, Gary asked me, “What do you think?” I said, “I didn’t bowl well.” Gary actually looked shocked. He was like, “How can you say that? You are just 19 and you are taking the blame that you didn’t bowl well.” I told him, “That’s the truth, right? So I need to pull up my socks and do better tomorrow.”I am from Delhi and we speak directly. I told him clearly that I was bowling full tosses. Then after that, spell happened.Fourth morning, you came on to bowl the fifth over of the innings. What was the plan?
At 19 you don’t plan, to be honest []. You just bowl. When you play a lot then the planning starts, about what you should do and not do. I knew just one thing: I have to bowl in good areas and after that somehow I should get a wicket. And the more consistently I bowled in good areas, the greater the chances of me getting a wicket.On the fourth morning when I arrived at the ground I felt a bit of pressure. I was nervous because I felt then that if I don’t bowl well here then it might be the end for me. But I tried to stick to my basics.Ponting earned a reprieve in the 24th over when the ball hit him on the knee roll, but umpire Billy Bowden overruled the appeal•Getty ImagesIt was not so hot, so the Kookaburra ball was actually swinging despite being 30 overs old. That was a surprise for me. In Sydney that didn’t happen. [In Perth] the ball was swinging, coming in and everything, and when that was happening I was actually enjoying it. I was just bowling. I was then not thinking this or that will happen, how will I get the guy out.Sachin [Tendulkar] was standing at mid-on at the time. He asked me [initially]: “What are you doing?” I said, “Nothing, I am just bowling.” He said that’s great, just carry on doing that, just enjoy your bowling.He just kept on telling me after every ball, “Don’t try anything [different]. Don’t change anything. He [Ponting] is not comfortable with whatever you are bowling and you’ll get him out.” I said, “”. With the ball moving in naturally, I did not even need to try hard.Related

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There was a ball that hit Ponting’s pad early on. He did not play a shot. It appeared the ball hit him under the knee, but Billy Bowden overruled India’s appeal. TV replays showed the ball would go on to hit the bail. When you walked back to your mark, what did you think?
Nothing. Good thing was said, “Don’t worry. Keep bowling. You’ll get him out.” Like I said, I just kept bowling. I wasn’t thinking whether he [Bowden] gave it out or not.Sometimes a fast bowler achieves rhythm: when you want to bowl where you want to, and when that starts happening, suddenly things start changing. You can say that like a batsman enters a zone, a bowler also enters a similar zone – you are running in well, you are bowling well, your ball is swinging, automatically the ball is going straight from the same spot. So when I myself did not know, how would the batsman know when the ball was straightening? ().And your speeds were the same throughout the spell, around mid-130kph?
I have never been a fan of the speedometer. If I was running in well I didn’t get worried about the speeds.Did you get tired at all during that spell?
No. I just wanted to carry on bowling.

“Anil asked me: ‘Will you bowl another over?’ I said, ‘Yes, I will.’ Ponting got out next ball”

When did Kumble tell you that he was going to replace you?
After the eighth over [of the spell] Anil said, “Okay, you stop now. Bowl later.” He felt having already bowled in the first innings and then now eight overs on the trot, it was better I took a break. But Viru [Virender Sehwag] told Anil that I was bowling well and Ricky was uncomfortable. He also said that I can bowl long spells. In the entire domestic season before the Australia tour, Viru was the Delhi captain. So he had seen I had bowled quite a few long spells.Viru said that even if you bowl him continuously for an entire session he will not tire. Anil asked me: ” dalega?” [Will you bowl another over?] I said, “” [Yes, I will.] He said, okay, come bowl. Ponting got out next ball.What was the length you were bowling, about six metres from the stumps?

Yeah. But the ball [Ponting] got out on, it was slightly fuller. It did not come in that much. That ball just went straight. That was the first delivery of the ninth over. There was only just one more delivery that had straightened, which was around the sixth or seventh over, in which again he was beaten.Otherwise the rest of the deliveries mostly moved in or were swinging in the air or seaming off the pitch. I really did not know it would straighten. If you ask me now, I can tell you when I’m bowling straighter and when I’m swinging it.Can you recount the delivery as it happened?
The way I held the ball as I ran in to bowl, I wanted to swing it in. It did swerve a bit in the air, but after pitching it went straight. [Ponting] did play the right line, because the seam position suggested it would come in, but the ball went straight and took the outside edge.What was the difference from the dismissal in the first innings?
The difference was that I wanted to get him [Ponting] out early. [Harbhajan Singh] was not playing that Test, so I told him, you are not playing, so I will get him [Ponting] out. and Yuvi [Yuvraj Singh] made us comfortable by joking around. [Harbhajan] said, “If you get him out I will come out on the balcony and clap because he is such a big player.”Sharma and Harbhajan Singh celebrate after India’s win•Getty ImagesIn those days, you didn’t, and still don’t, go by the name – who is playing in front of you and who the batsman is. In the first innings the ball pitched and went away a little, but there was a bit more bounce. His bat was hanging and the edge went to slip. It was a similar delivery against Michael Clarke [in the first innings in Perth], but that ball was slightly fuller compared to Ponting.Did Bhajji come out on the balcony?
Yeah, he did come out. After that, during the lunch break, he said, ” out [You would have got him out anyway].Did that ball change your life?
That ball changed my life! But to be very honest, I’m still surprised. Because, such spells, in Ranji Trophy, in first-class, you need to continuously bowl them. The more consistently you bowl, you get that much bigger an opportunity to get a wicket. First-class cricket is all about patience – only then you can get the batsman out. If your aim is only to get a wicket then you can go for runs.That patience, in my bowling, has come only after playing first-class cricket – that having bowled two balls inswing, now I will try to bowl one going-away delivery. With experience you can do such things.So, actually, I was surprised when I saw that spell, and all the hype that followed. I felt it is my job – I do this daily in first-class cricket – that if I am bowling 20 overs in a day, I have to give 40-45 runs and I can get three wickets. So what I was doing in the Ranji Trophy, the same thing I was doing in the Test match.Not long before that, you delivered a spell of 15 overs in Vijayawada in the Ranji Trophy.
Yes, I had bowled continuously throughout the session. It was against Andhra Pradesh. We [Delhi] had to win the match outright or save it, and one of our bowlers had got injured. Mithun Manhas, who was the captain in that match, asked me to just keep bowling, so I bowled 15 straight overs.

“I never watch that spell. There are a lot of people who tag me on social media in clips of that spell, but I never watch it”

At that young age it is about adrenaline, isn’t it? You don’t bother about workload and all that, you just go with the rhythm.
Yeah, at present everyone tries to manage their workload, bowl so many overs in the nets and all that. That was not the case when I started. And for that I should say thanks to my coach, Shravan Kumar. Because when I started to play, whether it was the afternoon heat or the cold, you started to bowl at 1pm and until it got dark you could not stop bowling. If you stopped [you would be scolded]. That is why I am used to bowling long spells.Ponting wrote in his book that if he had survived, he was confident he could have scored a century. Did he ever speak to you about that spell?
No, he never has spoken to me.Has that been the spell of your life so far?

Can’t really say that. I feel that spell became famous because I was young, was playing my fourth Test, bowling to a legend, making him struggle a bit. That is why it became big.I don’t know if you remember a similar spell I bowled in Galle with the new ball, where I got [Mahela] Jayawardene and Angelo Mathews out. Same kind of spell I bowled in the 2008 Irani Trophy when Rest of India were playing against Delhi. I bowled five maidens on the trot to [S] Badrinath in the second innings. Do you watch videos of that Perth spell?
I never watch that spell. There are a lot of people who tag me on social media [in clips of that spell], but I never watch it. Okay, that spell gave me the confidence, it was pretty good. Yes, people started to recognise me.When people have confidence in you and have expectations, then you get confident, right? After that spell, I realised I deserve this praise. That was very important.”The Wellington spell that told me there is no limitation: that if you don’t put the burden of expectation on yourself, you can go on”•Getty ImagesWhich are your top five spells in first-class cricket?
Obviously, Lord’s 2014.My first five-wicket haul against Baroda in Delhi [2006].That New Zealand Test series [2019-20], in Wellington where I took five wickets. That is special for me because I had torn my ligaments and I was not sure whether I would go on that tour or not. Just two days before the Test match, the team asked me, “You want to play or not?” I said, “I’m here to play cricket. I’m not here on holiday.” Yes, I was struggling, no doubt about that. I was jet-lagged. But I had bowled a lot at the National Cricket Academy [during rehab in Bengaluru]. But that is one spell that told me there is no limitation: that if you don’t put the burden of expectation on yourself, you can go on. It taught me that if I can just focus on bowling in good areas… that spell taught me to trust myself more.And that spell in Jo’burg in 2013-14 where I took four wickets [in the first innings]. Around that time I had been hit for 30 runs in an over by James Faulkner. After that I could have gone wrong any time – both emotionally and mentally, I was struggling. But suddenly something clicked in me. I was like, I can’t play like this. If I have to be the best version of myself then I have to pull up my socks and do well. So something sparked inside me and suddenly I picked up four wickets.I am talking about these spells from memory. I can’t really pinpoint one spell [as the best].You will obviously add Perth to that, to make it a top five?
I am still thinking ().