Spurs' Aurier signing was a disaster

Tottenham Hotspur’s decision to sign Serge Aurier from PSG would backfire in more ways than one and it must go down as a shocking piece of business by Daniel Levy.

The Ivory Coast international arrived from PSG in a £23m deal in the summer of 2017 and would go on to make 110 appearances for Spurs, contributing eight goals and 17 assists.

Aurier’s performances on the pitch were far from consistent, as he often looked good going forwards but was always suspect from a defensive point of view, with his record of blocks and clearances per game in the 2019/20 campaign some of the lowest in Spurs’ squad.

Sky Sports pundit Jamie Carragher was less than impressed with Aurier’s defending in the League Cup final defeat against Manchester City, saying (via talkSPORT):

“Aurier is maybe one of the biggest liabilities in Premier League football and is a player who would possibly put you off management with the amount of crazy decisions he makes.”

The former PSG man’s problems were not completely on the pitch as well, as he was regularly guilty of breaking lockdown rules during the pandemic, while he was also reportedly arrested for assault in 2019, which did little to improve his standing amongst Spurs supporters.

The warning signs were there for Levy, after Aurier was also arrested during his time at PSG, so it seems strange that he was willing to spend such a significant fee on a player who was clearly controversial both on and off the pitch.

While he was something of a regular under Jose Mourinho in his first season in charge of Spurs, making 33 appearances in the top flight, he was limited to just 19 Premier League appearances in the 2020/21 campaign.

It was no surprise to see him released on a free transfer at the end of that season, with Spurs failing to recoup any of their £23m fee, which surely represents poor business by Levy, especially given his reputation for being a tough negotiator and something of a transfer guru.

Aurier would spend one season with Villareal before joining Nottingham Forest on a free transfer this summer. The Ivorian is yet to feature for Steve Cooper’s side but the Reds might end up regretting giving him a deal if he plays and acts in a similar way to his time at Tottenham.

Spurs missed out on Milinkovic-Savic

Tottenham Hotspur and Fabio Paratici enjoyed a spectacular summer transfer window, with the Italian sporting director landing a number of impressive signings who should undoubtedly improve Antonio Conte’s squad.

Indeed, with Spurs welcoming the likes of Richarlison, Yves Bissouma, Djed Spence, Ivan Perisic, Clement Lenglet and Fraser Forster to the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium prior to the transfer deadline on September 1, Conte now boasts squad depth that he infamously claimed he was lacking over the course of the club’s 2021/22 campaign.

However, while Paratici very much looks to have done a stellar job in the transfer market, there was nevertheless one position that Conte was reported to be extremely keen on strengthening where the 50-year-old sporting director failed to bring in a fresh face – that of a new attacking midfielder.

Despite being heavily linked with moves for a number of players in that position, there was one target in particular who would have undoubtedly been a magnificent signing for Paratici to land – Lazio sensation Sergej Milinkovic-Savic.

Indeed, the 27-year-old has been a continual attacking threat in the heart of the Lazio team over the past eight seasons, scoring 48 goals and registering 44 assists over his 236 Serie A appearances for the club.

The £63m-rated talent was in particularly fine form over his 36 league outings in 2021/22, scoring 11 goals and registering 11 assists in the Italian top flight. The Serbian’s returns were more than Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg, Oliver Skipp, Harry Winks, Rodrigo Bentancur, Tanguy Ndombele and Giovani Lo Celso managed between them in the Premier League last time out.

Furthermore, as per FBref, the £98k-per-week sensation also ranks in the top 5% of midfielders among Europe’s big five leagues for non-penalty goals per 90, in addition to the top 2% for assists, the top 13% for shot-creating actions, the top 12% for passes attempted and the top 14% for dribbles completed over the last 365 days – proving his all-round forward-thinking ability from central midfield.

As such, with Conte clearly lacking a midfielder in Milinkovic-Savic’s mould, the fact that Paratici did not pull the trigger on a £38m bid for the player who Hesham Bilal dubbed “insane” and David Amoyal labelled “unreal” this summer appears something of a shocker by the Italian.

It seems evident that the Serbian would have solved Conte’s biggest – and perhaps only – issue in his Spurs side at present.

On-air Leeds exit claim emerges

Leeds United forward Dan James is expected to remain at the club beyond the summer transfer window, following an on-air claim by Sky Sports’ Kaveh Solhekol.

The Lowdown: James hit-and-miss at Leeds

The Welshman joined the Whites from Manchester United back in January, with manager-at-the-time Marcelo Bielsa seeing him as someone who could aid their Premier League relegation fight with his pace and exuberance.

James has struggled to fully impress in a Leeds shirt to date, however, showing plenty of endeavour but only scoring four goals in 38 appearances from his attacking role.

A summer exit for the 24-year-old has been rumoured with Tottenham believed to be showing a ‘shock interest’.

The Latest: Winger expected to stay

Speaking live  on Sky Sports News on Friday [via MOT Leeds News], Solhekol confirmed the interest from Tottenham but dropped a pretty definitive update on the player’s future:

“Leeds United want another forward and it looks like they’re going to keep Dan James.

“Tottenham were interested.”

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The Verdict: Squad role

James’ work-rate and blistering pace are positive assets, but he may be limited to a squad role between now and the end of the season, despite being hailed as ‘brilliant’ by Marcus Rashford and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer saying he has an ‘X-factor’.

The Wales international lacks the all-round quality and end product to be a regular starter, with the likes of Brenden Aaronson, Jack Harrison and new star Luis Sinisterra more exciting options moving forward.

It could be that James is moved on next summer instead, should his form continue to be patchy, but this is a great opportunity for him to show Jesse Marsch that he is worth persevering with.

Everton interested in Serhou Guirassy

Everton are looking in France for some striker reinforcements if reports are to be believed. 

What’s the word?

According to reports, via TEAMtalk, the Toffees are interested in Rennes marksman Serhou Guirassy.

Frank Lampard has reportedly been a fan of the powerful attacker since his Chelsea team faced the French side in the Champions League two years ago.

Available for around £15m, it could prove to be a huge coup for an Everton side still looking to keep their spending as low as possible. 

He can replace DCL

A huge blow for the blues, Everton are to be without their star striker Dominic Calvert-Lewin for the next six weeks following a “freak” injury picked up in training.

It seems like the Toffees are set for another season without a proper forward, which is made all the more apparent following the departure of Richarlison, who deputised for most of last season.

With large parts of Lampard’s game geared towards the presence of a powerful forward, perhaps poaching this 6 foot 2 Guinean could fill that role and challenge the England international should he return to fitness.

The 26-year-old would thrive off the service of Dwight McNeil and Anthony Gordon, who both put in some wicked deliveries during their loss to Chelsea on Saturday.

Having that central striker could tie together everything the Everton boss has been building this summer.

With 12 goals and three assists last season in all competitions, it is clear that Guirassy is a capable striker with the ability to score and create.

In fact, he ranks in the top 6% for pass completion percentage as well as the top 2% for non-penalty goals when compared with other forwards in Europe’s top five leagues. His presence is felt by all due to his size, but he clearly has incredible feet that make him a multi-faceted threat for defenders.

It is this sort of player that the Toffees had been crying out for, with the “powerful” £18k-per-week attacker is claimed to have “a decent turn of pace and makes intelligent runs.”

With these sorts of attributes, combined with some consistency that can be found in his 48 appearances over last season, Guirassy can certainly replace the gaping hole left by Calvert-Lewin.

Newcastle interested in Gianluca Scamacca

An update has emerged on Newcastle United and their interest in Gianluca Scamacca in the summer transfer window… 

What’s the talk?

According to Craig Hope of the Daily Mail, the Italian is one of the strikers PIF are plotting a swoop for as an alternative to Hugo Ekitike.

The club had agreed a £25m deal to sign the Stade Reims forward but that move has now been scuppered by demands from his agents, which has left the Magpies scouring the globe for other targets.

It is claimed that Newcastle are keen on Scamacca, who is reportedly set to be available for a fee in the region of €30m, and that they will need to convince him to make the switch as the ‘feeling’ is that he would prefer to remain in the Serie A.

Eddie Howe’s own Jamie Vardy

The Premier League has been host to some incredible goalscorers over the years; Alan Shearer, Wayne Rooney, Thierry Henry, and Sergio Aguero to name but a few.

One player who has put his name up alongside them, against all odds, is Leicester City legend Jamie Vardy. The former non-league attacker has scored 133 goals in 270 top-flight matches for the Foxes – winning one title along the way – and Newcastle can now land Howe his own version of him by signing Scamacca from Sassuolo.

FBref lists the players as being similar to each other based on their statistics over the past 365 days in Europe’s top five leagues.

In the Premier League last season, Vardy plundered 15 goals and two assists in 20 starts as he, once again, showcased his ability to find the back of the net on a consistent basis.

Scamacca, meanwhile, scored 16 goals and created three ‘big chances’ for his teammates in 25 starts for Sassuolo in Serie A. His former Italy U21 coach Luigi Di Biagio once claimed that he plays “on the edge” and this has seemingly allowed him to thrive in front of goal.

This shows that he has the quality to score goals on a regular basis at the top level, just like Vardy has over the years for Leicester. At the age of 23, he also has the potential to be Newcastle’s main man at the top end of the pitch for the next decade – given that the Englishman is still firing them in at the age of 35.

The Magpies would, therefore, be signing a player to contribute over the course of a number of seasons, rather than signing a short-term solution, which is why he would be a fantastic addition to the team.

AND in other news: Offer made: NUFC in talks to sign “world-class” 110-goal “magician”, Howe needs him

Manchester United: Ben Dinnery reacts to Matt Walker deal

Injury expert Ben Dinnery has been reacting to Manchester United’s move for head of athletic development Matt Walker, as per Football Insider.

The Lowdown: Walker joining Man United

United may not have made any first-team signings for Erik ten Hag as of yet, but the club have agreed a deal to bring in Walker, formerly of Cambridge United.

He has joined the club as head of athletic development and will work closely with United’s youth teams ranging from the under-17s to under-23s.

He was hailed as doing an ‘exceptional job’ with Cambridge as head of performance, and Dinnery believes that a move for Walker is an ‘important’ one for the Red Devils.

The Latest: Dinnery reacts to Walker appointment

Dinnery, who contributes for Sky Sports, was talking to Football Insider regarding United’s move to bring in Walker.

The injury expert described it as ‘absolutely massive’ and a ‘fantastic role’, going into detail on Walker’s role with the crop of academy stars:

“Walker is working at an age group where kids are developing into adults.

“You have that transitional phase. You’re moving from functional training to a very serious, goal-driven style of training. You need to understand why you’re doing what you’re doing and the wider picture behind it.

“You need to look at the development and long-term impact of playing in competitive sports. To move on to the next level, these guys in the coaching department are pivotal.

“Without that foundational model and those building blocks, the players are going to be ill-prepared. It’s massive, absolutely massive. It’s important to get that right, and it’s a fantastic role to work with those young people.”

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The Verdict: Good to see

United lifted the FA Youth Cup for the 11th time last month and their first since 2011, defeating Nottingham Forest at Old Trafford in front of more than 67,000 supporters.

It’s clear to see that an exciting crop of future stars are coming through at Carrington, so bringing in someone like Walker to help with the physical transition seems to be a wise move.

The step up to the first team nowadays is huge, so having a head of athletic development in the academy could prove to be a smart decision which goes under the radar in an Old Trafford rebuild under Ten Hag.

In other news: Sky Sports relay big Man Utd news as Ten Hag plots move for English star

Spurs: Levy had howler with Juan Foyth sale

Tottenham Hotspur chairman Daniel Levy is often noted as a shrewd operator when it comes to transfers, although that’s not to say that the 60-year-old always gets it right with the club’s incoming and outgoings.

One scenario where the frugal businessman appears to have made what could be a costly error is with the sale of versatile defender Juan Foyth, the Argentine having gone on to impress since his £13m departure for Villarreal last summer.

The 24-year-old had spent four years on the books at Tottenham after being signed from Estudiantes by compatriot Mauricio Pochettino in 2017, although he was hardly given a look-in over the next few seasons, making just 16 Premier League appearances for the Lilywhites in total.

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A loan move to Spain ensued for the 2020/21 campaign after the 6 foot 2 gem had fallen out of favour under Jose Mourinho, before he was snapped up on a permanent deal by Unai Emery and co after impressing during that temporary stint.

This season has seen the £27k-per-week gem kick on again for the La Liga side, playing his part as the Yellow Submarine surged to the Champions League semi-finals, before crashing out at the hands of Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool.

In Europe’s premier club competition, the La Plata native averaged a remarkable 3.7 tackles, 1.2 interceptions and 2.1 clearances per game from his ten outings, while also winning 1.9 of his aerial duels per match.

Comfortable at both right-back and in the centre of defence, Foyth also ranks in the top 3% for tackles made among players in his position across Europe’s top five leagues, and in the top 13% for pressures made, illustrating his sheer desire to regain possession for his team.

Such an asset would no doubt have a place in Antonio Conte’s current side as either a defensive wing-back or as part of the back three, with the Italian likely to be impressed by the former Spurs man’s full-blooded approach, while the club are currently suffering a real shortage of defensive options at present.

In a business sense as well, the north London outfit’s decision to sever ties with the player now seems an odd one, with Foyth now valued at £18m – £5m more than the amount for which he was sold just a year ago.

Tottenham are likely to go into the market to bolster their defensive ranks this summer, although they could well have been better served retaining the services of the 14-cap Argentina international, with Conte set to have nightmares about his departure.

In other news – Imagine him & Bentancur: Spurs can find perfect Conte gem in £49.5m-rated “phenomenon”

Downie drops Newcastle transfer news

Sky Sports journalist and North East reporter Keith Downie has now dropped some news on Newcastle United’s transfer plans for the summer.

The Lowdown: Busy summer

After all but securing their safety in the Premier League, the summer transfer window now looks set to be a busy one for the St. James’ Park faithful.

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It is expected that they will make the loan move for Matt Targett a permanent one from Aston Villa, while they have also been recently linked to the likes of Evan Ndicka, Victor Osimhen and Hugo Ekitike, suggesting that they will be looking to strengthen in quite a few areas of the pitch.

The Latest: Five signings

Speaking to GiveMeSport, Downie has said that the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) consortium’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) will now look to sign a central defender, a playmaking forward, a striker and a goalkeeper as well as Targett, and could bring in even more players if others were to leave:

“I think they’ll bring in a centre-back, a forward, like a playmaker, and a striker. They’re also looking at the goalkeeping department, and then it all depends on players going.

“If they lost a centre midfielder or they don’t manage to sign Matt Targett, then they’ll look to bring in more on top of that.”

The Verdict: Exciting

It certainly is exciting for the Toon Army to see so many quality players linked to the Magpies, and in so many different positions on the pitch, as PIF look to take them to the next level.

Money should not be too much of a problem for the mega-rich owners, and so providing that they can ship out a few and comply with Financial Fair Play (FFP) rules, they should be able to bring in plenty of fresh faces.

Nonetheless, Eddie Howe will need time to get them all to gel, but the future is certainly looking bright.

In other news, find out who could now be first to leave NUFC this summer here!

How an Afghan blockbuster wowed Dehradun

They fought, they danced, they chased records and took a crowd of strangers along in a town that reminds them of home

Sidharth Monga in Dehradun04-Jun-2018Shapoor Zadran throws hard into the ground from short fine leg. He doesn’t need to. But he is Shapoor Zadran. He has the power, he has the long hair that he never ties or restrains under a headband, and he will show it all off. Mohammad Shahzad refuses to risk an injury and lets the ball pass. An easy single is completed. They both look at each other. They both argue. They gesticulate. This is early doors in the Bangladesh innings. This is Afghanistan fielding, they don’t believe in hiding emotion. The crowd is into it.Two overs later, an edge goes up, Shahzad calls for it early. He has to turn enough to be in position to take this catch facing short fine leg, and he does. As he completes the catch, the first person Shahzad sees is Shapoor. And he breaks into the Dwayne Bravo “Champyan” dance. This is pure drama, and you know from those faces and their gestures what exactly is going on.Dehradun teases the Afghan players. The Himalayan hills in the distance, the cool breeze in the evenings remind them of home. The car horns, the pollution bring them back to a foreign land, their third “home” base after Sharjah and Greater Noida. They learnt their cricket in refugee camps, and while they might be staying in posh hotels and training in the best gyms, deep down things remain the same: they are doing what they love outside their country because of issues within. They are loved here, but this is not home.And this new base is a city that has never seen any official cricket live. Nobody knows how the people will react to this hurriedly arranged and hardly advertised series between Afghanistan and Bangladesh. There is nothing going for this series. Logistically the city has no business hosting an international match. The roads are narrow, the ground is so far out of town you are likelier to spot a wild animal than public transport to get you back. And these are two neutral teams. Why would anybody turn up?Ask the 15000-plus that did. Ask why they walked three to four kilometres after the police barred them from taking vehicles close to the ground. Ask some of them why they braved the overbearing police’s caning just to get in.AFPShahzad sees the second ball of the match in his half, stands tall and helicopters it through midwicket. He is an unabashed MS Dhoni fan. He has modelled his keeping on India’s most successful wicketkeeper. His aggressive shots all end in that helicopter flourish. As does this. Shahzad doesn’t even look up. He told ESPNcricinfo recently that he knows where the ball is going when he nails it. Now it is up to the fielders to worry where it is going, for the umpire to decide what to signal, and for the crowd to enjoy.There is a match to be won, a favourites tag against a more experienced Full Member to be defended, and Shahzad bats responsibly for his 37-ball 40 on a slow surface where he knows his spinners don’t need much more than 140 to defend. Shahzad shows the trademark flair but not at the cost of his team’s interest. Once the platform is set for that 140, with equal help from captain Asghar Stanikzai, Samiulah Shenwari and Shafiqullah show Dehradun some of the most heartfelt hitting. This is what batting is to kids: hit the ball as hard as you can. They are almost getting swept off their feet as they swing.Now to the hero, Rashid Khan. It seems like he is playing in Mumbai one day, London the next and Dehradun a day after. He lands a day before the game, all the while observing the fast during the holy month of Ramadan, which is why he says they didn’t talk much as a team, and then turns up and coolly drives the last ball of the innings over extra cover for six. “Ra-Shid Ra-Shid” the crowd goes in a tone reserved for “Sa-Chin Sa-Chin”.And when he comes on to bowl, Rashid becomes the second quickest to 50 T20I wickets with the first ball he bowls. With the next, he has another scalp. No wicket is celebrated in a routine manner. Rashid says the people of India have shown him love everywhere he went in the IPL. Why not make them happy when you are happy? Why not indeed?The finishing touches are provided by the strapping Shapoor. He has fought injuries and terror attacks, but his hair has never lost that bounce or shine. In he bounds, 22-step run-up, the hair bouncing here, there, everywhere, and he spears a full ball in to break Rubel Hossein’s leg stump into two. And he just changes his direction a little as Rubel walks past him. Enough to let Rubel know he has been had, but not enough to draw the match referee’s ire. The batsman here is immaterial. There is arrogance but it is not obnoxious. This is more Mohammad Asif than Sreesanth.This is Afghanistan. In a foreign land, in front of people who don’t understand their language, fighting with each other in full public view, dancing together with pure joy, snapping stumps, chasing records, taking a crowd of strangers along. Yes, India has loved foreign cricketers before but they have had to earn those stripes against India. Now this small town with no infrastructure to host an international match is taking to a whole group of cricketers that have nothing to do with the Indian superstars. Dehradun is lucky; its people have shown they know it.

Dhoni's dream

The new biopic, shaped around the World Cup win of 2011, works best when it depicts one youngster following his calling

Jai Arjun Singh03-Oct-2016To begin with an admission that will seem astounding to regular readers of this site: I was more stirred by the opening scene of , set in the Wankhede Stadium during the 2011 World Cup final, than I had been by the actual match five years earlier.The main reason for this is that my love affair with cricket ended a decade ago, occasioned partly by the ugly, fair-weather displays of nationalism-jingoism associated with the sport (one example being a crowd attacking MS Dhoni’s Ranchi house in 2007). As one of the very few people in the country who didn’t much care when the real Dhoni hit that winning six on April 2, 2011, I was unprepared for my reaction – the adrenaline rush, the growing anticipation – when I watched Sushant Singh Rajput as Dhoni in the dressing room deciding to go in at No. 5, padding up and heading out into the deafening arena. Call it the power of a tense, tightly constructed scene that uses camerawork, space and sound effectively, or a sudden burst of nostalgia for a once-loved sport.In other words, begins on a rabble-rousing note. But after this World Cup scene (which Neeraj Pandey’s film will, of course, return to at the end), the narrative backtracks to a quiet afternoon in July 1981 and Dhoni’s birth in a Ranchi hospital ward, while his father Paan Singh Dhoni (Anupam Kher), a hard-working lower-middle-class man, waits nervously outside. A series of well-constructed vignettes follows: Dhoni as a boy being coerced by a coach to give up football for cricket, and to take up wicketkeeping (though he prefers batting); the support of his friends as it becomes evident that he has special talent and drive; the misgivings of his father, who has sensibly conservative ideas about what constitutes a secure future; repeated frustrations followed by a job in the Railways and the possibility of becoming a “” (“Ticket collector ?” as Paan Singh puts it” [What can be bigger than a ticket collector?]).Rajput’ portrayal of Dhoni starts from when he is 16, and these early scenes have a slightly off-kilter quality – as if the actor’s head has been digitally superimposed on a slim teen body – but that doesn’t matter after a while, because this is a fine performance. Rajput captures not just Dhoni’s boyish exuberance and the enigmatic smile that stops just short of being cocky, but also something of the placid, Buddha-like inscrutability that emerges in moments of stress; a sense that he is calling on inner reserves only he knows about. This is a convincing portrait of a young man who can be impetuous but is also grounded enough to buy snacks for his friends as a sort of “celebration” after being selected for a team – because he never wants to forget this day of failure.

Rajput captures not just Dhoni’s boyish exuberance and the enigmatic smile that stops just short of being cocky, but also something of the placid, Buddha-like inscrutability that emerges in moments of stress; a sense that he is calling on inner reserves only he knows about

The film’s first half, with its depiction of the rhythms of small-town life, is a reminder that director Pandey has a feel for place and period (see his recreation of 1980s Delhi in the con-job film ). There are many engaging little moments, such as an early encounter, in a Bihar-Punjab match, between Dhoni and future team-mate Yuvraj Singh (played here by Herri Tangri as a regal kid whose very presence leaves most people awestruck). The cricket scenes are shot with panache and wit, even when they centre on a deadpan hero. The stage also gradually shifts to show us officials in the sport’s higher echelons in Mumbai and Delhi pulling strings and deciding the fate of thousands of struggling youngsters around the country.In the second half, a tonal unevenness sets in, and to a degree this is understandable given the arc of Dhoni’s life. It seemed natural that the early scenes would have the texture of a gritty, understated small-town story about aspiration, the sort that Hindi cinema often does so well now (in another such film, (2013), Rajput played a character whose cricketing dreams pan out). But once Dhoni gets his chance in the Indian team, he rises to stardom fairly quickly, and as more glamorous locations take over – plush hotel rooms, advertising studios where he says cheesy lines while endorsing a range of products – the film’s look and pace alter as well; it becomes glossier, more languid.That in itself is not a problem, but around this time, also becomes looser, more random, and whimsical in its decisions about what to show and what to leave out (there isn’t even a scene that shows the circumstances that led to Dhoni becoming captain) – and when this happens, one recalls that this is largely an “authorised” project, with the real-life Dhoni and his associates having been consulted and kept abreast of the script.Fox Star StudiosThere are two romantic interludes – the first involving a girl named Priyanka (Disha Patani), who dies in a car crash, then with the cricket-indifferent Sakshi (Kiara Advani), who goes on to become Dhoni’s wife – that feel much too generic given how the film has unfolded up to then. This section includes an exotic-location song sequence, superfluous flashback inserts, and embarrassingly forced attempts to generate pathos (wondering about their future together, Priyanka dolefully repeats the line ” time ?” [We have plenty of time, don’t we?] as if she were aware of her own impending fate). Briefly glimpsed in these scenes is the suggestion that a man who is assertive as batsman and captain might be defensive-passive when it comes to relationships, but the film doesn’t take this idea anywhere. The two-woman trope is handled better here than in the recent, utterly lacklustre Mohammad Azharuddin biopic , but that isn’t saying much. (The goofy climactic scene of that film had the “wronged” Azhar being vindicated when his two wives walk into the courtroom side by side to support him and provide the ultimate character certificate!)These sequences notwithstanding, the film builds unerringly towards that World Cup win, which is presented here as the culmination of a remarkable career (never mind that real-life sport doesn’t usually provide such tidy or definitive endings – Dhoni did, after all, also captain India in their 2015 loss, but there isn’t space here for such troughs). Ending with real footage of the post-match celebrations is a guaranteed way of having the audience out of their seats and applauding; as mentioned above, I was one of those viewers.In the final analysis, the film worked best when it did the small moment well. In one notable scene, a subdued Dhoni explains why he is so frustrated by his Railways job – not because he considers it below him (“” [I don’t think the work is small], he says) but because it doesn’t allow him to give cricket enough time and attention. This nuanced scene comes as a refreshing counterpoint to a shoe-polish ad that the real Dhoni did a long time ago, where he turned to the camera and said, “I decided not to be ordinary. I chose to shine.” A good, smooth line for the product, but also one that seemed to condescendingly imply that people in some professions can be dismissed as “ordinary” and that real winners can simply to reach the top through hard work and perseverance. is a bumpy film, very stimulating in its good parts, oddly inert at other times, but in its better moments – like that “” scene – it ducks the grand, overarching narratives and gives us a ground-level story about a young man following a calling with the knowledge that things might not work out perfectly, but that he has to at least give it a shot, he can’t die wondering. That’s a compelling tale in itself, and a more inspirational one in some ways than the one hinted at in the film’s more triumphal scenes – the ones about a blazing star who was so good and so determined that he was destined to reach the top no matter what, and who might well have had that World Cup-winning six inscribed on his horoscope.Have you watched ? Share your thoughts on the movie by mailing us at [email protected].

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