Pope must seek selfishness to end the Bethell debate

England’s incumbent has been given the backing of his captain for now, but he knows he needs to produce

Vithushan Ehantharajah19-Jun-2025Ollie Pope’s journey as an England cricketer began against India in 2018. Seven years on, as he prepares to lock horns with them once more, we might finally be about to find out what he’s about.There’s an important differentiation. Because after 56 Tests, all we know of Pope is what he does. A bit of everything, really. Some bits he’s done before, others he has not. He’s become English cricket’s own handyman. And a damn good one.That debut at Lord’s came at No.4, despite having made his case at No.6 for Surrey. The selectors saw a 20-year-old wunderkind and sought to let him loose. His first walk out to the middle in England creams was also the first time he had gone into bat in the first 20 overs of an innings.He is by no means a full-time wicketkeeper, yet he donned the gloves in Pakistan in 2022 and New Zealand in 2024 to help the team out of issues of illness and injury. He has deputised for Ben Stokes as captain on four occasions and won three.His recent active, altruistic service has included three years (and counting?) at No.3, smoothing over a problem position by being the responsible one when, deep down, he’d much rather hang with the rest of the dashers in the middle order. And it is this reason that even external talk of jeopardy around Pope’s position, ultimately triggered by the internal temptation to throw the latest wunderkind, Jacob Bethell, into the mix, had Stokes on the front foot a day out from Headingley’s series opener.”It would be remarkable to choose someone else if their last knock was a one-seventy (171),” Stokes said, thrusting Pope’s last knock against Zimbabwe like a shiv, in response to a question on whether there was a decision to be made at first drop. “And that’s pretty much all I need to say on that.”Ollie Pope received his Test cap from Alec Stewart at Lord’s in 2018•Getty ImagesStokes’ admiration for Pope developed before his tenure as captain. He has always rated him, and took him under his wing during the 2021-22 Ashes when Pope was in a rough patch of form. Stokes even negotiated with then-captain Joe Root to fix Pope at No.5 for the third Test of that Australia tour, with Stokes volunteering to move up to four. He went as far as telling Pope the plan had been agreed, only for the management to drop Pope for the next two Tests.Pope was also the first Bazball “project player” – the first raw talent hot-housed in the greenhouse of good times. As newly appointed managing director Rob Key explained in May 2022, Pope’s placement at No.3 came in a bid to “unlock him”. You could argue they’ve done that – an average of 28.66 across 40 innings leading into that summer has been followed by 39.80 (and seven centuries) in the next 58 knocks.Pope’s specific No.3 average is 43.06, though this figure includes the 205 he made against Ireland in 2023, as well as the recent Zimbabwe 171. Without those knocks, his average slips to 36.62, which puts us back in the zone of yearning for a little more, as do his averages of 24.60 and 15.70 against India and Australia respectively. And so the allure of Bethell’s remarkable talent and unblemished (almost empty) record comes back into the frame.There’s an argument to say Stokes and Brendon McCullum have played it safe behind closed doors. For all Stokes’ bolshiness in his press conference, picking Bethell would sit neatly alongside the various calls over the last six months – the selections of Shoaib Bashir and Jamie Smith at the expense of Jack Leach, Jonny Bairstow and Ben Foakes. Even McCullum left last year’s New Zealand tour admitting a serious decision needed to be made after Bethell’s impressive showing. Well, the decision has been made and, surprisingly, it is a safe one.Perhaps that reflects the life cycle of this team. An initial period of wild, enthralling adolescence, followed by the familiar lurch into conservatism with age. A group of one-time free-spirited vibe mongers are now, on the eve of a five-match series against India that leads into a winter Ashes, considering things like “consequences”.Related

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Ironically, Pope’s life under Baz and Ben has almost entirely been about dealing with the consequences of his various roles, or at least minimizing the fallout that they caused. When Stokes took the job and spoke of wanting to be flanked by 10 selfless cricketers, Pope stood tallest. It is no coincidence Stokes chose him as his deputy.And look where that got him? Under-appreciated and under pressure. Had he not put team balance first and assumed the gloves in New Zealand, Bethell would not have got the opportunity to strum 260 compelling runs. This conversation would not be happening, and Pope could be looking ahead to the 10 legacy-defining Test matches to come. Now, even this first one feels tetchy.Of course, Pope still has a say here. He might not have had it in him to say, “you know what Jacob, settle down, I’m at 3” six months ago. But here and now, as the man in possession, he can make a statement.Does he have it in him? Maybe, you know. It is clear Pope’s patience for the discussion around his position has, naturally, diminished. He appreciates this is the lot of an international sports star, but there is a growing annoyance – and it’s spilling into anger – at the lack of respect given to his name and what he has done for this team.Rather than ignore it, he could do with harnessing some of that negative energy. One of England’s most selfless cricketers needs to be a lot more selfish, and seek the “I’m him” glory that came with that incredible 196 in Hyderabad.Even the babiest of baby faces need a heel-turn once in a while. Now is the time for his. With his Test future still in the balance, he should remember there’s a “me” in team, and an “I” in Ollie Pope.

Abdullah Shafique speeds down Pakistan Way

The team’s new approach wasn’t his natural game, but they believed he could adapt and now he believes it too

Danyal Rasool26-Jul-2023Pakistan’s much-vaunted new way draws parallels to England most easily, but Abdullah Shafique would have been wise to be under no illusions of the differences between the two teams. It remains to be seen whether the Pakistan Way survives its first downturn in results – or even the next administrative shuffle – and any long leash their batters might feel they’ve been given has not been stress-tested.Shafique will have felt the tautness in that rope by the time this Colombo Test came around. After a fairy tale start to a Test career that put him on course to become the fastest man to 1000 Test runs, the dip that followed was equally dramatic. Following a first-innings hundred against England in December, he went 11 innings without a half-century, averaging 15.4 in that period. While the dry spell against England and New Zealand was internally dismissed as a case of an inexperienced batter coming up against world-class bowling, the run continued in Galle, where Shafique contributed 27 across two innings to Pakistan’s six-wicket win.Related

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Shafique 201, Salman 132* put Pakistan well on top

Shafique is no Zak Crawley. For one, he averages about 20 more runs and has as many hundreds in 44 fewer innings, so perhaps the comparison is unfair in any case. More importantly, though, he differs from his English counterpart in the sense that the new aggressive style Pakistan are trying to grow into is perhaps the antithesis of what fuelled his rise through the ranks and made him their first-choice opener. He can’t hit his way through a bad patch of form. The Pakistan Way wasn’t formed with Shafique in mind; he just had to adapt to it. And the guarantee Crawley enjoys that long strings of low scores won’t jeopardise his place in the side? Forget it.But Shafique bought in. After never having ended an innings with a strike rate north of 60, he’s breached that mark in two of three innings in Sri Lanka. Two days and two hundred runs ago, he began his innings by driving balls he wouldn’t have gone near, scoring three sumptuous boundaries in his first 14 deliveries. The first over he faced from Ramesh Mendis, Sri Lanka’s economical spinner, he plundered a six and a four, and carted Prabath Jayasuriya for six in the following over. He’d been told he was good enough to bat this way, and now he was finding out just how good he could be. Craven conservatism had got neither Shafique nor Pakistan anywhere over the past year, and the time for polite negotiation was over.Day three began differently at the SSC. Shafique was nearing a hundred, batting alongside his captain. Babar Azam is perhaps the only batter not to have been drawn into Pakistan’s new style, but then again, Babar gets runs however he bats, so he might as well do whatever he wants.Pakistan scored only six off the first 33 balls, but just as Sri Lanka fancied turning this day into grinding trench warfare, Shafique made his first belligerent forays across opposition lines. Back in the barracks, they’d prepared for this.”The team management and staff helped me out, raised our practice standards to a level that it would benefit us in-match,” Shafique said after play. “In the camps we practiced, where we said if anyone plays three dot balls you’re out. This was helpful because you can’t defend every ball, you have to score as well.”When we score, it puts the bowler under pressure as well. Whether that means employing sweep shots or reverse sweeps, using our feet, and adjusting positions within the crease. This helps strike rotation, and also puts the bowlers under pressure.”Abdullah Shafique punished all of Sri Lanka’s bowlers save Prabath Jayasuriya•Associated PressAsitha Fernando was about to be put under pressure. Two boundaries took Shafique swiftly through the 90s, before a tickle to square leg brought up three figures. He punched the air, raised his bat towards the dressing room and his head skywards. In the early stages of his career, these runs came so easily it was tempting to think this was how it’d always be. Now, Shafique was discovering how hard-earned these moments can be, and how much sweeter they are for it.Unshackled, he launched Jayasuriya for a six over long-off, making him look like a regular slow-left-arm trundler than the world-class spinner he is. This, is the man who dismissed the Pakistan captain two balls later; no one has got Babar out more often in Test cricket. He was the only bowler whom Shafique showed some deference to, scoring just 49 runs off 105 balls from Jayasuriya on day three. Against Mendis, his strike rate was nearly 83 and his combined strike rate against everyone besides Jayasuriya was in excess of 75.”The captain supports me a lot, and all of the players. After the first innings, he came and had a chat with me which was immensely helpful,” Shafique said. “What you have in mind is you play aggressively no matter the bowler.”The pressure was now off Shafique and Pakistan. This was the scenario the Pakistan Way was geared towards setting up, and for players of his quality, and indeed Salman Ali Agha’s, pressing home the advantage came naturally. Shafique’s 150 came and went, and after a brief stutter in the 190s, he became the 17th Pakistan batter to score a double hundred away from home.Shafique had found himself in a rut, been told to adapt to a new playing style that didn’t come as naturally to him, and got 201 runs out of it. He stormed back into form, and casually added another gear to his game along the way. It’s easy to see why his captain rates him so highly.It had been a while since he hit Jayasuriya for six, and the itch needed to be scratched once more. He danced down the track, but Jayasuriya landed the ball just a touch wider, and spun it just a little more. An edge, a slice to mid-off, ended an epic. It had taken 326 balls for Jayasuriya to get his man, and even that had happened on Shafique’s terms.He’s not going anywhere. And now it’ll be even more fun to see him stick around.

Stats – Is Cape Town more pace friendly than Centurion and Johannesburg?

In the last five Tests in Cape Town, fast bowlers have averaged 22.95 runs per wicket, the best among South African venues

S Rajesh10-Jan-202223-5 South Africa’s win-loss record at Newlands since their readmission to international cricket. Their win-loss ratio of 4.6 is second only to Centurion (21-3) among the home venues where they have played at least six Tests. Since 2010, they have a 9-2 record here. However, the last time they played a Test here, in January 2020, South Africa were beaten by 189 runs by England. Their only other defeat in this period was in 2014, when Australia defeated them by 245 runs.

0 Tests won by India in Cape Town – they have lost three Tests and drawn two. The last time they played here, in 2018, India lost a low-scoring game by 72 runs. However, Indian batters have scored four hundreds here, the joint-highest for them at any South African venue. Sachin Tendulkar has two, while Wasim Jaffer and Mohammad Azharuddin have scored one each.22.95 Average runs per wicket for fast bowlers in the last five Tests in Cape Town, from 2017 to 2020. This includes Tests against Sri Lanka, India, Australia, Pakistan and England. Among the 25 venues that have hosted at least five Tests since June 1, 2016, only two other venues have had better averages for pace: St Lucia and Jamaica. That means Cape Town has been the most pace-friendly of all South African venues in the last five years, marginally ahead of Johannesburg (23.45) and Centurion (23.69).

38.52 Average runs per wicket for fast bowlers in the six previous Tests in Cape Town, from 2012 to 2016. In this period, when South Africa hosted England, West Indies, Australia, Pakistan, New Zealand and Sri Lanka, Newlands was the least pace-friendly among the South African venues. The strike rate for pace bowlers in this period was 69.8 balls per wicket; in the last five Tests it has improved to 43.6.

32.70 Average for pace bowlers in the eight first-class matches played in Newlands since the last Test match there in January 2020. Fast bowlers have taken 130 wickets in those matches, while spinners have nabbed 85 wickets at 34.40.21.54 Kagiso Rabada’s bowling average in Tests in Cape Town. He has taken 35 wickets in six matches here; only in Centurion does he have more wickets (42 in six). In his last five Tests in Cape Town, Rabada has taken 31 wickets at 16.83.

50.57 Dean Elgar’s Test average in Cape Town. He has scored more runs here than at any other venue.287 The average first-innings total in the last five Tests at Newlands. Teams batting first have won four times and lost just once in this period. The only team to lose was Pakistan, who made 177 in their first innings and lost by nine wickets.

Value has risen by 228%: Chelsea star looks like "Lampard, Drogba & Hazard"

Things are looking up for Chelsea at the moment.

Enzo Maresca’s side put a stop to their middling form in the Premier League with their incredible 2-1 over Liverpool on the weekend.

It was the sort of performance and result that could see them now go on a winning run in the after the international break.

Moreover, with the talent Todd Boehly and Co have added to the squad, plus someone soon to return whose valuation has exploded at Stamford Bridge, there is no reason the Blues couldn’t win something again this year.

How Todd Boehly's most significant signings are faring

Since taking charge of the club in 2022, Boehly and then Clearlake have invested substantial sums of money in players, and while not all have succeeded, some of Maresca’s most important players have joined under his leadership.

Market Movers

Football FanCast’s Market Movers series explores the changing landscape of the modern transfer market. How much is your club’s star player or biggest flop worth today?

For example, Moises Caicedo, who cost around £115m, is now finally looked upon as one of the very best midfielders in the Premier League, someone capable of breaking up opposition attacks and then kickstarting them for his team.

Moreover, he seems only capable of scoring absolute bangers.

It’s been a little tougher to win people over for Enzo Fernández, who also cost over £100m, but he played himself into some brilliant form by the end of last season, and seems to be getting better with each passing game this season.

Furthermore, even when he’s not playing at his best, he has been able to pop up with a goal involvement, scoring three times and providing one assist in seven league games so far this season.

Fernández’s Scout Report

Statistics

Per 90

Percentile

Goals

0.44

Top 2%

Goals + Assists

0.58

Top 2%

Penalty Kicks Made

0.15

Top 2%

xG: Expected Goals

0.54

Top 2%

npxG: Non-Penalty xG

0.44

Top 2%

npxG + xAG

0.55

Top 2%

Progressive Passes Rec

3.93

Top 2%

GCA (Dead-ball Pass)

0.29

Top 2%

Penalty Kicks Attempted

0.15

Top 6%

npxG/Shot

0.30

Top 6%

Passes into Penalty Area

1.46

Top 6%

Goal-Creating Actions

0.58

Top 6%

Touches (Att Pen)

2.48

Top 6%

SCA (Fouls Drawn)

0.29

Top 10%

Progressive Passes

6.41

Top 14%

All Stats via FBref

Then there are his underlying numbers, which help illustrate the extent of his influence over games, as according to FBref, he ranks in the top 2% of midfielders in the Premier League this season for expected goals, the top 6% for passes into the penalty area and goal-creating actions, all per 90.

Someone who endured a tough start to life in West London, but is now as undroppable as Caicedo, is Marc Cucurella.

The Spanish left-back has been sensational for the Pensioners for well over a year now, and has proven himself to be as brilliant at the defensive side of being a full-back as he is at the offensive side.

He was excellent against the Reds at the weekend and provided the assist for Estevao’s late-late winner.

However, while these three are clear examples of successful signings under the club’s new ownership, there is one international who has become the jewel in the crown, someone whose value has exploded since moving to Stamford Bridge.

Chelsea's best signing under Boehly

It’ll likely come as no surprise at all that the signing in question is none other than Cole Palmer.

The former Manchester City star joined the club in the summer of 2023 for a fee of around £42.5m, including add-ons, and according to the CIES Football Observatory, is now worth up to €161m, which is about £139.5m.

In other words, the Englishman’s valuation has skyrocketed a whopping 228% in just over two years, and while that might sound absurd, it’s an increase that simply mirrors the international’s immense talent and importance to this Blues side.

For example, since making the move, the 23-year-old game-changer has made 101 appearances for the club, totalling 8095 minutes, in which he has scored 45 goals and provided 29 assists.

That translates to a world-class average of a goal involvement every 1.36 games, or every 109.39 minutes, which would be an outrageous rate of return for a number nine, but is all the more impressive considering he primarily plays on the right or in attacking midfield.

Palmer’s Chelsea record

Appearances

101

Minutes

8095′

Goals

45

Assists

29

Goal Involvements per Match

0.73

Minutes per Goal Involvement

109.39′

All Stats via Transfermarkt

Moreover, he isn’t some flattrack bully who scores meaningless goals; he’s someone who loves the biggest stage, as he demonstrated in the Club World Cup final, with a brace and assist against Champions League champions Paris Saint-Germain.

Finally, in addition to the sheer number of goals and the important big-game goals, the former City ace is also a great entertainer, someone capable of turning defenders inside out and getting the crowd on their feet.

It’s an outlandish comparison to make, but there is certainly an element of truth in the statement from GOAL’s Sean Walsh that he’s like “Lampard, Drogba & Hazard all in one.”

Ultimately, Chelsea have made their fair share of poor signings over the last three years or so, but they’ve also made some world-class additions, none more so than Palmer.

Chelsea lost a homegrown Estevao for £0, now he's "one of the world's best"

The sensational talent would be perfect for Chelsea and could help push Estevao to be even better.

1

By
Jack Salveson Holmes

Oct 8, 2025

Diomande upgrade: Rangers pushing to sign “box-crashing” SPFL star for Rohl

Glasgow Rangers head coach Danny Rohl will be relishing his first opportunity to bring in his own players when the January transfer window opens for business next month.

The German manager joined after the summer window closed and has only been able to work with the squad that was put together by previous managers and sporting directors.

With five wins and two draws in seven matches in the Scottish Premiership so far, it is exciting to think about what Rohl could achieve with signings that he has a chance to have a say in.

Rangers pushing to sign Premiership star

After a host of signings from England in the summer, the Light Blues are reportedly looking closer to home to bolster the manager’s options in midfield.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

According to FootballTransfers, Glasgow Rangers are ‘pushing’ to reach an agreement to sign Kilmarnock central midfielder David Watson in the January transfer window.

The Scotland U21 international’s contract with Killie is due to expire at the end of the season, and the Gers are looking to take advantage of that situation to make him the first signing of the Rohl era.

It adds that Kilmarnock are open to a sale in January, to avoid losing him for nothing in the summer, but it remains to be seen how much they will demand for his services.

FootballTransfers reveals that the 20-year-old starlet has been identified as the club’s top target for the January window, but they will face competition from Lazio and Celtic, which means that this will not be an easy deal for Rangers to get over the line in the coming weeks.

Why Rangers should sign David Watson

With Mohamed Diomande heading off to the African Cup of Nations later this month, Watson could arrive at Ibrox at the start of January as an upgrade on the Ivorian talent.

Rangers will, of course, be without Diomande until the end of his country’s run in the tournament, which could provide a new signing like the Kilmarnock star to come in and take his place in the team before he returns.

Based on their respective performances in the Scottish Premiership this season, Watson would be likely to step into the side and offer more than the left-footed star has for Rangers so far.

Described by Scottish scout and analyst Kai Watson as a “box-crashing, goalscoring midfielder that works hard on both ends”, the Kilmarnock star has scored three goals and created two ‘big chances’ for Kilmarnock in the Premiership, per Sofascore, whilst Diomande has only scored one goal and created one ‘big chance’ for his team in that time.

This suggests that Watson, on current form, could offer more of a threat at the top end of the pitch for the Light Blues if he arrives in January to take a place in Rohl’s midfield, as both a scorer and a creator of goals in the middle of the park.

Appearances

12

16

Goals

1

3

Big chances created

1

2

Tackles + interceptions per game

1.9

3.1

Duels won per game

2.9

5.7

Ground duel success rate

45%

50%

Aerial duel success rate

31%

41%

As you can see in the table above, the Scottish talent has also provided more quality than Diomande out of possession in the league this season, winning a higher percentage of his duels on the ground and in the air, whilst making more defensive interceptions per game.

Analyst John Walker claimed that Watson had “blown up the league” last year, and the same is true this season with his impressive performances in the middle of the park as a 20-year-old star.

The Killie central midfielder has significantly outperformed Diomande, who was the subject of a £6.5m bid from Besiktas in the summer, and has shown that he can deliver consistent displays in the division.

Watson, who scored four goals in 23 league starts in the 2024/25 campaign, is a proven Premiership performer who could arrive at Ibrox to hit the ground running in January, which is exactly what they need when signing a player midway through the season.

Rangers dud was as "rotten" as Miovski, now he's Rohl's most improved player

This Glasgow Rangers flop who looked as bad as Bojan Miovski is now Danny Rohl’s most improved performer.

ByDan Emery Dec 8, 2025

With Diomande set to jet away to the African Cup of Nations, signing the Scottish star to come in as an upgrade on him at the start of the January transfer window could be a shrewd move by the club and a dream first signing for Rohl.

Mikel Arteta confirms Arsenal star will miss Chelsea clash through injury

Arsenal take on Chelsea this weekend in a blockbuster Premier League clash which could help to define this year’s title race, and Mikel Arteta has provided some team news ahead of the clash.

Arsenal take on Chelsea in mouth-watering Sunday encounter

Arsenal’s emphatic 3-1 victory over Bayern Munich on Wednesday evening has catapulted the Gunners into Sunday’s London derby with serious momentum.

Arteta’s side complemented their 100 per cent Champions League record with a dominant display that overwhelmed the Bundesliga champions, who were unbeaten in all competitions before their defeat at the Emirates.

It was a massive performance by Arsenal on a real night to remember, but attention now turns immediately to Stamford Bridge, where the league’s top two meet in what represents a genuine six-pointer.

Arsenal arrive at Chelsea’s home ground boasting a formidable recent record against their London rivals.

The north Londoners are unbeaten in their last seven matches against Chelsea, recording five wins and two draws over that mightily impressive run.

Arsenal 3-0 Nottingham Forest

Athletic Bilbao 0-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 1-1 Man City

Port Vale 0-2 Arsenal

Newcastle 1-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 2-0 Olympiacos

Arsenal 2-0 West Ham

Fulham 0-1 Arsenal

Arsenal 4-0 Atlético Madrid

Arsenal 1-0 Crystal Palace

Arsenal 2-0 Brighton

Burnley 0-2 Arsenal

Slavia Prague 0-3 Arsenal

Sunderland 2-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 4-1 Tottenham

Arsenal 3-1 Bayern Munich

Chelsea currently sit six points behind Arsenal, meaning victory for the hosts would reduce that gap to three and reignite their title challenge.

However, a triumph for Arsenal would establish a potentially insurmountable nine-point cushion over their closest challengers, effectively ending Chelsea’s realistic hopes of catching the leaders barring a miracle.

Both sides enter the fixture riding waves of confidence following midweek European statements.

Arsenal hold 'initial talks' to sign Real Madrid target who Arteta thinks is 'ideal'

The Gunners are moving in ahead of January.

ByEmilio Galantini Nov 28, 2025

Chelsea demolished Barcelona 3-0 with teenager Estevao producing a moment of magic to live long in the memory, while Arsenal’s dismantling of Bayern demonstrated their credentials as genuine Champions League contenders.

Captain Martin Odegaard made his long-awaited return from injury after coming on as a late substitute, gifting Arsenal a major boost ahead of Chelsea after both Noni Madueke and Gabriel Martinelli also made their comebacks recently.

Supporters are now waiting for updates on Viktor Gyokeres, Kai Havertz, Gabriel Jesus, Gabriel Magalhaes and Leandro Trossard, with the latter subbed off against Bayern after picking up a knock.

Mikel Arteta shares Gabriel injury update out of Arsenal

Now, speaking in his pre-match press conference, Arteta has provided some news.

Arteta confirms that Gabriel will miss Arsenal’s trip to Chelsea after a further scan, with the Brazilian still not ready to take part.

Being without the “underrated” star for a little while longer is unfortunate, but there is some positive updates.

The Spaniard says that there is a ‘potential chance’ that Trossard could be available to play Chelsea, and refuses to rule out Gyokeres and Havertz playing a part too, with all three subject to late fitness tests.

When asked about Havertz and Gyokeres, Arteta explained:

As things stand, the Arsenal trio all have a chance for the matchday squad tomorrow, it would seem, which comes as a massive boost given their real shortage of attackers in the last two months.

Havertz hasn’t played since the start of the season due to a knee injury, while Gyokeres has been sidelined since Arsenal’s 2-0 win away to Burnley.

Swepson's career-best outing charges Queensland to big win

Mitchell Swepson has claimed 10 wickets for the match to lead Queensland to a comfortable fourth-day Sheffield Shield victory over South Australia

AAP18-Oct-2025

Mitchell Swepson took 10 wickets for the match•Getty Images

Mitchell Swepson has spun Queensland to a seven-wicket win over South Australia, producing the finest match of his Sheffield Shield career in Adelaide.Swepson ran through the hosts’ tail on Saturday to have them all out for 308 in their second innings, leaving Queensland a fourth-innings chase of 139.Usman Khawaja fell for a duck and Marnus Labuschagne was lbw for 18 following his first-innings century, but 72 not out from Angus Lovell ensured the Bulls won easily.From day one at Adelaide Oval, Swepson was at the centre of Queensland’s success, with 10 wickets for the match and second-innings figures of 6 for 109.The former Test spinner did the bulk of the damage on the opening day for the Bulls, taking four wickets in a collapse that left South Australia falling from 133 for 2 to 188 for 7.And after Labuschagne’s 159 gave Queensland a 170-run first-innings advantage, it was Swepson who again did the damage on days three and four.The legspinner took apart South Australia’s top three, trapping both Conor McInerney (46) and Henry Hunt (36) lbw, before Nathan McSweeney (26) edged him to slip.Then on Saturday Swepson beat Nathan McAndrew in flight to have him well caught by Hugh Weibgen running back at mid-off.He also removed a sweeping Wes Agar caught behind on 19, before Lloyd Pope hit him straight to Weibgen at cover to end South Australia’s second innings.Swepson’s haul was his second 10-wicket haul, after doing likewise against New South Wales in 2020.At that point Swepson was considered the country’s second-choice spinner, before falling back down the pecking order in recent years.The 32-year-old’s 6 for 109 in the second innings also marked his career-best figures, as Queensland made it one win and one draw to start the season.

It's not Kudus: World-class Spurs star is now as influential as Kane

Despite some negative noise regarding attacking regressions, Tottenham Hotspur have made headway under Thomas Frank’s management, fifth in the Premier League and in a promising position in the Champions League group stage.

But Spurs could certainly do with a bit more fluency and impetus when on the charge, and such creases must be ironed out over the coming months to make this a season to remember.

It was always going to be difficult, selling Harry Kane to Bayern Munich in 2023, and Ange Postecoglou deserves credit for establishing an attractive, entertaining playing style (when things were going his way).

But it’s true that some members of the squad aren’t quite pulling their weight. That said, Tottenham do have some top talents who have the capacity to secure the club’s place at Europe’s elite table and lead Frank toward trophy-winning success.

Mohammed Kudus being chief among them.

Kudus' start to life at Spurs

There was an air of controversy about Kudus’ summer transfer to Tottenham. After all, the Ghanaian winger had plied his trade down the road at West Ham United for the past couple of years, and the sale has left the Irons fanbase feeling hot under the collar.

But West Ham’s loss is Tottenham’s gain, with the 25-year-old having registered five assists in the Premier League this season, more than any other player.

His pace and potency have seen him add a dimension to Frank’s outfit that Tottenham simply didn’t boast last term, and in this, he is offering shades of Kane, taking on the responsibility of leading the club forward, bringing a unique flavour to the table.

Kudus is indeed emerging as Tottenham’s new principal source of attacking inspiration, but there’s actually another member of Frank’s squad who’s looking somewhat Kane-esque.

Spurs' new version of Kane

We’re not talking about one of the Tottenham forwards here. Instead, it’s Micky van de Ven whose growth into a talismanic role down N17 is leaving him in line to take Kane’s leadership berth, belatedly.

The 24-year-old has been a revelation since joining from Wolfsburg for around £43m in 2023, with injuries his biggest weakness. So strong and fast and commanding, with journalist Sonny Snelling even labelling him as “world-class”.

It was the 6 foot 4 star’s injury that derailed the Ange hype train a few years ago, sending that project into a spin. Then, last season, hamstring injuries reigned supreme over the defender’s hopes of availability. He started only 12 Premier League fixtures all season, eight of which came across Spurs’ first nine fixtures of the campaign.

While Cristian Romero is Tottenham’s captain, Van de Ven is the perfect counterpoint and every bit as impressive. It’s perhaps important to remember that, like Kane, Van de Ven is not the skipper, with the Three Lions striker behind Hugo Lloris in that regard.

Of course, Kane and Micky van de Ven are hardly similar players. They are so different across physical and tactical bases as to be diametrically opposed.

But Van de Ven offers so much more than his central defensive role demands, and in this, he shares a likeness with Kane, whose range of passing and ability to drop deep and influence make him a very unique number nine, and with 23 goals from 17 games for Bayern this season, he’s still rather good at his primary job.

Tottenham have struggled to replace Kane since selling him to Bayern, but that’s more because of the 32-year-old’s remarkable, unique qualities. When he left, the Lilywhites didn’t only lose their record goalscorer, but their shrewdest playmaker and source of inspiration across so many years.

But his pace. Such speed. It’s astonishing, in many ways, and hard to define. In the Premier League this season, furthermore, Van de Ven has completed 92% of his passes and come out on top in 63% of his ground duels, as per Sofascore.

Micky van de Ven

Tottenham

37.38

Kyle Walker

Man City

37.31

Jackson Tchatchoua

Wolves

37.30

Micky van de Ven

Tottenham

37.23

Micky van de Ven

Tottenham

37.12

It tells much of the Dutchman’s athleticism that he is first, fourth, and fifth on the all-time speed rankings (beginning 2020/21), and is a further illustration of the above-and-beyond approach he brings to his centre-half role.

As per FBref, he also ranks among the top 1% of positional peers across Europe’s top five leagues over the past year for goals scored per 90, emphasising an attacking threat that has been on full show this season, six goals from 16 matches in all competitions.

This is a top-class player, and one whose special skills will inevitably see a wave of interest in his signature before long, Europe’s heavyweights squabbling over his signature.

It is perhaps a given that Van de Ven will eventually move on. The lure of Real Madrid and Barcelona, outfits bound to have earmarked the Netherlands international among a list of loose long-term targets, may ultimately prove too much for him to ignore.

This could see him shape into the next version of Kane in more ways than one. But, whatever happens down the line, Van de Ven is a unique player who Tottenham must keep a grip on for as long as they can, for he will spearhead the Frank era toward a surface only scratched when Postecoglou defied the odds and lifted the Europa League title last season, Van de Ven playing that final and thriving.

Spurs have signed a "hidden gem" who's a bigger talent than Troy Parrott

Tottenham need to do more in the final third under Thomas Frank’s management.

ByAngus Sinclair Nov 17, 2025

Aaron Judge Joked About Teammate’s ‘Disrespectful’ Move After His Game 2 HR

New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge’s home run in Game 2 of the American League Championship Series was a memorable one, not just because it was his first of the postseason, but because of what Judge’s teammate, Gleyber Torres, did in the moment. 

In the seventh inning of the Yankees’ 6-3 win over the Cleveland Guardians, Judge smashed a two-run homer that cleared the wall in center field to give his team extra breathing room late in the game. On Judge’s hit, Yankees second baseman Gleyber Torres tagged up from first base to see if the ball would actually leave the yard, a move that led Judge and other Yankees teammates to poke fun at him afterward.

“That was disrespect out of Gleyber, man. He's seen me hit 58 of those things this year,” Judge said.

Judge also elaborated on the moment in a postgame presser.

“I was pretty pissed at him,” Judge said. “It was him and Chappy, Chappy was telling him to tag up a little bit. But like I said, you never know when it’s windy like this, what the ball’s going to do to center field, he’s trying to get to scoring position, so I’ll let this one slide.”

Yankees first base coach Tracy Chapman apparently told Torres to tag up, so Torres can’t be blamed too much for the move. It still made for a great postseason moment, though.

After Tuesday’s victory, the Yankees are just two wins away from reaching their first World Series since 2009. Judge, who racked up an MLB-leading 58 home runs in the regular season, finally got one in the playoffs and could be heating up at the perfect time with his offensive slump hopefully in the rearview mirror. 

The Yankees will face the Guardians in Game 3 of the ALCS on Thursday at Progressive Field in Cleveland.

Procter, Sales centuries propel Northants to memorable 311-run chase

Luke Procter and James Sales both hit brilliant centuries to crown a remarkable Northamptonshire run chase against Middlesex as they reached their 311-run target in just over two sessions with 10 overs to spare at Wantage Road. It took Northamptonshire to their second Rothesay County Championship win of the season by five wickets and keeps their hopes of promotion alive.Procter played a true captain’s innings of 107 (137 balls, 14 fours), his second ton of the campaign in a third wicket partnership of 156 in 26.4 overs with Sales who picked up the mantle when his captain fell, going on to make 108 (120 balls, 12 fours, 2 sixes).Middlesex skipper Toby Roland-Jones (2-48) was left to rue his declaration calculations despite the visitors adding another 117 runs for the loss of five wickets in the morning session, Max Holden making 54 and Ryan Higgins a quickfire 44. With Roland-Jones calling time on 332 for eight, Calvin Harrison finished with figures of four for 107, while Liam Guthrie (2-60) took a further wicket to register a career best match haul of nine for 154.It left Northamptonshire with 73 overs to reach their target at 4.2 runs per over, a rate they matched and then exceeded as the day wore on. Middlesex will also reflect on their fielding performance with Procter given three lives off dropped catches on 12, 27 and 88.Earlier Middlesex resumed on 215 for three and were proactive from the outset as they went in search of quick runs to set up the declaration.Holden was unable to press on further after his half-century, bowled by Guthrie, but Higgins motored on, hooking Guthrie for six, flat batting Procter down the ground and attacking the spinners. Harrison had the final word when Higgins was deceived by the wrong’un as he attempted to sweep, the ball hitting the base of middle stump.A brilliant piece of fielding from Ricardo Vasconcelos accounted for Ben Geddes (24) as he swept Harrison. Vasconcelos took the catch on the square leg boundary, throwing the ball up as he stepped over the rope before walking in to pouch it safely.Middlesex’s lower order tried to keep up the pace, but lost a couple of quick wickets, Luke Holman coming down the wicket to Lloyd Pope and picking out long-off while Zafar Gohar cut Harrison straight to extra cover.With runs drying up, Roland-Jones called time to give Northamptonshire an awkward 20 minutes before lunch. It almost paid off when Vasconcelos edged Tom Helm, but Leus du Plooy shelled the chance at slip.The hosts were gifted another life after the interval when Procter was put down by a diving Josh de Caires at midwicket, but they picked up Vasconcelos three balls later when he drove loosely against Roland-Jones, Hollman taking a tumbling catch at point.Gohar found turn straight away, causing problems for the left-handers, bowling into the rough outside off-stump and almost removed Procter when he swept out to the square leg boundary. Hollman took an excellent running catch but could not hold on.Amid a fiery but expensive spell from Higgins, Procter powered one down the ground while Harrison cracked him over midwicket for six before the bowler trapped him lbw with one that kept low.Sales ran a single off de Caires to take Northamptonshire to 100 off 26 overs and dispatched Gohar over cow corner for six before Procter swept Gohar to bring up his half-century.Sales was using his feet well against the spinners, coming down the wicket to drive Gohar through the covers, going back to cut him behind square and when Hollman dropped short, he whipped him through midwicket. On the stroke of tea, he swung de Caires high over midwicket as Northamptonshire went in on 149 for two, still needing 162 in 39 overs.Northamptonshire came out firing after tea, Sales hooking Helm in front of square as he reached his half-century. Procter ran a quick two off Robson to reach his century, while Sales disdainfully put away a half-tracker, dissecting two fielders.Runs kept flowing as Procter reverse swept Gohar for four to take the run rate required below three and bring up the 150 partnership, before he was trapped lbw by Robson.Tim Robinson deposited a Robson full toss over extra cover, while Sales steered Roland-Jones down to third to take the target down to 50 and move into the nineties.Northamptonshire lost a fourth wicket when Robinson lofted Roland-Jones to wide mid-off, but Sales continued to attack, coming down the track against Gohar to move to 99 before working Roland-Jones to fine leg to reach his century.There was some late drama when Saif Zaib was caught on the boundary off Hollman and Sales finally departed, edging to slip off Robson. But with Justin Broad deploying his favourite sweep shot, Northamptonshire duly sealed the win.

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