Shooting star to Supernova: Twenty years of James Anderson

England’s greatest celebrates two decades of back-breaking, shoulder-wrenching, ankle-stomping wear and tear

Andrew Miller22-May-2023Twenty years. It is a preposterous landmark for any international sportsman to achieve, let alone an international, all-time-great fast bowler.Twenty years of back-breaking, shoulder-wrenching, ankle-stomping wear and tear. Twenty years of rising, of falling, of plateauing, of being put out to pasture, and of being roped back in again. Twenty years of bettering one’s elders, then matching one’s peers, then disproving the doubters while beating back the younger, theoretically hungrier pretenders. And all the while, finding the inner fire to keep believing the struggle is, not just real, but worth it.At the age of 40 years and 296 days, James Anderson clearly still believes. Assuming his groin niggle is nothing more than that, he’s already inked in for his tenth Ashes campaign this summer – and a realistic shot at 700 Test wickets – even if he may have to wait until Ireland have been and gone before he’s unleashed for a record 28th Test appearance at Lord’s.Related

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But temporally speaking, he’s already entering his third decade as an England cricketer. On May 22, 2003, he was picked for the first of those Lord’s Tests – and the first of his 179 all told – alongside Yorkshire’s Anthony McGrath (whose own four-match career would be done and dusted before that summer was). And on the third day of that match, with first-innings figures of 5 for 73, the first of Anderson’s seven appearances on the dressing-room honours boards duly came to pass.At that precise moment, it felt as though Anderson’s England career was panning out like a prophecy. For extraordinary though it is to relate, given how many career evolutions he has since undergone, he arrived at that Test debut, two months shy of his 21st birthday, with a fully-formed narrative arc that could quite easily have defined and destroyed a lesser player.The story had begun six months earlier, at the mid-point of a bruising Ashes tour in December 2002, when England’s golden child was plucked from Burnley in the Lancashire League and unleashed in the one-day leg of the tour, to face down an Australia ODI team at the absolute zenith of its power.

On his England debut at Melbourne, Anderson was confronted with a brace of centuries for Ricky Ponting and Adam Gilchrist, no less – the Players-of-the-Match-elect for Australia’s next two World Cup final victories, at Johannesburg in 2003 and Barbados in 2007. And yet, on a furnace-hot day in Adelaide one month later, his spell of 10-6-12-1 slowed Australia’s juggernaut to a crawl, and proved his own worthiness to lead England’s attack in the first of those tournaments in the New Year.Against Pakistan in Cape Town, Anderson took to the floodlights like a Newlands moth, inflicting dastardly first-ballers on both Inzamam-ul-Haq and Mohammad Yousuf en route to match-winning figures of 4 for 29; against Australia in a must-win show-down at Port Elizabeth one week later, however, he was zapped into the scoreboard by Andy Bichel for a match-losing six, as Hussain banked on his young gun’s magic in the critical penultimate over, and found it could not yet be delivered on cue.Therein lay the context as Anderson stepped into the fray two months later, as England Test cap No. 613, and with about as much hinterland as any young unknown fast bowler could possibly possess. Not even a full year had elapsed since he had bowled second-change for Lancashire against Surrey on his first-class debut in May 2002; now he was sharing the new ball with Matthew Hoggard in a Test match at Lord’s … and he duly served a 17-run maiden over, topped by two no-balls in his first three deliveries, and tailed with a trio of leg-stump half-volleys as he over-strained for his outswinger and was picked off with ease by Dion Ebrahim.But then, by degrees, the stardust began to settle back on Anderson’s game. Compared to the compact and perfectly-oiled machine that he has long since become, the 2003 prototype had a more frantic flap to his elbows on approach, and a more deliberate pause at the point of delivery, prior to a dramatic ‘whang’ of his shoulder – with his head tucking under his left wing like a baby bird – that was like nothing he’s since tried to recreate.

Back then, that zip in his follow-through could nudge the fledgling Anderson up towards 90mph in his liveliest spells. But, quite apart from attracting the unwelcome attention of the ECB’s biomechanists – on whose watch his game would be hollowed out over the next three years – it also left him reliant on rhythm rather than the guile that his talents would later be married to. Even while ripping out Zimbabwe’s last four wickets in a 14-ball onslaught at Lord’s, “his nervous smile looked like that of an apprentice magician,” as Paul Coupar wrote in Wisden’s match report. “Delighted with the result but unsure exactly how he’d managed it.”Nevertheless, Anderson was hot to trot for a good while yet. By the midpoint of the summer, he’d picked off a hat-trick against Pakistan and dyed a red go-faster stripe in his hair – an add-on that may or may not have contributed to Ferrari flying him by helicopter to meet Michael Schumacher at the British Grand Prix, an invite he had initially turned down because of a birthday barbeque at his parents’ house.With indecent haste, however, his first coming would start to unravel – at the hands of South Africa’s Graeme Smith in the first instance, but also through the unfortunate presumption that his flashy tastes in clothing and haircuts could earn him a media cut-through as cricket’s answer to David Beckham. By October, he had been chosen as the inaugural cover star for the newly-minted Wisden Cricketer magazine (“I really don’t like having my photo taken”, he conceded during his shoot), and by the time that issue hit the stands, the intro to a dramatically re-worked interview was comparing him to a “dotcom disaster”.Anderson’s first year of international cricket culminated in cover stardom, but he was uneasy in the spotlight•Stu Forster/Getty ImagesWithin the span of that scene-stealing performance at Lord’s, however – which began with a nip-backer to plink the top of Mark Vermeulen’s middle stump, and was capped in his 16th over by one of his already familiar magic balls to Douglas Hondo – there were signs both of the struggle that would envelop his early years, but also of the insuperable attitude that would keep his career on track during the fallow years to come – not least the pointed stare at his second victim, Heath Streak, whose stumps he had just thumped with a late-swinging yorker.Anderson has now chalked up so many milestones in the course of his career, it’s almost redundant to remark on his longevity, or his athleticism, or the fine-tuning of that innate skill that – in one of the most telling subplots of his incredible statistics – has now earned him 417 wickets at 23.17 since he turned 30. That, incidentally, is 34 more than the previous England record tally of 383, which Ian Botham had held for 30 years until Anderson himself broke it in Antigua in April 2015.Even so, at this juncture of a sport in eternal flux, it’s worth reiterating that Anderson’s career is longer, by three whole weeks, than the T20 format – the inaugural Twenty20 Cup debuted on June 13.His career predates social media, too. Never mind Twitter or Instagram, even MySpace didn’t come along until August that year. But if an exploding head emoji was an apt and succinct way for the man himself to commemorate the milestone, his current captain, Ben Stokes, perhaps said it best.”I was 11,” Stokes tweeted.

Teenager Archie Lenham rides his luck during 'crazy' debut season

Sussex’s 17-year-old legspinner, the first “Blast baby”, is taking it all in his stride

David Hopps23-Aug-2021Is cricket cool? Well, there’s a loaded question if ever there was one. Even its greatest devotees would struggle to contend that it has ever been the height of fashion, not in England at any rate, where periodic attempts to improve its image have failed to shake a resistance movement that imagines it can be a little, shall we say, monotonous.So is cricket cool? Archie Lenham, the first Blast baby, the first county professional born after the birth of T20 in England, has no doubts. “I think it’s really cool,” he said, with the confidence of a 17-year-old who had just spent a week with Southern Brave (inactive maybe but highly instructive) during the climax to the Hundred. For once, he will not be drowned out by cries of derision when he modestly responds: “I think my mates are quite proud of me.”The debate over how the Hundred can co-exist symbiotically with county cricket remains a pressing and complex one, but that’s for others to work out: for the likes of Lenham, cricket feels a little different and with good fortune he has a career ahead of him to lap it up.Related

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“Before I came into the Hundred I was watching on TV and I thought it was really cool,” he said. “Just the crowds – the last couple of games I have been at the crowds were electric, really loud, really getting behind the sides. I really enjoy white-ball cricket.”Next up is the Vitality Blast quarter-final against Yorkshire on Tuesday night and, as it must be staged on a neutral ground because Headingley is hosting the third Test against India, the atmosphere at Chester-le-Street might be a bit of a come down. Not the message the Blast needs to send as it takes up the mantle. Capacity crowds will follow later in the week.Lenham’s legspin is expected to be central to Sussex’s challenge, something that was inconceivable when this season’s tournament started. Then he burst onto the scene in his second game, against Hampshire at Hove, when he took a wicket with his first ball, held a skier and generally had the time of his life in one of the great stories of the summer. That positive impression remained by the end of the group stages as his bowling stats stacked up alongside such luminaries as Chris Jordan, Tymal Mills and, briefly, the Afghan legbreak bowler, Rashid Khan.Luke Wright, Sussex’s seasoned T20 captain, is just one of several senior players who have wrapped a protective shell around Lenham.”Any time you get to play some youngsters it’s a breath of fresh air and I think it’s just getting the balance right,” Wright said. “We’re lucky that in the T20 side we’ve got a lot of senior guys to help the young guys when they come in. In the four-day team that’s the difficulty, that there’s hardly any senior players there to help them and guide them through.”That’s a challenge in its own right for that team but for ours, obviously Archie has been the standout and has been a great story. More than any skill, for me it’s always the character. For any youngster to be able to come in and play in front of decent-sized crowds and land the ball like he has done, that’s a testament to his character.”

It’s all pretty crazy to be honest. At the beginning of the season playing my first Sussex second team game, then making my full debut. Six weeks later I’m training with Southern Brave in the HundredArchie Lenham

Wright also signed at 16, for Leicestershire. His county debut came in 2003, the inaugural season of T20 in England, but many players were reluctant to take it too seriously and it was approached in a hit-and-miss fashion. It was a different world.”There wasn’t really an academy at Leicester so I was on the playing staff. I certainly wasn’t playing T20 in front of big crowds. But I see a lot of traits in terms of absolutely loving it and throwing himself in at the deep end – that was something that I wanted at that time.”I don’t think you see the negatives at that age where you worry about failing or anything, you just see the positives of playing. You have no worries and no fear whatsoever. You can give him the ball against the best players and he’s still excited. He obviously got a go in the Hundred with the Brave and then got a winners’ medal so he’s not had the worst year, so hopefully he can go even better and win the Blast as well.”Lenham’s level-headed and equable nature is striking considering the demands placed upon him. It was only a few hours before the Hundred final when he agreed to a video chat – he had just finished a bowler’s meeting – and he undertook it with a relaxed and generous air that did him great credit.He has been fortunate to have been surrounded by good advice since birth, whether it is his from his father, Neil, grandfather, Les, both former Sussex players, or his mother, Petch. Both his parents coach cricket at his school, Bede’s School in Hailsham, set in 140 glorious acres of the Sussex Downs. Then Sussex’s spin bowling coach, Ian Salisbury, who also coaches the 1st XI in the Championship and 50-over competitions, is a former England leggie. There are far too many to mention. Everywhere, support when it is needed.”I don’t feel the pressure too much,” he said. “My first Sussex game I was really nervous, walking out to look at the pitch before the game and obviously they all saw me not talking very much and came over and helped me out a lot. CJ [Chris Jordan] just tells me, ‘just try to get a wicket, I don’t mind if you get hit, we back you,’ so it takes a lot off my shoulders.Lenham has enjoyed a remarkable debut summer•Getty Images”Ian Salisbury is a brilliant legspin coach so that experience is really useful for me. He is really good with tactics – field settings and where to bowl to different batsmen, when I should use my variations and so on.”And, most recently, a week with Brave and a chance for their coach, Mahela Jayawardene, a consummate player of spin bowling, to offer his own input. At barely 17, such experiences are invaluable – and Lenham knows it.”He has been helping me with trying to find new variations and change my pace, maybe a slower ball from back of the crease, so that batsmen don’t get used to me. I bowl it pretty quickly. In England quite a lot of the pitches we play on don’t turn big so if you bowl too quickly people can line you up a little bit. Just do things that play in the batsmen’s heads so they don’t get used to you.”It’s all pretty crazy to be honest. At the beginning of the season playing my first Sussex second team game, then making my full debut I was thinking this is really cool. Then six weeks later I’m training with Southern Brave in the Hundred in their squad for the final. Now a Blast quarter-final against Yorkshire. I would never have dreamed about it at the start of the season.”Whether he even sneaks in a Championship debut might be influenced by whether Sussex reach Finals Day in the Blast, although there is an end-of-season match against Derbyshire at Hove, a game of no great consequence, which might offer an opportunity, and which will not risk affecting his white-ball rhythm.Then it is back to Bede’s for the start of his final year – and BTECs in Double Sport and Business. Mostly course work – except he has been doing it for real – with a single exam that might put the cricket on the back burner for a couple of months (hours?) early next season.
“Luckily, Bede’s have been really good to me so they have given me extensions on work.”Archie Lenham says “luckily” a lot, and you sense that he appreciates how lucky he is. He has gone a long way to showing this summer how deserving he is.

Jarren Duran Played a Very Physical Game Against the Chicago Cubs

The Boston Red Sox beat the Chicago Cubs 6-1 on Sunday to avoid a post-All-Star sweep at Wrigley Field. Leadoff hitter and possible trade chip Jarren Duran went 0-for-3 at the plate during the game, but was clearly willing to leave it all on the field to get the win.

With two outs in the bottom of the fourth a fly ball was hit to left-center where Masataka Yoshida settled under it. As Yoshida caught the ball Duran ran into him at full-speed. In Duran's defense, he timed the hit perfectly, led with his shoulder and did not hit his teammate in the head or neck area so no flag was thrown.

A few innings later, after walking, Duran tried to advance to third on a ball hit by teammate Roman Anthony. As Duran rounded second he collided with Cubs second baseman Nico Hoerner. Duran threw out a little stiff-arm to make sure the umpire, who he also had to try to avoid, saw the illegal contact.

Duran was thrown out at third, but thanks to the interference call, he was safe.

Let this be a lesson to anyone who might be on a baseball field at the same time as Jarren Duran. Get out of his way because he will run into you. It doesn't matter if you're trying to get him out or yelled "got it!"Keep your head on a swivel.

قائمة بيراميدز لمباراة كهرباء الإسماعيلية في الدوري المصري

أعلن الكرواتي كرونسلاف يورتشيتش المدير الفني لفريق نادي بيراميدز قائمة فريقه لمباراة كهرباء الإسماعيلية في بطولة الدوري المصري.

وتقام المباراة بين بيراميدز وكهرباء الإسماعيلية على أرضية استاد الإسماعيلية، في المواجهة المؤجلة من الجولة الثامنة للدوري المصري.

وأدى الفريق مرانه الأخير في ملعبه بالدفاع الجوي قبل السفر إلى مدينة الإسماعيلية للمبيت بها حتى موعد المباراة.

طالع | محامي رمضان صبحي يوضح التطورات في قضية المنشطات وحقيقة تواصل الأهلي

ويدخل بيراميدز مباراة الغد وهو يحتل المركز الثاني في جدول ترتيب الدوري المصري، ولديه 23 نقطة بعد الفوز بـ7 لقاءات والتعادل بمباراتين وتلقى هزيمة وحيدة.

بينما يتواجد فريق كهرباء الإسماعيلية بالمركز الـ21 والأخير في جدول الدوري ومعه 8 نقاط من الفوز بـ مباراتين والتعادل مرتين وتلقى 9 هزائم. قائمة بيراميدز لمباراة كهرباء الإسماعيلية في الدوري المصري

حراسة المرمى: محمود جاد – زياد هيثم

خط الدفاع: محمود مرعي – علي جبر – أحمد سامي – طارق علاء – محمد الشيبي – محمد حمدي – كريم حافظ – عبد الرحمن جودة

خط الوسط: أحمد توفيق – محمود دونجا – مهند لاشين – محمود زلاكة – عبد الرحمن مجدي – أحمد عاطف قطة – مصطفى زيكو – إيفرتون داسيلفا – محمد رضا بوبو

خط الهجوم: فيستون ماييلي – دودو الجباس

Pat Nevin blown away by "absolutely and utterly brilliant" Chelsea star vs Barca

As Chelsea thrashed Barcelona 3-0 in the Champions League, former Stamford Bridge star Pat Nevin was left in awe of Estevao Willian, who scored a stunning individual effort in a true breakout performance for the young Brazilian.

The Blues started as they meant to go on, almost inviting Hansi Flick’s high-line, baiting Barcelona in. The Spaniards were handed plenty of warning signs, too. Wesley Fofana’s hand spared their early blushes, before the linesman’s flag suggested that Flick had picked his tactic well for the trip to Stamford Bridge. But the inevitable was clear.

Come the 27th-minute, Barcelona and Jules Kounde completed the job that Enzo Fernandez believed he’d done twice prior by finding the back of the net to hand Chelsea the lead. The own goal opened the gate in a half of onslaught that simply did not rest after the break, when West London was treated to the Estevao show.

On a night centred around one of the early 2026 Ballon d’Or favourites Lamine Yamal, it was Chelsea’s youngster who shined brightest to score a wonderful goal in the 55th-minute. The 18-year-old is proving to be one of the best signings of the Todd Boehly era.

Aside from Ferran Torres’ wasted effort early on, Barcelona didn’t have a sniff against Enzo Maresca’s dominant side. This was no 2005 display from the Spanish club. Instead, it was excellency from the hosts in the Champions League as they secured their biggest-ever win against Barcelona.

The impressive victory has made it three wins from five in the Champions League and highlighted them as a potential dark horse. They’ve got plenty of history in European football these days and have just added another night to remember.

Pat Nevin blown away by "utterly brilliant" Estevao

When news emerged earlier this week that Cole Palmer has fractured his toe in a home accident, there may have been understandable concern around West London about where the Blues would continue to find their spark. But Estevao wouldn’t have shared that concern. He saw an opportunity – an opportunity that he’s taken with both hands against Barcelona, of all sides.

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He ended the evening with three chances created, one goal, eight touches inside the Barcelona box and deserved praise from Nevin. The former Chelsea man was blown away by the teenage sensation, telling BBC Sport: “You know what? Start believing the hype! Estevao Willian is EXTRA special!

“The way he goes past the first player, there is no space whatsoever and he leaves him for dead. He did it just by pure skill and fast feet. He still had a difficult angle to overcome to finish it but he leathered it into the net.

“He is going to be absolutely and utterly brilliant. It isn’t a question of if, it is a question of when and how good he is going to be.”

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The A’s Failed Their Sacramento Debut, but Sutter Health Park Largely Passed

Anyone arriving to this West Sacramento neighborhood on Monday evening, both a regular Monday and unlike any other Monday here before, must have felt, among so many swirling emotions and opinions and debates, predominantly … ?

Sure, at least 14,000-some-odd souls were headed to Sutter Health Park. And not for a minor league baseball game—which, under more typical circumstances, is precisely what would have unfolded. Not Monday. Oh, no. Those fortunate enough to score seats were headed to a Major League Baseball game. In Sacramento. Make that West Sacramento. The A’s new home. Er, temporary home. Well, O.K., more like their layover stadium on a lengthy relocation trip with a very long connection between the city they have already departed (Oakland, duh) and the city where they will reside (Las Vegas).

And yet, in the neighborhood near the park, only 90 minutes before the first pitch of the A’s “home” opener, the streets nearby were not choked with, well, anything or anyone. No traffic, let alone anything resembling a “jam.” Most parking lots sat empty. The rainstorm expected earlier in the day had not materialized after a morning downpour.

My Uber driver compared this Monday to any other Monday in this neighborhood, after revealing he hadn’t followed any sports since the COVID-19 pandemic.

“A cakewalk right here,” he says. “You sure there’s a game?”

Oh, yeah. On the official MLB schedule. Promise. Sold out. Secondary ticket market going bonkers, relative to normal. Just no … fans. Nobody outside the new apartment buildings, many still under construction. Nobody on the path ahead, the one pointed toward a golden overpass, the Tower Bridge which connects this neighborhood to downtown.

This wasn’t exactly a tumbleweeds scenario. It wasn’t exactly not a tumbleweeds scenario, either.

Was that a scoreboard glimmering with images and statistics in the near distance? A faint hint of bass, not yet thumping, in the same general direction?

Then: Street art, sprayed on a slab of concrete, with green dots and a long, green swirl—not unlike A’s colors, amirite?—and an apt phrase painted in pink. It read: .

Now we’re getting somewhere.

All sorts of signs peppered the Cabaldon Parkway, announcing the neighborhood that would soon host a bona fide MLB game. Right? The Bridge District. For a “home” that resembled more of a ghost town, this wasn’t a clue so much as a metaphor. That will be the juxtaposition in the next three seasons for a proud baseball franchise replete with significant players and eras and moments throughout the vast majority of MLB’s history, now in its 154th season.

Winds whipped those Bridge District banners. Nobody lingered at the intersection where visitors turn and head toward the main entrance. One guy—one!—stood at some gated-off entry that didn’t look accessible to anyone at all. One stadium worker, passing by this one guy, yelled out, “Love the A’s hat, baby! He’s VIP! Look at that face! It’s not pretty but it’s his!”

The park’s fences soon rounded into view. Then the park itself. And there it was, the next era of Athletics baseball, among so, so many eras of Athletics baseball, neatly summarized in empty streets, district banners and an innocuous comment. This park may not be pretty, at least in the traditional MLB park sense, but it’s theirs. These seasons will not be like previous A’s seasons. They will be, wait for it, bridge years for a franchise that can stay put, for years and for decades and for more than half-a-century in Oakland, and yet, this same franchise never stays in one place, not permanently. Not yet.

, then, began in earnest on Monday night.

"We never speak about this in here" – Slot stunned at Liverpool press conference

Liverpool boss Arne Slot is only worried about arresting his side’s worrying slump amid reports of him signing a new contract.

The Dutchman is facing the first real test of his Anfield reign as the Premier League champions have suffered four successive defeats as part of a wider run of six losses in seven games in all competitions.

Despite that, reports suggest Slot is in talks over a new deal, but that is not where his focus is.

Slot shocked at Liverpool question before Aston Villa

Asked about a possible new contract, he said ahead of Saturday’s clash with Aston Villa:

Serious questions are being asked of Liverpool and the cause of their severe drop off from the side that coasted to the title last season and won their opening seven competitive games this term.

Slot, who was keen to steer away from “excuses” for his side’s poor run but did cite injuries and a packed schedule, is confident his side have the quality to end their alarming slide.

“The thing that gives me the most confidence is the quality of the players,” he added.

“We have to address certain other things, but if I’m speaking about what we have to improve, people then tell me I’m using excuses.

“So maybe it’s better now just to say we need to address certain things. But there are a lot of positives to go into this week as well.

“We miss nothing. I am completely happy with the team and with all the quality that we have and I am also completely convinced by the strategy and the policy that we have.

Arne Slot sends message about Anfield atmosphere after Liverpool fans spotted leaving early

“But that makes the issue – if you call it an issue – is not all of them have had a proper pre-season or have been injured.

“When three or four are injured you go back to 16 players. I am a firm believer that 20 or 21 players is enough but you have to keep them fit as we did last season.

“It has been more difficult than last season to keep them all available and if a few of them are not available, it comes down a lot to the same players.

“Maybe last season we were more lucky and now we are more unlucky.

“But, no excuses for our results before people say this. We have had to play a lot of away games with only two days rest in-between and that would have been difficult for our players last season and players that have been fit all pre-season but that has not been our situation.

“It is nothing to do with the squad depth, it is how we’ve gone throughout the season in terms of injuries and availability.”

Alexander Isak and Allison Becker will again be missing for the Reds against Villa while Ryan Gravenberch will be assessed ahead of the match having returned to training.

Hesson slams 'unacceptable' Mirpur pitch

One game into the Bangladesh-Pakistan T20I series, the pitch at the Shere Bangla National Stadium has come under the scanner as expected.While Pakistan’s head coach Mike Hesson admitted that his batters hadn’t read the pitch correctly, he branded the surface as “unacceptable” for international cricket, after Pakistan were bowled out for 110.Related

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“I think (the pitch) is not ideal for anybody,” Hesson said. “Teams are trying to prepare for the Asia Cup or the (T20) World Cup. It is not acceptable. It is still no excuse for some of the decisions we made with the bat. But this pitch is not up to international standards.”Pakistan had slipped to 46 for 5 by the eighth over, with most of their batters falling while going for big shots. Pakistan’s cause wasn’t helped by three run-outs either, as they eventually folded in 19.3 overs.”We got off to a little bit of a flyer. Fakhar Zaman played four or five shots. It gave us a false indication about how the surface was playing,” Hesson said. “We didn’t help ourselves through the middle. We chose some poor options. When the ball started to nip through, and bounced steeply, we probably didn’t assess that it was a bit more challenging to play high-risk shots. Couple of run-outs also didn’t help.”Bangladesh opener Parvez Hossain Emon, however, disagreed with Hesson’s assessment of the pitch. Emon said that Bangladesh winning comfortably – by seven wickets and with 27 balls to spare – was an indication that the surface wasn’t all bad.”We didn’t feel (it was a bad pitch) as we chased it down in less than 16 overs,” he said. “We could have scored 150-160 runs if we batted the full 20 overs. It may be so that they couldn’t adjust to the pitch. We adjusted better than them. The Dhaka pitch usually benefits the bowlers. We tried to assess the wicket quickly. It was our first plan.”Hesson, though, felt such pitches wouldn’t help even Bangladesh prepare for sterner tests away from home.”You need good cricket wickets to develop cricketers. There was some good wickets during the BPL, to be fair. It is not up to the standard when international cricket is being played.”I don’t think it helps them when they leave Bangladesh. But I think also batting first in these situations is challenging. When you aren’t quite sure whether 100 or 130 or 150 is good enough. I don’t think (the pitch) is good for anybody. It still doesn’t take away the fact that you have to perform better in any surface. We will look at it as a team.”

بعد ارتباط اسمه بـ الزمالك.. نور الدين بن زكي: لن أدرب الصغار وانتمائي للسعودية

في تصريحات نارية تحمل الكثير من الرسائل، خرج المدرب الجزائري نور الدين بن زكري عن صمته بعد تداول أنباء حول اقترابه من تدريب عدة أندية من بينها الزمالك، ليؤكد أنه يرفض تمامًا فكرة قيادة الفرق الصغيرة، مشيرًا إلى أن خبرته الطويلة في الملاعب تجعله مؤهلًا فقط لتولي قيادة الأندية الكبرى والمنافسة على البطولات.

وقال بن زكري في حديثه لصحيفة “الرياضية” السعودية: “لست مدربًا صغيرًا، ولا أقبل أن يُحتقر تاريخي بترشيحي لتدريب فرق صغيرة، لديّ عدة عروض من أندية سعودية وخارجية، وما زلت أدرسها بعناية”.

وأوضح المدرب الجزائري أن هناك ما وصفه بـ عقدة الأجنبي داخل بعض الأندية السعودية، حيث يفضّل مسؤولوها التعاقد مع مدربين غربيين رغم وجود كفاءات عربية مميزة، مضيفًا أن الأرقام والنتائج التي حققها طوال مسيرته تتحدث عن نفسها.

طالع أيضًا | محامي جوميز يفتح النار عبر “بطولات” بعد إيقاف القيد: الزمالك تنصل من الاتفاق

وأكد: “أنتمي إلى السعودية بكل مشاعري، وسأبقى فيها حتى نهاية حياتي، فهي بلدي الثاني وأشعر أنني واحد من أبنائها”.

وعن الأنباء التي ربطته بتولي تدريب الزمالك أو النجمة السعودي، رفض زكري الخوض في التفاصيل، مكتفيًا بالقول: “لن أتحدث عن أي أسماء أو كيانات في الوقت الحالي، لكن العروض كثيرة ومتنوعة، وهذا أمر طبيعي بعد سنوات طويلة من العمل في السعودية”.

ويملك زكري سجلًا تدريبيًا حافلًا في الكرة السعودية، إذ قاد خمسة أندية هي: الرائد (2013-2014)، الفيحاء (2019)، ضمك (2019-2020)، الأخدود (2024)، وأخيرًا الخلود الذي أنهى معه مشواره الموسم الماضي، ومنذ رحيله لم يرتبط رسميًا بأي نادٍ جديد.

Aiden Markram's long walk off field the calm before a South Africa storm

Centurion reflects on the moment he knew Australia were broken before his own wave of emotions breaks

Andrew Miller14-Jun-20251:53

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Aiden Markram’s long walk back to the pavilion at the end of his epic, trophy-seizing century, ought by rights to have been one of the proudest, most self-reflective moments of his life.With a mere six runs still needed for World Test Championship glory, here was his chance to soak in the moment, and stride off the hallowed turf of Lord’s with a salute to all corners. Surely, with 136 fourth-innings runs to his name, Markram knew in his heart of hearts (if not quite in his frontal cortex) that he was the man who had just exorcised some 30 years of South Africa big-stage failure.That wasn’t quite how the man himself allowed the moment to unfold, however.”I wish I could have,” he said. “But that’s me being me when I get out. I’m always angry.”At least looking at the building in front was pretty special. And then, naturally, the walk up [the stairs] was incredibly special. So at least there’s one or two memories from that.”Related

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Markram’s reaction was perhaps the final vestige of South Africa’s suspension of belief. Despite all of the well-worn caveats that the nation has learned to factor into impending glory, the thronging support in the stands had long since abandoned their reticence. Perhaps the biggest clue that the game was up, however, came from the reaction of Australia’s own fielders.Travis Head’s sharp take at midwicket created barely a flicker of recognition. For most people in the crowd, the first inkling that Markram was out came as he clasped his own helmet in agony and turned on his heel. But soon afterwards it was clear, as one by one, the Australians trooped up to shake his hand. It was wonderfully magnanimous in the moment, but their body language wasn’t just beaten, but broken.”I noticed it for sure,” Markram said. “Obviously, it was a great touch from their side. There’s quite a bit of banter had on the field. But all is well that ends well, I guess. It’s always nice to be appreciated from that position.”Perhaps he’s still in a trance, still locked into the duty of delivering an innings that, by every conceivable measure – grandness of occasion, fourth innings, and against a relentless attack of unprecedented quality and longevity – earns it the right to be considered the greatest Test innings ever produced by a South African.”Nothing’s hit me just yet, so maybe that’s a good thing, but something needs to hit me soon, to get out all the emotions, because it’s been a bit of a rollercoaster.”It was Aiden Markram’s third fourth-innings hundred•ICC/Getty Images

But there was a moment, as Markram marched through to his century late on the third evening, when the mask cracked and the enormity of his performance seemed ready to engulf him. With a stiff upper lip that would doubtless have earned the approval of the many English public-school boys in the stands, he quickly gulped down his emotions – though not without ducking a request for a close-of-play word to the cameras – and reset himself to perform his duty.”Yeah, it was weird last night. I was pretty emotional,” he said. “From about quarter past five, the game had slowed down. I had a bit of time to look around and see all the fans, the family, all the mates that were there … I was looking at the changing room. I was like, ‘Yes, we are now getting close’, and it caught me off guard. Then the hundred happened, and a couple of tears leaked out that I was trying to fight.”Markram reached the close on 102 not out and, with just 69 runs still to get on the final day, he went on to sleep “horribly”.”I tried to take a sleeping tablet, it didn’t work,” he said. “The mind just couldn’t switch off. But fortunately, today wasn’t ever going to be a full day, so I knew it would be fine.”Markram went the full journey in the course of this contest. Way back on that frenzied opening day, he epitomised South Africa’s hunger with his highly-strung display in the slips – first, by being the distraction as he dived across David Bedingham from second slip, then by clinging on as Wiaan Mulder repeated the dose from third, as Kagiso Rabada cranked open the contest with two Australian wickets in four balls.Later that day, his lesser-heralded offspin extracted a well-set Steven Smith for 66, and on the stroke of lunch on Friday, he finally ended Australia’s dogged tenth-wicket stand as Josh Hazlewood holed out to cover.In between whiles, however, he had also fallen for a sixth-ball duck in South Africa’s ropey start to their batting display. And, having made 4 from five balls as captain in Barbados last June, as South Africa’s last appearance in an ICC final fell agonisingly short of glory, he admitted that the urge to stay in the moment was his single biggest driver, when his chance came again to steer his country’s fortunes.Aiden Markram got a well-deserved drink from a friend in the stands•PA Images via Getty Images

“I thought a lot about the T20 World Cup last night and how hopeless I felt sitting on the side after getting out,” he said. “I was like, I don’t want to sit there again. So, this gave me a bit of motivation to make sure I stayed at the crease, if I could. But never once thought about the achievements and what would come with it. It was always about just trying to get the job done and trying to win.”That mindset meant that, throughout his game-breaking 147-run stand with Temba Bavuma, there was never any question about backing up his captain’s desire to soldier on, even after his left hamstring gave way just six runs into his critical knock of 66 that spanned three-and-a-quarter hours.”To see his hammy go was obviously a bit worrying,” Markram said. “We got to tea, and he said he felt he could still keep going, but he wanted to know from my side if the twos becoming ones would affect me.”I said, ‘there’s no chance’. It’s about the partnership, staying out there for longer, getting the ball even softer, even older, and that’s exactly what he did. He still managed to run twos and threes, so I think there was a lot of adrenaline there, but he showed a lot of leadership and character. Maybe not the big, big numbers, but the ones that really make a difference, and that was tremendous for us.”Besides being his most important innings, this was also Markram’s third century in five Tests against Australia, a team against whom he is clearly primed to raise his game. “Australians and South Africans are pretty similar,” he said. “They play the game hard, they play the game to compete, they play the game to really win, and it brings out the best in us. It’s just a battle between two teams that really don’t have any interest in losing.”And now, South Africa are the World Test Champions – an accolade earned in spite of the many well-documented brickbats they faced in the build-up, both in terms of their unusual route to this final, as well as the baggage that such a contest brings with it. “It’s as big and as tough as it gets,” Markram said. “All the questions that have been asked in the past have fortunately now been answered.”And now, at the very last, perhaps he’ll get his chance to savour the moment, now that he has lived it to the fullest. The first inkling of this occurred in the moments before the presentation, amid the melee on the outfield, and the tears and euphoria of his team-mates.Markram was beckoned by a familiar face in the stands, and after some initial hesitation, he trotted over to let his personal party begin.”Yeah, that was cool,” he said. “That was one of my mates from school. He wanted me to come over. And I was like, ‘man, I can’t, it’s too busy. It’s chaos’. And then he was like, ‘Oh, here’s a beer’ … and I was like, okay! I’ve had my first one for today, and I’m pretty sure there’ll be a few more.”

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