Arsenal's injury list: When will William Saliba and Oleksandr Zinchenko return to boost Mikel Arteta?

Find out the latest Arsenal injury news and expected return dates for Gunners stars who are currently in the treatment room

Arsenal are still in the hunt for the Premier League title, with the Gunners currently sitting one point behind Manchester City with three games remaining.

But Mikel Arteta's has seen his squad hit by some injury and fitness issues in recent weeks as they attempt to keep up the pressure on Pep Guardiola's side.

So what’s the latest when it comes to injuries at Arsenal ahead of Sunday's crucial game against Brighton? GOAL takes a look.

Getty ImagesWhat's the latest with William Saliba?

Arsenal's centre-back was forced off with a back injury during the first half of the Europa League second leg defeat by Sporting CP.

The injury has seen Saliba miss Arsenal's last eight games and he is not expected to play any further part in the season due to the ongoing problem.

Expected return date: A return date for Saliba is not yet known, but Arsenal will hope he is fully fit in time for the start of pre-season.

Advertisement(C)Getty ImagesWhat about Takehiro Tomiyasu?

Arsenal's right-back left the Emirates Stadium on crutches following the defeat by Sporting CP in the Europa League.

The injury came in the opening stages of the game when he slipped while making a challenge and his knee seemed to twist under him.

Arsenal have since confirmed that the injury will rule Tomiyasu out for the season, with the defender having been forced to undergo surgery.

Expected return date: Arsenal confirmed in their statement about Tomiyasu that they hoped to have him fit to start pre-season training in the summer.

GettyIs Oleksandr Zinchenko OK?

Zinchenko picked up a calf problem during the second half of the 2-0 win at Newcastle.

The left-back will miss Sunday's game against Brighton and is not expected to play any further part in the campaign.

Expected return date: Zinchenko is expected to be fit for the start of pre-season.

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Getty ImagesHow about Mohamed Elneny?

The Egyptian midfielder has not played since the win at Oxford United in the FA Cup third round.

Arsenal announced that Elneny had to undergo surgery on his right knee and would be sidelined for an 'extended' period of time.

Elneny is now back out working on the grass, but will not be fit to feature in any of Arsenal's remaining three matches.

Expected return date: Elneny is not expected to play again this season, but should be ready for the start of pre-season.

Alisson should be pinning Liverpool flops up against the wall! Winners, losers & ratings from Forest horror show

Taiwo Awoniyi struck as Nottingham Forest heaped more misery on Liverpool with a 1-0 win at the City Ground.

Of all the people, in all the games. Taiwo Awoniyi spent seven years as a Liverpool player, yet never got the chance to pull on a Liverpool shirt in a competitive match. He had loan after loan, never realising his dream of representing the Reds.

But here, at the City Ground, he broke his former club’s heart, his goal handing the other Reds, Nottingham Forest, their first Premier League win since August and proving that for all the talk of a revival after recent wins against Manchester City and West Ham, the foundations of Jurgen Klopp’s side are still shaky, to say the least.

Liverpool were nothing like fluent as Forest defended doggedly, dragged Klopp's side into a battle and then buried them early in the second half through Awoniyi.

The Nigerian was on hand to convert from close range after Ryan Yates’ initial effort had struck the post. It was his third goal since his summer move from Union Berlin, and enough to secure the points as Liverpool, for the second time this season, dropped points away to a newly-promoted side. 

They have now lost more league games this season than in the whole of the last campaign. Their mini-revival is well and truly over.

Forest, meanwhile, can celebrate a win that will be talked about for years, and which could really get their campaign going after a tough start.

Getty ImagesThe Winners

Taiwo Awoniyi:

It had to be him, didn't it? The Nigeria international is nothing if not resilient. He showed that during a succession of loan spells while a Liverpool player, heading to Belgium and Holland before finding a home in Berlin. He's in Nottingham now, and days like this will ensure he feels the love forever from the fans. His goal was a poacher's effort, the right man in the right place to convert after the ball had rebounded off the post, but it was Awoniyi who created the chaos in the first place, his persistence forcing Joe Gomez into an error on the ball, with the Liverpool man dragging him back to concede the free-kick. The rest, as they say, is history. Awoniyi left to the loudest cheers of the afternoon soon after, his job done on a big day.

Steve Cooper:

The Liverpool connection at Forest is strong. As well as Awoniyi, there was Neco Williams, the Reds academy graduate, battling away out of position at left-back against Harvey Elliott, Mohamed Salah and Co. And then there's the manager, a one-time youth coach at Kirkby, now the man tasked with re-establishing the Garibaldi Reds as a top-flight club after 23 years in the wilderness. Cooper pulled a masterstroke here, his team defending superbly, competing for every first ball, every second ball, protecting their penalty area and breaking with menace when they could. His players, to a man, gave everything, and earned their win. They needed their goalkeeper at the end, but had it not been for Liverpool's, Forest might have added extra gloss to the scoreline. As it is, 1-0 is more than enough.

Alisson Becker:

If Liverpool's goalkeeper has anything about him, he'll have been pinning a few of his teammates up against the dressing room wall after this. After all, if he can do his job to the best of his abilities, why can't the rest? The Brazilian is the only starter – the possible exception of Elliott aside – to emerge with any credit here, an all-too-familiar tale in a season of woe for Jurgen Klopp. Alisson was helpless as Forest grabbed the winner, his defence flat-footed and failing to defend a deep set-piece. The goalkeeper then reacted superbly to keep out first Brennan Johnson and then Ryan Yates, as the Premier League's bottom club twice broke clear. He found himself in the Forest penalty area in the dying stages, and was close to converting a rebound of his own after Van Dijk's header was saved. That Liverpool needed him to, however, says everything.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesThe Losers

Liverpool's attack:

Good luck putting a highlights reel together for this one. After thrilling against Manchester City and grinding it out against West Ham, the hope was that Liverpool, belatedly, had clicked into gear. But they've never won at the City Ground in the Premier League, and they didn't deserve to change that record here. They were without stars – Diogo Jota and Luis Diaz are sidelined, Darwin Nunez wasn't risked and Thiago Alcantara went down with an ear infection overnight – but they were equally without incision, without quality, seemingly without belief. They had some chances – Van Dijk should have done better with a couple of headers – but Salah and Roberto Firmino were anonymous, Fabio Carvalho only flickered and Harvey Elliott, like Curtis Jones, did his best work too far from goal. Trent Alexander-Arnold added something, but it was 1-0 by the time he was summoned. Too late.

Joe Gomez:

He must have thought he'd gotten away with it. A yellow card, yes, but a necessary one. Having dawdled in possession on the halfway line, Gomez had seen Awoniyi cut out his attempted pass to Van Dijk, forcing the defender into a desperate grab of the shirt. It proved costly; from the free-kick, Forest fired the ball in from the right, the ball ricocheted against the post and Awoniyi pounced. Gomez was man of the match against City last week, but since then he's given up a penalty against West Ham and delivered this shaky display at Forest – one which ended with him being berated by his manager for being too timid in a challenge. Like Liverpool, he has shown flashes of his old self, but been unable to build any real momentum.

Fabinho:

We need to talk about Liverpool's 'lighthouse'. For so long, Fabinho has been the centrepiece of the Reds' midfield, but his form right now is a huge concern. He looks shattered, his legs refusing to do what his brain wants. He is too easily bypassed, too easily beaten and his quality on the ball isn't good enough to compensate. Sure, he was without his usual sidekicks here – Curtis Jones, making his first start since May, was his partner to begin with – but this is a senior player we're talking about in Fabinho. He isn't playing like one.

Getty ImagesLiverpool Ratings: Defence

Alisson Becker (8/10):

Faultless handling and made two big saves at 1-0. Nearly scrambled an equaliser. Blameless.

James Milner (6/10):

He and Elliott looked the most likely to open up Forest in the first half. Milner put one on a plate for Van Dijk and defended well. After the break he set Elliott up well before being subbed.

Joe Gomez (5/10):

Had his hands full with Awoniyi and he lost the battle. His foul led to the goal, and he struggled after that. Got a telling off from Klopp for being too timid in the second half.

Virgil van Dijk (6/10):

Wasted a great headed chance first half and should have done better with one late on. Otherwise, he did well defensively.

Andy Robertson (6/10):

Not able to get forward as much, but when he did he was dangerous. Looked tired towards the end.

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Getty ImagesMidfield

Fabinho (4/10):

His form has to be a huge concern for Jurgen Klopp. Not enough presence, not enough quality. He looks laboured, lethargic, leggy, everything but himself.

Curtis Jones (6/10):

Showed confidence and composure to ask for the ball and take it under pressure throughout, though he didn't make the breakthrough in the final third. Did well to last 90 minutes after so long out.

Man City vs Liverpool: Who are their greatest African players?

Ahead of their showdown on Sunday, GOAL rank the 10 greatest African players to play for the Premier League title contenders

Photo by Alex Livesey/Getty Images10Ali Benarbia

Manchester City pulled off a coup when they recruited Algeria’s Benarbia from Paris Saint-Germain in 2001, with the North African having won the Ligue 1 Player of the Year award two years previously.

He was influential as the Sky Blues won promotion to the Premier League under Kevin Keegan, but struggled to impose himself in the top flight.

He also represented AS Monaco, Bordeaux and Martigues, and was named Algerian footballer of the year in 2002.

AdvertisementGetty Images9Wilfried Bony

Bony was previously Africa’s most expensive player ever, costing Manchester City £28 million when he moved from Swansea City at the beginning of 2015.

However, he struggled for game time due to injuries and increased competition from Sergio Aguero and Iheanacho, and departed on a season-long loan to Stoke City on transfer deadline day as his Etihad Stadium career came to an end.

He subsequently moved back to Swansea City, and is currently with Eredivisie club NEC Nijmegen.

Getty8Emmanuel Adebayor

Adebayor has often been a polarising figure in world football.

It seems that, as soon as he starts to get the fans on his side, he does something that conjures up the ire of his supporters.

He has represented a host of high-profile clubs, including Spanish giants Real Madrid and Arsenal, among others, and departed the Gunners for Manchester City in 2009 for a fee believed to be about £25 million, making him, at one point, Africa's most expensive player.

He remained at the Etihad Stadium until 2011, when he joined Tottenham Hotspur.

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Getty7Bruce Grobbelaar

The Zimbabwe stopper is remembered as one of Africa’s finest goalkeepers in history…and is certainly the most successful.

He was a key man in one of Liverpool’s greatest sides, winning six titles and three domestic cups during his time at Anfield.

He was influential as the Reds won the European Cup in 1984, putting AS Roma’s strikers off with his infamous bandy legs in the final shootout.

Only by playing Full Members can we learn how to beat them – Stanikzai

Asghar Stanikzai, the Afghanistan captain, has joined the chorus of Associate voices calling for more opportunities to play against Full Members

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Mar-2016Asghar Stanikzai, the Afghanistan captain, has joined the chorus of Associate voices calling for more opportunities to play against Full Members. Speaking to the media on the eve of his team’s World T20 clash with Sri Lanka, Stanikzai said the level of talent in Afghanistan was evident from their remarkable climb up the cricketing ladder over the last decade, and said the gap between Full Members and Associates would only narrow from more regular competiton.”You can’t make big comparisons between Afghanistan and other Associates,” Stanikzai said. “Many other Associates have been playing for the last 30 to 40 years, participating in World Cups and other events. But if you see Afghanistan’s history at the elite level, we have only been playing for the last 6-7 years.”In that time we have achieved what other nations couldn’t do in 30-40 years. It shows how much talent Afghanistan have to play at the elite level. Definitely we need more games against the Full Members, it can increase our experience in the game.”Pointing to Afghanistan’s recent ODI and T20 series wins over Zimbabwe, both home and away, Stanikzai said his side had what it took to beat a Full Member side.”If we play against other Associate countries, we will get experience from each other, but if you play with a Full Member, like we did against Zimbabwe in ODIs and T20s, you learn how to beat them. We now have that experience. As long as we play more games against Full Members, the distance between Associates and Full Members will reduce.”Looking ahead to the game against Sri Lanka, Stanikzai was confident Afghanistan had the quality to pull off a win.”We have some game-changers, and we have not qualified for the Super 10s just to participate. We are ready to challenge some big teams.”Looking back to Afghanistan’s impressive display against Sri Lanka in the 2015 World Cup, where a century from Mahela Jayawardene prevented a potential upset, Stanikzai said the absence of the now retired Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara raised Afghanistan’s hopes.”We came close against Sri Lanka in the 2015 World Cup but their experienced batsmen, particularly Mahela Jayawardene, played outstandingly to beat us. This time most of their players are new; this time we have a good chance to beat them.”

Cosgrove and Cooper cut by South Australia

Experienced batsmen Mark Cosgrove and Tom Cooper have lost their contracts with South Australia after a summer in which neither man had a significant impact on the Sheffield Shield campaign

ESPNcricinfo staff15-Apr-2016Experienced batsmen Mark Cosgrove and Tom Cooper have lost their contracts with South Australia after a summer in which neither man had a significant impact on the Sheffield Shield campaign. The 2015-16 season was one of regeneration for the Redbacks, who were runners-up in both the Shield final and the Matador Cup final, and were pleased at the emergence of several young players.Cosgrove, 31, played every match in the Shield campaign but failed to pass 65 in any innings, scoring 565 runs at 26.90. Cooper, 29, scored 249 runs at 17.78 in his seven Shield games but was more effective in the one-day competition, where he was among the top ten run scorers for the tournament and posted a fighting century in the final.Instead of the experienced duo, the Redbacks will put their faith in younger batsmen such as Jake Lehmann, Jake Weatherald, Alex Ross, Sam Raphael and Kelvin Smith. Weatherald has earned his first South Australia contract, while other inclusions are Alex Carey, Patrick Page and the spinner Tom Andrews, who has been upgraded from a rookie deal.Along with Cosgrove – who began his career with the Redbacks before moving to Tasmania and then returning home in 2014 – and Cooper, South Australia have also cut the fast bowler Gary Putland and the rookie fast bowler Nick Winter. Putland, 30, played four Matador Cup matches last season but did not figure in the Shield campaign, although injuries affected his summer.”We’re really excited to have Alex, Jake, Tom and Patrick in our senior squad after some outstanding efforts from them this year,” Tim Nielsen, South Australia’s general manager of high performance, said. “Their inclusion into the squad is another example of the successful pathways implemented in South Australian cricket, as well as the exciting talent pool we have in this state at the moment and we’re confident they’ll have long futures with the Redbacks moving forward.”It’s never easy to see experienced players go, especially when they have been an important part of the team for such a long time, but we’re confident we still have a good balance of youth and experience in our side. We have no doubt that all of the players who missed out on a contract will still be in selection plans if they are performing for their respective Premier Cricket clubs.”New South Australia rookies for 2016-17 include fast bowlers Wes Agar and David Grant, and opening batsman John Dalton. Agar, 19, is the younger brother of Australia representative Ashton Agar.South Australia squad Travis Head (capt), Tom Andrews, Nick Benton, Alex Carey, Callum Ferguson, Jake Lehmann, Tim Ludeman, Joe Mennie, Patrick Page, Sam Raphael, Kane Richardson, Alex Ross, Chadd Sayers, Kelvin Smith, Jake Weatherald, Daniel Worrall, Adam Zampa.
Rookies Wes Agar, John Dalton, David Grant, Alex Gregory, Harry Nielsen, Cameron Valente.

'Thrived with every match I played' – Yasir

Yasir Shah, who has become the fastest Pakistan bowler to 50 Test wickets, has said his only aim is to do the best he can for his country

Umar Farooq in Colombo26-Jun-2015Before the Test series started, Zulfiqar Babar confidently predicted that Yasir Shah would take more wickets than him, and Yasir’s bowling numbers so far have emphatically proved him right. In just eight months, Yasir has made his journey from oblivion to become the fastest Pakistan bowler to take 50 Test wickets, surpassing Pakistan’s coach Waqar Younis.Yasir said he was happy to achieve the record which would further strengthen his confidence. “I still remember when Shane Warne tweeted me, that gave me ample confidence,” Yasir said after the second day in Colombo. “With his words I was under pressure, thinking how I will live up to his appreciation but with every match I played since then I have started to thrive.”I never thought that far [on being the fastest Pakistan bowler to 50 wickets] when I made my debut against Australia. The only aim was to just concentrate on doing good for the country. I knew in Test cricket I needed to be patient and I did exactly what needed to be done. Misbah has supported me all the way. For a legspinner, the field placement is very important and I am glad that the captain is giving me enough freedom to set the field.”After making his first-class debut in 2002, Yasir got his chance in Test chance last year, and has since left an indelible mark in the format. He took nine wickets in Galle, which included figures of 7 for 76 in the second innings – the best by an overseas bowler in Tests in Sri Lanka. After more than a decade on the domestic circuit, Yasir is not only acknowledged but also respected. On day two in the press box, Pakistan’s consistency in developing world-class bowlers was repeatedly commended.Yasir’s 13-year first-class career includes 336 wickets at an average of 25.05. He is one of many bowling prospects who had been pushed back with the burgeoning success of Saeed Ajmal in the last five years. He took his second five-for in the space of five days in the second Test in Colombo, after bowling 40 overs – the most by any bowler from both sides so far, primarily because Pakistan have lost Wahab Riaz for the rest of the series due to injury.After the first Test, Sri Lanka targetted Yasir as a tactic to neutralise him but it was to no effect as Yasir troubled the batsmen with his impressive variations and kept a check on the run rate, going at an economy rate of 2.37 in his 40 overs. Sri Lanka managed to hit him for 10 fours but kept on losing wickets at regular intervals.”The pitch is still playing well but expect more spin on the fourth and fifth day, it has definitely something to offer. Today the idea was to avoid bowling short and wait for the wickets to come and it worked. Unfortunately, Wahab Riaz got injured and we were forced to play with one bowler short. But the rest have given their 100%, though I had to bowl bit longer. But the plan remained the same to contain as much as we can.”

Crowd support softens tough tour for Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe’s cricketers are being rewarded for their historic tour of Pakistan by having the red carpet rolled out for them and experiencing the kind of treatment they rarely get

Firdose Moonda26-May-2015Zimbabwe’s cricketers are being rewarded for their historic tour of Pakistan by having the red carpet rolled out for them and experiencing the kind of treatment they rarely get. While they have gone public with their appreciation through their tweets, they’ve matched that in their off-record comments.”They have really pulled out all the stops for us. We are being treated extremely well,” one player told ESPNcricinfo.Unlike their South African, English, Australian or Indian contemporaries, Zimbabwe’s cricketers are on modest pay-cheques, which sometimes do not get paid on time or at all. When they play at home, especially in Harare, the team do not stay at a hotel but at their own homes. They do not travel in a team bus, but by their own means. Now, all that has changed.When Zimbabwe are escorted to the stadium for training and match days in Lahore, it is by an armed guard, something they expected before leaving. One of the players said the team had heard at least 3,500 security personnel had been deployed for their trip. Their movements have been restricted by the security arrangements but several Zimbabwe cricketers took to Twitter to open the channels of communication even before leaving. They retweeted messages from Pakistani fans promising their safety and have since continued sharing their experience on that platform.Craig Ervine is the most notable example. Before leaving for Pakistan, he posted this message on Twitter:

His message was well-received by Pakistan fans.

On the eve of the first T20 last Friday, Ervine said:

On the day of the game, which he did not eventually play, Ervine tweeted:

Zimbabwe have been enjoying the hospitality and warm reception of fans off the field, too. The team is staying at the Pearl Continental Hotel, an establishment frequented by state presidents, and not at the National Cricket Academy as originally planned. The PCB changed the venue after deciding housing people in the stadium would create the impression the country was not ready for visitors.The change of location means that Zimbabwe’s touring party will see a little more than just the Gaddafi Stadium precinct but not much more. Their travel is limited to the hotel and the ground with shopping, sightseeing or even general roaming around strictly forbidden.

Mumbai cruise into semis

Medium-pacer Balwinder Sandhu claimed three of the six wickets on the last day in Cuttack as Mumbai cruised past Delhi by 204 runs and sealed their semi-final spot

ESPNcricinfo staff20-Feb-2015
ScorecardFile photo: Balwinder Sandhu took three wickets on the last day•FotocorpMedium-pacer Balwinder Sandhu claimed three of the six wickets on the last day in Cuttack as Mumbai cruised past Delhi by 204 runs and sealed their semi-final spot.Chasing 441, Delhi mounted some resistance through Rajat Bhatia’s 49 off 122 balls, after Shardul Thakur dismissed the overnight batsman, Manan Sharma, for 16 in the fifth over of the day. Bhatia added 33 with Virender Sehwag to take Delhi to 150. Sandhu, however, ended the stand in the 56th over, bowling Sehwag for 19. Sehwag came out to bat at No. 7, because a viral prevented him from taking the field for much of Mumbai’s second innings.It was not long before left-arm spinner Harmeet Singh dismissed Bhatia and Sumit Narwal, as Delhi subsided from an overnight 110 for 4 to 199 for 9. The last-wicket pair of Pradeep Sangwan and Parvinder Awana put on 37 to frustrate Mumbai, but all it did was reduce the margin of defeat.Sandhu finished with figures of 3 for 35, while Wilkin Mota and Harmeet took two apiece.

Handscomb, Marshall respond to Horton 168

An unbroken 130-run partnership between fourth-wicket pair Peter Handscomb and Hamish Marshall after tea on day three ensured Gloucestershire took charge against Lancashire at Old Trafford.

Press Association12-May-2015
ScorecardPaul Horton’s 168 was essential to keep Lancashire in check•PA PhotosAn unbroken 130-run partnership between fourth-wicket pair Peter Handscomb and Hamish Marshall after tea on day three ensured Gloucestershire took charge against Lancashire at Old Trafford.The visitors gained a of 24 on first innings on the stroke of lunch during today’s third day, which could have been far greater but for Paul Horton who compled a 298-ball innings of 168 – his fifth score above 150 in 12 years of Championship cricket.Gloucestershire built on their slender lead second time around to close with a healthy lead of 230 and a chance to push for what would only be a ninth victory in Lancashire in their history.When fledgling Australian Handscomb and veteran New Zealander Marshall came together in the early stages of the evening, Gloucestershire were 76 for 3 in the 27th over with a lead of 100 and the contest in the balance.Peter Siddle struck twice with the new ball inside the first eleven overs as Gloucestershire’s slipped to 30 for 2, with first-innings centurion Chris Dent one of his scalps. Dent lost his off-stump as he offered no shot before Gareth Roderick, late on one that nipped back appreciably, was trapped lbw. Nathan Buck later picked up his first Red Rose wicket as Will Tavare played on for 34, and Lancashire had their tails up.But Handscomb and Marshall regained the momentum during their 36.5 overs together in what remain decent batting conditions. Both players brought up their fifties inside the last hour of play, with Handscomb’s coming off 99 balls and Marshall’s second of the match coming off 83. They will begin day four on 74 and 71 not out respectively.Not only do Lancashire have to work out a way of bowling Gloucestershire out, they also have to keep an eye on their over-rate as they ended the day at minus two.Earlier, Liam Norwell took two of the four Lancashire wickets to fall for 17 runs to finish with 4 for 95. Horton fell five short of his best score in county cricket – 173 against Somerset at Taunton in 2009 – having shared an 82-run partnership inside 28 overs for the seventh wicket with Siddle. Their stand started during the latter stages of day two, and they took Lancashire to within 41 of Gloucestershire’s total before Siddle was trapped lbw by Norwell for 40, leaving the score at 347 for 7 in the 104th over of the innings.Horton was caught behind in Norwell’s next over with 350 on the board before Craig Miles had Buck caught at second slip and Tom Smith’s left-arm spin accounted for Kyle Jarvis, caught by Norwell running from cover towards point.Gloucestershire batsman Hamish Marshall said: “It’s nice to have finished the day well. Three down for a 230 lead is a position we’d have liked to have been in at the start of the day. We’ve got that. We’ve now got to work out how we can get ourselves in a position to put pressure on Lancashire and win the game.”Siddle and Jarvis are quality bowlers, and they asked a lot of questions in the first innings. In this innings, they got some early poles. It was nice to get a partnership going and put them under pressure. If we can give ourselves some overs with runs on the board, we’ll have a crack at trying to win the game.”Lancashire bowler Peter Siddle added: “I think we batted pretty well this morning to get us into the position we got to, but it was a bit disappointing not to eek a few more runs out and get in front. The way we started with the ball that second dig with a few early wickets, credit goes to their last partnership. They batted well and batted time. They were patient. It’s made for an interesting day tomorrow.”The pitch has played pretty well for the last couple of days really. Day one was a bit up and down, and we thought it was going to deteriorate a lot more. It’s played pretty well. We need a couple of quick wickets. If we don’t get them, it does make it hard for us to get in front of the game.”

Soumya Sarkar leads Prime Bank to title win

Round-up of the Dhaka Premier Division matches played on January 4, 2015

ESPNcricinfo staff04-Jan-2015Prime Bank Cricket Club clinched their maiden Dhaka Premier Division Cricket League title after beating Abahani by nine wickets. They have become the eighth club to win the league, the country’s most popular domestic competition.Prime Bank were already holding a two-point advantage over Prime Doleshwar Sporting Club before the final round of Super League matches, but they still needed a win in Mirpur on Sunday to confirm the championship. After the first phase had ended, this encounter was touted to be the virtual final after both Abahani and Prime Bank were chasing each other at the top of the points table. But after Abahani’s one-wicket loss to Kalabagan Krira Chakra in the last round of matches, they were out of the race altogether.Prime Bank’s path in this game was made even smoother when Abahani were bowled out for 160 runs in 44.2 overs. Nasir Hossain made 55 but it was Farhad Reza’s 4 for 17 in 9.2 overs that did all the damages.Soumya Sarkar, who took two wickets, then made 97 off 91 balls with seven fours and as many sixes to seal Prime Bank’s chase. They won with 22.3 overs to spare, with Saikat Ali making 58 not out and the opening pair added 155 runs for the first wicket.Prime Doleshwar Sporting Club finished second in the competition with a three-wicket win over Mohammedan Sporting Club at BKSP-3.Batting first, Mohammedan made 220 for 9 in 50 overs with Mohammad Mithun top-scoring with 45. Shafiul Islam and Asif Ahmed took three wickets each.The Doleshwar openers, Rony Talukdar and Mehedi Maruf, once again gave them a good start, adding 117 runs in 22 overs. Maruf struck six fours and a six in his 82-ball 58 while Talukdar’s 63 came off just 61 balls with five fours and two sixes.They stuttered slightly before reaching the 221-run target in 48.5 overs. Mohammad Nabi, the Afghanistan captain, took two wickets for Mohammedan, who finished in sixth position.In the day’s third match, Anamul Haque’s 150 helped Kalabagan Cricket Academyto a 38-run win over Legends of Rupganj in Fatullah.Anamul struck seven fours and ten sixes in his 146-ball knock as KCA made 288 for 3 in 50 overs. Apart from Anamul, Nafees Iqbal made 52 while Imtiaz Hossain struck 42.In reply, Rupganj were restricted to 250 for 6 in 50 overs as Junaid Siddique top-scored with 50, and all their batsmen, who were dismissed, reached double figures. Bishawnath Haldar took two wickets.

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