مران الزمالك | انتظام الثنائي الدولي.. ورسائل خاصة من عبد الرؤوف

يواصل الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بنادي الزمالك، استعداداته لمواجهة حرس الحدود في الجولة الثانية من بطولة كأس الرابطة المقررة يوم 20 ديسمبر الجاري.

وعقد أحمد عبد الرؤوف، المدير الفني، جلسة مع لاعبيه قبل انطلاق مران اليوم الأحد على استاد الكلية الحربية، ضمن الاستعدادات لمواجهة حرس الحدود.

وأوضح عبد الرؤوف خلال الجلسة، برنامج الإعداد للمباراة، وناقش بعض الأمور الفنية التي سيتم تنفيذها خلال التدريبات.

طالع..  شبهة إهدار مال عام.. النيابة تصدر بيانًا رسميًا بشأن أرض الزمالك المسحوبة ومنح مدرب الزمالك اللاعبين تعليمات دقيقة حول أدوار كل لاعب داخل الملعب، مؤكّدًا على ضرورة التركيز وبذل أقصى جهد لضمان تحقيق الفوز.

وشهد المران انتظام محمود حمدي “الونش” ومحمد عواد، بعد عودتهما من صفوف منتخب مصر المشارك في بطولة كأس العرب، حيث شاركا في التدريبات البدنية والفنية ضمن برنامج الإعداد للمباراة المقبلة.

واحتوى المران على فقرة تدريبات بدنية متنوعة قادها نونو كوستا ريبيرو، مدرب الأحمال، تلتها فقرة خاصة بالكرة، قبل أن يختتم الجهاز الفني المران بتقسيمة تطبيقية، ركزت خلالها على الجوانب الخططية، مع توجيه مستمر للاعبين.

Jen Pawol to Make MLB History As First Woman to Umpire MLB Game

Jen Pawol is set to make Major League Baseball history this weekend.

The 48-year-old will become the first woman to work as an umpire during a regular-season MLB game. She will umpire three games during the series between the Miami Marlins and Atlanta Braves. That will include both games of a doubleheader on Saturday and the series finale on Sunday. She will be behind the plate calling balls and strikes on Sunday.

Due to the doubleheader, the umpiring crew needed to add a fifth umpire, which led to Pawol getting the assignment.

Pawol began umpiring professionally in 2016 at rookie ball, then steadily began climbing up the ranks. In '23, she became the first woman to umpire at the Triple A level in 34 years. She was behind the plate during the Triple A championship that fall.

In 2024, Pawol was the first woman to umpire a spring training game since '07, and she was a Triple A crew chief that season. She has a long track record during a steady climb to the big leagues.

Pawol played softball at Hofstra and was a member of the U.S. women's national baseball team that won the inaugural Baseball Women's World Series in 2001.

She has already broken barriers in her career as an umpire. She's set to make more history this weekend.

E o Gabigol? Flamengo define time para jogo contra o Amazonas; veja escalação

MatériaMais Notícias

O Flamengo relacionou Gabigol para o jogo contra o Amazonas, nesta quarta-feira (1), pela Copa do Brasil, e definiu a escalação do confronto.

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➡️ Tudo sobre o Mengão agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso canal Lance! Flamengo

➡️ Vai ter gol do Gabigol? Aposte R$ 100 e fature R$ 263 se Flamengo e Amazonas balançarem as redes na Copa do Brasil!

Apesar de estar relacionado, Gabigol fica no banco de reservas do Rubro-Negro diante do Amazonas. Pedro será o centroavante, com o garoto Lorran e Bruno Henrique no ataque.

Tite ainda promoveu mais mudanças no time. Viña, por exemplo, será o titular da lateral, e Ayrton Lucas será preservado. Gerson, capitão, e Allan também estão na equipe.

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Sem Gabigol, a escalação do Flamengo para enfrentar o Amazonas é: Matheus Cunha; Varela, Fabrício Bruno, Léo Pereira e Viña; Allan, Gerson e De La Cruz; Lorran, Pedro e Bruno Henrique.

Gabigol está de volta após ser suspenso por tentativa de fraude em exame antidoping e fica como opção no banco de reservas. Ele obteve efeito suspensivo e foi liberado.

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O jogo acontece às 21h30, no Maracanã, pela terceira fase da Copa do Brasil.

Tudo sobre

Copa do BrasilFlamengoGabigol

Mets Announce New Role for Frankie Montas Amid Disappointing Season

The Mets have endured a difficult second half of the season, having lost seven games in a row and 11 of their last 12.

As the team's struggles continue to mount, manager Carlos Mendoza announced Tuesday that he'd be making a change to the starting rotation. Veteran right-hander Frankie Montas is no longer set to make his next scheduled start and will instead be pitching out of the bullpen for the foreseeable future, Mendoza told reporters.

The team hasn't officially decided on a replacement in the rotation for Montas. Mendoza indicated they'd been eyeing Noah McLean and Brandon Sproat, two of the organization's top pitching prospects, as potential call-ups, per Anthony DiComo of MLB.com. McLean is the No. 3 prospect in New York's farm, while Sproat is No. 5, per MLB Pipeline.

In 2025, Montas has made seven starts and eight total appearances. He has a career worst 6.38 ERA with 32 strikeouts and 12 walks in 36 2/3 innings. In his most recent outing, Saturday against the Brewers, Montas followed an opener and pitched three innings while surrendering three runs, though only one was earned.

The 32-year-old would've been in line to start Saturday against the Mariners, but instead it seems the team will look to one of its farmhands instead.

In Nayeem Hasan's success is a wake-up call for Mehidy Hasan

Russell Domingo is not afraid of making unpopular decisions in the hope of seeing all-round improvement

Mohammad Isam23-Feb-2020When the players walked off at the end of the first day of the one-off Dhaka Test, Nayeem Hasan’s team-mates, all much older than the 19-year-old, were behind him. Nayeem slowed down to join them, but was told that he had to lead them off. It painted like a cute picture: Nayeem, walking ahead with a shy smile on his face, and the likes of Tamim Iqbal and Abu Jayed showing him the way.It was well deserved. If Bangladesh bat well, Nayeem’s four wickets could have a big say in the way the match turns out. But, at the same time, his selection in the playing XI ahead of the more established and experienced Mehidy Hasan did raise eyebrows.Bangladesh have lost six Tests in a row, but against Zimbabwe at home, they started as the favourites. On paper then, it looked a risk to leave out their main offspinner. But it was a well-planned move.According to at least two members of Bangladesh’s team management, the feeling was that Nayeem was in better form and would be more effective at the Shere Bangla National Stadium. His height is an advantage – it helps him generate extra bounce and he gets turn even on flat pitches. And Mehidy’s recent form – six wickets in four Tests in the past year – worked against him.Nayeem certainly paid back the faith, bowling unchanged for 32 overs from one end and coming into his own in the second session, creating a number of chances in a dramatic 20 minutes. He himself dropped a return catch, while chances went down at slip and short leg too. But Nayeem made amends by grabbing a chance from Prince Masvaure and then removing the big three of Brendan Taylor, Sikandar Raza and Ervine.What worked for Nayeem was his accuracy. He targeted off stump, without much flight, but still got purchase. Mehidy, much shorter, tosses up the ball more, gets it to drop in front of the batsman before it turns. Nayeem’s spin is more subtle, but because of the bounce and accuracy, he doesn’t always allow the batsman to drive the ball with confidence.That doesn’t necessarily mean Mehidy is a lesser bowler. He is ten short of becoming the fourth Bangladesh bowler to take 100 Test wickets, a big deal given that he only made his debut in 2016. He has won Bangladesh big matches – the 19-wicket haul in two Tests against England (his first two games too) helped Bangladesh turn a corner in international cricket and made him a household name. But he has been on a dip more recently, a shoulder injury and then a finger injury not helping.Therefore, when it came to a crunch decision ahead of what is considered a crucial Test in 2020 for Bangladesh, the team management felt they needed to make a big call.It’s the sort of decision-making that coach Russell Domingo had been talking about since taking charge late last year. Mehidy isn’t going to be discarded, but it is a message to him, and many others within the team, that Domingo’s team will make unpopular decisions. If they come off, like with Nayeem, a point will be made and, one hopes, there will be all-round improvement in the ranks.

Yashasvi Jaiswal's coach and father figure watches from the stands – in secret

When Jaiswal scored his century, he had no idea his coach Jwala Singh was at the stadium

Sreshth Shah in Potchefstroom04-Feb-2020″I made him promise me before he left. I made him promise me that he will finish the World Cup with the most runs. If he gets it, I told him I’ll gift him a car.”That’s Jwala Singh, Yashasvi Jaiswal’s coach, talking to ESPNcricinfo inside Chalet 26 of Potchefstroom’s JB Marks Oval, watching his protege take a big step in fulfilling that promise, with a century against Pakistan in the semi-final on Tuesday.Jaiswal, however, has no idea Singh is in South Africa. Jaiswal had categorically told Singh not to come for the tournament. But Singh couldn’t resist, so he flew to Johannesburg and then drove to Potchefstroom as soon as India’s semi-final spot was confirmed. He stays hidden all day, away from Jaiswal’s line of vision, just in case his student gets distracted seeing his coach.But Singh is more than Jaiswal’s coach. Since Yashasvi’s father handed over his son’s responsibility to Singh in 2013, Yashasvi has lived with his coach in Mumbai. Effectively, Singh is the father figure in Jaiswal’s life. The love is on display as Singh gets up from his deck chair to clap as soon as Jaiswal scores the run that takes him past Sri Lanka’s Ravindu Rasantha as the tournament’s highest run-scorer.The Jaiswal at the Under-19 World Cup, though, is very different from the Jaiswal in domestic cricket. Back in India, the left-hand batsman has built a reputation of being an attacking batsman. He has already struck double-hundreds twice in one-day cricket, once for Mumbai Under-19 and another for the senior Mumbai team. But at the World Cup, he has been restrained. Against Sri Lanka, his 59 came at a strike rate of 79.72. Against New Zealand, his 57 was scored at a strike rate of 74.02. Against Australia in the quarter-final, his strike rate was 75.60 while scoring 62.”In Mumbai, he has senior cricketers around him, so he has the freedom to play his natural game. But here, he knows he’s probably the most crucial part of the team’s batting,” Singh explains. “That’s what makes Jaiswal special – his adaptability.”Fifteen minutes later, Jaiswal guides a short ball down to the fine-leg boundary to inch closer to his fourth fifty in five games. Singh chips in again, giving an insight into the teenager’s brain.”You see that shot? That’s what sets him apart,” he says. “Any other batsman and he would’ve gone for the pull. But Jaiswal knows that’s not the right option when there’s no run-rate pressure.”The reason Singh can analyse Jaiswal so well is because they’ve stayed under the same roof for five years now. Once upon a time, Jaiswal would live in the tents of Azad Maidan in Mumbai while beginning his cricketing journey, selling , a street snack, after practice to stay financially afloat in India’s most expensive city. But since Singh opened his home’s doors for Jaiswal, they have practiced cricket in the daytime and chatted about everything else in the evenings.”We have a rule at home. Every evening, he gives me a massage and tells me how his day went,” Singh says. “Even if I forget to ask him for a massage, he will come to me. Because he’s not had much of a childhood, he can get easily lured into things that teenagers do these days. So we discuss every aspect of his life. Everyday. But he is this headstrong because I’ve never given him anything on a platter. Even on the IPL auction day, I sent him to shop for groceries.Yashasvi Jaiswal hits into the leg side•Getty Images”Once in a generation can someone become a legend. Jaiswal has that in him, which is why it’s so important to stay grounded. There are so many players who have played for India and done well. But legends don’t come by every day. That’s what I have tried to drill into him. He has now come to understand what all he can achieve if he keeps his head in the right place.”This one time, he was the Player of the Series in a local tournament. He got a INR 10,000 voucher. He said he wanted to buy a cricket helmet, so I gave him permission to buy one.”When he came back, he said, ‘I’ve spent INR 3000 extra, can you give me that money please?’ That was the first time I got angry at him. I snatched the helmet from him and said, ‘13000 for a helmet? That’s ridiculous. You will wear this when you really deserve it.'”I put the helmet on top of his almirah after that. So that he could see it every day. The day he made his Ranji debut, I personally handed that helmet over to him. That’s the day I realised that whatever goal you give Jaiswal, he will fulfil it.”Singh, who was also Prithvi Shaw’s coach from 2015 to 2018, says that he feels blessed to have shaped two cricketers who are destined for greatness. At one time, Singh – from Gorakhpur in Uttar Pradesh – had dreams of being an India cricketer. But knee injuries dashed his hopes and so he chose to be a coach. He has recently given permission for a movie to be based on his life story. It’s title is apt: .As Jaiswal reaches his nineties, I probe whether the now-successful Jaiswal – with an IPL contract at hand – has ever given him a gift, Singh’s smile widens.”You see his jersey number? It’s 23 because that’s my birth date,” Singh says. “What more can I ask for?”Before my daughter was born, he was my only child. Now he’s an elder brother to my girl. Even my girl has proven lucky for him. The day she was born, December 6, 2017, he struck the double-hundred for Mumbai Under-19.”He is so mature that when I said I’ll give him a car for being the highest run-scorer, he said he doesn’t want a new one. He wants to take my old Brezza so that I buy myself a new one.”A few moments later, Jaiswal reaches his hundred by slog-sweeping the Pakistan spinner Aamir Ali over deep midwicket. He raises his arms, looked upwards and says a silent prayer. Singh then says, “I think I’ll reveal it to him now. That I’m here.”

George Bailey's influence evident in Australia's selection revolution

Players who have been dropped have more chance to question the decision-makers

Daniel Brettig30-Apr-2020Players left off Cricket Australia’s men’s contract list for next season will not feel any better than the countless others to have a similar experience over the 35 years since the governing body unified marketing and playing contracts into one authoritative annual ledger.However, they will be the most informed about the circumstances around their omissions and the paths by which they may find a way back into the fold, after the national selection panel instituted a long overdue process of granting players more information about how they have been judged, and a formal opportunity to debate their individual feedback with selectors.What can be seen in this decision are the influences of a couple of events last season. First there were the withdrawals of numerous players for mental health reasons, with anxiety around selection or non-selection and the issues within it always a source of angst. Secondly, CA chose to appoint the widely respected George Bailey as a selector, with a brief to work on improving communication between panel and players.ALSO READ: Usman Khawaja and Marcus Stoinis lose Cricket Australia contractsFor Trevor Hohns, who has been either a selector or chairman of the panel over two stints stretching back to 1993, it is a significant change from years of communications between players and selectors that varied wildly.Over many years it was even non-existent, as players heard about their omissions via radio broadcasts or perhaps the different city to which their flight baggage was tagged. Phone calls gradually became the norm, but even then they would often be short conversations between selectors eager to break the news and move on, and players reeling from the shock of having their income drastically reduced in an instant. Hohns summarised the change.”What I can tell you is all players have been contacted, those that have been awarded a contract have been contacted. Those who were in the contract list last year and have been omitted, they’ve been contacted and spoken to,” Hohns said. “Then we’ve followed that up with a letter confirming their inclusion or their omission.”For those who have been omitted, there’s also been some feedback from the national selection panel included in that letter. So they can digest that. Then in the next week or so, someone from the panel – it may well be the coach – will call those players and give them the opportunity to discuss it and debate that feedback that has been provided. I think the system should work pretty well.”Usman Khawaja hasn’t topped 40 in six Ashes innings so far•Getty ImagesThis system will run in concert with selection criteria that are evolving and increasing in depth all the time. “As far as selecting, we obviously watch a lot of cricket, we know the players, we think we know them back to front, we know what they can do,” Hohns said. “We keep our own notes, we keep our own information, but we also provide a lot of data, a lot of statistics. There’s a fair bit of that research goes into it, and that’s a matter of the simple part is what they’ve done over the last 12 months.”We know all that, we have all the records, but then we have to try to project where they may fit in to our teams going forward into the next 12 months. That’s basically how we do it. We take other things into account as well of course and these days a fair amount’s placed on character, placed on fitness and how they present themselves. All those things come into play when we’re ranking them.”Hohns is currently on a short-term bridging contract with CA as further deliberations about his future are placed on hold by the Covid-19 pandemic. But the formalisation of feedback from selectors to players and back the other way has the distinct ring of Bailey’s influence since he was appointed a selector late last year, before he had retired from a long first-class and limited-overs career that saw him captain Australia in ODIs and T20s while also playing five Tests.Typically of his reputation for thoughtfulness and clear communication skills, Bailey had made it plain that he was taking soundings from team-mates and opponents alike while still playing as to what they wanted to see from the national panel.”I’m trying to ask a lot of the players now,” Bailey told 2GB Radio in December. “My understanding of it is and in my experience I reckon what they’re after is a really logical sequence of events. I think players can understand selections when they can see a process has been followed and a player has been picked with a really good argument and reasoning behind it. I think at times that maybe hasn’t happened.”I think the other things that players want, they may not want it at the time, is brutal honesty. Players would prefer to be hit between the eyes with the real reason that they are or aren’t being selected rather than perhaps a reason that has been made to let them down gently or make them feel better about it. There’s no great way to deliver particularly getting dropped, a message for that point in time that you’re ruining someone’s dream.”Asked about Bailey, Hohns spoke warmly of the qualities he had brought to the selection table. “George has been very good. His input has been invaluable, he’s a very experienced cricketer, as we all know. He’s been an Australian captain as well, so he certainly knows all the players, knows them back to front because he’s only recently retired.”Australia’s cricketers, it is easy to suspect, are looking forward to seeing his name flash up on their phones too, even at times when the news might not be good for them.

Jess Jonassen: 'I never have been, or never will be, somebody that enjoys telling people what to do'

The allrounder on the challenge of taking over the Brisbane Heat captaincy at a time of transition

Andrew McGlashan22-Oct-2020Australia allrounder Jess Jonassen is determined to ensure that captaincy does not change her as a player or a person as she prepares to guide Brisbane Heat’s attempt to secure a hat-trick of WBBL titles.Jonassen has replaced Kirby Short, who announced her retirement after last season, at the helm of the Heat and will be in charge of a team that has lost its leading batter in Beth Mooney and one of its leading bowlers in Sammy-Jo Johnson, who have switched to the Perth Scorchers and Sydney Thunder respectively.”It’s something that’s very exciting,” Jonassen told ESPNcricinfo of the challenge ahead. “I think it provides some really great opportunities.”Jonassen does not have a wealth of captaincy experience to fall back on – “a few underage sides, a while ago now, and a bit with my club in Brisbane,” she said – but hopes to be the sort of leader who can encourage others to feel empowered to make decisions while also inspiring by her own performances.”I want to try and make sure that l’m still me,” she said. “I’ve got big shoes to fill with Kirby and her leadership style, we are going to be slightly different. It’s been nice to be able to have a few centre-wicket scenarios back home to start getting that captaincy brain working. I’m someone that likes to get the bowlers to be in charge of what they want and I just try and help facilitate that, use my experience with the amount of games that I’ve played to be able to help initiate conversations. I never have been, or never will be, somebody that enjoys telling people what to do, I’d rather be with them and show them the way.”She has spoken with Short and knows the former captain is always on the end of the phone if needed, but both are conscious that this is now Jonassen’s team on the field.”I’ve had some conversations with her and we’ve got a pretty good friendship so she’s always going to be there if needed,” Jonassen said. “It’s nice to have resources such as her so readily available, but she’s also very mindful about wanting me to be able to do things my way. I need to learn to trust my own instincts, trust my gut and live and die by that.”Australia’s leading T20 spin bowler Jess Jonassen has been named Brisbane Heat captain•Getty ImagesAs a captain who is also a key bowler with her left-arm spin, when and how to use herself will be something Jonassen will need to get used to. “If the game is on the line sometimes I might go with myself, while other times it might be that I want to test somebody else in that situation, particularly early on in the tournament. You want to give them the confidence that if that situation came about in another game later in the tournament that they have that belief to execute. It’s backing my own judgement and if I think I’m the best match-up I’ll go with that.”Although Johnson has moved to the Thunder, the Heat retain the core of a strong bowling attack with Delissa Kimmince, Amelia Kerr, Georgia Prestwidge, Jonassen herself and the new signing of South Africa allrounder Nadine de Klerk.At the outset of the tournament, the bigger challenge would appear to be replacing the runs of Mooney. Last season she scored 743 at 74.30, more than 300 ahead of next-best Jonassen. Having not made a big-name batting signing to fill the gap, it will likely need a team effort to make up for those lost runs. Jonassen is excited at the off-season work put in by flamboyant allrounder Grace Harris, who has two WBBL hundreds to her name – including one off 42 balls – and will be the type of experienced player required to lift for this campaign.”She’s put in some significant work over the pre-season and it’s developed her game really nicely,” Jonassen said. “Everybody knows that she’s got the power and she can clear any size boundary, but a lot of work that she’s been doing is around the cricket smarts and being able to bat big periods of time. We know she can score at a 150-160 strike-rate but being able to start consistently and get 50-plus scores, and big match winning not-outs, is something that she’s really worked very hard on.”We’ve seen a lot of evidence of that growth and the improvement in Queensland in centre-wicket scenarios or club cricket. She’s really developed into a smart, powerful batter which is extremely dangerous. I think she’s started to thrive on having that greater responsibility put on her shoulders from run-scoring perspective.”Grace Harris celebrates after smashing the fastest WBBL hundred•Bradley Kanaris/Getty ImagesJonassen is also looking forward to the chance of being higher up a batting order again given the riches Australia have usually sees her with little chance to impress in either T20Is or ODIs, while Kerr could be in line for greater responsibility. Jonassen also picked out 17-year-old Georgia Voll as a potential star. “She’s a bit of a teenage sensation, a bit of a Grace Harris 2.0.”Jonassen is aware of the strange circumstances in which this year’s WBBL is taking place with all the teams based in a village at the Sydney Olympic Park. While there is a degree of freedom inside that set-up it will still be a different experience for the players, especially those outside of the international squad who were not part of the bubble against New Zealand.”I think it’s probably an ideal opportunity for the likes of myself and Delissa [Kimmince] and a few of our international girls to share our experiences of what it’s been like to be away from home for significant periods of time and things that we’ve found have been helpful,” she said. “We’ve got girls in our team that have had to put in for leave for the next little while, but they are really fortunate that they have some good and understanding employers.”Then Charlie Knott will be doing her year 12 exams, so there’s definitely a lot of support in and around it. The priority is always going to be players’ wellbeing and mental health but also balancing that with whatever the training or playing requirements. To me it’s always about the person first and making sure they are okay and they have everything that they need to be able to perform to them.”And so what of the prospect of achieving the rare feat of a hat-trick of titles? “There’s always going to be talk around it, that’s something that we know and we’re not going to hide from, but it’s also something that we’re not reading too much into,” Jonassen said. “We just hope at the end of it that we’ve played the cricket that we wanted to and as consistently as we’d like and that then means that we’re standing on that stage holding the trophy up for a third time.”

It's not lack of intent, it's Cheteshwar Pujara's method and it works for him

Pujara’s philosophy is to spend more time in the middle to create more chances of scoring runs

Sidharth Monga09-Jan-20212:11

Chopra: Pujara’s back leg movement a ‘flaw’ causing dismissals against Cummins

“I don’t think it was the right approach, I think he needed to be a bit more proactive with his scoring rate because I felt it was putting too much pressure on his batting partners.”That was Ricky Ponting’s assessment, posted on Twitter in response to a question posed to him about Cheteshwar Pujara’s approach in India’s first innings of the Sydney Test. Pujara had scored his slowest half-century, facing 176 balls, but despite facing only five overs fewer than Australia, India ended 94 runs behind. There was a run-out and a played-on dismissal while Pujara was at the wicket, which were indirectly linked to his rate of scoring.This is not opportunistic criticism in hindsight. The questioning of Pujara’s approach began well before his, or Ajinkya Rahane’s or Hanuma Vihari’s, dismissal. The import of it is that if you bat with that approach, you put others around you under pressure and, thus, don’t leave yourself and your team an option but to score a big one yourself. And on difficult pitches against good attacks, you are bound to get a good ball before you score a hundred going at that pace.There is merit to this criticism, but “approach” can soon start to give way to “intent” and it can begin to sound like the batsman is not even thinking of runs. In reality, the approach is not decided by a batsman based on which side of the bed he wakes up. It is a reaction to the quality of the bowling, the nature of the pitch, the match situation, the strength of his own batting line-up, and, perhaps most importantly, his own ability.It isn’t as though Pujara doesn’t know the pitfalls of not scoring at a certain rate. This is a method – let’s not call it approach because it leads to the awful word intent, which suggests the player doesn’t intend to do what is best for the team – that has worked the best for Pujara and India. This was the method that worked on the last tour of Australia when he won India the series by facing more balls than any visiting batsman in a series in Australia in which he played four Tests or fewer. This was the method that worked in Johannesburg where he took 50 balls to get off the mark. This is a method that works for him at home.This method relies on the philosophy that the more time you spend at the wicket, the better your reactions get and the less accurate and intense the bowling gets. Pujara has shown more than enough times that he can make up for these starts once he has bowlers where he wants them. And it is not always accurate that if he gets out for 20 off 80, he has done his side no favours. The last Test was a good example of Shubman Gill and Pujara tiring Pat Cummins out, forcing him to bowl an eight-over spell in the morning session. The centurion Rahane was well into his 20s, having faced 70-plus balls when he first faced a proper spell from Cummins. It is not always apparent, and it is not always extremely significant, but it has some benefit for those who follow him.Of course, Pujara can show more “intent” and try to play quicker, but his judgement tells him that involves an undue amount of risk. He was up against stronger, quicker, taller and more accurate fast bowlers than Australia’s batsmen were on a pitch that called for accurate banging of the ball into the pitch. The bounce available meant Nathan Lyon was in the game too.There was no release available for Pujara unlike for Australia’s batsmen who had Navdeep Saini, Ravindra Jadeja – his four wickets perhaps flatter his effort – and even R Ashwin, who was now getting hit off the back foot into the off side. All told, Pujara faced 20 full balls and duly scored 14 runs off them. It was the good balls that he didn’t go after.Look at how Rahane got out: that late-cut over the cordon would perhaps work on another pitch, but the uneven bounce meant he played on. Look at how Rishabh Pant got hurt: trying to pull. Pujara knew this wasn’t a pitch for the horizontal-bat shots.Cheteshwar Pujara drops his hands and sways out of the way of a snorter•Getty ImagesThe combination of the pitch and the quality of the Australian bowling meant that the slight closing of the face or opening of it for even those singles was deemed to be too risky by the batsmen in the middle. Pujara has faced more than 31,000 balls in first-class cricket in varied conditions and match situations, close to 13,000 of them in Tests. Perhaps it is wise to trust his judgement of what is risky.Of course, you can try to play the shots regardless, and they can come off on your day, but elite batsmen don’t like to take that much risk. Not leaving things to chance is what makes them elite. Especially when they are playing just five pure batsmen.The risk involved here is of another nature. Pujara concentrated hard for 176 balls, helped take India to 195 for 4, but then an injured Rishabh Pant and he fell on the same score and the tail stood no chance of getting India close to Australia’s score. The ball Pujara got was, according to him, the ball of the series, a ball that he said would have got him had he been batting even on 100 or 200. While Pujara can take solace in that he made Australia throw the best punch they possibly could, Cummins, the bowler of the monster ball that kicked off just short of a length, rubbed it in that Pujara’s scoring rate helped him and the other bowlers.”At one stage he had been out there for 200 balls or 150 balls and I looked up there thinking they are still 200 away from our first-innings total,” Cummins said after the day’s play. “So if things go that way and we can keep bowling well, you’re not overly bothered. He is someone you know you are going have to bowl a lot at. I think we got our head around that this series, for him to score runs we are going to make it as hard as possible. Whether he bats 200 or 300 balls, just try and bowl good ball after good ball, and challenge both sides of his bat.”Related

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In what can be a bit of a mind game lies an admission too. That Pujara makes you bowl at your best for longer periods of time than other batsmen. Against the same attack, it worked on the last tour. It came close to working on this tour too. At least it gave Pujara a chance.On this pitch, against this bowling, to force the pace and drive on the up, while not taking an undue amount of risk, you have to be as good as Virat Kohli at that kind of batting. Pujara probably knows he isn’t. That is not his skill. His skill is to absorb the blows before taking down tired bowlers. Since about late 2018, even Kohli has started buying into the Pujara philosophy. The best innings of this series in terms of method, Kohli’s 74 in Adelaide, took 180 balls. For the first 80 balls of that innings, he went at a strike rate under 30. It was exactly like a Pujara innings, except that Kohli’s higher skill at shot-making meant he opened up sooner than Pujara could have.There is another, more nuanced criticism of Pujara’s batting, something he probably needs to work harder on. You don’t see too many driveable balls when he is at the wicket because he gets stuck on the crease. So what might be a half-volley for other batsmen is a length ball that Pujara is forced to show respect to. It gives the bowlers a wider margin of error, which means they feel no pressure and thus make less errors.There is merit to that but Pujara will turn around and tell you that this is what allows him to keep out balls that take other batsmen’s edges. Instead of pushing at the ball, he either lets them seam past his edge or play them late and under his eye if they are straight. That by facing more balls the way he does, he actually makes some unplayable balls look negotiable. That by facing more balls, he gives himself a better chance at scoring runs.With bowlers getting fitter and stronger, with bowling attacks now carrying fewer weak links, it is true that Pujara’s method will become less and less prevalent with the future batsmen. This is why probably India made a reasonable call when they dropped him for lack of intent in the past, but Pujara came back and showed with his immense powers of concentration that his method can work. That the criticism of method is not necessarily on the mark. That he shouldn’t be praised for the same method in 2018-19 and be criticised for it in 2020-21.The biggest problem with the criticism perhaps is that Pujara’s method was not a significant difference between the two sides. Or any batsman’s method for that matter. Australia’s bowling in the absence of Ishant Sharma and Mohammed Shami is far superior to India’s. It is high credit to the visitors that they pulled off the Melbourne miracle but the longer a series goes in Australia, an attack with stronger, quicker, more accurate fast bowlers will prevail over one whose seam attack has a combined experience of 17 Tests, one of them a debutant who has shown the tendency to not be accurate. That is exactly what has happened in Sydney so far.

Four youngsters who could provide the 'spark' for Chennai Super Kings

From R Sai Kishore to KM Asif, the Super Kings have some potential match-winners in their ranks

Deivarayan Muthu22-Oct-2020

Ruturaj Gaikwad

Age: 23Role: Top-order batsmanWho could he potentially replace: Kedar Jadhav or Ambati RayuduWhy should he be picked?
Having recovered successfully from Covid-19 at the outset of the IPL, Gaikwad made his IPL debut, which was far from striking as he was stumped for a duck. He played another match, and managed just five runs. Both those innings were the only times Gaikwad has batted in the middle order. Otherwise, his natural role has been as a top-order batsman: he has opened or batted at No.3 in 28 out of 30 innings. Gaikwad has been a prolific performer for India A in List A cricket, with centuries at home and near-centuries in the Caribbean and New Zealand. All of his 843 runs for India A have come at the top.With ‘Project Sam Curran’ not quite taking off at the top, the Super Kings could test out Gaikwad as an opener with Faf du Plessis or Shane Watson and instead use Curran as a middle-order floater once again.

N Jagadeesan

Age: 24Role: Wicketkeeper-opener, can also float in the middle orderWho could he potentially replace: Kedar Jadhav or Ambati RayuduWhy should he be picked?
Jagadeesan got his IPL gig in 2018 on the back of his heavy run-scoring at the top in the 20-over Tamil Nadu Premier League (TNPL). He was handed his IPL debut this year, against the Royal Challengers Bangalore. Batting at No.4, above Dhoni, Ravindra Jadeja, Curran, and Dwayne Bravo, Jagadeesan showed signs of intent and innovation during his 33 off 28 balls in a tall chase of 170.Jagadeesan, like Gaikwad, isn’t a power-hitter, but unlike Gaikwad, he has floated in the middle order for his state side Tamil Nadu in T20 cricket. In the 2018 Syed Mushtaq Ali tournament, when Dinesh Karthik batted up the order, Jagadeesan made some useful cameos in the middle. He usually builds his innings with singles and doubles and accelerates with chips over the infield or sweeps and reverse-sweeps behind the wicket. Can he become a S Badrinath-like player for the Super Kings in the future?R Sai Kishore in action for Tamil Nadu•R Sai Kishore

R Sai Kishore

Age: 23Role: Left-arm fingerspinner who can bowl in the powerplay and middle oversWho could he potentially replace: Piyush ChawlaWhy should he be picked?
If the Super Kings are to bring in Sai Kishore and bench Chawla, they might have to throw in their more experienced and versatile legspinner Imran Tahir into the mix, too, in place of seamer Josh Hazlewood. Sai Kishore attacked the stumps in the powerplay and also found turn, of the quicker variety, to trouble batsmen in the most-recent Syed Mushtaq Ali tournament, where he was the highest wicket-taker. His economy rate of 4.63 was also the best among bowlers who had delivered at least 20 overs in the tournament. The Mumbai Indians have Quinton de Kock in the top and Ishan Kishan and Krunal Pandya in the middle order to disrupt the left-arm spinner, so Sai Kishore could be a better bet against the potentially right-hander heavy Royal Challengers.

KM Asif

Age: 27Role: Fast bowler who can clock 140kphWho could he potentially replace: Shardul Thakur or Deepak ChaharWhy should he be picked?
Bowling has been the Super Kings’ strongest suit this season, but if they opt to rest Shardul Thakur or Deepak Chahar, Kerala quick Asif could be an option. While Asif can hit 140kph and bowl yorkers, he is still raw and only 10 T20s old. He played two games for the Super Kings on the quicker pitches at the MCA Stadium in Pune and at the Eden Gardens in 2018, returning 2 for 43 and 1 for 32 respectively.

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