Head's magnificent 137 leads Australia to sixth World Cup title

The opener also took a spectacular catch earlier in the game to send back Rohit Sharma, after which Australia’s bowlers put India in a chokehold

Andrew Miller19-Nov-20232:56

‘Travis Head has matured over the last two years across all formats’ – Tom Moody

Australia 241 for 4 (Head 137, Labuschagne 58*, Bumrah 2-43) beat India 240 (Rahul 66, Kohli 54, Starc 3-55, Cummins 2-34, Hazlewood 2-60) by six wicketsIndia may be where the heart of the game now resides, but the coolest Head in cricket has once again been shown to be Australian. Travis Head, to be precise, who set up his side’s record-extending sixth World Cup victory with a triumphantly paced 137 from 120 balls in Ahmedabad, but whose most significant contribution arguably came some six-and-a-half hours beforehand, with one of the most match-turning catches in ODI history.Related

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What might have been for these two teams had Head not held onto a steepling, sprawling take, running backwards into the covers to saw off India’s captain, Rohit Sharma, in his prime? Australia’s eventual target of 241 would have been significantly higher, no doubt, and to judge by the ferocity with which India’s new-ball bowlers clawed at their opponents in the powerplay – with Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Shami inevitably to the fore – there would have been all the more opportunities for their chase to have toppled off its tightrope.Australia have won World Cups in 1987, 1999, 2003, 2007, 2015 and now 2023•ICC/Getty ImagesInstead, Head held on, and in so doing, he applied a handbrake to a runaway innings that would never be fully released. On Rohit’s watch, India had racked up 10 fours and three sixes in blazing along to 80 for 2 in the first powerplay. Once he’d gone, India mustered just four more fours, and 160 more runs, across the next 40 overs. It meant they were unable to post a total big enough to mitigate against the inevitable onset of dew – the primary reason why Pat Cummins had risked letting Rohit and Co. set the agenda in the first place.And so Australia’s victory came at a canter in the end, with six wickets standing and a huge 42 balls unused – a margin that would have been greater still but for Head’s dismissal to the penultimate ball of the chase. Undeterred, Glenn Maxwell pulled his first ball for two to take his side through to a victory target which – as fate would have it – was the exact total that England and New Zealand had been unable to split by conventional means four years ago.But that ease at the finish told nothing of the jeopardy that had preceded it. At 47 for 3 after seven overs, with Steven Smith inexplicably failing to review an lbw from Bumrah that was shown to have struck his pad outside off, Australia were in the thick of a do-or-die tussle against two of the most outstanding performers of India’s previously peerless campaign.Travis Head was all smiles after finishing with 137 off 120 in the World Cup final•ICC/Getty ImagesDavid Warner, in what may turn out to be his final ODI innings, had scuffed Shami’s first legitimate delivery to Virat Kohli at slip for 7, having fenced his own first ball of the innings (from Bumrah) past the same fielder’s boot for four, and with Mitchell Marsh’s attempt to hit the quicks off their lengths ending in a loose cut through to the keeper, the crowd had found its full voice for the first time in the game.But Marnus Labuschagne, retained in Australia’s starting XI despite the sense, mid-tournament, that he and Head were competing for a solitary berth, showed the value of his Test pre-eminence with an indomitable sidekick’s role of 58 not out from 110 balls. Over by over, run by run, he and Head extended their crucial fourth-wicket stand of 192, seeing off pace and spin alike until, at some indefinable moment around the 20th over of the chase, the bite in a two-paced wicket was replaced with the even-sprayed skid of the long-promised dew.When Bumrah returned for the 28th over for a last roll of the dice with Australia beginning to accelerate away on 148 for 3, he was greeted with three flayed fours from Head, either side of an excruciating umpire’s call appeal for lbw against Labuschagne that felt like final proof that India’s hope had gone.Ultimately, it was a clinical and ruthlessly passion-killing display from the most formidable winners in the world game. Every man in Australia’s XI played his part in sucking the marrow from a contest that, to judge by the sea of blue in the Narendra Modi Stadium’s stands and the expectant attendance of the eponymous PM himself, had been intended as a coronation. Instead, the closing hour of the match was greeted in stunned silence by a 92,453-strong crowd, and nothing epitomised the sense of national anticlimax quite like the trophy-lift itself, for which Cummins was left forlorn on the podium for a full 20 seconds before his team was able to join him after accepting their handshakes away from centre stage.1:56

Moody: Cummins’ field placements were a masterstroke

Not that the lack of in-situ acclaim will derail Australia’s sense of achievement. As Head’s pivotal catch would ultimately prove, the tone for their victory was once again set in the field. As had been the case in the semi-final against South Africa, the 37-year-old Warner was their barometer, flinging himself with gusto to cut off numerous boundary balls, but while Rohit was on deck, it seemed that Cummins’ brave decision to bowl first might get soon overwhelmed, like so many opponents before them, by India’s extraordinary weight of strokemakers.Instead, he backed his bowlers to complete the job they had started in their extraordinary tournament opener in Chennai, where India’s top three had all made ducks in slumping to 2 for 3, only for their sub-par target of 200 to be picked off with ease. This time, the dew notwithstanding, he figured the pressure of the big occasion might weigh more heavily in the first innings than the second – especially if his attack could make their early breakthroughs.All of which made Rohit’s shortlived onslaught all the more brave, selfless even, as he shouldered the entire responsibility for India’s powerplay proactivity, particularly against Josh Hazlewood, the instigator of that Chennai collapse. In the manner of his charging down the pitch to meet his hard lengths, there were shades of Sachin Tendulkar’s pre-emptive attack on Glenn McGrath in the 2003 final … except on this occasion it seemed, briefly, to be working.But then came the unequivocal moment of the match – a act of fielding majesty that stood immediate comparison with Kapil Dev’s running catch off Viv Richards at the pivotal juncture of the 1983 final. Rohit had already slammed ten runs in two balls from Glenn Maxwell’s second over, when he stepped into another slap over the long-off boundary, and miscued high out into the covers. Travis Head tracked back from point with the ball skewing high over his shoulder, and with his eyes never leaving the prize, timed his dive to perfection to cling on with both hands.Pat Cummins backed up his brave decision to bowl first with an unhittable spell•AFP/Getty ImagesIt will go down as a seminal World Cup moment. Australia had still been battered for 80 runs in the first powerplay – the joint-most conceded in that phase of the first innings of a World Cup final – but now they sensed their chance to turn the contest on its head. Two balls later, Cummins, into his second over, found Shreyas Iyer’s edge as he poked without conviction or footwork, and at three down in the 11th, with Shubman Gill already gone to a flaccid pull off Mitchell Starc, Hardik Pandya’s absence as India’s lower-order pivot was suddenly revealed to be the weakness that Shami’s stunning impact with the ball had hitherto concealed.There had been no such angst while India had been pounding along in each of their ten previous tournament wins – including five untroubled chases to launch their campaign, and a net margin of 875 runs in their five subsequent bat-first victories. As a consequence, India’s Nos. 6-11 had barely been called upon in scoring a total of 240 runs between them in those matches, the lowest of any team in this tournament, and now suddenly, with Shami and Bumrah inked in at Nos.8 and 9, none of their set batters dared to be the one to set that descent into the tail into motion.At least in Kohli, India had a man whose tempo in such circumstances could be trusted. On his team’s better days, and in spite of his formidable tournament haul of 765 runs at 95.62, his ruthless devotion to run-making had been mistaken for a weakness. Now his 56-ball fifty was the bedrock of his team’s recovery, albeit the reaction to his latest landmark was a pent-up roar that merely exacerbated the anxious hubbub that had preceded it.But Australia’s magnificent attack could not be denied, especially after Cummins had seized on his opponents’ visible reticence to smuggle through a churn of change bowlers. Between them, Maxwell, Head and Marsh burgled ten overs for 44, a perfect holding pattern that bought back options for the back end of the innings.Virat Kohli makes the long walk back after India’s heartbreak•ICC/Getty ImagesThat included the return of the captain himself for the 29th over. With the third ball of his second spell, Cummins hit an awkward length with his short ball, and Kohli looked genuinely emotional as he under-edged onto his stumps with an angled bat, glared at the length from which it had lifted, and glanced over his shoulder before trudging off, as if assessing the pull shot he had chosen to keep in his locker.KL Rahul endured, but was scarcely unable to unfurl either, even though he did break a 97-ball sequence without a boundary by lobbing Maxwell over his shoulder through fine leg for four, the longest such barren spell for any team in this tournament other than Netherlands, and India’s longest between overs 11-50 since 1999.But on 66, he and the lower order came face to face with another threat that India’s own seamers would be forced to do without. In preparing a visibly dry and abrasive deck for this final, the curators had opened the possibility of reverse-swing, and few teams have more eager exponents than Australia. Starc, from round the wicket, straightened an unplayable delivery into Rahul’s edge and through to the keeper.Though Ravindra Jadeja is renowned as a scrapper in such circumstances, his promotion to No.6 couldn’t contend with Hazlewood’s similarly late movement. After surviving one review for caught-behind he succumbed to the very next ball for 6, at which point, India’s easy progress to the final fully caught up with them. With no situational experience to fall back on – and no pace in the wicket with which to access his inverted V from fine leg to deep third – Suryakumar Yadav ground out 18 from 27 before lobbing Hazlewood to the keeper, by which stage he’d faced just five balls out of a possible 17 in his ninth-wicket stand with Kuldeep Yadav.Kuldeep and Mohammed Siraj kept the innings alive to the final ball, but the mood within the stadium was never able to emerge from its funk. Australia had come with a plan, and the sure knowledge of what it truly takes to win the biggest title in the sport. Ahmedabad turned blue alright, but only with a wistful sense of what might have been.

Real Madrid and Xabi Alonso handed massive blow by La Liga ahead of opener against Osasuna

La Liga president Javier Tebas has confirmed that Real Madrid's request to postpone their opener against Osasuna on August 19 has been turned down.

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Madrid's La Liga opener won't be delayed, Tebas confirmsCompared them to Chelsea and PSGMadrid had handed request to postpone the game for more restFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Real Madrid and Alonso have been handed a huge setback by La Liga president Tebas, who has confirmed that the club's request to delay their opening league fixture against Osasuna on August 19 has been officially declined. Madrid were hoping for some leeway after reaching the semi-finals of the Club World Cup, but it seems their requests will not be heard this time.

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reported earlier this week that Tebas denied a deal to delay La Liga's 2025–26 start, despite Association of Spanish Footballers (AFE) and clubs claiming agreement. According to , Madrid and Atletico, along with captains Dani Carvajal and Koke, agreed with La Liga, Spanish football federation (RFEF), and AFE in May to postpone their 2025–26 openers if they reached the Club World Cup quarter-finals, citing player welfare. Madrid were alive in the competition until July 9, when they lost to Paris Saint-Germain in the semi-final, while Los Colchoneros were knocked out at the group stage.

WHAT JAVIER TEBAS SAID

“I believe that they will have 20 days to rest instead of 21 and no other leagues like the Premier League for Chelsea or the French Ligue 1 for PSG are changing the games,” Tebas said. "So I don’t believe that we should change the calendar for that reason, especially thinking that it’s a matter of one day.”

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AFPWHAT NEXT FOR REAL MADRID?

It appears that Madrid's La Liga opener will proceed as planned, to be played on August 19 against Osasuna. Alonso has his work cut out after a humiliating 4-0 defeat against PSG in the Club World Cup semi-final. It has been reported that the manager is set to hold talks with forwards Vinicius Jr. and Kylian Mbappe ahead of next season, with other reports from Spain suggesting that the Real Madrid board will fully back Alonso's sporting decisions, should he find that some of the big names are not buying into his ideas.

Himmat replaces Dhull as Delhi captain after big defeat to Puducherry

The Delhi cricket association said the decision was taken to help Dhull focus on his batting

PTI08-Jan-2024Delhi have removed Yash Dhull as their captain, the update coming not long after they suffered a heavy – and shock – defeat to Puducherry in their opening Ranji Trophy 2023-24 match at home at the Feroz Shah Kotla.Himmat Singh will now lead the side that takes on Jammu and Kashmir in an away game from January 12.”Yash is a talented player but is out of form. We wanted him to do well as a batter, that is why we have relieved him of captaincy duties. Himmat is our senior player and has done very well for us. He will captain the side,” Delhi and District Cricket Association joint secretary Rajan Manchanda told after Puducherry bowled Delhi out for 148 and 145 on their way to a nine-wicket win. Dhull scored 2 and 23 in the match.Related

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Dhull, captain of India’s Under-19 World Cup-winning team in 2022, was made the state team captain in December 2022 and scored a century on captaincy debut. Since making his first-class debut in February 2022, Dhull has made 1185 runs at an average of 43.88 in 17 matches. But he averaged just 27 in the last Ranji Trophy season.Himmat, six years older than Dhull at 27, had led Delhi to a win over Mumbai in Dhull’s absence last season. In 22 first-class games, Himmat has scored 1174 runs at an average of 39.13, and averaged 45.25 last season.Navdeep Saini, who was named in the India A squad to face the visiting England Lions, and Ishant Sharma, both senior Delhi quicks, won’t be travelling with the team to Jammu for their next fixture. It has been learnt that veteran pacer Ishant will only be available for Delhi’s home games.Delhi, who have won the Ranji Trophy seven times, last lifted the trophy back in 2007-08.

'Take the blame to protect us' – USMNT and Columbus Crew wingback Max Arfsten reveals Gold Cup gesture by Mauricio Pochettino that immediately gained trust

The 24-year-old recalled the moment in which Pochettino won over the squad at the Gold Cup, also talked future in Columbus

Arfsten hails Pochettino's impactDiscussed challenges of U.S. soccer developmentAdmits his aim is land in EuropeGet the MLS Season Pass today!Stream games nowGetty ImagesWHAT HAPPENED?

AUSTIN, Texas – The U.S. men's national team's run to the Gold Cup final was a meaningful moment for a relatively young squad that featured 15 players from MLS. Although the team would ultimately lose 2-1 to Mexico, it was a strong bounce back after lackluster showings against Turkey and Switzerland in June friendlies.

According to Max Arfsten, who played in five matches during the tournament and had three assists and one goal, the turnaround wasn't coincidental – and full credit to coach Mauricio Pochettino.

"First two friendlies we played, obviously, the results [weren't good], we lost both of those games," Arfsten said at MLS All-Star Media Day. "And, you know, he could have kind of blamed us for that, because we're the ones playing. But he took, you know, the ownership and, like, kind of took it on himself with the media and stuff. So that kind of showed me he cares about us.

"It's not easy for someone to do that, especially when you're not playing – to take the blame to protect us, in a way. So I think that was a huge gesture that we all noticed. Like, OK, this guy, he wants us to, you know, be positive. Just have good vibes in the camp. And that's what he did."

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Pochettino was under heavy criticism following those two friendlies, but following his team's run to the Gold Cup final, there was optimism, considering how the team performed without several stars such as Christian Pulisic, Antonee Robinson and Weston McKennie. Arfsten has been in both the U.S.'s January camp and the Gold Cup and believes the Argentine's approach throughout was a significant catalyst.

"He's a really good guy, super friendly with the players, like, super emotional and, like, you can tell he cares about the players a lot," Arfsten said of Pochettino. "It kind of goes without saying. Really good coach, as well. He's coached at very high levels… Really good experience for me to just be able to be coached by someone who has coached at such a high level before."

Arfsten also reflected on his own experience at the Gold Cup, making strides in development.

"I just got mentally stronger. To be honest with you, I was put in like uncomfortable situations, like playing with players you're not really used to," he said. "So going through all that, I think just made me mentally stronger. And then, you know, obviously I just gained a lot of good experience, like playing in big games and starting a lot and just kind of getting that experience."

Getty Images SportWHAT ARFSTEN SAID

Another benefit of playing in the Gold Cup for Arfsten was seeing his stock rise. The wingback was linked with a move to Ligue 1, as the Columbus Crew reportedly rejected a bid for Toulouse, according to GiveMeSport. Arfsten acknowledged his goal is ultimately to land in Europe.

"Yeah, right now, obviously, it is a dream for myself, and I think any player to play in Europe at the highest level," Arfsten said. "But you know, for now, I'm just focused on what's in front of me, and just staying here as a moment, doing what I can to just be the best player I can be."

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WHAT NEXT FOR ARFSTEN?

The Columbus wingback is set to play in the MLS All-Star game Wednesday at the Q2 Stadium.

'Amazing player and great friend' – James Milner changes Brighton shirt number in 'mark of respect' to former Liverpool team-mate Diogo Jota

James Milner has chosen to change his Brighton & Hove Albion shirt number to No. 20 for the new season in tribute to former team-mate Diogo Jota.

Milner will wear No. 20 for BrightonCalls Jota 'a great team-mate and friend'Pair won trophies together at LiverpoolFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Milner played alongside Jota for three years with Liverpool and won trophies such as the FA Cup and Carabao Cup, in addition to reaching the Champions League final in 2022. The 39-year-old is still going strong in the Premier League and has chosen to wear Jota's former number 20 shirt with Brighton ahead of the new season.

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Jota wore the No. 20 shirt with distinction at Anfield and Liverpool have since retired his number as a mark of respect following the forward's tragic passing in a car accident on July 3. The football world came together to pay their respects and tributes to Jota and brother Andre Silva continue to flood in ahead of the new season and beyond.

WHAT MILNER SAID

Milner said of his decision to take the number: “Once I heard Carlos [Baleba] was looking to change his number and 20 was available, I wanted to do it as a mark of respect and obviously pay tribute to Diogo Jota, who was an amazing player who I was fortunate to play with and a great friend as well. It is a great honour to wear his number in the Premier League this year."

Speaking shortly after Jota's death, Milner said: “As a player he was incredible. A finisher – so clever with the positions he got into, how he used his body. I sit next to Adam Webster on the bus when we travel to [Brighton] games and the amount of times I’ve said to him ‘you don’t realise how good this guy is, this guy is amazing, I love watching him’ and Adam would say ‘yeah Milly, you told me last week’.

“Every week I loved watching the guy as a player and I loved training with him but, more importantly than as a player, as a guy he was incredible. He was someone you could put in any corner of the dressing room and people loved him. Me and him had so many fun days together winding each other up. He’s such a stubborn guy like myself. We had so much fun together.

“He was such an amazing family man and just someone you wanted to be around. He’ll be missed by everyone. He was a truly amazing player and even better guy – an unbelievable guy to be around. He’ll be missed by everyone who knew him and everyone in the footballing world for sure.”

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Milner heads into the new season with 638 Premier League appearances under his belt, needing just 16 more to beat Gareth Barry's record for games in the competition since its inception in 1992. Should he remain injury-free, this could be the season Milner manages to achieve the outstanding feat and he will be honoured to have the chance to do it with the No. 20 on his back.

Bumrah and Ashwin beat England's bazballers as India draw level

Both picked up three wickets each as England were bowled out for 292 in their chase of 399

Andrew Miller05-Feb-20241:36

Manjrekar: ‘Ashwin reacted superbly to England’s approach to sweeps’

India 396 (Jaiswal 209, Anderson 3-47, Ahmed 3-65) and 225 (Gill 104, Hartley 4-77) beat England 253 (Crawley 76, Bumrah 6-45, Kuldeep 3-71) and 292 (Crawley 73, Bumrah 3-46, Ashwin 3-72) by 106 runsJasprit Bumrah, the fast bowler of our times, completed the job that he had begun in England’s first innings as India weathered a predictably ferocious fourth-innings challenge from a team that never knows when it is beaten, to close out a 106-run victory in Visakhapatnam and square an enthralling series at 1-1 with three Tests to come.Bumrah’s figures of 3 for 46 in 17.2 overs were less spectacular than his first-innings six-for, but the timing of his breakthroughs was everything on a fraught fourth day – in particular, his priceless extraction of Jonny Bairstow on the stroke of lunch, a dismissal that capped a five-wicket session for India and left England’s chase with too far to run, having bursted out of the blocks with now typical gusto.The loss was only England’s third in 11 fourth-innings chases since the start of the Bazball era, and if a target of 399 had always seemed outlandish, their all-out total of 292 was still higher than the previous successful chase by a visiting team in India – West Indies’ 276 for 5 in Delhi in 1987-88.For all of their endeavour, England will rue a handful of key moments that derailed their hopes – most particularly a lbw verdict against their most composed chaser, Zak Crawley, moments before the Bairstow extraction, and an atypically lax piece of running from the captain, Ben Stokes, that sawed off his ominously poised innings before it could cut loose. Joe Root, nursing a damaged finger, played a wild knock of 16 from 10 balls that begged several questions too, particularly given how composed England’s tail proved to be in adversity, most notably Tom Hartley, who was last man out for 36 from 47 balls.The tone of England’s chase was established in the opening moments of the day. At one end, there was Crawley, all poise and calculation as he lined up India’s dangerman Bumrah and committed only to the balls that his 6’5″ frame could drive with impunity. At the other, there was Rehan Ahmed, a blur of ambitious strokeplay as he resolved to live dangerously and burgle his runs before India could get settled, as he did with a brace of boundaries in Axar Patel’s second over.Rehan was there for a good time, not a long time, and Axar duly had the final word with a plumb lbw from round the wicket, but not before Rehan’s 23 from 31 balls had helped to add 45 runs in 11 overs for the second wicket. Out came Ollie Pope, the second-innings hero in Hyderabad, and as he too launched onto the offensive with a lasered drive for four first-ball, it was clear England weren’t about to go into their shells.Rohit Sharma took a sharp catch to dismiss Ollie Pope in the first session•Getty ImagesCrawley strode onto the front foot once more to dump Axar through long-off to reach a supremely measured 83-ball half-century, but while he sought to provide a very Bazball definition of an anchor, Pope was business personified in the course of a fleet-footed cameo. His faith in the sweep was a clear indication that the bounce had gone out of the surface, at least while Axar was in his sights, from whom he picked off all five of his boundaries in a 21-ball stay.The wily Ashwin, however, was a different proposition. After missing out on a reverse-sweep that flicked his arm through to the keeper, Pope rocked back to cut another Ashwin delivery that kicked off the surface across his bows, and Rohit at slip grabbed a reflex chance with a flick of his left hand.That was wicket No. 498 for Ashwin, and 499 wouldn’t be far behind. Whether Root’s damaged finger was a factor or not, England’s main man played a curiously frenetic knock, even by the standards being coaxed from the occasion. His first two scoring shots were reverse-sweeps for four – the latter ballooning off the glove over slip – before he laid into Axar with an inside-out drill for six over long-off, a shot that took him past 1000 Test runs in India.But Axar hit back with an tight appeal for lbw that would have been upheld had the umpire’s finger gone up, and two balls later, Ashwin had his man via a skied slice to point, as he brought up his long-on and long-off fielders, and lured the big hit down the ground with one of those trademark hang-time offbreaks that never quite landed in Root’s arc as planned.At 154 for 4 after 31 overs, the die was emphatically cast. As James Anderson had stated on the third evening, England’s aim was to win the match in “60 or 70 overs”, even if that meant a straight race between runs required and wickets remaining. And with lunch approaching, it was neck-and-neck in that regard, as Crawley and Bairstow built their way into a 40-run stand for the fifth wicket, seeing off Axar and Ashwin, whose attacking line across the right-handers was once again challenging both edges of the bat in that familiarly subtle style.But it was a double-switch from Rohit that blew England’s prospects apart. First it was Kuldeep, skidding a top-spinner into Crawley’s pads from over the wicket, and earning three reds on DRS as India gambled on the review. Even with all three stumps visible, Rohit rightly reckoned that the ball had pitched on the line of leg stump, and India’s ecstasy as Crawley’s diligent 73 from 132 balls ended confirmed the extent to which he’d been carrying England’s fight.And then, on the very stroke of lunch, the inevitable Bumrah holed England beneath the waterline. Bairstow had lined him up with sufficient confidence to punch a brace of boundaries through the off-side in his comeback over, but back came Bumrah with the nipbacker on a fuller length, and up went umpire Gaffaney’s finger as the ball was shown to be hitting the top of leg stump. Bairstow left the crease with a volley of invective as Ashwin celebrated loudly in his presence, but at 194 for 6, the tone of the session had been up-ended in the space of five balls.Shreyas Iyer ran out Ben Stokes with a direct hit•BCCIWhere there’s Ben Stokes, of course, no cause can ever be considered lost, and as he and Ben Foakes pieced together the innings with a rare display of caution after the break, England nudged past 200, the halfway mark of their chase. But for once, Stokes’ reticence would prove his team’s undoing, as he was slow to spot the danger as Ben Foakes called him through for a quick single to short midwicket, and Shreyas Iyer’s direct hit caught him three inches short.That, as hindsight would emphatically prove, was that, but England’s unwavering belief would not allow India to celebrate until the final scalp had been claimed. Hartley’s poise with the bat has matched his impact with the ball in this series, and as he joined Foakes in a block-and-bash stand of 55 for the eighth wicket, the requirement continued to ebb away at pace.Each man landed a six apiece as Ashwin and Kuldeep strayed into their arc, and though Hartley’s flirtation with the reverse-sweep nearly cost him, with Ashwin’s 500th wicket denied him on review, it required the return of India’s most lethal weapon to break this latest show of resistance. Bumrah needed six balls of his comeback over to induce a checked drive into his own midriff as Foakes departed for 36, before Mukesh Kumar – a distant second-best in India’s seam stakes – ended a tough Test on a personal high, by snicking off Shoaib Bashir for his first wicket of the match.It was only fitting, however, that the true difference between the teams was the man to apply the coup de grace, as Hartley’s off stump took a walk like so many others before it. The series is alive and kicking, after a tussle to savour.

Rashid the spark for England before Buttler, Salt dismantle chase

Pakistan crumble with bat to be swept aside despite Haris Rauf’s fiery spell

Danyal Rasool30-May-2024There wasn’t much to separate these two sides when they met in the last T20 World Cup final, but in the final T20I before that tournament’s next edition kicks off, the gap between the two is positively chasmic. A disciplined, all-round bowling performance from England, followed by a brutal barrage of top-order hitting from openers Jos Buttler and Phil Salt saw England crush Pakistan by 7 wickets with 27 balls to spare, and claim a 2-0 series win.How the game started under overcast skies wasn’t quite a harbinger of the overwhelming dominance England would eventually establish. Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan, who opened the batting for the first time this year, got Pakistan off to a steady start in the first four overs before finishing the powerplay strongly; the 59 they managed was Pakistan’s second-highest powerplay score since January. But England struck back with five wickets for 27 runs either side of a brief rain break, spearheaded by Adil Rashid.Brief, happy-go-lucky resistance from Usman Khan – whose 21-ball 38 bolstered Pakistan when they were in danger of crumpling – kept hopes of a competitive target alive for long enough. But Liam Livingstone, who England utilised to perfection in the middle overs, prised him out thanks to a stunning catch from Chris Jordan, and Pakistan eventually folded for 157.There was a suspicion it wasn’t quite enough, but England’s openers made a mockery of the idea it was ever even in doubt. Mohammad Amir was leathered for 16 in his first over, Naseem Shah pulverised for 25. England scored 78 in the Powerplay, their highest since they managed 82 in Lahore against the same opposition in 2022. And though Haris Rauf restored some respectability to the score with three wickets in a fiery, spirited spell, the hosts wouldn’t even let him have the last laugh, with Harry Brook clobbering him for six over cover to seal a statement-making win before their World Cup defence begins.Rashid triggers collapse
Rizwan and Babar had given Pakistan a platform, but what happened off the final ball of the powerplay was more significant than anything that went before. The Pakistan captain edged one to short third, which Rashid held on to. The openers have often been accused of slowing down after the powerplay, so when Rashid breached Rizwan’s defences next over, the middle order had their platform laid out for them. But Fakhar Zaman holed out as Rashid took a sharp catch during a passage of play when he simply couldn’t be kept out of the game. He returned to clean up Shadab Khan first ball, with Mark Wood’s sheer pace sending Azam Khan packing for a five-ball duck. His nightmare was only just beginning.Adil Rashid helped tie Pakistan down•Getty ImagesLivingstone’s bowling heroics
Every time Livingstone was thrown the ball by Buttler, it seemed like the time for Pakistan to sneak in a big over. And yet, the spinner found a way to bowl perfect lines to perfectly set fields; the big shot never quite seemed to be on. But not content with being milked for 16 in his first two, Livingstone bowled the most impactful over of the game in the 15th, sending down a double-wicket maiden. Pakistan’s top-scorer Usman holed out to Jordan before Shaheen Afridi smeared at one that eventually hit his stumps. By the time Livingstone was done, the last dregs of Pakistan’s batting resistance had been stomped out of them.The onslaught
On a wicket as true as this, surely Pakistan’s pace quartet would find a way to keep England honest, right? Right?Wrong. Shaheen and Naseem might have been slightly unlucky to concede 18 without reward in the first two, but everything that followed was a one-sided drubbing. Even the pace of the wicket played in the batters’ favour, the touch and timing of Buttler and Salt meaning caresses flew to the boundary. Pakistan’s bowlers, flustered and harried, found their lengths wavering and their pace one-dimensional. It was only too easy for England’s openers to take full advantage.Azam’s day out
Azam receiving a snorter of a short ball he wasn’t mobile enough to evade was just the start of his horror day. With his credentials as a middle-order batter severely diminished by his stint in the side, his status as their wicketkeeper also took a battering. Stationed there only because he can’t be hidden elsewhere, he dropped two straightforward chances off an otherwise impressive Rauf, with his embarrassment so palpable it was borderline uncomfortable viewing. When he eventually did grasp a straightforward catch, Rizwan jogged up to give him a pat on the back. You would imagine it isn’t long before Rizwan is stood there permanently again.

Man Utd give AC Milan big boost in Rasmus Hojlund pursuit as Massmiliano Allegri eyes struggling striker as cheaper Dusan Vlahovic alternative

AC Milan are eyeing a move for struggling striker Rasmus Hojlund with Manchester United reportedly open to sending him out on loan.

Milan are interested in HojlundUnited are ready to consider offersItalians to propose loan with €35m buy optionFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Milan have identified Hojlund as their alternative to Juventus forward Dusan Vlahovic and, according to , they have been handed a boost as United are open to loaning the Danish striker out if they secure RB Leipzig striker Benjamin Sesko this window. According to , the Italian club are prepared to submit a loan with option to buy worth €35 million (£30m/$40m) for Hojlund, who has a lower salary compared to Vlahovic.

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Hojlund made a strong impression at Atalanta, scoring nine goals and providing four assists, prompting United to pay €80m (£68m/$92m) for him in 2023. However, he has struggled to hit the same heights in England, managing just 26 goals in 95 appearances. United are in search of a more reliable striker for the coming season and are prepared to offload the Denmark star. Another potential escape route could come from his former coach Gian Piero Gasperini, who is eager to reunite with him at Roma. Juventus are also keeping tabs, though Igor Tudor views him only as an alternative option to Randal Kolo Muani.

MILAN'S STRIKER SITUATION

Milan are in the market for a striker to partner Mexican forward Santiago Gimenez, who has committed his future to the club despite recent rumors. Juventus striker Vlahovic remains Milan’s top target, with coach Allegri pushing for his signing after previously working with him in Turin, but talks with the Italian club  have yet to make progress.

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Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT FOR HOJLUND AND MILAN ?

With Milan set to face Bari on August 16 in the Coppa Italia, the club will aim to finalise their squad for coach Allegri. As for Hojlund, he’ll be hoping to secure a move and get his career back on track. Still only 22, the striker has time on his side and will be eager to make a fresh start.

Talking Tactics: Son Heung-Min could be among best in MLS – but only if LAFC use him as MVP candidate, not overpaid role player

The South Korean might be a wonderful fit for LAFC, but manager Steve Cherundolo would need to get his system straight

It won't seem right to see Son Heung-Min wearing another color that isn't the Lilywhite of Tottenham Hotspur. Sure, this is a South Korean, who spent seven years at two different clubs before moving to Spurs as a 23-year-old. But no other player has been so closely associated with the rollercoaster ride that is Tottenham than Son.

He arrived at the club in 2015, and formed an electric partnership with Harry Kane – one that somehow, cruelly, didn't finish with any silverware. But as others came and went, Son stayed. He outlasted Kane, Hugo Lloris, Toby Alderweild, Jan Vertonghen and Dele Ali.

He was coached by seven different managers and lasted a decade in North London. And when he lifted the Europa League trophy a few months ago, it felt like his forever home had been found. Surely, Son had to retire here, right? Age gracefully, chip in here and there, and then walk away? 

Apparently not. Son has made the highest profile move in MLS this year, with LAFC paying $26 million to secure his services. If he had to go, it seems a good fit. Los Angeles is a lovely place to live, and such is the culture of the club and the willingness to spend of the ownership that he could spend at least the next 18 months fighting for titles. LAFC are certainly a playoff team, and an MLS Cup is within reach. 

Still, what seems to be a perfect move might not be so simple. Son is a wonderful footballer who will make any team, in pretty much any league, at any level, immediately better. But LAFC will have to get their tactics right to get the most out of a league record signing – and ensure that they bring in Son, the MVP candidate, rather than Son the overpaid role player. 

Getty Images SportFitting in with the style

First it's worth looking at the football Steve Cherundolo and LAFC already like to play. Olivier Giroud was their last big-money signing from Europe, and he was a remarkably bad fit for the Black and Gold. The manager never quite figured him out. At first, they tried to slow down to serve Giroud's aging legs. Then Giroud did what Giroud does very well, and missed a load of chances.

Eventually, the manager scrapped it altogether and asked a youthful, quick, team to play with youth and quickness. Giroud couldn't keep up. It was a disaster, and LAFC, in all honesty, deserve some credit for saving face. 

But now, they could have someone far more threatening. There is no point remotely thinking about comparing the two players. Giroud is a No .9, through and through. Son is a rapid winger, best used when starting on the left and making jagged runs inside onto his right foot.

But he can also play on the right, or even through the middle as part of a front two.  He has played in teams, historically, who have pressed high, run for 90 minutes, and hit on the break. MLS is chaotic and transitional. LAFC like that kind of chaos. 

There are tactical minutiea but the broader picture here is that Son is not only well equipped for a system like Cherundolo's, but also immensely familiar with it. Early signs, then, are good. 

AdvertisementGetty ImagesA Premier League legend?

What seems to have been forgotten in the chaos of Tottenham Hotspur Football Club over the last 18 months is just how good Son is. He scored double-digit goals in eight of his 10 seasons in the Premier League, and had to play second fiddle to Harry Kane in all but two of those. In 2021-22, he split the Golden Boot with Mo Salah, finding the net 23 times. He can assist, too, and has tallied more than five in the league in each one of his seasons in England. 

On an international stage, Son is even better. He has played at three World Cups, and led Korea to the 2018 Asia Games gold medal. Only one player has scored more goals for his country, and with just 10 goals between them, it is likely that Son will surpass that mark. Add in the fact that he captains the side, and Son is certainly the finest footballer Korea has ever produced.

He's also, more broadly, culturally significant. There is an unfortunate stereotype around Asian footballers that still persists in segments of soccer discourse. Players are praised for being "hardworking", "diligent", and "illustrious." For one, Ji Sung Park, a wonderfully technical footballer who became a personal favorite of Sir Alex Ferguson at Manchester United, was relegated to just being "a good runner" in the eyes of the English media.

Liverpool's Wataru Endo is a cultured defensive midfielder. He tends to get more plaudits for his work rate. Son shatters that stereotype to bits. He's an excellent dribbler, an impossible one-on-one matchup, and a bit of a showman in his own right. Son makes football look fun. 

Getty Images SportSon's tactical versatility

Son's appeal is, indeed, in his versatility. Ask him to play anywhere across the front line, and he will do it to a good level. For Spurs, he operated on either wing, and through the middle.

When the team got really groovy under Mauricio Pochettino, Son drifted from side to side, and made runs in behind from all sorts of chaotic angles – with Kane dropping deep to feed him the ball and Dele Ali serving as a Thomas-Muller-lite Raumdeuter in between. 

Look through his goal catalogue and you will see a bit of everything. There are long-range strikes, amazing runs, deft flicks and acrobatic scissor kicks. He has every type of finish in his locker – and off both feet.

But there are still some absolutes here. As Son has aged, and worked under different managers, he has become far more efficient. These days he hangs around off the shoulder of the last defender, functioning as an inside forward who likes to cut onto his right foot. Yes, he can still go onto his left and beat a man around the outside, but Son, in his most efficient form, is a player in the mold of Salah or even Thierry Henry. 

He can, in a pinch, play on the right. But he is not a width-holding touchline winger that this LAFC side might need. 

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Getty Images SportDenis Bouanga, striking options, and who plays on the right

And therein lies the problem. LAFC have an array of attacking talent, but the right wing position is under question. 

Denis Bouanga is certainly a top-five player in MLS, and among the best attacking presences in the league. But there is an issue in his positional versatility – or lack thereof. Bouanga, to a fault, is a left winger. Of Bouanga's 31 appearances in all competitions this season, 29 have come on the left. Those have yielded 18 goals and seven assists.

Through the middle, he has scored just once – without registering an assist. 

Look at his MLS career, and much the same picture forms. Last season, 43 of his 46 appearances came on the left. All but two of his 44 goal contributions came from that position. The year before he showed a little more versatility, but was still markedly less effective when playing through the middle or off the right wing.

There was sparse speculations that Bouanga could leave – with Club America reportedly interested in securing his services. But there doesn't seem to be much behind that other than whispers and agent talk. He's not going anywhere.

Meanwhile, LAFC's other attacking options are a little more patchy. Nathan Ordaz has offered promise, but is still young, and not particularly clinical. Jeremy Ebobisse is more of a steady reserve option. David Martinez might be a long-term solution, and showed flashes of quality at right wing, but he's also 19, and questions about his long-term readiness for the spot are entirely valid.

The most obvious solution, then, would be to play Son on the right, with Ordaz through the middle and Bouanga on the left. There is also a world in which Martinez starts on the right, Son could play through the center and Ordaz comes off the bench. Either way, Cherundolo would have to show some serious tactical chops to get it all working. 

Dunkley confirms return to form but Stars fall just short of record chase

Northern Diamonds sneak home despite dropped England batter’s 130

ECB Reporters Network08-May-2024Northern Diamonds beat the South East Stars by three runs in a final-over thriller in the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy at Beckenham, despite a stunning century from Sophia Dunkley.Dunkley, left out of England’s squads to face Pakistan so she could find form in domestic cricket, did exactly that, making 130 from 136 balls.But she was run out by the bowler Erin Burns in an excruciatingly tense final over, after inexplicably failing to ground her bat after a single from the fourth delivery.Bethan Miles was then unable to hit a boundary off the last delivery, meaning the Stars fell agonisingly short of what would have been a List A world-record run chase.Related

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Dunkley, Beaumont 'still in conversation' for T20 WC

Earlier, Hollie Armitage (66), Bess Heath (63) and Sterre Kalis (52) all hit half-centuries, but a spell of three wickets for three runs in six balls from Phoebe Franklin limited the Diamonds to 311 for 9.The visitors chose to bat on what looked like a typical Beckenham road and despite the early loss of Lauren Winfield-Hill, who was bowled by Tash Farrant for 19, they built an ominous platform. The first five wickets all yielded hefty partnerships, taking advantage of a Stars’ attack weakened by the loss of Alice Davidson-Richards, who went off injured after bowling two overs.Armitage and Emma Marlow put on 65 for the second wicket before the latter was brilliantly run for 32 by a direct hit from Miles. Kalea Moore then had Armitage caught by Bryony Smith, before Danni Gregory bowled Burns for 23 in the final over of her spell.A stand of 63 between Heath and Kalis was broken when the former was stumped by Chloe Hill off Miles, but the Diamonds then stuttered. Leah Dobson was the first of Franklin’s victims when she went for six, caught by the sub fielder Claudie Cooper.0:54

Lewis’ World Cup message to dropped Dunkley

Kalis went to Franklin’s next delivery, caught on the boundary by Dunkley, and Phoebe Turner followed in almost identical fashion when she holed out to the last ball of the over.When Sophia Turner was caught by Aylish Cranstone off Stonehouse for 4 the Diamonds were 290 for 9, but an aggressive, unbeaten 23 from Jess Woolston that included a huge six of Stonehouse took them past the 300 mark.The Stars suffered an early blow when Farrant went for just 7, victim of a sharp, diving catch by Dobson off Woolston and Smith had made 19 when she got a leading edge to Phoebe Turner and was caught by Burns.Dunkley and Stonehouse steadied things with a stand of 52, but the latter was caught behind off Sophia Turner for 21, victim of a smart take by Heath who was standing up to the stumps.Phoebe Franklin made 24 at a run a ball, but she fell in Armitage’s first over, slicing her to Woolston at backward point. Hill was looking useful until she was caught by Kalis off Sophia Turner for 23 but with the run rate steepening Cranstone’s 41 dragged the Stars backed into the contest with some calculated aggression that brought up the Stars’ highest ever sixth wicket partnership.When Dunkley reached three figures with a single off Sophia Turner the tie was right back in the balance, but Cranstone fell in the 46th over, chipping Burns to Armitage and Davidson-Richards was forced to bat with Farrant as a runner. Turner’s 47th over went for just four, leaving the Stars needing 33 from the last 18 balls.The equation titled back in the Diamonds favour when Heath stumped Davidson-Richards off Katie Levick for 2. Moore hit the first ball off the penultimate over, bowled by Sophia Turner for four, took a bye of the next and watched as Dunkley smashed a six over long on. The next went for four and two singles left the Stars needing 11 from the last over.Burns limited them to singles off the first three balls and then ran Dunkley out after she failed to ground her bat, after apparently giving up on a second run. Moore hit the fifth ball for three, leaving Miles needing four off the final delivery, but she was caught at cow corner by Sophia Turner, ending an exhilarating contest.

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