Burns, Aley, Healy and Perry deconstruct dramatic WBBL run-out

With two to defend and odds stacked against them, a sensational piece of teamwork helped Sydney Sixers secure a tie, and then a comfortable win in the ensuing Super Over

Melinda Farrell24-Jan-2019Sydney Sixers were defending a total of 131 in their semi-final match against Melbourne Renegades. When Ellyse Perry ran in to bowl the final ball of the innings, the Renegades needed three, with Sophie Molineux on strike and Claire Koski at the non-striker’s end. Molineux’s shot was on its way to a victory-securing boundary when a desperate dive from Erin Burns meant the batters had to run three to win. Burns flicked the ball back for Sarah Aley to pick up and throw to wicketkeeper Alyssa Healy, who turned and threw down the stumps at the bowler’s end. The match was tied and the Sixers won comfortably in the ensuing super over to go through to the final against Brisbane Heat.This is how the players who were involved saw the sensational last play of the innings.

Burns:
I was standing at deep extra cover and I thought that Soph might target the short boundary on the leg side so I thought I wasn’t going to be needed very much! More kind of running in and getting to the circle for backing up the throw. But obviously she opened up and sliced it through cover point.Perry:
I think it looked pretty touch and go in terms of where the ball was going to end up, whether it was going to go for a boundary or not. I think the first shot of the over was a really similar one and that went for four so, yeah, it was pretty touch and go.Healy:
If there was anyone in the competition who was ever going to get it, it was Erin Burns.Burns:
I run as hard as I can and… throw your body at it really.

I don’t think we’ve had so much excitement and entertainment and emotions in the one ballSarah Aley

Aley:
Well I was at third man and I also thought I was going to get the ball but then I knew Erin was faster than me so I basically just tried to hotfoot it as fast as I could over there so that if she did make it I was able to be there and support and throw it in.I was in the best position to view that amazing piece of fielding. She did a fantastic job, full length dive. As I was getting closer to it I thought, ‘this is going to hit the rope’, but then she got low, got her hand to it and I could tell, even though they had to look at the replays and all of that to check, I knew from where I was that she was nowhere near the rope.Burns:
I just see Mitzy coming around from third man so I just tried to tap the ball back and she picked it up pretty quickly and saw that Midge [Healy] was in a pretty good position, so I just watched it all unfold from there.Erin Burns drives through the off side•Getty ImagesAley:
The throw’s actually a bit of a blur, I can’t really remember it. I just remember picking it up and fanging it to Midge. I knew that was the closer end so it was probably better for me to throw to that end and then, if it did need to go to the other end, she was in a closer position and it was going to get there quicker.Perry:
Right next to me the non-striker, Claire Koski, turned to come back for three and I was thinking, ‘well she’s going to make that’. She had a bit of a head start. And then it was kind of like ‘what’s going to happen when Midge gets the ball, will she be able to get it up the other end?’Healy:
I just knew that Claire Koski would have been so far ahead of Soph when she was backing up at the non-striker’s end and I could hear her pretty much over my right shoulder and I thought, ‘I’m not going to have time to take my bails and throw at the other end so I’m just going to take a punt and throw at the other end, hopefully we could sneak them off guard’. Soph had been out there for 20 overs, had run really hard and I was hoping to catch her a little bit slower.

In terms of a team play I don’t think I’ve ever seen a more special one in the context of the match and what effect it had on the gameEllyse Perry

Ridiculous. I thought it was always a lose-lose situation anyway because I figured she might be home anyway. I’m just going to ping it and if I miss we lose. So it was just a spur of the moment thing. I obviously knew I needed to throw to that end and, you know, give me nine out of ten shots and I’ll miss nine of them, so it was just one of those things that happened and I guess we were destined to make the final and we did it however we could.Perry:
I knew it was out as soon as it hit the stumps.Burns:
I was just ecstatic. I was pretty sure she was short of her ground and the thought didn’t even cross my mind that I might have hit the rope so I was pretty confident.Aley:
Jubilation. I know that we didn’t actually win the match [on that play] but the position that we were in to then get it to a Super Over meant that we were still in a position to win the game and get through to the final so our chances were still alive. I just started running in towards the wicket but Erin was behind me so I turned around and celebrated with her. We obviously had to wait for the replay but you could see where we were that she was out so it was a lot of excitement and jubilation.Alyssa Healy hurls a throw to the non striker’s end•Getty ImagesHealy:
It was just an unbelievable team play and something this team’s really proud of that. We are a team and we all play together and that was just the ultimate example of that.Aley:
I don’t think we’ve had so much excitement and entertainment and emotions in the one ball. The situation that it was to put us through to the final it was a pretty special feeling and a pretty special play.Perry:
In terms of a team play I don’t think I’ve ever seen a more special one in the context of the match and what effect it had on the game. It was absolutely phenomenal and I know a lot of people have watched that footage a number of times but I think we’ll be watching that for a long, long time to come down the track and hopefully it’s symbolic of the culture we’ve created at this club but also what we stand for as a team.Burns:
It was one of those moments where everything just seemed to fit perfectly. To tap it back but then Sarah to come around and the perfect throw into Midge and then to spin around no look at the stumps and throw down the other end is pretty awesome. It was definitely a pretty wild finish.

A dream year for Bumrah and India's quicks

Bumrah’s 2018 tally of 45 wickets is the highest by an Indian bowler in away Tests, and he could become the fastest Indian pacer to 50 Test wickets

Gaurav Sundararaman28-Dec-2018India have unearthed a pace-bowling sensation in the longer format in the form of Jasprit Bumrah, who, since his debut in South Africa in January, has impressed with his ability to bowl on different kinds of pitches and consistently keep up his pace. Bumrah has played all his nine Tests abroad, which is unusual for an Indian pace bowler. In the nine Tests so far, Bumrah has taken 45 wickets at 21.24 and has struck once every eight overs. He has three five wicket hauls – one each in South Africa, England and Australia – of which two have aided in wins for India, while the side holds the advantage in the ongoing MCG Test. With one more innings left in the game, Bumrah could smash the record for the quickest Indian fast bowler to 50 Test wickets.Some of the numbers from Bumrah’s spell today and the exceptional year that the Indian pace bowlers have had. 45 Wickets taken by Bumrah away from home in 2018, the most by an Indian bowler in away Tests in a year. His team-mate Mohammed Shami also features in the list, at a close second, with 43 wickets. Bumrah’s 45 wickets is also the most by a bowler from India in their debut year.ESPNcricinfo Ltd 6/33 The second-best bowling figures for an Indian pace bowler in Australia after Kapil Dev’s 8 for 106 at Adelaide in 1985. Bumrah’s six-for is his career-best in Tests and second best in his first-class career. 2 Wickets taken by Bumrah in this innings by bowling full length. His variations across line, length and delivery type have been a revelation. Barring short of good length, Bumrah took a wicket from each of the lengths he bowled today, striking with a full toss, yorker and the short ball.ESPNcricinfo Ltd247 Wickets taken by Indian bowlers in 2018, the most they have ever taken in a year. Their previous best was 237 wickets in 1979. In 14 matches, the Indian bowlers average just 24.15, the second-best in a year where they have played a minimum of five Tests. 292 Lead taken by India, their largest in Australia and third largest in SENA (South Africa, England, New Zealand and Australia) countries. 0 Scores in excess of 400 for Australia since March this year. Since the start of the South Africa tour, Australia have averaged 233 with the bat and have scored in excess of 350 only twice. In total of 17 innings Australia have scored less than 200 on five occasions and above 300 only on three occasions. In this period Australia have managed just one century, which was scored by Usman Khawaja in Dubai.1 Runs scored by batsmen from positions three to five for India. This is their joint lowest run aggregate in Tests for these batting positions. Previously they had aggregated 1 in 1953 against West Indies. This is also the second instance this year that Virat Kohli and Pujara have scored a duck in the same innings.

Down Marshall Drive, a new West Indies promise to rekindle the old feeling

Five fast bowlers, three explosive hitters, three striking young batsmen, a captain who can do anything: a beguiling prospect for fans, a terrifying one for a shaken South Africa

Sharda Ugra in Southampton09-Jun-2019Within the space of one match against Pakistan, West Indies have made everyone forget about how they had to scrap and qualify for the World Cup. Inside two matches, after having Australia at 79 for 5, they had a generation of cricket fans swooning, reminded of their 16-year-old selves. On the eve of their third World Cup game, at Southampton against a struggling South Africa, West Indies are to the romantic acquiring the status of a squad of superheroes, cricket’s Avengers back and ready to seize the game from the superbats – sorry, superbots – who rule the cricket world.It gets richer: when South Africa hosted its World Cup in 2003, their campaign was upended in the very first match by West Indies, who won by three runs. Between the 2015 World Cup and now, South Africa have only faced West Indies three times in ODIs, during a tri-series also involving Australia, winning once and losing twice (with AB de Villiers in the side, in case you wondered). So their encounters with the new West Indies have been minimal. The road leading up to the Hampshire Bowl is called the Marshall Drive, after the county’s two great Barbados-born Marshalls: opening batsman Roy, and a slightly more famous fast bowler who took 1065 wickets for the county across all competitions (and just, by the way, 533 for West Indies.)The two teams did face each other in a rain-affected World Cup warm-up match in Bristol, South Africa rattling along to 95 for no loss in 12.4 overs. But that was before everything – before the AB bombshell, before injuries to Ngidi and Steyn, before Amla ran into a fog. The West Indians have gone in the other direction, leaving South Africa coach Ottis Gibson reminding the world on Saturday that West Indies “are dangerous in World Cups.”The truth is that between the last World Cup and this one, West Indies didn’t win too much. They won just 19 out of 67 ODIs, didn’t win an ODI series – coming closest with a 2-2 draw at home against England in February – and lost the World Cup Qualifier final to Afghanistan. Only Sri Lanka have lost more.And yet, West Indies stride the World Cup with aura reburnished. This has come from two reasons – the first, that West Indies have been seen and heard of as winning in other formats – the 2016 World T20 in India, a home Test series against England, and making three other tournament finals in the time (even if those have spelt defeats to Australia, Afghanistan and, most recently, to Bangladesh.) In World Cups, it must be said that even though West Indies last won the title in 1979 and made the semi-finals in 1996, they’re ahead of Pakistan and Sri Lanka and South Africa in match victories, 42 out of 73.Gibson reminded the world, “West Indies teams have always been dangerous and this one is no different. They have a lot of players in there that can win matches, they have always had match-winners.” It is the manner in which they are setting up the winning that has the world sit up, “They are going to go on an all-out and they have decided with the team they have set up.” It is simple. When they bowl, it’s five fast bowlers and bam. When they bat, a trio of the game’s most explosive hitters is shuffled around three striking young batsmen and a captain who can do anything. How do you not get beguiled and hypnotised by the idea of this kind of West Indies?Shai Hope smashes one on the leg side•Getty ImagesWest Indies assistant coach Roddy Estwick has seen all sides: a first-class cricketer from 1982 to 1990, half-brother to Sylvester Clarke, and now working with a team trying to respectfully set aside an enormous heritage and create their own. “We can’t keep looking back. We have to respect the past, you know. Our great bowlers of the past obviously they are very important in our history. But what we’ve got now, this group of bowlers now, they have got to find their own identity. They have got to find their own way.”It will be both daunting and inspirational for the West Indians to travel around this country during the World Cup, where the very ground has been touched by the greatness of their predecessors. The Marshall Drive will remind them of it, as will the sight of Bishop or Holding turning up for commentary, or Garner, Robers and Croft dropping by to watch.On the Monday, Estwick knows will not be about sentiment or aura or presence or history, it will be about the boring stuff. “What we must do is play the one-percenters a bit better… It’s [defeat to Australia] nothing to do with the bowlers. We are all in it together. We are not going to single out the bowlers and say the bowlers did a poor job, or the batsmen did a poor job, it is a team. If you are looking for excuses in the cricket game, you can find it wherever you look.”He refused to grumble about the umpiring in Nottingham. “It is history. We can’t do anything about it. You can’t keep looking back. If you keep looking back, you have major problems. We have now got to look forward… Not on the past because past is history. It can’t come back.” The past in West Indies cricket is hard to shake off. In this World Cup, its current team has discovered that in the aftermath of compelling performance, its looming cloud could become an updraft.Estwick took the match and the World Cup out of Southampton and Great Britain and put it across the oceans. “Every West Indian is in this,” he said, “This is big for the Caribbean people.”The team’s management has been asking the team, “to go out and put a smile on the people’s faces in the Caribbean,” Estwick said, “Economically we are struggling a little bit so we want people to wake up in the morning at 5 o’clock and 6 o’clock with a smile on their face, seeing West Indians playing good cricket. And also we want to help the people in London as well, you know, who have had so much pressure cricket-wise in the last 10, 15 years and if we can put a smile on all black people’s faces we will be very happy.”Outside of West Indies’ direct opponents in this event, the cricket world is already beaming.

Why aren't T20 teams scoring bigger more often?

If more sides approached T20 less like traditional cricket forms and embraced all-out hitting without worrying about wickets, they would end up consistently pushing the envelope

Jarrod Kimber16-May-2019Andre Russell’s left foot pointing to midwicket, his right knee bent, and his arms swinging through a ball that’s about to be called a wide is not what you think of as a traditional cricket shot. Test batting has actually slowed down in recent years, meaning T20 cricket has never been less like it. The runs-per-over figure in the last three years for Tests is 3.2, for ODIs 5.3, and in all T20s it is 8.2.T20 has lit a fire under attacking batting, and for someone who believes Test batting is proper cricket, it’s hard to look at T20 hitting and not think it’s crazy. We’ve not only perfected the cow-corner hoick but the inside-out hockey-slap, the back-of-point slice, and a host of other shots where someone will lose their Adam’s apple. Players now understand how to hit the ball hard.But the actual gains in run rates across formats are pretty low. Players aren’t adding an extra run a year in T20, and ODI cricket hasn’t become as much like T20 as some would think. The highest run rate in ODIs over a year was in 2015 – 5.5 per over; and that included extras. Viv Richards scored at 5.4. In ODIs last year the economy rate was 5.3 (mocking the whole “300 is par” notion), though it had risen from 5.12 in 2009. Even if you look at the lowest yearly run rate in the last decade, 5.05 in 2012, against the highest, in 2015, it’s only an 8% rise.ALSO READ: Types of T20 teams: the six-hitting sideThe run rate in T20 has grown slightly more quickly. In the last decade, the lowest run rate was 7.48, in 2013; last year it was 8.4, which is an 11% rise. Unlike a good T20 innings, it has been steady rather than spectacular.And that is because T20 cricket is still anchored in what we might call “normal cricket”. In 2018 the T20 batting average for all batsmen was, at 25.06, the highest it has ever been, suggesting that batsmen are putting more value on their wickets now than in previous years. They might hit a lot of sixes, and they might get quicker with their scoring, but they still play T20 like normal cricket, just with more urgency. It has not truly become a sport in its own right just yet, although it is well on its way.In computing and science, people talk about theoretical limits. In nature, the theoretical limit to how fast something can travel appears to be the speed of light (about 300,000km/s). The fastest observed human is Usain Bolt, clocked at 44.72kph. So there appear to be natural limits depending on mass, physiology and other factors. For T20 cricket we have a theoretical limit of how fast batsmen could score if they did not worry about losing wickets – the scoring rate off free hits.Since 2008, the scoring rate off free hits stands at 12.54 (runs per over); so batsmen can’t score at much faster than two runs a ball. As T20 currently stands, 12.5 is our theoretical limit, which translates to an innings score of 250.At the moment the rise of the run rate off normal deliveries is fairly in sync with the run rate off free hits. A couple of years one has increased while the other has fallen – or vice versa – but overall they are rising fairly equally. (The free-hit run rate has swung more but that is mainly because there are so few free hits every year, amounting to a fraction of a percentage point of all runs scored.)

Of course, batsmen cannot score at 12.5 for sustained periods because of the finite resource of ten wickets. Additionally, as so often happens in limited-overs cricket, there will be playing-condition changes that make that number redundant. So as long as five bowlers are needed, four fielders need to be inside the circle, there are six overs of Powerplay, and turf wickets continue to be used, it’s hard to see players crossing the 12.5 mark. If they keep improving at the current rate – in the last decade the scoring rate in T20 has gone from 7.57 to 8.4 – it will take them over 30 years to make it.But batsmen are still playing a game that is rooted in conventional cricket-think. If and when that changes, run rates could take a jump.***When I speak to T20 players and coaches, many of them point to batting averages or overall runs tallies. Batsmen still don’t want to get out, and coaches place a high value on consistency over explosiveness. T20 has changed that equation slightly, but it has not eradicated that thinking.In 2018 the average of all batsmen in T20 was the highest since the birth of the format. And this year is currently the second highest. Batsmen are batting longer, meaning more players get set – so if you think about it from a conventional standpoint, it would make sense that they score quicker than newer batsmen.ALSO READ: How batsmen began to go boom all the timeT20 batting line-ups still rely on the top order to a ridiculous degree: 496 players opened the batting last year in T20 in 717 matches (that is for both spots). At Nos. 5 and 6, over 500 players batted . Which tells you that we chop and change other batting positions because we struggle to work out what success is in those positions, while for openers a steady-as-you-go start is enough to get you multiple opportunities in that position.And that is because openers seem at first glance to be the most successful batsmen in T20. So they should be, given they have the field up for almost all of their innings, and even with mediocre years, can find themselves towards the top of the run tally or average list. Opening is the quickest-scoring batting position in T20, so even slower-scoring openers often have better strike rates than Nos. 4 and 5.If you throw in the No. 3, who gets some of the benefits that apply to openers, the first three batsmen face 57.6 balls an innings, or 48%. That does not leave the rest much of a chance to get started. Openers could go far quicker, but teams still fear the “lose three wickets in the Powerplay and lose 65% of the match” rule.It’s something teams still hold on to. A team like Adelaide Strikers seem to have taken this so much to heart that they don’t attack much in the Powerplay at all; instead they start attacking once the field goes out. This approach is steeped in traditional cricket thinking. Many of the losses that that 65% rule refers to are because teams slow down after they lose the three wickets and consolidate, and not just because they lost three early wickets. In part that is because they have stacked their batting at the top, but mostly because that is how batting always has been in cricket: your top order makes most of the runs, and if they don’t, you have to rebuild to set a new base.But what if the base is wrong to begin with?What if T20 batting isn’t about big contributions from the top but a series of contributions all the way through? In 2018, No. 8s on average faced 4.07 balls per match, and only appeared in 58% of possible innings. So that means they hardly get in, and when they do, it’s not for long.

The top six currently face 100 balls, or 83%. And often they do that by conserving their wickets and then trying to attack towards the end.To score a lot quicker, you could select a team of players who average 20 at 1.6 runs a ball; a top eight, perhaps. It takes 12.5 balls to make 20 at that speed, and if you had eight players who had the ability or temperament to do it, you would have 160 runs from 100 balls with 20 balls left in the innings. There would be two extra batsmen to consume the 100 balls, but they would be scoring what teams score in a match now, with 20 balls left. That comes down to ability, but you’d also need all-round skills, to not weaken the bowling. It so happens that a lot of the players who smash it loads do have bowling ability, like Russell, Sunil Narine, Colin de Grandhomme and Corey Anderson.Some of this goes back to traffic management. If you build a highway, the worst thing that can happen is, the highway is seen as the only option. You want to build a highway and still have a large proportion of people use other roads. Otherwise everyone will clog up the highway. If you rely too heavily on your top three and they bat slow for too long, they clog up the innings. If you have a multitude of scoring options, and everyone is trying to score as quickly as they can, the chances of traffic jams are limited.If your top three face 60 balls every game, unless they are incredibly fast scorers, you’re limiting what your other talent can do and allowing the opposition to stack their bowling in match-ups. If you have a collection of players who all can face 12-15 balls per game and go for it, everyone is a threat, and you’ll have a team with many diverse strengths and weaknesses.Even the king of T20 batting, Chris Gayle, gets himself set to ensure he scores big more often, knowing that his power can catch him up and then some. Gayle is one of 26 batsmen who have faced ten or more free-hit balls, and he is the only one with a strike rate of above 300 from them. So if even Gayle is getting set, getting a good average and ensuring his run total is high, what of mortal men? The average of all openers last year was 27 and they struck at 134. Not that long ago, batsmen who averaged 30 and had a strike rate of 130 were in demand, but openers have got so good in that position that they do score 30 at 130 as default.ALSO SEE: Russellmania hits T20This system, of players scoring faster and doing so deep into the batting order, might feel riskier at first, but it could lead to more consistent high scoring.Now while these big data trends often tell us a lot, they can be tricky. In the last three years, among all grounds used more than ten times, Trent Bridge has the highest run rate, 8.82 (which is a strike rate of 147). If you are playing at Colombo Cricket Club Ground or Multan Cricket Stadium, the runs per over are about 6.84. So a strike rate of 130 at Trent Bridge is not sensational, but in Colombo or Multan, it’s great.Sunil Narine successfully brought the pinch-hitter concept to T20s•BCCIFactors like this, not to mention collapses, weather, bowling match-ups, all affect what batsmen do. Also, there are teams like Sunrisers Hyderabad, Perth Scorchers and Chennai Super Kings, who have preferred to achieve consistent totals rather than score as many as they can, and that has helped them win titles.Even as T20 hitting has improved, cricket still finds a way, through bowlers or conditions, to make people go back to what they know.***There are ways – not exactly new ones – of extending your batting line-up and making each batsman more efficient.The pinch-hitter has been around in cricket for a long time. It was perhaps 1992 when the idea took a strong hold in ODIs, and pinch-hitters have been used occasionally since then. Narine has brought the trend back in T20 cricket. As an opener he averages 18 and strikes at 160. You’re not losing that much if you throw someone like him up: he won’t face many, if any, balls batting at Nos. 9 through 11, and he’s less likely to play for his average.There are plenty of players like Liam Plunkett, Adil Rashid, David Willey and Rashid Khan who have the game to be thrown up the order. If they will only face five or fewer balls anyway, targeting the Powerplay with a relatively unimportant wicket might work. You could also make the argument that batting at the death is harder, with the field out, a soft ball, and death-bowling specialists operating. You might want smarter batsmen there, whereas at the top, hitting is at its most simple. A score of ten off four balls at the top is worth more than ten off four at the death, as death over run rates are higher.But it is in the middle order that things get trickier.***Players who find themselves in the middle order are usually professional batsmen. They are trained a certain way. There are coaches who still get upset when a player hits a boundary and tries to hit another the next ball. Batsmen in the top six want to bat long and sensible, even if the definition of that has changed for T20.One of the most notable exceptions is Russell. He faces far fewer balls than a normal middle-order player – only 13 – and can bat anywhere from three to seven. Russell in the last two years, since he came back from his drugs ban, has averaged 31, but at a strike rate of 182.Najibullah Zadran strikes at 118 in T20 and 224 in T10, which is an indicator of how much further hitting can go•AFPRussell has been slowly improving over the years, averaging more. His enforced break from the game seems to have helped his batting. But unlike most middle-order players, his batting is not the sole reason he is in the team. He could afford to risk it all and only face a few balls a game because – like Narine – his bowling is strong. Now if his knees keep getting worse, he has more than enough of a reputation as a batsman to continue on the strength of that skill alone – but the ability to bat the way he does came from the original freedom his bowling allowed.Though there are few batsmen with Russell’s skills, he is not alone. Players like Anderson, Ben Cutting and de Grandhomme can score at inhuman levels. One major difference is that often these guys either aren’t bowling at all or they are the fifth or even sixth bowlers. Russell is a genuine front-line bowler. He can start batting in sixth gear without fear; most players cannot, either physically or mentally.Now imagine you had the ability to bat like Russell or Narine, but no second skill at all. There aren’t many teams who take punts on players who average around 20. Most coaches don’t see it as a passable average, no matter what the strike rate. Unless you are batting at No. 7 and giving something else in the field. So if you had any batting ability, pushing your average up while limiting your strike rate would be a fairly safe bet.These kinds of players need to be unlocked in order for batting to be spread more throughout the innings and for players to cut loose with fewer fears.***You can’t fault the players for taking the position that will help their career. But free hits have shown what is possible, and so has the T10 league. In the last T10, 21 players scored over 100 runs apiece, of whom 15 scored at over two runs a ball, and not one scored at slower than 1.5 per ball. What was interesting was the jump in strike rates for some players between T20 and T10.Andre Fletcher is the second highest scorer in CPL history. He can smoke fast bowling, including doing things like score 20 runs in four balls against one of T20’s most parsimonious bowlers, Mohammad Irfan. But after the Powerplay his strike rate often slows down 30 points or more. In the T10, without a natural slow-down period, and without the worry of having to bat for a long time, he struck at 214. In the last two years his T20 strike rate is 122; that’s some leap between the two.And it wasn’t just him. There are so many players, like Nicholas Pooran, Najibullah Zadran and Fletcher, who have so much more to give. So while there aren’t many Russells out there, the T10 and free hits have shown us that many batsmen can score at scary levels.

There were only four players of the 21 who made over 100 runs in the last T10 series whose strike rates didn’t rise by 40 or more: Alex Hales – whose strike rate in the last two years is 146 outside of Trent Bridge and 209 at his batting-friendly home; Cameron Delport, who struggled to get going in the T10 tournament; Hazratullah Zazai, who has been striking at 189 recently, so it’s hard to improve on that too much unless you are Russell (who hit three fours and 17 sixes in the T10); and Narine, who has been at 153 in T20, and went up to 187.So we can assume that Narine is batting near his natural scoring limit, and it seems like most players are not. It’s not a surprise to learn that despite getting into pretty much any side as first or second bowler, he has also spent years working on his striking – at first, hitting sixes over fours as a tail-end cameo man; and then, after Aaron Finch promoted him to try and upset frugal left-arm spinner Michael Beer, he became a semi-frequent short-innings opener.But this is a low sample size, and for all we know, the wickets were made for batting. Also, I talked to one bowler in the T10 who admitted it was hard to get up for only bowling 12 balls a day knowing you were about to be destroyed. However, like the free hits, it shows what is possible when you embrace the hitting and stop worrying about wickets.ALSO READ: Why hitting is more optimal than batting in T20Russell was an aggressive player from the start, and with two first-class hundreds in 17 games, he is a decent batting talent to begin with. But what he did was use all those elements to become the biggest force he could be with the bat. And still, his strike rate jumped 89 in the T10.It is not simple for a team owner to buy all the Andre Russells in the world, because there’s only one. And even cheaper versions, like de Grandhomme, Anderson, Willey and Chris Morris, are still quite pricey.But what free hits, T10, Narine and Russell have shown is that T20 can get a lot quicker. It’s just a question of when it will happen.If you are a specialist batsman, it’s not that easy to make a call when it is your livelihood on the line. T20 tournaments are short. If you tried going all out for one series and ended with an average of 16, would it matter that your strike rate was 180? While individual players will try it, how long before batsmen as a whole go for this approach? It might even be dictated by the people who choose teams and not the batsmen themselves.There is definitely a limit to T20 scoring at the moment, and considering that in no year have we topped the nine-runs-an-over mark, that seems to be it. Not long ago, it was eight runs an over. These limits are not natural, though; they’re man-made. As more specialists come into T20, players try new methods and continue to work out what is actually possible, the sky may not be the limit, but 12.5 will not stay as the theoretical one.

From repairing roads to building bridges: Jack Burnham battles back after drugs ban

After a year-long ban for cocaine use, Durham’s rising star has a new outlook on life and a determination to atone

David Hopps at Chester-le-Street04-Apr-2019Three drug busts for cocaine use in one season was certainly going some. By the end of the 2017 summer, Jack Burnham’s cricket career hung by a thread. One of England’s most highly-rated young batsmen was in danger of being lost to the game.Now Burnham nets with Durham again, in readiness for the start of the county season. That should be enough to make everybody euphoric. Without an artificial stimulant in sight.Burnham has sought acceptance again in the accustomed manner for a working-class north-eastern lad. Not by highfalutin speeches or grandiose gestures, but by hard graft.If you’re in a hole don’t keep digging, they say. Burnham did the opposite. There are some roads and kerbs in the north-east that look a little smarter after a year of 5.30am alarm calls.”This time last year I was labouring for one of my mates,” he said. “He had his own company. I was doing block work, roads, kerbs, everything. It was hard work. After it all happened, I just thought I needed to do something to keep working and keep myself going. Long jobs, long days. It was a massive eye opener, seeing how lucky and privileged I am to have had this opportunity.”I did a little bit of work when I first left school, building work. But in all honesty I did get sucked into this life, this Good Life. To go away and see what other people have to do to make the money to get by in life was a big eye-opener.ALSO READ: Finn at 30: Can England’s Next Big Thing finally reach his potential?“I’m going to work as hard as I can with my cricket, make as much money and play as many games around the world that I can. But it has also made me realise, now I have developed skills outside of cricket, that if cricket doesn’t work, I have options.”But there is a deeper element to his recovery than mere physical exertion. He has hinted at “bottling things up since childhood”. With that emotional honesty comes a greater prospect of putting his bad times behind him.His mother responded to his fall from grace with a combination of plain speaking and emotional support. For the time being, he is living at home again, determined that there will be no relapse.”I’ve just recently done my mam’s garden. I put a new patio in for her and then a little garden for the flowers,” he said. “To have those skills, to be able to do things apart from cricket, was quite nice.”Burnham has a Level 2 coaching badge and has plans to take a Level 3 this winter unless overseas trips get in the way. With the help of the PCA, he can speak to a counsellor in Nottinghamshire or on Face Time chat. He has embraced a range of coping mechanisms to try to keep his career on an even keel.What studies exist are equivocal about the benefits of cocaine for an athlete. Although it is a stimulant, the illusion of better performance is not necessarily backed up by actuality. And it should be fairly observed that Burnham’s reliance on this illegal, Class-A stimulant was far from unique: the Sunday Telegraph reported last month after testing the Wembley toilets that cocaine use was at an “alarming” level among the crowd for England’s opening European Championship match against the Czech Republic.But sport sets a higher bar for its athletes and the ECB is committed to ensuring that cricket is a drug-free sport. All recreational drugs are outlawed irrespective of performance advantages, with health a prime motivation.

I was doing block work, roads, curbs, everything. It was hard work. After it all happened, I just thought I needed to do something to keep working

To comply with WADA international standards, it operates a strong in- and out-of-competition anti-doping testing programme which is conducted by the UK Anti-Doping agency (UKAD). Any cricketer can be tested anytime, anywhere.To be sure of achieving such a lifestyle consistently, Burnham has had to make difficult decisions. He has broken up with his girlfriend and is no longer as reliant on his childhood friends. He knows he needs to move in different circles.”I have had to make a lot of sacrifices with my friendship groups and things I was doing,” he said. “But the help I have had from the club and everyone around me, supporting me, it has been hard but good. It was tough moving away, it was like starting again, but I knew I was doing it for the right reasons. I moved house, I moved village.”Durham were entitled to sack him – and many counties would have done. Under ECB rules, they had to keep his failed drugs tests confidential on the first two occasions, but on the third occasion they were free to do as they please.But he has been at the county since the age of seven and his emergence as a player of international potential was a source of great pride – in Bangladesh three years ago, he broke Alastair Cook’s England run-scoring record in an Under-19 World Cup.”At one point I thought that was it with cricket, I’d ruined every opportunity I had,” he reflected. “But the support and help that the club has given me is very appreciated. To be here now, going into a season, fit, strong, having this opportunity again is just amazing.”He hasn’t always been a hard trainer, far from it. There were times when he perhaps got more licence than he should. But his commitment in the long pre-season has been exemplary. He looks fitter than at any time in his life. He knows that regaining respect will not happen overnight.Marcus North, Durham’s new director of cricket, judges: “Jack Burnham has been outstanding. He has gone through a very difficult period in his life, has had 12 months to reflect and work really hard on himself away from cricket due to the ban.”He has done more than we have asked of him, he is one of the fittest in the squad and his work ethic is exceptional. He is a real raw talent. We are really excited what the future holds for Jack.”

I'd like to think if I do well I pave the way for other SA spinners – Keshav Maharaj interview

The left-arm spinner opens up about what makes him tick and how he’s prepared for this India tour

Karthik Krishnaswamy in Visakhapatnam01-Oct-20193:15

Maharaj as good as any spinner in the world – du Plessis

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India v South Africa is available in the US on Hotstar and ESPN+. Subscribe to ESPN+ and tune in to the three Tests.

Your first Test wicket – did you think Aleem Dar would give it out, with Steven Smith so far down the track?
So, funny story. We were bowling in the nets the day before [the Test match], and I’m not sure who I was bowling to. Aleem came there, to get into his routine of seeing how the bowlers are, and the guy came down the wicket and exactly the same thing happened, and he was like, you know what, I’d give that out, it looked adjacent to me.I’m sure he must have been thinking about that when you appealed for the Smith wicket.
I’m not sure if he thought about that. I did, definitely. I didn’t expect him to give it out, but luckily he did.Do you know that, since your debut, 11 spinners have taken 50 or more Test wickets, and you have the second-best strike rate among them, behind Rangana Herath?
Yeah? To be honest, I didn’t know about that at all. I’m not very much a stats person. I’m trying to do the best I can, wherever I go in the world, whether it’s international, domestic, club cricket or just some local Sunday league that you go play. I’m very fortunate and blessed to be able to do something I love and see other parts of the world, so if I can do well, I’ll get many more opportunities to do that.Keshav Maharaj registered the best figures for an SA bowler outside home•AFPThe reason I brought up the strike rate was this tendency, maybe, to look at this South African attack and see all these fast bowlers and think they’re the strike bowlers, and see you as doing the holding role, but your strike rate says you’re an attacking bowler too.
Yeah, but let’s not forget, fact is that we have a wealth of fast bowlers and I’m fortunate enough to have such a world-class attack around me, and it allows me to settle in and things like that.

I’m blessed to be able to do something I love and see other parts of the world, so if I can do well, I’ll get many more opportunities to do that

Do you feel that batsmen feel under pressure to come after you, because there’s not really much they can do at the other end, sometimes?
Yeah, sometimes it works out that way. Conditions dictate how the batsmen also identify avenues to score, like you said, and I suppose when you have a world-class bowling attack, seam attack, you’re going to have to target someone, and that’s an opportunity for me to get wickets.When do you know that you’re bowling well? What are the signs you look for?
It’s just the feel for me, I think. If I’m not bowling a cut ball or anything, then I know I’m in my rhythm and things are going okay, but as a spinner, I know it’s just a feel thing. You’ll have days when you’re bowling well and it just doesn’t go your way in terms of outcomes, but I judge myself basically on the fact that I must not bowl a cut ball during my spell. If I do that, I know how well [I’ve bowled], regardless of what it says in terms of figures.No one matches up to South Africa’s quicks at home, but overseas their best bowler is left-arm spinner Keshav Maharaj (third from right)•AFP/Getty ImagesIn your lifetime, South Africa hasn’t really had a spin-bowling culture. There have only been three other spinners since readmission who’ve got 100 Test wickets, and you’re on 94 now. How significant is that milestone?
Yeah, obviously it’s a big accolade. I mean, looking back three years ago, I wouldn’t be able to say that I thought about being in the position that I am today, in terms of how far I’ve come along. But yeah, coming from a country of fast bowlers, it is difficult, but I think when you persevere with something you love, you will go places. It’s not always the easiest road. You may only get it once, you may get it a hundred times, but you know, you’ve still got that chance to do something. I’d like to think that, if I can have a successful career in international cricket, it does pave the way for the younger spinners in terms of opportunity coming through.You’ve played two Tests in the subcontinent so far, in Sri Lanka. You went wicketless on the first day of that tour, but you came back after that, and picked up that nine-for in the second Test. What were the things you learned about bowling in the subcontinent, on that tour?
I fell sick, so I couldn’t play the warm-up game, so obviously I had to feel my way into subcontinent conditions, that’s why the first innings was… it felt weird for me, but, you know, people say [on the subcontinent, it’s about your] pace and things like that, but I also think it’s about your consistency, your lines and lengths. The best in the world, your Ashwins, your Jadejas, your Lyons – they’re all just consistent bowlers. Yes, they have subtle variations, some of them have more, but I think it’s just the consistency and ability to just sort of test the batsmen’s patience and things like that. They’re also very clever as to how they want to bowl, but if you’re consistent, you can bowl any way you want and know you’re going to get someone out.

At least 40 percent of my wickets, probably, are dictated by the way Faf’s read the game, on the field

Before coming to India in 2016-17, Nathan Lyon and Steve O’Keefe did quite a bit of work on how they spun the ball on Indian pitches. Where they’d bowl with more overspin back home, here they were trying to mix it up with sidespin. Is that something you’ve worked on too?
Yeah, everyone who comes here says that you need to work on your sidespin and stuff, it’s a very, sort of unnatural thing for me to do because I’m more overspin, but I’ve been trying to play around with the SG ball to find where you can get some assistance off the wicket when it is not turning, you know, that sort of thing.Keshav Maharaj gets a hug from his captain Faf du Plessis after a wicket•Getty ImagesWhat’s it like, as a spin bowler, to have Faf du Plessis as your captain?
I think he’s very encouraging. He’s a captain who lets you dictate what you want, and then he comes in, rather than telling you what to do, and then you give your opinion. Also the way he reads the game, his ability to read the game, is phenomenal. At least 40 percent of my wickets, probably, are dictated by the way he’s read the game, on the field.Could you give some examples of that?
One that stands out is in England, we were playing the second Test in Nottingham. Moeen was batting, and he kept sort of trying to sweep me and sweep me, and then we kept moving, moving (the fielders), and Faf said, you know what? Have the guy at catching square leg, let him try and fine sweep, and literally we had the guy, not even the next ball, tried to fine sweep and it went straight to short square leg.Another one was at Colombo [the nine-for Test]. Dilruwan Perera was batting, and it wasn’t probably my best delivery, but Faf says, you know what, if he does sweep, it’s not going to go the whole way, and he sweeps up, so we put the man halfway [back], and Ngidi caught it at backward square leg.

South Africa's worst series defeat since readmission

This was the first time since 1936 that South Africa lost successive Tests by an innings

S Rajesh23-Oct-2019Lungi Ngidi’s bizarre dismissal on the fourth morning in Ranchi – caught off a ball which hit the non-striker – mercifully brought a quick end to what has been an utterly shambolic series for South Africa. With both bat and ball, they were completely outplayed in each of the three Tests, and that is reflected in the series stats. In several parameters, these are the worst numbers for South Africa since their return to international cricket in 1992.The overall series numbersESPNcricinfo LtdThere have been two other series of at least three Tests, since their readmission, in which South Africa have lost every game, and both were against Australia – at home in 2005-06, and away in 2001-02. But they weren’t outplayed in this manner, in terms of the difference between their batting and bowling averages. In fact, this was the first time since 1936 that South Africa lost successive Tests by an innings.Over these three Tests in India, South Africa averaged 23.01 with the bat, and 76.92 with the ball. The difference a whopping 53.91, which is the largest ever for them in any series since their readmission. In fact, it’s almost twice as much as the next-highest difference of 27.67 in the 2006 series in Sri Lanka, when Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene had that massive partnership of 624.The 10 series with the highest difference have all either been in India, Sri Lanka, or against Australia, illustrating the opponents/countries which have been the toughest for them.The wickets mismatchSouth Africa took 25 wickets in the entire series, while India took all 60 that were on offer. The difference of 35 is the highest ever in South Africa’s history. Since their readmission, that difference had never exceeded 22 before this series; in fact there is only one other series when the difference has gone beyond 20 (when the opposition team took more wickets than South Africa). In the 94 series South Africa have played since their readmission (including one-off Tests), only 26 times have opposition team taken more wickets than South Africa.

Apart from failing to take wickets, the bowlers also struggled to keep the Indian batsmen in check: India’s overall run rate for the series was 4.03, making this only the third series since 1992 when South Africa have leaked more than four runs per over. The two previous instances were both against Australia, in 2002 and 2012.Pacers take a beatingTraditionally, pace has always been South Africa’s strength. In 94 series since their readmission, only 11 times has the opposition pace attack taken more wickets than they have, while there have been 24 instances of opposition fast bowlers finishing with a better average. However, the difference has never been as vast as in this series, in terms of average, wickets taken or strike rate.While India’s fast bowlers took 26 wickets at 17.50, South Africa’s managed just 10, at 70.2. The difference of 52.70 is easily the worst, more than twice as bad as the next-highest difference (in series where the seamers of each team have bowled at least 10 overs). The top six in this list is dominated by series against Australia.ESPNcricinfo LtdIn terms of wickets taken by fast bowlers in a series, the difference of 16 is four more than the next-highest difference of 12, when South Africa toured New Zealand in 2016-17. Back then, New Zealand’s seamers took 33 wickets in three Tests at 29.78 to South Africa’s 21 at 38.8. (However, South Africa’s pace attack was rescued by Keshav Maharaj, who took 15 wickets at 19.93, far-cry from his meagre haul of six wickets at 85.66 in this series.)The strike rate difference in this series was 96.50, which means South Africa’s seamers bowled 16 more overs per wicket than their Indian counterparts. That is an additional hour of bowling per wicket. Again, it’s comfortably their worst performance in a series since readmission.

The disappearing top orderOver the three Tests, South Africa’s average partnership for the top five wickets was 17.10, compared to India’s 91.05. India’s top five had six century partnerships and three other 50-plus stands in 20 attempts, compared to one half-century and century stand for South Africa. The difference was embarrassing.Again, never has South Africa’s top order been outplayed so thoroughly in a series since their readmission. The previous highest difference in average partnership for the top five wickets in a series for South Africa was 32.27, which is less than half the current difference of 73.95. In terms of ratio, India’s top five wickets scored more than five times the runs per partnership, compared to South Africa.

South Africa’s lower order did much better in comparison, averaging 28.93 runs per partnership. The difference of 11.83 is the second-highest for South Africa since readmission (in series where each of top and lower orders have had at least 10 partnerships). The largest difference of 12.24 was also against India, in the home series of 1996-97. Had the top order shown some of the fight exhibited by the lower order, South Africa would have at least made the Indian bowlers work much harder for the 3-0 scoreline.

Sourav Ganguly acknowledges 'tuff conditions' in pollution-hit T20I

The BCCI president’s tweet was the first time in three years the board had admitted the risks of scheduling matches in hazardous air conditions

Sidharth Monga in Delhi04-Nov-2019Moments after the end of the Delhi T20I between India and Bangladesh, Sourav Ganguly, the BCCI president, tweeted out his thanks to the two teams for playing “under tuff conditions”. It was a significant moment, Ganguly becoming the first person in Indian cricket administration over the last three years to openly acknowledge that the atmospheric conditions in Delhi in November are not ideal for cricket.

The match went on without apparent incident, but ESPNcricinfo can confirm that Soumya Sarkar and one other player vomitted on the field during Bangladesh’s chase. For his part, Bangladesh wicketkeeper Mushfiqur Rahim stayed true to what he had told BCB president Nazmul Hassan before the match: that it was difficult but the players were going to manage it.The match had been scheduled for the first weekend after Diwali, the festival of lights and firecrackers. Pollution in Delhi is at its worst in the week immediately following Diwali, thanks to the fireworks and crop-stubble burning in neighbouring states.With the new BCCI team taking over only ten days before the game – the scheduling for this game, as in recent years, had been handled by the Committee of Administrators and the board’s CEO – the match itself was never in serious doubt. Questions, though, persisted.There was no let-up in the pollution on Sunday. The air quality dipped to severe levels in the afternoon with the AQI index at Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, eight kilometres from the venue, reading 912. The general acceptable reading for these particulate matters is 200, beyond which athletic activity is discouraged for fear of damage to the lungs and the heart. Thirty-seven flights had been diverted from the national capital. Schools and construction activity had already been shut until November 5. The Delhi state government’s medical department had put out an advisory on Sunday afternoon, saying the “severe level” of pollution “may result in morbidity among exposed people”.All this raised the possibility that the ICC match referee might step in for the safety of the players, with concerns over low visibility as well as the poor air quality.Almost miraculously, the air quality improved over the next three hours to 563 at 4pm, 492 at 5pm and 262 at 6pm. After that, the air quality deteriorated progressively but didn’t reach the alarming levels of the early afternoon. The stadium itself was almost sold out with crowds showing little concern and queuing up as early as 3.30pm.”Personally, this air pollution is nothing for me,” Mushfiqur said after his match-winning innings. “I was much more interested in which bowler I was facing. Playing against India in front of a big crowd isn’t something Bangladesh team gets every day. I think we have come to play our biggest bilateral series, so these things don’t matter.”The Firoz Shah Kotla was covered in smog ahead of the India-Bangladesh T20I•Associated PressNazmul Hasan had expressed his concern before the game. “I had no idea about it [Delhi’s pollution] until very recently,” he told reporters. “But when I saw the situation on the internet, I honestly got scared. Then I heard the schools were closed.”I spoke to the coach, captain and Mushfiq, and they told me it is an issue but they can play. This morning it looked quite bad. I wondered how they can see the ball. But from the very beginning they [BCCI] were saying it cannot be shifted. Apparently it is better than before.”In November 2016, Ranji Trophy matches were moved out of the city only for a Test match to be scheduled in similar conditions the following year. Bharat Arun, who as Hyderabad coach in 2016 spoke of the impossibility of stepping out or running in Delhi, spoke a year later, as part of the India set-up, of “unnecessary stoppages” and questioned the fitness levels of Sri Lanka’s players, who had fallen ill while playing a Test in Delhi in 2017. Lessons were not learnt as Railways were allowed to host Mumbai in the first week of November 2018, when Siddhesh Lad batted in a mask.If Ganguly’s tweet suggested relief and some show of concern and duty of care, his words leading up to the match presented the promise that the BCCI might finally have learnt a lesson. “In future, when we schedule, especially in the northern part of India during the winter, we will have to be a little bit more practical,” Ganguly had said a couple of days before the match. “I know post-Diwali it’s a bit tough in the north. I hope everything goes fine.”For now the BCCI, as Ganguly’s tweet acknowledged, has dodged a bullet, getting away with no big incident in a match organised on a day when the Delhi government issued a health advisory asking people to stay indoors and reschedule outdoor activities.

Offer made: West Ham leading race to sign 27 y/o star compared to Emerson

West Ham United have reportedly submitted a contract offer to a “beautiful footballer” ahead of a potential London Stadium free transfer.

West Ham preparing for summer after costly 2024/25 season

The Hammers are making preparations ahead of Graham Potter’s first full season in charge of the Irons, with the club having nothing to play for in the remaining Premier League fixtures.

The current campaign hasn’t gone to plan for West Ham, who spent big last summer when Julen Lopetegui was in charge. He didn’t last long and was sacked at the beginning of the year, with Tim Steidten also following him out of the London Stadium door shortly after.

Max Kilman

Wolves

€47.5m

Crysencio Summerville

Leeds United

€29.3m

Niclas Fullkrug

Borussia Dortmund

€27m

Luis Guilherme

Palmeiras

€23m

Mohamadou Kante

Paris FC

Undisclosed

Aaron Wan-Bissaka

Man Utd

€18m

Wes Foderingham

Sheffield United

Free transfer

Guido Rodriguez

Real Betis

Free transfer

Jean-Clair Todibo

Nice

Loan transfer

Carlos Soler

PSG

Loan transfer

Evan Ferguson

Brighton

Loan transfer

Now, with Potter in charge and Mark Noble still as sporting director, West Ham have been linked with a number of new signings.

Up to 10 players could be on the way out of West Ham and in regards to incomings, the likes of Sunderland midfielder Chris Rigg and Udinese defender Oumar Solet are just two targets.

The new Payet: West Ham have unlocked a "future icon" of the London Stadium

West Ham’s “future icon” could be their next Dimitri Payet

ByConnor Holden Apr 8, 2025

A striker is also on the agenda, with Lille’s Jonathan David, Fiorentina’s Moise Kean and Corinthians’ Yuri Alberto three attackers thought to be of interest to West Ham.

West Ham make offer to sign Kyle Walker-Peters

Now, according to talkSPORT, West Ham have made their move to sign Southampton right-back Kyle Walker-Peters this summer. The 27-year-old is out of contract at the end of the current campaign, and with the Saints already relegated, is set to be on the way out of St Mary’s.

Southampton'sKyleWalker-Petersapplauds their fans after the match

It is reported that West Ham have made a contract offer to Walker-Peters via his reps, and the Irons are thought to be leading the race to sign the defender.

Potter feels like Walker-Peters can be a shrewd addition and provide an option at both right-back and left-back, with the boss currently happy with Aaron Wan-Bissaka on the right-hand side. As well as Walker-Peters, the Hammers are also keen on Southampton duo Taylor Harwood-Bellis and Aaron Ramsdale.

Should Walker-Peters make the move to London with West Ham over the coming months, he would arrive with plenty of Premier League experience under his belt.

Called a “beautiful footballer” by former Saints manager Russell Martin, he has made 144 appearances in the top flight after previously coming through the ranks at Tottenham.

Interestingly, Football Transfers have likened Walker-Peters to West Ham left-back Emerson Palmieri, and soon, he could be rivalling the Italian and Wan-Bissaka for a starting spot.

A transfer looks like one to keep an eye on, as West Ham await a reply from the defender over a move to link up with Potter.

Friedkin not messing around: Everton join £80m race to sign 24-goal striker

In pursuit of making an instant statement this summer, The Friedkin Group have now reportedly joined the race to sign an impressive striker for Everton who could be worth as much as £80m.

Friedkin plotting big Everton summer

A fresh attacking lead certainly seems on the agenda for the Toffees this summer, who have already been linked with a shock move the in-demand Liam Delap. The Ipswich Town star is set for Premier League relegation but could earn top-flight redemption following an excellent individual campaign.

That said, he’s not the only one on Everton’s reported radar. Friedkin have also reportedly set their sights on Liverpool’s Ben Doak in what would certainly steal plenty of headlines.

The Anfield academy star impressed on loan at Middlesbrough this season before injury disrupted an otherwise successful spell. That form may still not be enough to earn a place in Arne Slot’s first-team, however, potentially resulting in a move across Stanley Park.

Everton boss David Moyes recently had his say on what could be a busy summer at the club, telling reporters: “There’s going to be a change, and all those bits are still being pieced together at the minute.

“I’ve had one short conversation with Angus, that was all because he’s got his job to do at Leeds. And I don’t want to disrupt him whilst he’s working there. But we’re getting things together, we’re starting to plan, but obviously again the league position and league you’re in is all important.”

Everton poised to rival Liverpool in move to sign "superb" £40m DCL heir

He’s outscored Calvert-Lewin this season.

ByTom Cunningham Apr 8, 2025

Just how much Friedkin will spend this summer remains to be seen, but if they want to take the Toffees back into the top half then they’ll certainly need to make a statement or two. And that could yet include the arrival of a big-money striker in the coming months.

Everton join £80m Pavlidis race

With Dominic Calvert-Lewin set to depart as a free agent this summer, those at Goodison Park have reportedly set their sights on an impressive replacement. According to The Boot Room, Everton have now joined the race to sign Vangelis Pavlidis from Benfica this summer alongside the likes of Newcastle United and Nottingham Forest.

The deal won’t come cheap though, given that the forward reportedly has a release clause worth as much as £80m in his current Benfica contract. Such a deal at such a price would certainly make the intended statement for Friedkin, especially if they fend off interest from their rivals, but whether they have that budget to spend is the big question.

Vangelis Pavlidis for Benfica.

It should come as no surprise that Benfica boss Bruno Lage – formerly of Wolverhampton Wanderers – described Pavlidis as “important” earlier this month. After all, the big-money forward has scored 24 goals in all competitions and assisted another 10.

Lage told reporters following the forward’s hat-trick in a 4-1 thrashing of Porto: “He has done a lot of important work for us. It is important to have men who score a lot of goals, but in the end, this was mainly a real team effort.”

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