Bruce must now axe this West Brom star

West Bromwich Albion manager Steve Bruce must finally axe Callum Robinson and sign a better replacement ahead of next season.

What’s the latest?

A report from Football League World states that West Brom are reportedly willing to listen to offers for the winger, with one pundit telling them that he believes now is ‘the right time’ for Robinson to move on.

Cashing in on the player would allow Bruce to reinvest the money elsewhere and sign a better replacement. Robinson has had an okay spell at The Hawthorne’s but there have been questions over his commitment with him being booed off the pitch at one point last season.

West Brom can do better

Robinson’s form last season wasn’t bad, but it wasn’t great either.

He scored eight goals in all competitions which is fairly consistent compared to his previous seasons but was quite far behind the Baggies’ top scorer Karlan Grant.

He moved to the West Midlands in 2020 in an exchange deal between West Brom and Sheffield United that saw Oliver Burke move the other way. It was an exciting addition at the time and he signed a five-year contract signalling the club’s intent to make him a key part of their future.

However, he hasn’t turned out to as significant to their success as they may have first hoped and is he really the player who’s performances can lead them back to the Premier League?

Irish Football pundit Eamon Dunphy has described Robinson as “overhyped” and we agree.

He’s an average Championship striker and the Baggies can do better. The Irishman is currently being paid £18k per week so selling him would not only free up space, but also funds that could be used to buy someone who can make them serious contenders.

The club have recently been linked with Derby County player Tom Lawrence who could be available on a free transfer, he performed well in a struggling side last season and could offer everything Robinson can and they wouldn’t have to pay a fee.

Ultimately the club need to be setting their sights on better players if they want to be competitive and secure at least a play-off place next season. Allowing Robinson to leave would be the best decision for both parties.

AND in other news: Bruce eyeing “inspirational” £27k-p/w gem for West Brom, he’s a big Robinson upgrade…

Wolves should axe Adama Traore

Two years ago, selling Adama Traore might well have been unthinkable for a lot of Wolves fans.

However, given his disappointing form since then, Bruno Lage’s reported decision to sell the Spain winger this summer might well be the right one.

What’s the word?

According to Daily Express journalist Ryan Taylor, the Old Gold will look to cash in on the 26-year-old this summer, with Barcelona set to turn down their option to purchase him after his loan spell at the Nou Camp this season.

Taylor told GiveMeSport: “I couldn’t rule it out [Traore staying] because, technically, Barcelona are not going to sign him and he’s going to return.

“But I think he’s only got a year left on his contract, so Wolves will be looking to move him on and use that cash to sort of bolster the options within their squad.”

Should Lage axe Traore?

Since joining Wolves from Middlesbrough in 2018, Traore has gone on to make 154 appearances for the Old Gold, in which he has contributed just 11 goals and 18 assists.

Other than a strong run of form in the 2019/20 season, when he managed four goals and nine assists and averaged an impressive 7.49 rating from WhoScored for his performances, the 26-year-old has been wildly inconsistent at Molineux.

His pace and power make him a serious threat on the counter but, on far too many occasions, his final ball was lacking in quality as he found himself in good positions out wide, with his disappointing 1.2 crosses per game average in 2019/20 his best return as a Wolves player.

Therefore, given the interest being reportedly shown in him by Tottenham Hotspur, Newcastle United and Leeds United, this summer represents the ideal time for Lage to cash in on Traore.

The former Aston Villa man is valued at £18m by Transfermarkt and his contract with Wolves expires next season, so the Old Gold would surely be best cashing in on him now rather than potentially losing him for nothing in 12 months’ time.

While he has certainly excited opposition managers and players during his time at Molineux, with Jurgen Klopp labelling him “unplayable” and Southampton’s Che Adams dubbing him a “monster”, Traore has sadly been far too inconsistent, and cashing in on him now would be the right decision by Lage.

In other news… Wolves are targeting this prolific Championship striker

Tottenham: Conte eyes ‘impressive’ signing as he makes exit call

Tottenham Hotspur manager Antonio Conte is eyeing an ‘impressive’ signing whilst also showing one of his players the summer exit door, according to reports.

The Lowdown: Big summer of change…

The Times, sharing news in the last week, revealed a private dinner between Conte and chairman Daniel Levy where the pair were thought to have discussed potential transfers.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/tottenham-latest-developments-2/” title=”Tottenham latest developments!” poster=”” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

Spurs’ head coach, guiding the Lilywhites to within touching distance of a Premier League top four finish, has a plethora of incomings in his sights for the next transfer window with just as many leaving N17.

Looking to ‘offload’ the likes of Sergio Reguilón, Emerson Royal, Steven Bergwijn, Giovani Lo Celso and Tanguy Ndombele, the Italian also wants to bring in ‘at least’ six major signings (The Times).

A reserve goalkeeper to provide support for long-serving mainstay Hugo Lloris has also been touted with West Bromwich Albion keeper Sam Johnstone heavily linked.

The Latest: The Sun make Gollini and Johnstone claim…

According to The Sun, Conte is indeed eyeing a Bosman move for Johnstone as Spurs make ‘contact’ ahead of the summer window.

This comes after the ex-Chelsea boss tells current number two Pierluigi Gollini he’s set to leave and return to parent club Atalanta this summer, and contrasts with claims from The Athletic that they may have turned their attention to Fraser Forster.

The Verdict: Right move?

Called ‘amazing’ behind-the-scenes by defender Eric Dier, it appears Conte hasn’t been in agreement over 2021/2022 judging by Gollini’s lack of game time in the top flight.

Johnstone’s potential incoming would solve a gaping hole behind Lloris after Gollini’s exit and go some way to solving their current homegrown quota issue.

Taking this into account, it’s little wonder members of the media like journalist Pete O’Rourke believe he would be a ‘really impressive’ signing at Spurs.

In other news: ‘Spurs will…’ – Fabrizio Romano shares exciting behind-scenes update with Conte ‘very happy’…find out more here.

Spurs: Reporter makes ‘desperate’ Levy claim

Journalist Jack Pitt-Brooke of The Athletic has made a claim involving Tottenham Hotspur chairman Daniel Levy after an Antonio Conte twist at the Premier League club.

The Lowdown: Conte news emerges…

Over this last week, a major twist has come out of Spurs on Conte’s future at the club – coming just months after he was appointed to replace the sacked Nuno Espirito Santo in November.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/tottenham-newest-updates/” title=”Tottenham newest updates…” poster=”” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

The Italian has guided Tottenham to within touching distance of a top-four place as they compete with north London rivals Arsenal for a coveted qualification spot.

However, reports have recently emerged of the 52-year-old’s potential departure to Paris-Saint Germain, with Le Parisien claiming that he is seriously interested and has even spoken to club chiefs about the role.

Meanwhile, former Spurs fan favourite Mauricio Pochettino is allegedly set to depart the French capital despite guiding them to a Ligue 1 title win.

The Latest: Pitt-Brooke makes Pochettino claim involving Levy…

Taking to Twitter, reporter Pitt-Brooke of The Athletic believes that hiring Pochettino is chairman Levy’s only way to ‘save face’ if Conte leaves – even if Spurs’ chief is ‘desperate’ for his appointment to work.

He explained: “For Daniel Levy, the appeal of Pochettino would be obvious. Levy is desperate for Conte to work out, but if Conte does go, bringing Poch back is basically the only way he can save face. He’s effectively a get out of jail free card for Levy and the club.”

The Verdict: Correct call?

After Jose Mourinho’s dismissal this time last year, reports linking Pochettino with a sensational return to Tottenham were prevalent.

Credible claims backed that the Argentine was considering a reunion at Hotspur Way and it is believed that Levy has Pochettino on standby if Conte does unceremoniously quit this summer (The Telegraph).

Knowing the players and club intrinsically already, Pitt-Brooke is absolutely spot on that hiring Spurs’ former manager is, quite literally, Levy’s only avenue in the event of Conte’s exit.

That being said, Tottenham’s current coach has worked wonders since his arrival and it would be a major disappointment to see him depart so soon.

In other news: Source: Tottenham edge closer to ‘top signing’, he now really wants to join Conte…find out more here.

Caught in a defensive mindset, can Jos Buttler cast off his Test shackles?

Recalled in 2018 to transform the No.7 role, England’s wicketkeeper has lost his sense of purpose

Matt Roller22-Jan-2020Scrawled on the top of Jos Buttler’s bat handle is a small message that reads: “F*** IT”. It’s not simply another example of his potty mouth, but instead “something that reminds me of what my best mindset is – when I’m playing cricket, and probably in life as well”.”That is the thing I can always come back to, whether it is about committing to a shot or about getting out first ball,” he told in a 2018 interview. “I think it keeps cricket in a really good perspective for me, where it lands in the scheme of life. If you pick up a paper and start from the front, by the time you get to the sports pages you realise getting out for a duck is not the be-all and end-all.”When Buttler won a recall to the Test set-up in 2018, emerging from the rubble left by the disastrous 2017-18 Ashes tour thanks to his stellar run in the IPL, Ed Smith explained his selection by suggesting he would “bring a new flavour” to England’s order as a specialist batsman slotting in at No. 7.”Who could do that job in a way that was unique, in a way that really brought a different dimension to the whole batting order? The panel decided that Jos Buttler fitted that role perfectly,” Smith said. “The message to Jos from everyone around the table was to play his way, to play with the confidence and the flair that he’s capable of batting with, and the skill and the decision-making.”In other words, Buttler had the licence to ‘f*** it’.Initially, everything clicked. He scored freely in his second game back to make an unbeaten 80 off 101 balls against Pakistan at Headingley, following that with scores of 106 (his maiden Test ton), 69 and 89 in the four-match series against India and scoring fluently in Sri Lanka.In his first year back, Buttler was averaging 40.78 while scoring with a strike rate of 64.07. Without quite seeming to reach the ceiling his obvious talents hinted at, it was an impressive return for a batsman whose performances had come in relatively low-scoring series, emphasised by the fact no Englishman made more runs in that time.ESPNcricinfo LtdBut since the start of last summer’s Ashes series, Buttler’s returns have dipped markedly. In his last nine Tests, he averages just 22.17, with his 70 at The Oval his only half-century. In that time, his strike rate has dipped to 50.40.Analysing his dismissals paints something of a surprising picture, too. According to ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball records, he has been out ‘defending’ four times, ‘leaving’ twice, and on three further occasions has been dismissed without looking to score: chipping Josh Hazlewood to short cover at Headingley, edging a back-of-a-length ball from Vernon Philander behind at Centurion, and chipping a return catch to Keshav Maharaj at Port Elizabeth.All told, that means that nine of his 17 dismissals have come without him looking to score. The indication is that rather than falling to reckless, overly-attacking shots, Buttler has found himself torn between aggression and defence.Consider, for example, his dismissal at Mount Maunganui in the second innings, when he shouldered arms to an off-stump yorker from Neil Wagner, delivered from round the wicket. In a one-day game, there is little doubt that Buttler would have squeezed the ball out towards cover point or look to muscle it through mid-on, but uncertainty over his defensive game resulted in him leaving a straight ball.Buttler was bowled without playing a shot in the second innings at Mount Maunganui•Getty ImagesLast week’s Port Elizabeth Test provided him with the perfect platform. Walking in at 351 for 5 – the highest first-innings total when he has arrived at the crease since his recall – Buttler should have been ideally suited to moving the game on, counterattacking after South Africa had put the squeeze on Ben Stokes’ scoring after lunch. Instead, he struggled to adjust to the pace of the wicket, and chipped a return catch to Maharaj playing a nothing shot on 1 from 15 balls. The innings played by Sam Curran (44 off 50 balls) and Mark Wood (42 off 23) coming in lower down the order served to highlight Buttler’s struggle.In isolation, there is an obvious pattern, which points to a player whose runs have dried up. But there is a further problem for Buttler: the lack of clarity he has been given over his role.Smith’s comments regarding his recall made clear that with England’s wealth of allrounders, he felt they could afford to create a totally new role, practically unheard of in recent Test history: a specialist No. 7 batsman, given freedom to attack.But since then, Buttler has moved up and down the order almost constantly; in 17 innings since the start of the Ashes, his batting position has changed ten times. In the last two years, he has been a wicketkeeping No. 6 and No. 7, a specialist batsman everywhere from No. 5 to No. 7 (and even No. 8, accounting for nightwatchmen), and having been vice-captain in the India series two years ago, his place appears to be one of the most vulnerable in the side.Part of that is down to the fact that England have been, by the admission of most senior figures at the ECB, a side in transition for the last two years. In Antigua last year, Buttler batted at No. 5, with Stokes, Moeen Ali, Ben Foakes and Curran the men in next; this winter, he has regularly been at No. 7 with one allrounder and three bowlers below him.

That means that since the start of the Ashes, he has only been involved in a partnership of ten or more overs on five occasions, and three of those have been with specialist bowlers (Craig Overton, and Jack Leach twice); of the two with batsmen, one was a 13.5-over stand with Jonny Bairstow trying to save the game in the fourth innings at Old Trafford. While that can partly be explained by Buttler’s own lack of staying power at the crease, it emphasises the point that he has rarely been afforded the sort of platform he was given at Port Elizabeth last week.He has also had the gloves thrust upon him again, and while it is tough to draw much from his raw averages with and without them – the samples are too small and over disparate parts of his career – it is worth revisiting a interview he gave in 2015 after the first time he was dropped following a tour of the UAE.”It was a relief to get dropped,” he said, “which is sad in a way because you never want to miss a game. But I was not performing and mentally I got to a stage where I was not concentrating and did not want to be there. I was not enjoying walking out there and feeling like I didn’t know where the next run was coming from.”I would also worry that I would miss a nick when keeping because I would be thinking about batting too much. Keeping wicket is the worst place to be when out of form: you can’t hide at fine leg where you might touch the ball once every 10 overs. Behind the wicket you are involved every ball.”Similarly, it is worth reflecting on how much last year’s schedule took out of him. He went almost straight from the Caribbean tour to the IPL, into the Pakistan white-ball games and then into the World Cup, in which the stress of the final was so great that he later admitted he “didn’t know how I’d play cricket again” if England had lost. He used his week off during the Ireland Test to move house, before heading into an Ashes series. For anyone who has watched the documentary , which laid bare the toxicity that resulted from the win-at-all-cost mentality of the Strauss/Flower dressing room, that run will seem worryingly familiar.It is easy to view Buttler’s apparently mild-mannered, schoolboy charm from afar and assume he does not suffer the same mental strains that other players do. In a newspaper advertorial last summer, he spoke openly about the “incredibly draining lifestyle” involved with playing professional cricket, and revealed that he has taken up meditation and playing the piano, to help him “gain a much healthier perspective”.

“When you’re batting with the tail, you try to sum up situations and work out how best you can score. You work out your risk management: what is too much risk? What is trying to push the game on?”Jos Buttler on his poor run

Ultimately, the fear with Buttler is that England will fail to get the most out of a batsman who is no longer a promising youngster, but instead a man who should be approaching his peak at 29. There remains a feeling that he could – should, even – be a once-in-a-generation talent; instead, he currently averages 32.29 after 40 Tests.”I feel like I’m not quite performing to the standards I need to,” was Buttler’s own verdict earlier in this series. “Since I’ve come back into Test cricket I’ve tried to trust my defence for longer periods of time. I’ve been able to do that on occasions, but [playing my natural game] is certainly something I’m trying to work out.”Moving forward I’ve got to play the situation, but I will try to be a bit more positive. When you’re batting with the tail, you try to sum up situations and work out how best you can score. You work out your risk management: what is too much risk? What is trying to push the game on? I want to look to be a bit busier and try to look a bit more on the positive side.”Buttler said during the New Zealand series that he was “‘trusting my defence,” following sessions with Marcus Trescothick, his former Somerset team-mate, “which has been a big part of trying to improve myself as a red-ball player”. Much as they were dismissed by the end of his era in charge of the Test side, Trevor Bayliss’ ideas regarding being positive in defence, and conviction in movements, seem relevant; they may not have worked as a top-order blueprint, but they seem perfect for a lower-middle order player.Ahead of the fourth Test against South Africa, it feels like Buttler’s time in the five-day side might be starting to run out. England’s next assignment is a two-Test series in Sri Lanka, in which the team’s management are willing to place emphasis on their short-term needs as much as their long-term goals with World Test Championship points on the line.Few will need reminding that Foakes – seen by plenty of England fans as a cure-all remedy to their problems – was player of the series on their last visit, and is an impressive player of spin. There is little question as to who is the superior gloveman, a point furthered by Buttler’s untidy showing behind the stumps at Port Elizabeth. Even if Buttler is persevered with as first-choice wicketkeeper, then Foakes will surely travel with the squad, and with the middle order finally settled – Joe Root, Stokes and Ollie Pope seem locked in from No. 4-6 – there are few vacancies he could fill.With a T20 World Cup at the end of the year, in which England will rely on him as a key player, the opportunity to take some time to refresh between the white-ball leg of the South Africa tour and the start of the IPL at the end of March could well be a better option than travelling to Sri Lanka.The upshot is that Buttler travels to Johannesburg needing runs, and against a team low on confidence and missing its best bowler, he may have few better opportunities. As for the best way to go about it? He could do much worse than to take a look at the top of his bat handle, for a start.

The Wasim-Waqar feud: a brief history

The two were deadly together with the ball, but never got along. Now, a possible reunion at Multan Sultans has been called off

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Aug-2017

The CPL keeps its focus set on India

The Caribbean league wants its brand to remain local but is seeking to attract IPL investment, and Indian players and TV audiences

Peter Miller25-Feb-2016When Ernest Hilaire, the out-going CEO of the West Indies Cricket Board, announced in late 2012 that a “commercial T20″ league would be created, few would have blamed those that witnessed the rise and ignominious fall of Allen Stanford for being a bit nervous.It has been almost seven years since the spectacular collapse of Stanford’s business empire, and with it his groundbreaking Stanford 20/20 tournament, but for many the Texan fraudster’s name is still the first that springs to mind when considering T20 cricket in the Caribbean. The wounds are yet to heal. But Caribbean Premier League CEO Damien O’Donohoe says that Stanford isn’t discussed anymore by those running the CPL.”Like with anything, even if Stanford had never happened it would have taken us time to build trust,” O’Donohoe told ESPNcricinfo. “Of course, in year one, people were bringing up the Stanford name, but, to be honest, it isn’t a name we have heard in over two and a half years now. We have come in and promised a huge amount, and we have delivered over and above what we said we would do.”In recent weeks Stanford’s name has reappeared as a result of a BBC interview in which he claimed, from his prison cell in Florida, that he was not guilty of the crimes for which he has been sentenced to 110 years in jail. Beyond those headline-grabbing assertions, however, it was his comments about the commercial viability of cricket in the Caribbean that were of most interest.”I was trying to grow the Stanford brand globally,” Stanford told the BBC’s Dan Roan. “What nobody understood is that I anticipated this new generation of players that we were going to uncover. When we had our first cricket tournament, we broadcast that and I gave the TV rights away globally. We had over a billion people watch our matches and that was the island-versus-island competition.”

For all of his failings, Stanford “got” T20 cricket and where it belonged in the modern Caribbean culture. In many ways the CPL is the natural progression of his vision

Perhaps the CPL is no less exploitative. It is, after all, a private venture attempting to make money out of West Indies cricket. Digicel are the majority shareholder of the tournament and, just as Stanford did, they see the potential of cricket in the Caribbean to generate income, and the numbers seem to be proving them right.That is not to say that the CPL is not doing its bit for growing the game. Kids are proudly wearing their CPL jerseys, the players have school visits written into their contracts, and the CPL management make it very clear that helping the grassroots game is as much part of their goals as any financial reward. There is plenty of evidence that these are more than just empty promises.O’Donohoe is very proud of the growth that the league has shown over the last three years. TV viewership is up to 92 million and attendances have increased 44% in last year, thanks to a move to more floodlit matches after an experiment with day-time games to better suit a worldwide TV audience. The quality of overseas players has increased. This season Brendon McCullum, AB de Villiers and Shane Watson will all be taking part, which will help raise interest. The issue is how to make that growth continue at the current rate and allow the CPL to hold its own against the likes of the IPL and the Big Bash.The answer, as always where cricket is concerned, is India. The CPL has already made decent strides in this regard. Hero is now the title sponsor and there are two IPL owners with teams in the tournament. Half of that growing TV audience is from India. Finding a way to increase that connection with the Indian market is described by O’Donohoe as the CPL’s biggest challenge.”In year two we played the majority of our games during the day and it had an impact on numbers through the turnstiles. And at the end of the day we realised, this is a Caribbean product for Caribbean people. It is something that they are massively proud of, as are we,” O’Donohoe says. “I think you can’t alter your local product to try and please international markets. What we are trying to do is playing games later at night and building a package for the Indians, which is like a breakfast TV package, so it is, ‘Wake up to the CPL.'”Venky Mysore (right): “Indian viewership is 50% of CPL viewership. There are a few ideas that are being collated and brainstorming taking place on how you get Indian viewership going”•BCCIThis approach has already been successful for NBA basketball in India, and has also worked for the BBL in the UK. The major danger here is that the CPL will lose what makes it special. When people tune in, they do so as much for atmosphere as for the cricket. The need to court the India market puts this at risk. Finding that balance is why O’Donohoe says the challenge is so large.Venky Mysore, CEO of both Kolkata Knight Riders in the IPL and the newly renamed Trinbago Knight Riders of the CPL, is excited about finding a way to make the CPL a viable live television product in India.”I connected [the CPL management] to Sony, who is the broadcaster in India, because we do a lot of work with Sony. And we are working on some ideas, because the stats that CPL showed me were impressive that last year. Maybe it was a coincidence – with our entry, viewership doubled, and Indian viewership is 50% of CPL viewership. I think it will be fabulous to do something interesting. There are a few ideas that are being collated and brainstorming taking place on how you get Indian viewership going.”Mysore is also keen to point out the advantage of having Indian players taking part in the CPL, although he is aware that this is a long shot. For him the BCCI allowing the up-and-coming Indian players would be a start.”I think it will be great to have Indian players as well, as I said in the past. I think the board has their own reasoning for [restricting involvement], but I hope that they will ease up on that, at least in a limited way to start off with, allowing some of the emerging players, because there is a lot of talent there. It will be great for them to come and have this kind of exposure.”No one is better placed to get the BCCI to rethink its stance on Indian players than IPL franchise owners, and now that there are two very high-profile link-ups between the CPL and the IPL, the Caribbean league is very well placed to argue its case for some Indian involvement. If that does happen, it will be a massive coup for the CPL as the first T20 tournament other than the IPL to have the biggest drawcards in the sport playing for their teams.

“What we are trying to do is playing games later at night and building a package for the Indians, which is like a breakfast TV package, so it is, ‘Wake up to the CPL'”Damian O’Donohoe

While India is a much trodden path, albeit one with potential to grow, the real prize in cricket expansion is the USA. The demise of the United States of America Cricket Association has seen the ICC take over the running of the sport in the country. This has allowed the CPL to gain agreement to host six matches in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. With the CPL promising cheap tickets, they should be well attended, and will serve as an excellent gauge of where cricket in the USA sits in the present climate.The CPL is run in an attempt to generate profits and, O’Donohoe says they are close to breaking even. While Stanford spoke to the BBC about potential profits further down the line, his events always looked to be less about making money and more an exercise in furthering the Texan’s cult of personality. It seems the CPL method is working. Whatever the motivation, this has been the most successful – and soon to be the longest-lived – T20 cricket venture in the Caribbean’s history.That is not to say the CPL has not had its problems. That need to break even has led to some challenges in dealing with the various governments in the region. The CPL estimates it brings some US$56 million into the Caribbean each year. In return they have requested governmental support, both in terms of finance and infrastructure. Last year there was talk of Barbados losing its team, after O’Donohoe and COO Pete Russell accused the government and private sector on the island of failing to support the enterprise.It is telling that Vijay Mallya, the new owner of Barbados Tridents, was keen to stress when speaking at the CPL draft that government support had been vital in his decision to purchase the team. It is also very interesting that the St Lucia-based franchise Zouks have dropped the country’s name from their promotional materials ahead of the 2016 season, the implication being that St Lucia’s failure to offer adequate support to the CPL has cost them the free “advertising” that comes with being associated with the franchise.While it is understandable that the CPL is looking for some support from the governments of the islands it visits, the issue will always be the lack of money in an economically depressed region. This has been a source of conflict for all cricket in the Caribbean, and chances are it will continue to be that way for the foreseeable future. To reach an agreement that makes all parties happy will not be easy.What we know for sure is the CPL has gone a long way towards revitalising confidence in cricket in the Caribbean. The games are well attended, the TV viewership is growing and the organisers are arranging those matches in the USA. O’Donohoe even says there is interest from a third IPL owner in purchasing a team. The issues with the national set-up are not going away but the CPL has meant there are at least some positives for cricket in the West Indies. The tournament exists as a separate yet symbiotic entity to the national team and its growth should be celebrated.Outside of the Caribbean, there may be a lingering cynicism about Stanford’s original involvement in cricket, but within the region, his legacy remains mixed. For all of his failings, Stanford “got” T20 cricket and where it belonged in modern Caribbean culture. In many ways the CPL is the natural progression of his vision. Had the Stanford circus continued, it may well have ended up looking much like the current set-up, with its Indian investment and expansion into the USA.The CPL wants to be an integral part of West Indies cricket, not just something that makes money out of it. When speaking of long-term goals, the time frames discussed are decades, not years. In many ways, the need to make money has made the whole thing more streamlined and, as a result, increased its chances of success. If O’Donohoe has his way, the CPL will be part of the landscape for generations to come.

Russell's horrendous slog

ESPNcricinfo presents the plays of the day as South Africa wrap up the series against West Indies in thumping style

David Hopps21-Jan-2015Ghost of the dayHow much were West Indies still shaken by AB de Villiers’ fastest hundred in ODI history? They picked an experimental side and then self-destructed, showing little appetite for picking their way to a defendable target on a low, slow one at Buffalo Park. When the match finished early, some of us got the chance to watch de Villiers on TV for the first time. Always look on the bright side.Venue of the dayThree ODIs in East London in nine years does not say much for South Africa’s appetite for taking the game to the Eastern Cape. The crowd filled out visibly in the final two hours, only for the match to end before the dancing had barely begun.Tone setter of the dayVernon Philander’s first delivery immediately struck a perfect line and length and that was too good for Dwayne Smith who nicked a catch to de Villiers. It was pretty much downhill from there.Low spot of the dayFlick your way through West Indies’ dismissals and it will be hard to find much worse than the demise of Andre Russell, who tried to slog a length ball from Morne Morkel over square leg and had his leg stump hit. Pre-meditated or just an aberration? Horrendous, whatever it was.Fluff of the dayNothing cheered West Indies, who could not even summon a spirited performance in the field. Faf du Plessis benefited from a bad miss by Sulieman Benn, of Carlos Brathwaite, a mistimed, one-handed leap at mid-on.Overlooked stat of the dayImran Tahir’s 4 for 28 represented his best one-day figures and they were deserved on a day when his googly was in good working order.

Strauss the perfect fit for ECB

With a complicated web to weave, the ECB may have identified the ultimate company man in charming, soothing Andrew Strauss

David Hopps13-Sep-2013Ever since he became captain of the England cricket team, there has been a sense of entitlement about Andrew Strauss. Suggestions he would be fast-tracked as a Conservative MP have so far proved unfounded, but whether it be as a summariser on Sky Sports, a motivational speaker, or, the role in sharpest focus, the next managing director of England cricket, he has no shortage of admirers.Bright, diplomatic and persuasive, you could also envisage him as a British High Commissioner in one of the nicer, trouble-free parts of the world, discussing trade deals and educational opportunities and slipping into the conversation at an appropriate time how something really must be done about this immigration problem. That Strauss will charm and soothe in whatever he commits the next phase of his life to is rather taken for granted.There will be other candidates, naturally, when the deadline for applications closes on September 25: Nasser Hussain, another former England captain, would keep the role focused and demanding; Clare Connor, former captain of the England women’s team and head of England women’s cricket, is mulling over whether to apply; and Angus Fraser, managing director of cricket at Middlesex and a former England stalwart, would also be an obvious fit if he moved offices across Lord’s.To further complicate matters, Andy Flower’s future as England team director remains uncertain, perhaps even to him. England split the coaching role to accommodate Flower’s wish to spend more time with his family, putting Ashley Giles in charge of the one-day set-up, but ESPNcricinfo first indicated last month that Flower’s appetite to remain as coach of the Test side might not extend beyond this winter’s Ashes series in Australia.In the middle of it all, Strauss had the luxury this summer of shadowing the former managing director of the England team, Hugh Morris, as he goes about his job. It has been quite a privilege, an invitation into the inner sanctum if ever there was one. There is no doubt who is seducing whom. It would be no surprise to find that the ECB quietly slipped a few of Strauss’s favourite wines into the office.The ECB has a complicated web to weave and, not for the first time, there is the danger of adding to an ever-growing bureaucracy. The more Flower retreats from day-to-day coaching, the more his role begins to overlap with that of MD of England cricket. A structure that has done much to improve the performance of the England cricket team is in danger of becoming bloated and confused to satisfy the individual aspirations of talented individuals.Senior officials have been known to disappear for years within the offices of the ECB – and that includes Morris, whose role became increasingly hard to define and who certainly distanced himself from media responsibilities as Flower asserted his own, highly-disciplined and protective approach. Quite what does the MD of England cricket do? This is a chance to re-examine demarcation lines.Strauss has been suitably discreet about his potential job application. “I’m looking into it,” he said. “But they’re decisions that need to be made over the next couple of weeks and I’ll think quite long and hard about whether it’s the right time and the right job for me. I haven’t decided one way or another but I’m certainly looking at it, as will a lot of other people be.”I’m very passionate about the game of cricket and want to contribute to it. In exactly what way that is, that kind of remains to be seen.”

It is impossible to avoid the conclusion that when it comes to the ECB, Strauss is the ultimate company man. He does not as much tick the boxes as employ others to tick them for him.

Not to be too distasteful, because Strauss would have politer sensibilities, but there is also the issue of money. Morris’s salary is thought to have been around £150,000, which for most of us would be nice if you can get it, but so soon after retirement Strauss can command considerably higher figures in other areas. Since retirement, he has also been in demand as a “brand ambassador”, and although anybody with a real desire to achieve can surely not feel satisfied with such a superficial existence for long, he has felt the attraction of easy money. Perhaps at the moment he is simply not affordable?It was intriguing to Strauss’s approach to his role for Sky Sports during the Ashes series. “I really enjoyed doing the Sky stuff,” he said, but at times he seemed cautious in the role – uneasy even – as his fellow commentators gently tried to tease out opinions about a dressing room of which he had so recently been such a dominant part.Every former England captain faces a difficult transition in moving to the commentary box. As a captain, the protection of team unity is essential. A successful captain builds a strong sense of loyalty and mutual support. Then comes the switch to the commentary box where tactics are debated, techniques are dismantled and strong opinions demanded.Time soon makes that transition more comfortable. Dressing rooms evolve, ties weaken, loyalties are no longer as strong. But some make the shift more quickly than others. For Michael Atherton, it was merely part of the intellectual process; his move from captain to analyst, whether on TV or in the written word, has been hugely successful. Hussain, driven by a wish to express strong, honest opinions, also benefited from an independent spirit.But there were times, when Strauss’s discomfort seemed to have a deeper source; the discomfort of a man born not to debate but to lead. Insights were hard to find, presumably because he did not always wish to offer them. His belief in the England project seemed absolute, his unwillingness to undermine it apparent. To some extent, he was still acting as a brand ambassador – for English cricket.His autobiography comes out next month and it is hoped that it is more deep and meaningful than many, but if it reads more like a job application than a dismantling of the system, nobody will be overly surprised.If Strauss and the ECB demur, what then? While the job specification requires “international playing experience”, David Collier, the chief executive of the ECB, has indicated that such experience need not necessarily be in cricket. Collier also went on to suggest that while “playing at international level is strongly preferred, consideration could be given to someone who has outstanding international cricket management experience with the senior national team.”That encourages all manner of names to be conjured up: Sir Clive Woodward, the former England rugby coach or Peter Moores, Lancashire and former England coach, would both qualify for consideration. According to the most informed sports gossip column around, Darren Gough and Nick Knight are also expected to be among the applicants.But it is impossible to avoid the conclusion that when it comes to the ECB, Strauss is the ultimate company man. He does not as much tick the boxes as employ others to tick them for him. One senior official has even been known to refer to him at times as “Dear Andrew”. Flower’s future massively complicates the issue. But we may be about to find out whether Dear Andrew is ready to answer the call.

Presentations and precipitations

ESPNcricinfo presents the Plays of the Day from the first day of the first Test between Australia and New Zealand at the Gabba

Daniel Brettig at the Gabba01-Dec-2011The debutants
As they did in Johannesburg in 2009, Australia presented baggy green caps to three men on the same morning. Two years ago Ricky Ponting had handed the caps to Phillip Hughes, Marcus North and Ben Hilfenhaus, but this time his successor Michael Clarke called on a trio of older stagers to do the honours. David Warner’s was presented by Michael Slater, Andy Bichel handed out the cap to James Pattinson and Richie Benaud gaved Mitchell Starc his. Benaud might have mentioned his own great left-arm paceman Alan Davidson to Starc, who like Davidson can swing the ball.The first over
Clarke surprised by handing the first over to Pattinson, and a nervous over resulted. Three times Brendon McCullum crashed offside boundaries, and Pattinson also served up a wide. Swing and seam was evident, but the radar way awry. Seldom missing a trick so far as Test captain, Clarke perhaps erred in posting Nathan Lyon and Starc to mid-on and mid-off. The reassuring sight of his Victorian team-mate and good friend Peter Siddle near the bowler’s mark would have helped to soothe Pattinson’s nerves, much as Lyon benefited from having his New South Wales country colleague Trent Copeland alongside him in Sri Lanka. Instead, Siddle was at fine leg, and Pattinson’s edginess endured.The drops
For a period either side of lunch, it seemed New Zealand were handing out chances more readily than Australia’s fielders were prepared to accept them. Usman Khawaja had twice spurned catches at short leg before he accepted a gentler offering from Kane Williamson’s bat and pad, but it was a genuine surprise to see Clarke and Warner spill chances. Clarke grassed a slips catch from Dean Brownlie that was simple in every respect apart from the fact it flew off the toe of Brownlie’s bat, and Warner allowed the same batsman’s cut at Starc to burst through his hands.The rain
It is a feature of Brisbane’s ground-staff, attuned as they are to the vagaries of the tropics, that the curator Kevin Mitchell junior will occasionally rush out onto the field to cover the pitch in advance of the umpires asking him to. This time the rain was yet to arrive when the umpires called off play for bad light, but Mitchell, having observed the weather radar closely, had the covers rolled out and sitting next to the match strip in anticipation of the first drop of moisture. When it landed the pitch was safely covered, as the day’s play slid to a damp and early conclusion at 4pm local time as the rain fell solidly for the remainder of the evening.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus