Southampton target James Maddison would be most exciting signing since Mane

According to an exclusive report in The Sun on Sunday, Southampton are on the brink of securing a deal for Norwich City attacking midfielder James Maddison after seeing a bid worth more than £20m accepted.

What’s the word, then?

Well, The Sun on Sunday says that Saints have had an offer accepted for the highly-rated 21-year-old, who has been targeted by a string of Premier League clubs including Everton and Leicester City.

The Sun on Sunday says that sources close to the Canaries say that the south coast outfit’s manager Mark Hughes now has permission to speak to the England U21 international, who won the Championship club’s 2017/18 Player of the Season award, and convince him to move to St Mary’s.

The report adds that Maddison could be a replacement for Sofiane Boufal, who looks set to join either Marseille or Nice in France having had an altercation with Hughes and then been excluded from the first team following the loss against Chelsea back in April.

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How did Maddison do last season?

He was outstanding.

The 21-year-old scored eight goals and provided a further 14 assists in 44 league games for Norwich, but he brings far more to the table than simply goals and assists.

The England U21 star is comfortable on the ball and impressive in tight situations, and according to WhoScored.com he successfully completed 104 of the 154 dribbles he attempted, while he made a remarkable 124 key passes.

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Would he be a good Southampton signing?

He certainly would be, and their most exciting since they brought Sadio Mane to St Mary’s from Red Bull Salzburg in 2014.

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Like the Senegal international, Maddison brings a huge threat in the final third and has the touch and ability to get forward that will excite Saints supporters, who are split on a potential club-record deal for another Championship star, and that is something that is much needed after two successive disappointing campaigns.

The fact that he is also good on set-pieces is another bonus, and he would surely significantly boost a team that only scored 37 goals in 38 Premier League matches last term.

Newcastle fans discuss Mitrovic sale

Newcastle fans have been discussing the probable sale of Aleksandar Mitrovic, and they can’t agree on a price tag for the Serbian.

Mitrovic showed exactly why so many fans rate him so highly on Friday, bullying the Switzerland defence all night in his side’s 2-1 loss.

The beastly striker grabbed the opening goal with a towering header, although Serbia eventually fell to goals from Granit Xhaka and Xherdan Shaqiri.

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It seems like a matter of “when” rather than “if” Mitrovic leaves this summer, as the striker is not in Rafael Benitez’s plans for next season.

A report from the Chronicle said even the 23 year-old’s impressive showings thus far in Russia won’t be enough to change Rafa’s mind, and fans are now discussing how much they’d expect to receive in a potential sale.

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Fulham are the front-runners to land the striker, after he played a huge part in helping the Cottagers secure promotion, and forged a great connection with the Fulham boss, compatriot Slavisa Jokanovic.

You can find some of the best Twitter reactions down below…

Majority of Everton fans would sign Willian Jose for £52million

According to Spanish news outlet Mundo Deportivo, Everton are interested in signing powerful striker Willian Jose.

The Brazilian forward has been on fire for Real Sociedad since signing two years ago, bagging 20 goals this season for the Spanish club.

Everton clearly have problems up front, only managing to score 44 times in the Premier League last season, and it is an area new manager Marco Silva will need to invest in this summer if he wants the team to improve on its 8th place finish.

However, according to the report, Real Sociedad want £52million for Willian Jose, which would break Everton’s transfer record.

We asked Everton fans if they would be prepared to spend a club record £52million on recruiting Willian Jose this summer, and 65 per cent said they would.

Some clearly see Willian Jose as a potential replacement for Romelu Lukaku, with both players being strong and physical strikers who bully defenders.

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However, it remains to be seen whether Marco Silva would spend such a huge sum on one player with no Premier League experience, despite what the fans may think.

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Revealed: 83% of Rangers fans would love to sign Ben Woodburn this summer

An overwhelming majority of polled Rangers supporters would love to see the Ibrox side make a loan move for Ben Woodburn this summer, after reports that the club were set to make a renewed move for the player.

Last week’s Scottish Mail on Sunday reported that manager Steven Gerrard has made a fresh enquiry about the striker’s availability ahead of the club’s massive UEFA Europa League qualifiers next month.

Woodburn became Liverpool’s youngest ever goalscorer in 2016, and now 18 years of age is needing regular first-team football to enhance his development and move towards becoming a big part of Jurgen Klopp’s talented squad.

Rangers need depth in attack themselves with Alfredo Morelos as yet the only real recognised striker available to Gerrard in pre-season.

Supporters appear in favour of a move for the Welsh international, with a massive 83% of respondents to a poll we published earlier this week voting that Rangers should make a move for the player.

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You can see the full results below…

Nash provides a sting in the tail

Brendan Nash has so far been a winner in shoring up the West Indies middle order since moving from Queensland two years ago

Brydon Coverdale at Adelaide Oval05-Dec-2009Bennett King, John Dyson, Brendan Nash – the Australian influence in the West Indies camp over the past few years has been conspicuous, if not always successful. The reigns of King and Dyson as the past two coaches provided mixed results at best, but Nash has so far been a winner in shoring up the middle order since moving from Queensland two years ago.His 92 in Adelaide left him with a solid average of 38.37 from his 11 Tests and as the team’s No. 6, he has often had to forge important partnerships with the bowlers. Steve Waugh trusted his tail-end colleagues to survive and they improved so much that Jason Gillespie scored a Test double-hundred, and Nash has consciously tried to bring a similar approach to the West Indies lower order.Their efforts have been rewarded; against England in February this year, it was only through dogged lower-order resistance at St John’s that West Indies held on for the draw that allowed them to win the series. On the second day in Adelaide their final three pairs added an invaluable 115 as Nash anchored the effort rather than assuming his partners would fail and therefore going for broke.”That’s something that I’ve brought to the team,” Nash said. “I’m not the typical West Indian-style batsman, if you like, that maybe batting with the tail would look to press on and hit the ball in the air and that type of thing. I put some faith in the lower order and they responded quite well. I think that’s how you get the best out of them and that showed today.”Nash arrived in the West Indies in 2007 after losing his state contract with Queensland and he found that in the Caribbean there wasn’t a great history of expecting tailenders to make regular contributions. There were exceptions – Jerome Taylor scored a century in Nash’s debut Test – but he was keen to see more consistent run-making from the bowlers.”It was sort of seven-out all-out,” he said. “Our bowlers always say that they can bat a little bit. I think they never really got given the opportunity. They’ve worked very hard, our lower order, on building partnerships if there’s a batsman in there.”That’s something that we’ve talked about. They’ve worked hard in the nets and the coach has always stressed that. Don’t give them an easy Test wicket, basically. The lower order took that on and put it into pretty good use today.”Nash combined with Sulieman Benn for a 44-run eighth-wicket stand and then with Ravi Rampaul in a highly entertaining 68-run final partnership that built on the 63-run combination between Nash and the allrounder Darren Sammy. The concentration of the lower-order men made it all the more frustrating for Nash that it was he himself who ended the innings when he missed a Mitchell Johnson ball that ducked back in.”It was pretty disappointing not only for myself but for the team as well,” Nash said of falling short of what would have been his second Test century. “Ravi was looking quite good there, the last-wicket partnership we would have liked to have pressed on a little bit. It was just one of those things in Test cricket – you don’t focus for one ball and it’s all over.”But it would have been all over far earlier had Nash not knuckled down to help the side to 451. He conceded he felt under pressure to deliver having kept his place in the side while Travis Dowlin, who impressed with his concentration at the Gabba, made way for the returning Ramnaresh Sarwan. It wasn’t easy for Nash after he retired hurt on the first day, having been struck on the forearm by a rising ball.”It was quite numb and painful,” he said. “I couldn’t grip the bat. It was in between the two bones in my arm so it was a tissue, muscle area. It was a little bit difficult [to bat today]. I couldn’t really feel like I could grip the bat and put much power behind the shots, so that’s why it was a lot of flicking and that type of thing, deflecting.”Almost inevitably, it was Johnson, his former flat-mate, who delivered the painful blow, but Nash won’t hold it against him. “After the series I’m sure we’re going to catch up and say hello and have a drink after the series,” he said, “hopefully with a 2-1 win to us and the beer will taste sweeter.”

Shehzad helps Pakistan clinch series

Pakistan Under-19 clinched the three-match warm-up series against New Zealand Under-19 2-1 with a tight three-wicket win in the decider in Blenheim

Cricinfo staff08-Jan-2010
ScorecardAhmed Shehzad’s run-a-ball 76 was laced with 11 fours and a six•Getty Images

Pakistan Under-19 clinched the three-match warm-up series against New Zealand Under-19 2-1 with a tight three-wicket win in the decider in Blenheim. Opener Ahmed Shehzad starred with a run-a-ball 76, striking 11 fours and a six, and was supported by the middle and lower orders as Pakistan chased down their target of 233 with seven balls to spare. They were dented early in their reply, as two wickets fell for 36, but important contributions from captain Azeem Ghumman (31), Mohammad Naeem (46), Hammad Azam (27) and Usman Qadir (22 not out) took them over the line.Three-wicket hauls from Kaleem Sana and Raza Hasan had helped Pakistan limit New Zealand to a chaseable score. What the hosts managed at the end of their innings was significantly more than what they would have expected when an early burst had left them reeling at 11 for 3. Corey Anderson (46) and captain Craig Cachopa (70) revived the innings and the lower order stepped up at the death to take their team to a respectable score, which, in the end, proved inadequate.New Zealand team manager Kevin Pulley said while the series loss was
disappointing, it had been a valuable build-up for the side. “Unlike some other teams we have not played together before so this has been excellent preparation,” he said. “All 15 in our squad have now had a run and we’re starting to come together as a team.”New Zealand now go on to face Bangladesh and England in the official U-19 World Cup warm-up games in Christchurch next week. Pakistan will meet Zimbabwe and South Africa in their warm-ups.

Samaraweera, Perera take Sri Lanka to second successive win

Rarely does a centurion get overshadowed in a match of middling scores. But though Thilan Samaraweera finished with an accomplished unbeaten 105, the headlines were stolen by Thissara Perera, who celebrated his third cap with a power-packed 15-ball 36

The Bulletin by Dileep Premachandran05-Jan-2010
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were outThilan Samaraweera smashed 11 fours en route to his second ODI century•Associated Press

Rarely does a centurion get overshadowed in a match of middling scores. But though Thilan Samaraweera finished with an accomplished unbeaten 105, the headlines were stolen by Thissara Perera, who celebrated his third cap with a power-packed 15-ball 36. From needing 54 off 39 balls when he arrived at the crease, Sri Lanka romped home with two overs to spare, as India’s quest for yorkers merely resulted in one too many no-balls and full tosses. Chanaka Welegedara’s five-wicket haul had killed India’s batting momentum at crucial times, and with the dew playing such a factor in the evening, 279 was not quite enough.After taking Zaheer Khan through cover to get off the mark, Perera transformed the game in Ashish Nehra’s seventh over. He had been India’s best bowler, but Perera pierced the off-side cordon, flicked behind square and then nonchalantly hoicked the free hit for six in the same direction.
Samaraweera got to his hundred straight after, but was then more than content to watch the fun from the other end.Zaheer was then carved through the covers twice, as he made light of being struck in the ribs, and a meaty club through wide long-on finished off matters well ahead of time. Sri Lanka had been given a brisk start by the new opening pair of Upul Tharanga and Lahiru Thirimanne, the debutant who replaced Tillakaratne Dilshan, but once India conceded just 16 in the five overs of bowling Powerplay, the onus was very much on the old hands to see it home.Tharanga had set the tone with a casual loft for four off Zaheer, and then two then took 16 from an over that also featured wides down the leg side. With runs leaking, MS Dhoni gave the ball to Sreesanth, only for Thirimanne to reveal glimpses of his potential with three cracking drives through the covers. It was too good to last though. In Sreesanth’s next over, he got into a tangle trying to pull off the front foot and the ball ballooned to midwicket.Soon after, Harbhajan Singh was introduced and Tharanga chipped his fourth ball straight back. But Samaraweera came in and wrested the initiative with deft cuts and a paddle for four. And with Kumar Sangakkara unafraid to come down the pitch and chip over the infield, the innings quickly revived. By then the towels were out, and the Indian focus was as much on keeping the ball dry as it was on taking the wickets needed to win the game.Samaraweera was the primary aggressor, scooping Sreesanth for four in an over that cost 16, and Sri Lanka were cruising when Sangakkara, who had eased to 60, stepped out and lofted Harbhajan Singh straight to cover. Thilina Kandamby then top-edged a wild swipe to midwicket and when Suraj Randiv backed up too far, they were in trouble. Perera, though, ensured that India would get no reprieve.Earlier, Yuvraj Singh had marked his return to the XI with 74 from 84 balls, while Dhoni, Suresh Raina and Ravindra Jadeja all contributed decent cameos after Virender Sehwag had played a typically effervescent hand. He cruised to 47 from 30 balls before playing too early at one bowled with fingers rolled across the seam from round the wicket, and after his exit, India had to build steadily on a surface where the ball didn’t always come on to the bat.Sehwag had announced his intentions from the outset, off-driving Welegedara for four, but there was an early setback for the Indians as he sneaked a yorker underneath Gautam Gambhir’s bat and on to the base of leg stump. With Sehwag taking Suranga Lakmal for three fours in an over, and Virat Kohli playing a lovely straight drive, the 50 of the innings came in just the seventh over. The game changed, though, in the space of two eventful overs from Welegedara.Sehwag had scythed two off-side fours and been caught behind off a no-ball by the time Kohli tried too cute a deflection to a ball pitched outside off stump. Having conceded 18 in that over, Welegedara came back in the next to have Sehwag caught at mid-off by Thirimanne. India had taken 76 from the first Powerplay, but only 13 came from the bowling one as the bowlers kept a leash on the new batsmen. Both Yuvraj and Dhoni clipped boundaries through point, but with Randiv getting pretty sharp turn, and Kandamby filling in with part-time spin, the runs were no longer coming at Sehwag pace.When Muthumudalige Pushpakumara went off injured after a dive in the outfield, Sangakkara had to turn to his occasional bowlers, and Yuvraj quickly cashed in, pulling Samaraweera for four and then heaving Kandamby for two consecutive sixes to reach his half-century. At that point,
Perara, deputising for Chamara Silva, was called on, and Dhoni’s attempt to force the issue only found Sangakkara’s gloves. Soon after, he induced a miscued pull from Yuvraj, and by the time the batting Powerplay was taken after 43 overs, there were only 225 on the board.They took 14 from the first of those overs, bowled by Welegedara, but with Jadeja going four-six-four-four against Thilan Thushara, the innings finally had some energy. But back came Sri Lanka again, with Welegedara castling Raina and Zaheer, and Harbhajan playing a hideous stroke to point. By the time Jadeja holed out in the final over, all hopes of 300
had long since disappeared, leaving Sri Lanka with a chase that they timed to perfection.

Betty Wilson, the 'female Bradman', dies at 88

Betty Wilson, one of the greatest women’s cricketers who was sometimes called Australia’s female Bradman, has died aged 88

Cricinfo staff22-Jan-2010Betty Wilson, one of the greatest women’s cricketers who was sometimes called Australia’s female Bradman, has died aged 88. Her decade-long international career lasted till 1958 and, in an era where there was little women’s cricket, she averaged 57.46 with the bat and 11.80 bowling offspinners in 11 Tests.She made a spectacular entrance to top-flight cricket, scoring 90 and taking ten wickets on debut against New Zealand in 1948. In her next Test, she became the first Australian woman to make an Ashes hundred, and topped that effort with nine wickets in the match. Other highlights in a legendary career include becoming the first woman to take a Test hat-trick, becoming the first person to achieve the double of a century and ten wickets in a Test, and signing off with a couple of centuries and 21 wickets at 9.71 in her final series.In 1985, Wilson became the first woman cricketer to be inducted into the Australian Sporting Hall of Fame and and that year the Under-21 National Women’s Cricket Championship was renamed the Betty Wilson Shield.She was born in Melbourne in 1921 and became part of the club cricket scene by the age of 10, joining Collingwood. In four years, she had graduated to the second XI of the Victoria side and at 16 she was in the state side. A natural athlete, she was also admired for her work ethic – practicing daily when most of her team-mates trained once a week.

Laxman and Dhoni flatten South Africa

VVS Laxman and MS Dhoni saw off the tricky period with the second new ball, put together the second double-century stand of the innings, and proceeded to virtually bat South Africa out of the Test

The Bulletin by Sidharth Monga16-Feb-2010
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out
HawkeyeMS Dhoni and VVS Laxman took India’s lead to 347•AFP

VVS Laxman and MS Dhoni saw off the tricky period with the second new ball, put together the second double-century stand of the innings, and virtually batted South Africa out of the Test. It was only the second instance of four Indian batsmen scoring centuries in the same innings. It was also Laxman’s fourth hundred in nine Tests at Eden Gardens, taking his tally at his beloved ground to 1041 runs at 94.63.Staring at a massive deficit of 347, South Africa were left needing a huge batting effort, a turnaround of the proportions of the one at the same ground in 2000-01, to make something out of this match. They didn’t help themselves by continuing to drop catches: Laxman added 95 after his reprieve, Dhoni 109 after his, and nightwatchman Amit Mishra 23. That to go with the 118 Virender Sehwag added after he was dropped on the second day. They were not all easy catches, but South Africa usually take eight out of 10 such chances.The crucial period of play was just after Mishra had got out after an entertaining cameo full of edges, plays and misses, and also cracking shots. The lead had reached 88, but with the second new ball Dale Steyn had got his swing back. Morne Morkel was his usual aggressive self, and had Mishra’s wicket in his bag. Laxman was caught in a shell, not struggling but he had let Mishra take the ascendancy. South Africa could sense a comeback and were giving it their best with their best bowlers bowling in tandem.

Smart stats

  • India’s total of 643 for 6 declared is their second-highest total at Eden Gardens, after their 657 for 7 against Australia in that unforgettable Test in 2001.

  • The only other instance of four Indian batsmen scoring centuries in the same innings was against Bangladesh in Dhaka in 2007, when their top four -Jaffer, Karthik, Dravid and Tendulkar – all got hundreds.

  • This was VVS Laxman’s first Test century against South Africa – before this, he averaged 30.33 in 15 Tests against them, with a highest of 89.

  • Laxman also became the first batsman to score 1000 Test runs at Eden Gardens; the second-highest is Mohammad Azharuddin with 860.Laxman averages 94.63 at this ground, with four centuries in nine Tests.

  • The 259-run partnership between Laxman and Dhoni is the third-highest for the seventh wicket in Tests.

  • The first-innings deficit of 347 is the fifth-largest for South Africa since their readmission into international cricket. The highest during this period is 587, against Sri Lanka in Colombo in 2006. It’s easily their largest deficit against India, more than doubling their previous highest – 165, in Johannesburg in 2006.

Laxman handled the fast bowlers well. He left outside off and didn’t let the bouncer barrage or a period of no runs for 37 balls rattle him either. The closest South Africa came to getting a wicket was an inside edge that flew to the left of the keeper. Once Morkel went off – he had fever – runs came easily, the storm had been weathered, and it was time to accumulate.Dhoni welcomed back Paul Harris, who could have had Mishra in the second over of the day but for the drop by Jacques Kallis at slip, with a four and a six in his first two overs. India’s plan was clear then: Laxman was to be the solid anchorman, and the others were to score quickly around him. In the last over before lunch, Dhoni pushed forward at Harris, the ball spun and the edge flew to left of slip. Kallis had by then taken a special overhead catch to remove Mishra, but this one didn’t stick – the third such instance off Harris’ bowling in a session and one delivery. Dhoni was 23 then.In the first over after lunch, Laxman cut Wayne Parnell for four to enter his 40s, and steered him past gully for another four in his next over. Off the next ball, a similar shot went uppishly towards JP Duminy at point. The ball fell slightly in front of him, but those are the catches the South Africans take without making them look tough.After that Laxman and Dhoni, untested, unquestioned, sauntered towards their centuries. They took their own, unique routes. Laxman was unhurried, there were lovely inside-out drives, flicks out of the rough against Harris, and he used the fast bowlers’ pace for scoring on the leg side. Dhoni presented a contrast, walking down the stumps to counter the swing, moving about in the crease, hustling through for ones and twos, relying more on power than timing.After they reached their centuries, both batsmen naturally accelerated, again in their unique ways. Laxman started flicking more and playing more inside-out shots than before. Dhoni lofted Duminy for back-to-back massive sixes, hit Wayne Parnell through covers, and even turned down singles to Laxman. From 100 off 203 Laxman went to 143 off 260, Dhoni went from 100 off 159 to 132 off 187, and the two recorded the third-highest seventh-wicket partnership in Test cricket before the declaration.Thirteen minutes after India declared, light deteriorated suddenly, reducing the possibility of 11 overs to five actual deliveries, which the South African openers survived.

Jennings wants window for IPL

Ray Jennings, the Royal Challengers Bangalore coach, has called for a window for the IPL, saying that missing players due to international matches makes it tougher to build team spirit

Cricinfo staff10-Mar-2010Ray Jennings, the Royal Challengers Bangalore coach, has called for a window for the IPL, saying that missing players due to international matches makes it tougher to build team spirit.Bangalore will be without their most expensive player, Kevin Pietersen, for the first couple of weeks of the IPL. New Zealand’s Ross Taylor, whose big-hitting is one of the side’s strengths, will be busy with the Tests against Australia till the end of March, and Australian allrounder Steven Smith’s selection in the Test squad also deprives Bangalore of his services till early April.”With so much international cricket being played in between the IPL, it becomes difficult for any franchise to gel as a team,” Jennings wrote on the team’s official website. “As a result, it is difficult to target all the players together at the start of the tournament. I think there should be some window for the IPL for all the players to meet and gel as a unit before the start of such an important tournament.”Jennings felt that the coming IPL season will see larger totals being made because players have more experience in Twenty20. “Par score is beginning to grow because of the knowledge of how to play the game,” he said. “I think the par score will be around 155 – 170. But we don’t want to set our targets very high. We want to assess the situation, and be flexible with the targets.”The squad has been practising at the Chinnaswamy Stadium since the beginning of last week, starting with some of the Indian players, with more team members joining since. On Tuesday, Indian medium-pacer Praveen Kumar and South African allrounder Roelof van der Merwe were the latest players to become part of the camp.

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