Gringos do São Paulo saem em defesa de Rogério Ceni após vitória: 'Ídolo do clube e trabalhador'

MatériaMais Notícias

Após a vitória sobre o Puerto Cabello, por 2 a 0, na terça-feira (18), pela Copa Sul-Americana, alguns dos jogadores estrangeiros do São Paulo procuraram dedicar o resultado ao técnico Rogério Ceni, que entrou no duelo ameaçado de demissão por conta dos placares adversos registrados pelo clube nos últimos jogos.

Autor do segundo gol tricolor na partida, o primeiro com a camisa do clube do Morumbi, o uruguaio Michel Araujo destacou como fundamental a participação de Ceni em sua chegada.

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+ ATUAÇÕES: Em noite ruim, Marcos Paulo salva, e Calleri mostra que faz diferença em vitória do São Paulo

Vindo de empréstimo do Fluminense, o jogador vem se destacando pela versatilidade e integrou os 11 iniciais desde que foi apresentado.

– Foi um momento inexplicável, fazer um gol no Morumbi, uma emoção muito grande. Consegui responder ao treinador, ele botou muita confiança em mim, vinha de um momento difícil. Esse jogo que faço é por causa desse cara, trabalhador, sincero. Estamos aqui para fazer o melhor para o São Paulo. A vitória só saiu no final, mas está valendo.

Outro que tratou de elogiar Ceni foi Calleri. O argentino, sempre coerente em suas entrevistas, fez questão de enfatizar a importância do treinador.

– Rogério merece essa vitória. Está se falando muita coisa, só quero dedicar a ele, é um cara que ganhou tudo pelo clube, um ídolo, e muito trabalhador. Ele precisava dessa vitória, nós também. Vamos felizes para a casa, mesmo não tendo feito um bom jogo.

+ Confira os jogos, classificação e simule resultados da Sul-Americana-23 na tabela do LANCE!

Bowen 2.0: West Ham plotting offer for £6m star who “has got everything"

West Ham United really struggled to get going last season in the Premier League, even after Graham Potter took on the reins.

The Hammers did manage to bow out of their unmemorable 2024/25 campaign in the top flight with back-to-back away victories at Manchester United and Ipswich Town. Still, the ex-Chelsea manager will have his work cut out for him to turn his fortunes around, with those two away-day wins making up a large chunk of his meagre five wins as Irons boss.

He will hope he’s given adequate time to leave his mark on the Hammers set-up, having only lasted a rash 31 games in the Stamford Bridge hot seat, with the likes of Kyle Walker-Peters already entering the building this summer, marking the start of West Ham’s makeover.

Up next, the Hammers could welcome in some attacking additions, with one target already in mind who might well be the top-flight club’s second coming of Jarrod Bowen.

West Ham prepare offer for £6m sensation

Of course, the Hammers are likely to be on the hunt now for an immediate Mohammed Kudus replacement, after the one-time fan favourite in East London defected over to enemy lines to join Tottenham Hotspur for £55m.

James McAtee might well be the replacement for Kudus that West Ham have up their sleeve, alongside Potter and Co. also reportedly showing interest in the services of Shakhtar Donetsk ace Georgiy Sudakov as their net widens out to Ukraine.

Manchester City'sJamesMcAteecelebrates after the match

A new, up-and-coming centre-forward might also be on their agenda – even after Potter’s recent comments played down the importance of bringing in fresh talent up top – with West Ham-oriented website Claret and Hugh relaying information that the Hammers are reportedly considering an offer for breakout Wycombe Wanderers star Richard Kone.

Already this summer, Kone has been subject to a £6m bid from Luton Town, on top of interest coming from Brentford, Celtic, and Crystal Palace, but it’s West Ham who now allegedly lead the charge for the former non-league attacker.

Hull City

131

54

14

Hereford Town

8

1

1

Bowen also once found himself in the non-league scene with Hereford Town, before going on to solidify himself as a Premier League-worthy talent in the EFL with Hull City, as Kone now braces himself for that next gigantic step in his own career after a whirlwind campaign with the Chairboys.

Why Kone can be West Ham's next Bowen

Nobody at the London Stadium would have anticipated how vital Bowen would eventually become to the West Ham cause when he first joined the camp for £22m back in 2020.

There was a lot of excitement in the air that he would be a success story, though, having fired home a clinical 54 strikes for the Tigers in the demanding Championship, but even Bowen wouldn’t have anticipated that after 238 clashes in East London, he would be captaining the side after amassing an astounding 125 goals and assists in total for his Premier League employers.

Bowen has even become a regular on the international stage for England, with Kone surely harbouring his own dreams of representing the Ivory Coast if a move to West Ham comes to fruition, off the back of a potent season leading the line for Wycombe.

Having still been on the books of non-league outfit Athletic Newham last year, it’s a remarkable rise Kone has undergone in such a short space of time, with Bowen acclimatising to the EFL equally well when jumping ship from Hereford to Hull.

Games played

41

Goals scored

18

Assists

3

Goal conversion %

18%

Touches*

34.0

Accurate passes*

11.1 (65%)

Total duels won*

5.9

As can be seen looking at the table above, the Ivorian excels when being utilised as a poacher, with his venomous 18 league strikes coming about from just 34 touches of the ball on average per League One affair.

Bowen might well be whipping in many a cross in for Kone to latch onto, therefore, with the 22-year-old’s prowess in the air – which saw him win an impressive 5.9 duels on average in League One – also making him a suitable fit for the Premier League’s intense nature.

Labelled as a striker who “has got everything” by Wycombe great Joe Jacobson, it wouldn’t be the wildest shout to expect Kone to grow even more confident if East London came calling, mirroring Bowen’s sharp ascent in the process.

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West Ham United are weighing up a major £35m move for this incredible star.

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Ben Stokes calls for more player input on cramped international schedule

Ben Stokes has called for more player input over the international schedule, ahead of an overloaded 12-month period for England’s red- and white-ball sides.Speaking ahead of the third and final Test against West Indies, England’s Test captain reiterated his long-held criticisms of a congested fixture list, further complicated by the rise of franchise cricket. Having previously worried about its effect on the quality of cricket, Stokes is wary of the negative impact it could have on the development of England teams as a whole.While Stokes’ focus is on building towards the Ashes in the winter of 2025-26, the limited-overs set-up is looking towards a new dawn, with a decision to be made imminently on the futures of head coach Matthew Mott and captain Jos Buttler. Such are the commitments ahead for both squads, it is highly unlikely that each will progress at a similar rate.Related

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After the conclusion of this series in Edgbaston, the Test team will reconvene for a three-match series against Sri Lanka which begins at Emirates Old Trafford on August 21. The day after the third Test is due to finish in September, England begin a T20I series against Australia.That is followed by an ODI series against the same opponents that finishes just eight days before the start of a three-Test series in Pakistan. Three days after that tour concludes, England begin an ODI series in Antigua, which ends in St Lucia eight days prior to the first Test against New Zealand in Christchurch.The start of 2025 offers some respite with no overseas Tests in the first half of the year, but England will play five white-ball matches in India as preparation for the Champions Trophy in February. The home season then plays host to four visiting teams, with an ODI series in Ireland running parallel to the India Test series.England are blessed with a playing pool that can be adequately split for the obligations that await. But the pull on their multi-format players such as Harry Brook, Mark Wood and even Jofra Archer, who is mooted to return to the Test side in 2025, will become a problem, particularly as they continue to seek opportunities on the T20 franchise circuit.Stokes believes his role as Test captain allows him to have a firm hand on the tiller when it comes to what is best for his team. But he acknowledged problems on the horizon and urged boards such as the ICC, who produce the Future Tours Programme (FTP), and the ECB, who rubber-stamp it, to collaborate more with players at an uncertain time for the game’s ecosystem.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

“I hope not,” answered Stokes when asked if his ambitions with the Test team will be hampered by the schedule. “It is something that does need to be addressed.”Who knows what international cricket is going to look like, with all the franchise stuff that is going on as well? It does need to get looked at. The landscape is constantly changing. I don’t think anyone can put their hand on their heart and say they know what cricket is going to look like in even two years’ time.”I think some consultation might be quite nice, obviously to Jos (Buttler) and myself. The FTP could maybe see the people playing in it consulted, and I think we could have some good input in that.”Asked whether he had been consulted on the recent FTP running from 2023-27, Stokes was tight-lipped: “Yes and no. Make of that what you will.”He was similarly guarded when asked about his own white-ball career, unwilling to entertain the question on the eve of a Test match. Having reversed his ODI retirement to play in the 2023 World Cup, he subsequently opted out of the T20 World Cup last month to focus on his Test duties. He also refused to acknowledge reports in last week that he has signed a bumper £800,000 deal with MI Cape Town in the SA20, which clashes with the India white-ball series at the start of next year.

Done deal: Southampton have "agreed" £6.8m exit of "incredible" attacker

Southampton have “agreed a fee” with a club over the sale of an “incredible” Saints player, according to a fresh claim from journalist Fabrizio Romano.

Will Still outlines plans as Southampton manager

Will Still has begun life as Southampton’s new manager, with the Englishman looking to back up his reputation as an exciting young coach with a big future in the game.

The 32-year-old has already spoken well since taking charge at St Mary’s Stadium, outlining what he wants to see from his team in a tactical sense.

“I don’t like to sit in and wait and be passive in what we do. I’d like our teams to dominate, to go and press, to be as aggressive as we can be. I don’t do that just for the fact of running and to say, oh, we’re going to be really aggressive. We want to be high up the pitch and in the opposition’s third as much as possible.

“It’s been entertaining. I want the players to enjoy it. I want the fans, obviously, to get on board and support it. But it’s (about) creating that environment where we’re here to win and we want to win a lot. We want to win consistently.”

The pressure will be on Still to guide Southampton straight back into the Premier League from the Championship, and he will know that new signings are vital. There are also players who will leave after Saints’ relegation, however, and a key update has emerged regarding one such figure.

"Incredible" Southampton attacker set to leave

Writing on X, Romano reported that Southampton have “agreed a fee” with Trabzonspor over the £6.8m sale of striker Paul Onuachu from St Mary’s.

Seeing Onuachu depart is a shame, given his popularity among Southampton supporters, with his giant stature and unique style making him something of a cult hero.

The Nigerian is a good footballer in his own right, however, scoring four Premier League goals last season and being lauded by Ivan Juric: “He’s an incredible guy, always training hard. He has some good things and some bad things he can do better, but he’s one of those guys that is always working hard.”

The fact that Onuachu only has one year remaining on his current Southampton deal means that selling him now is the sensible decision, though, allowing the club to receive a healthy amount of money that can be used on new signings this summer.

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A new striker will be needed in his place, though, and Still has to nail his replacement, in order to give his side the best possible chance of a quickfire return to the top flight.

He'd be amazing with Cunha & Amad: Man Utd in talks to sign elite striker

This summer is a huge one for Ruben Amorim as Manchester United manager, needing to complete a huge overhaul of the squad if they are to compete at the top end of the Premier League next season.

His side have failed to deliver in the league throughout 2024/25, currently sitting in 15th position with just three outings remaining in the current campaign.

However, the Red Devils still have an opportunity to end the year with a trophy, potentially winning the Europa League against fellow English top-flight side Tottenham Hotspur.

Manchester United manager RubenAmorimbefore the match

Their tally of just 42 goals in their 35 league matches is the fifth-lowest in the division, highlighting the real need for attacking reinforcements throughout the off-season.

The hierarchy have already wasted no time in planning for the summer, with numerous attacking stars already emerging on their radar to help bolster Amorim’s front line.

An update on United’s hunt for new attackers this summer

Rasmus Hojlund and Joshua Zirkzee have been United’s main options in forward areas throughout 2024/25, but that could be about to change with a move for Matheus Cunha.

The Wolves talisman has notched 15 goals and six assists in the league this campaign, leading to the Red Devils entering talks to trigger the Brazilian’s £62.5m release clause.

Wolverhampton Wanderers' MatheusCunhacelebrates scoring their fourth goal

However, he could be joined at Old Trafford by Nigerian striker Victor Osimhen, with Foot Mercato claiming the hierarchy are also in talks with his representatives over a summer switch.

It also goes on to state that the forward is also keen on a deal to move to the North West this summer, with parent side Napoli demanding €75m (£64m) for his signature.

Further into the report, it claims the Red Devils are the only English side willing to match his £200k-per-week demands, opening the door to a switch should the talks progress in the right direction.

Why United’s £64m target would be perfect with Amad & Cunha

Amad Diallo has been a shining light for United in what has been a dismal season for the club, often producing the goods for Amorim’s side within the attacking areas.

The Ivorian has registered ten combined goals and assists since the 40-year-old back in November, missing a huge chunk of action due to his ankle issue, which sidelined him for just under three months.

The 22-year-old scored in stoppage time of the 4-3 defeat against Brentford last weekend, registering his first effort after returning from injury – hoping to play a huge role in the Europa League in the coming weeks.

Amad has often played in a central role behind the striker, potentially being partnered by Cunha in such a position and aiding Osimhen in the final third at Old Trafford.

When delving into his stats from this campaign, the 26-year-old has greatly impressed on loan at Galatasaray, highlighting the threat he will pose should he complete a switch to England.

Galatasaray's VictorOsimhenreacts

Osimhen, who’s been labelled “one of the best strikers in the world” by former Nigerian footballer Oghenekaro Etebo, has registered 24 goals in his 27 Süper Lig outings – sitting as the division’s top scorer.

His underlying stats have been just as impressive, averaging a staggering 7.3 shots taken per 90, along with 3.4 shots on target per 90 – having all the tools to impress in attacking areas for Amorim’s side.

Games played

27

Goals scored

24

Shots taken

7.3

Shots on target per 90

3.4

Shot-creating actions

3.8

Progressive carries

1.8

Aerials won

4.3

Aerial success

64%

He’s also won 4.3 aerial duels per 90, along with 1.8 progressive carries completed per 90, offering the side an all-round option at the top end of the pitch in their quest to qualify for the Champions League next year.

Whilst talks over a deal to take him to the Theatre of Dreams are still in their early stages, it would be an excellent transfer that would bolster the options at Amorim’s disposal.

£64m would be an expensive addition for the club given the current cost-cutting operation in place, but it’s one that would be worthwhile, potentially being the most important signing they could make in the coming months.

Shades of Pogba: Man Utd eager to sign £20m "freak of nature" this summer

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Their best LW since Son: Spurs plotting £70m move for "world-class" star

It’s safe to say Tottenham Hotspur have endured a disastrous Premier League campaign in 2024/25, with Ange Postecoglou under serious pressure as a result of their lowly league standing.

The Lilywhites currently occupy 15th place in the table with just six games remaining, sitting 18 points off the top four, showcasing how below par the side has been in recent months.

Whilst injuries have undoubtedly played their part, the Aussie has done himself no favours with his selections, even being booed by supporters in the defeat against Chelsea a few weeks ago.

However, his side still have the chance to end the campaign with a trophy, facing Eintracht Frankfurt in the second leg of their Europa League quarter-final tomorrow night.

Regardless of whether Spurs advance, it’s pivotal that additions are made over the summer to prevent a repeat of their lacklustre performances throughout the ongoing season.

The latest on Spurs’ activity ahead of the summer window

Over the last couple of days, Wolverhampton Wanderers star Matheus Cunha has emerged on the club’s shortlist, with reports claiming Spurs are ready to break their club record to sign him.

The Brazilian has registered 18 combined goals and assists in the Premier League throughout 2024/25, with his latest coming against Postecoglou’s men on Sunday.

Wolverhampton Wanderers' MatheusCunhacelebrates scoring their fourth goal

It’s evident that the hierarchy are targeting added attacking reinforcements in the summer window, with Southampton forward Tyler Dibling another player constantly touted with a move to North London.

However, despite the links with the aforementioned duo, the club have also started work on a deal to land Bournemouth’s talented forward Antoine Semenyo, according to GIVEMESPORT.

They aren’t alone in their pursuit, with Manchester United and Liverpool also in the race for the Ghanaian’s signature, but any deal would cost a fee in the region of £70m.

Why Semenyo would be Spurs’ best LW since Son

Heung-min Son has cemented himself as a modern-day icon at Spurs, being the shining light over a dismal couple of years on the pitch for the club.

The South Korean has been a key part of the first-team side ever since his move to North London back in the summer of 2015, registering 451 appearances and scoring 173 times.

He’s taken the captain’s armband over the last couple of months, highlighting his importance to the squad, but he’s failed to produce his high levels of performance, with age starting to play a factor in his decline.

The 32-year-old has only registered 11 goals across all competitions in 2024/25, his lowest tally since his debut campaign in the capital nearly a decade ago.

Wilson Odobert and Timo Werner have also attempted to fill the void in recent months, but both have struggled, opening the door for Semenyo’s summer move to North London.

When comparing the Cherries forward to the aforementioned trio, he’s managed to outperform them all, showcasing what a superb addition he would be to Ange’s side ahead of next season.

The “world-class” attacker, as dubbed by The Athletic’s Richard Amofa, has registered more goals than the current other Spurs left-wingers, showcasing the attacking threat he possesses.

Games played

31

28

11

18

Goals scored

8

7

1

0

Shots taken

3.7

2.4

2

1.4

Shots on target

1.2

1

0.1

0

Tackles & Interceptions

1.9

1

1.5

1.2

Take-ons completed

2.1

1.3

1.5

1.6

Aerials won

1.9

0.3

0.5

0.2

He’s also registered more aerials won per 90, whilst also completing more take-ons, having the tools to thrive in various areas, making him the perfect all-round option for the Lilywhites.

Semenyo may cost a pretty penny this summer, but given the figures he’s produced at the Vitality in 2024/25, it would be a sensational piece of business that could catapult the side back towards the summit of the table.

At just 25, the Ghanaian international has the potential to improve further in the years ahead, allowing the club to gradually phase out Son, given that the South Korean is edging towards the latter stages of his career.

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He's like Neymar: Man City eye move to sign "fast" star with £850m clause

In what would be one of the most impressive deals in Premier League history, Manchester City are now reportedly eyeing the chance to sign a young star who’s worth over £200m.

Man City planning summer overhaul

Following their worst season yet under Pep Guardiola, Manchester City look destined to be the club to watch in the Premier League when the transfer window swings open. The likes of Bernardo Silva and Ederson could yet be among those heading for the exit door as the Citizens get ruthless, whilst Kevin de Bruyne has already confirmed the news that he will be leaving as a free agent at the end of the season.

Like many, Guardiola has been full of praise for De Bruyne in the last week as his legendary Premier League career begins to reach a conclusion. The Man City boss told reporters: “You always have to be careful, have respect for the players who play main roles, and incredible players that play for the last, I don’t know, 20, 30 years in this club.

“But come on, there’s no doubt he’s one of the greatest, for sure. Because of his consistency – except the last year, year and a half, that he had injury problems – in important games and not important games, and every three days being there. Our success in the last decade, that would be impossible without him.”

Real Madrid now readying shock move to sign "irreplaceable" Man City star

He could join Kevin De Bruyne on the list of departures.

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What the Belgian’s exit will do is open up a crucial space within Guardiola’s side for their next De Bruyne. Just who that may be amid recent links to the likes of Morgan Rogers and Florian Wirtz remains to be seen, but the Citizens could yet welcome another fresh star on top of replacing their club legend in the near future.

Man City eyeing shock Lamine Yamal move

As opportunistic as ever, Manchester City are now eyeing the chance to sign Lamine Yamal from Barcelona, according to Mundo Deportivo. The teenage sensation is expected to sign a new deal at Barcelona, but if that does not prove to be the case then he will become a free agent in 2026 – allowing City and others to make a sensational move.

Of course, securing his signature on a free is likely to be the only way that any club manage to lure Yamal away from Barcelona. The Spaniard reportedly has a release clause worth an eye-watering €1bn (£850m) at the La Liga giants, which not many if any suitors around world football will be able to afford any time soon.

Lamine Yamal for Barcelona

If the La Masia graduate did decide to leave, meanwhile, then he would instantly become football’s most in-demand free agent. At just 17 years old, Yamal is already one of the world’s best and has already been compared to the likes of Neymar, who he looks destined to exceed at Barcelona.

Comparing his club teammate to his fellow Brazilian, Raphinha told reporters: “Messi is from another world. Inexplicable. I see him more like Neymar – the dribbling, how fast he thinks to dribble. When you think you can steal the ball from him, he does something you’ve never seen in your life.”

Fast times in Rawalpindi: how Nahid Rana became Bangladesh's latest pace sensation

The quick bowler is one of many who have been fast-tracked to the top. Hopefully his story will not turn out like those of his predecessors who fell by the wayside

Mohammad Isam18-Sep-2024″Bangladeshi fast bowler” is not exactly an oxymoron but the phenomenon is an unlikely one. Particularly if you look at the Test team in recent years, you’d be justified in thinking fast bowers were an endangered species in the country. Then came Taskin Ahmed’s comeback. And Ebadot Hossain’s stunning improvement.Most recently, there has been Nahid Rana, who made an improbable journey from a small town in the country’s north-west to the Test team.Rana rocked Pakistan with his pace and bounce during Bangladesh’s 2-0 Test series win in Rawalpindi earlier this month. In baking hot weather, in an almost empty stadium, the 21-year-old bowled like no Bangladeshi fast bowler has ever done, hitting 150kph on occasion and averaging 145kph for most of his spells, hurrying the Pakistani batters, showing the ability to extract disconcerting bounce from a difficult length. His four wickets on the fourth day of the second Test battered the home side. Bangladesh won the game by six wickets.Rana bowled well earlier in the series too, following his impressive debut against Sri Lanka in March this year.It has been a whirlwind ride for Rana, who was playing tape-tennis ball cricket with his friends less than five years ago and only got into a cricket academy after fulfilling his family’s wish that he pass his college exam.Related

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He is now one of the most talked about cricketers in Bangladesh as they embark on their third bilateral tour of India. The hosts have reportedly brought a tall fast bowler into the nets to prepare for the challenge of facing Rana – likely the first time a Test side has taken such steps to counter a Bangladeshi fast bowler.

****

Rana is wearing a loose-fitting black and white shirt when we meet at the academy building inside the Shere Bangla National Stadium’s premises. It is a week after the Bangladesh players have returned from Pakistan. After a couple of days’ training, it is now almost time for the India tour, and Rana is tackling a queue of interview-seekers. He finishes a session with Bangladesh Betar, the state-owned radio station, while three other groups of journalists, waiting their turn, sit idly by.The day before, Litton Das warned against complacency ahead of the India series, and requested the media not to talk too much about the Pakistan tour. But with Rana present in the flesh, you can’t not ask him about that spell in Rawalpindi.On the fourth day of the second Test, Pakistan had seven wickets in hand, and a lead of 74 runs. After playing some good strokes in the morning session, opener Saim Ayub was out caught at mid-off. Taskin Ahmed and hasan mahmudHasan Mahmud looked lively in their opening spells. When Rana came on, it was hot. He hadn’t bowled all that well in the first innings of the Test.Earlier during the match, Rana rang Alamgir Kabir, the former Bangladesh fast bowler, his mentor.”After he bowled in the first innings, he asked me, ‘Sir, what have you observed?'” Alamgir says. “I said, you looked confident – so confident that it looked like you are bowling in the National Cricket League. He replied, ‘Sir, you are right. I was bowling confidently. I felt like I could blast them away like in the NCL.'”I told him that he was either bowling too short or bowling half-volleys. It didn’t look like he was playing in a Test match.”Taking wickets inspires me me more than bowling fast”•Farooq Naeem/AFP/Getty Images”There’s a difference between domestic and international batters. ‘If you stick to your lengths and stick to one spot, you will have a better chance in the second innings,’ I told him.”With his third ball, Rana removed the Pakistan captain, Shan Masood, caught behind. Babar Azam went first ball next over, caught by Shadman Islam at first slip, who then dropped Mohammad Rizwan the following ball.Rana beat Rizwan’s inside edge in the next over, just missing the top of off stump. After Rizwan pulled out from the next delivery at the last second, Rana pinged him on the helmet with a bouncer as he attempted a pull. Taskin had something to say from fine leg. A ball later, Rana removed Saud Shakeel for 2. Pakistan were 81 for 6.The loud music in between overs broke the trance that Rana’s spell seemed to have cast. The press box he was bowling towards was abuzz. Someone wanted to know if “Rajshahi Express” might catch on as a nickname. Rajshahi is where Rana learned his cricket, though he grew up in nearby Chapai Nawabganj.He bowled two more menacing overs in the spell, finishing on 5-0-22-3. His team-mates gave him a round of applause and pats on the back.A Bangladeshi fast bowler had ripped out the opposition’s captain, their best batter, and their most in-form batter in three overs. In the city that not so long ago was home to the world’s fastest bowler.Rana was a threat earlier in the series too, but this spell was the highlight, and perhaps the first time he qualified to be called a match-winner in Bangladesh colours.When he talks about the spell a week later, in Dhaka, Rana is predictably shy. It takes a few follow-up questions to coax his thoughts out of him.”Yes, that was a good spell,” he says. “I think it was my best time in the four innings in Pakistan.” He says he worked hard for three months for the Pakistan series, doing everything he needed to keep his fitness and pace high.”Taking wickets definitely inspires me. It inspires me more than bowling fast.Rana trains in Chennai. “If you have good fitness, you can take good decisions”•Mahesh Kumar A/Associated PressThe series win was Bangladesh’s second overseas since becoming a Full Member nation in 2000. Rana’s pace was the surprise ingredient, coming as it did from a team that traditionally relies on its spinners. Over about the last four years, Bangladesh’s pace attack have become match-winners in both red- and white-ball cricket. Taskin’s comeback was a catalyst, followed by Shoriful Islam’s inclusion after he was in the Under-19 World Cup-winning side. Ebadot’s vast improvement, Mustafizur Rahman’s steady progress, and intermittent bursts of excellence from Hasan Mahmud and Tanzim Hasan Sakib have been highlights of the continued evolution of Bangladeshi fast bowling. Rana’s rapid rise from rural obscurity to playing a role in a Test series win overseas has been the cherry on top.

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Sometime around the end of the monsoon in 2019, Alamgir was looking for ways to keep his new students engaged on a rainy day at the Clemon Cricket Academy in Rajshahi. He arranged a taped-tennis ball match in which the coaches played alongside the students.”I saw that the wicketkeeper was having a hard time keeping to one of the pace bowlers,” he says. “He couldn’t grab three balls in a row. I said, what’s going on, why can’t you hold it properly? I took the wicketkeeper’s position myself, but I couldn’t hold on to the boy’s deliveries either.That was the first time Alamgir met Rana, who had come to Rajshahi from his village in Chapai Nawabganj.”From the next day, I kept Rana in the senior students’ group,” Alamgir says. “He had a haphazard action, quite natural for a newcomer, but I quickly found out he was receptive. If I showed him something, he could do it. I told our head coach [Khaled Mashud] Pilot that I have a feeling that we have someone special on our hands. He is a god-gifted cricketer. We should give him special training,” Alamgir remembers saying.Rana played age-group matches and was even considered for the Under-19 World Cup squad for the 2020 tournament in South Africa, though he eventually was a standby. After the pandemic, he made his first-class debut for Rajshahi Division in the 2021-22 season.He says that he owes everything to Alamgir for bringing him up as a cricketer. “Sir literally held my hand while teaching me everything about cricket. I learned how to be disciplined from him.”Does he feel different than most other cricketers in Bangladesh who play a lot of age-group and Dhaka league matches before coming into the Bangladesh team?”I always believed in myself,” he says. “I believed in my skills. I progressed with my confidence. When I played first-class cricket, I got an idea about what Test cricket is all about. I understood the discipline of it, what sort of fitness I should have. I got an idea about how to prepare for the longer format.”It seems only yesterday he was playing taped-tennis cricket. Mention the form and his eyes light up.”It has a very different feel to it. A taped tennis ball is light. A cricket ball has a bit more weight, so you have to keep a few things in mind when bowling with it. You can’t get swing with a taped-tennis ball, but you can swing the new cricket ball. You can do other things with the old ball. I think I bowl faster with the cricket ball than the tape ball,” he says.Alamgir had to make corrections to Rana’s bowling action; it was an effective one for taped-tennis cricket, but it needed to be tuned for the weight of the cricket ball. The lighter tennis ball usually travels quicker, so he didn’t need to generate speed from a long run-up when playing with it. That changed and his run-up got longer. The way his foot landed on the popping crease needed work.Rana cut his teeth in taped-tennis ball cricket, and many of his fundamentals were shaped by the format•Munir Uz Zaman/AFP/Getty ImagesThe way he used his wrist in taped-tennis cricket gave him a bit of extra pace, given his considerable height. Many of Rana’s fundamentals when he made his Test debut were rooted in informal cricket. He is a work in progress, but needs to be handled delicately because Bangladesh cricket will not want to lose his pace.

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If Alamgir is the coach who found Rana, taught him proper cricket, and introduced him to the age-group and first-class scene, Talha Jubair, another former Bangladesh fast bowler, as head coach at Rana’s BPL (Khulna Tigers) and DPL (Shinepukur Cricket Club) teams, has also been instrumental in his evolution.Talha saw Rana at a time when he had difficulty keeping his short run-up and landing at the crease in tune. “He was a late arrival at the U-19 World Cup camp,” Talha says. “He had a problem with bowling no-balls. We decided that he would have to rectify it, so before he headed back to Rajshahi, we worked on his running technique.”We gave him videos of his running technique so that he could work on it with his coach Alamgir . Rana had the raw pace back then, which suggested to us that he could be the real deal. I thought he had the potential to touch 150kph.”Alamgir, while providing Rana with his cricketing knowledge and experience, has also been something of a father figure and mentor. When they spoke on the phone during the series in Pakistan, Alamgir assured Rana, speaking from his experience of playing in that country, that things would go right despite his misgivings about the pitches. Alamgir played one Test in Pakistan and also nine first-class matches there for Bangladesh A in the PCB Patron’s Cup in 2003-04.”They usually make batting tracks,” Alamgir says. “When we spoke, Rana said that the practice pitches were mostly flat. He thought that would also be the case in the Tests. I told him to focus on his lines and lengths first. Since he is new to the Test scene, I figured that Pakistan would take a bit of time to adjust to his pace.”Alamgir keeps tabs on Rana, on whether his focus is in the right place. “I tell him that you will read a lot of things about yourself on social media but you have to stay in control of your emotions. They will write nice things now, but when things don’t go well, they will write bad things about you.”He has to judge the good and bad himself. His job is to think about cricket and perform well.”Both Alamgir and Talha had short international careers. Kabir debuted in 2002 and played three Tests, though he did not take a wicket in any of them. Talha, who is the seventh-youngest Test debutant, had a career curtailed to 13 internationals by back injuries.Rana has 11 wickets from his three Tests so far•Anjum Naveed/Associated PressTalha speaks to players about how they should manage their cricket careers, particularly their fitness, lifestyle choices, and diet. “I always reflect with my players about how my career went. I tell them what I have faced in my playing days,” he says. “I talk to them about what my lifestyle should have been, and what they can learn from it. could have had a longer career if I managed my injuries better.”

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When Bangladesh entered the Test arena, they didn’t have a stable pace bowling attack. Hasibul Hossain was an erratic tearaway, but the selectors found a new pace sensation shortly after: Mashrafe Mortaza was fast-tracked from the Under-17s into the senior team over nine months, but his complicated bowling action couldn’t withstand the workload of Test matches.It didn’t, however, stop the selectors from going on to pick other teen pace sensations. Talha and Nazmul Hossain were injury-prone, while Shahadat, who has the most five-fors among Bangladesh’s fast bowlers, had a hard time handling his sudden fame. Rubel Hossain showed promise with his slingy action, but he was better with the white-ball. His Test record was poor. Robiul Islam burned bright in one Test series, while Mustafizur and Taskin couldn’t translate their white-ball skills to Test cricket quickly. By 2016 it looked like the team management had moved on from fast bowling altogether, resulting in perhaps the bleakest era for Bangladesh’s fast bowling.Taskin and Ebadot turned the tide after the pandemic, making strides as match-winners. Ebadot’s six-wicket haul helped Bangladesh to a miraculous Test win in New Zealand; that performance brought his Test bowling average down from 81 in his first ten matches to 35 in his next ten. He started his white-ball career brilliantly before an ACL injury put him out of the side. Taskin’s comeback story is well documented. Shoriful came into the Test attack after being part of the U-19 World Cup-winning side in 2020. Hasan Mahmud impressed Russell Domingo and Allan Donald in the nets.Rana is another Bangladeshi fast bowler who has been rushed into Test cricket. Not many have survived this kind of fast-tracking in the past; there is now enough information and precedent for him to know the perils such a career trajectory might hold. His coaches, Talha and Alamgir, themselves went through difficult playing careers.Right now, though, Rana is only thinking about the Test series against India. “I don’t think too far ahead,” he says.”I feel that a cricketer must give importance to fitness,” he says. “[Otherwise] when the going gets tough in the middle, your brain doesn’t function properly. If you have good fitness, you can take good decisions. A cricketer knows how much fitness he needs. Only he will know what his body wants.Being a prodigy in Bangladesh cricket can be something of a curse. Mohammad Ashraful had a rough time. Mustafizur had to deal with injuries. Rana’s Test career has begun brightly, a rarity for a Bangladeshi fast bowler. His desire to focus on fitness is a positive, and it could ultimately help him stay on course and not end up a cautionary tale like a number of his predecessors.There will be temptations aplenty as he goes along, especially from the franchise T20 world. Right now, he is best with the red ball in hand. It is something that can take him places.

Stats – Abrar's record-breaking debut, and a rare all-ten for Pakistan spinners

England, meanwhile, smash the most runs scored by a team before lunch on the first day of a Test

Sampath Bandarupalli09-Dec-20222 Pakistan bowlers to take a seven-wicket haul on Test debut before Abrar Ahmed in the second Test against England in Multan. Mohammad Nazir had picked 7 for 99 on his debut against New Zealand in 1969, while Mohammad Zahid bettered those figures with 7 for 66 also against New Zealand in 1996.ESPNcricinfo Ltd5 Wickets for Abrar in an extended first session. He is the first bowler to complete a five-wicket haul in the opening session on Test debut since Alf Valentine against England in 1950 in Manchester.Only two other debutants have taken five or more wickets in the opening session – six wickets by Charlie Turner in 1887 against England (in the session before tea as no play took place before lunch) and five by Fred Martin against Australia in 1890.7 Abrar took each of the first seven wickets to fall in England’s innings. The only other bowler to achieve this feat on his Test debut was Valentine in 1950. He picked up each of the first eight England wickets to fall in the first innings.ESPNcricinfo Ltd1 Number of Pakistan bowlers with the wickets of the top seven batters of the opposition in a Test innings before Abrar. Saqlain Mushtaq, the current Pakistan head coach, had each of England’s top eight batters in the first innings of the 2000 Lahore Test. No player in Test history has sent back the opposition’s top seven in an innings on debut.2014 The last instance of all ten wickets picked up by Pakistan spinners in an innings. Mohammad Hafeez, Zulfiqar Babar and Yasir Shah shared ten wickets against Australia during the fourth innings of the 2014 Abu Dhabi Test. England’s first innings in Multan was also a first in Pakistan since 1987, where all ten wickets fell to spinners in an innings.250 Balls bowled by Pakistan spinners in England’s first innings – the fewest by any team’s spinners to take all ten wickets in the first innings of a Test match. The previous record was 263 balls by England against India in Kanpur in 1952.5.03 Abrar’s economy rate during his 7 for 110 in England’s first innings. Only one bowler has recorded a higher economy rate while taking seven-plus wickets in a Test innings – 5.68 for Kapil Dev during his 7 for 220 against Pakistan in 1983.ESPNcricinfo Ltd180 Runs scored by England during the two-and-half-hour first session. These are the most runs scored by a team before lunch on the first day of a Test. The previous highest was 179 by South Africa against Australia during a 41-over session in the 1902 Johannesburg Test.

The greatest IPL performances, No. 4: Rashid Khan's 3 for 19 and 34 not out vs the Kolkata Knight Riders

Can bat, can bowl, can field? Here’s an example for you

Varun Shetty28-Apr-20214:19

Tom Moody, Dinesh Karthik and Robin Uthappa on Khan’s performance

We polled our staff for their picks of the top ten best batting, bowling and all-round performances in the IPL through its history. Here’s No. 4Sunrisers Hyderabad vs Kolkata Knight Riders, Qualifier, 2018In 2018 the last two knockout games of the tournament were to be held in Kolkata, and the Kolkata Knight Riders ended up playing in both, turning what was a neutral ground on paper into a home venue for them. In close to eight hours of game time between those two matches, the stadium announcer didn’t manage to draw support for anything non-KKR.Apart from when Rashid Khan strutted his stuff.Khan wasn’t new to the IPL in 2018, but for the first time he had appeared fallible that season, particularly against left-handers who were willing to attack him. Early in the season, he had gone for 55 and 49 in consecutive games, on the receiving end of attacks from Chris Gayle and Suresh Raina.KKR, a young, attacking side rebuilt in the image of new leader Dinesh Karthik, had the resources to take him on. Coming into the qualifier against the Sunrisers Hyderabad, they had posted totals of 160-plus 12 times, more than any other team that season. Of the regulars in their batting roster, only one batter had been striking at under 130, Chris Lynn.Khan gets the first of his three wickets, Robin Uthappa•BCCIThe Sunrisers were reduced to 138 for 7 batting first, with 11 balls to go and a below-par score looming. Khan managed to carve two sixes over sweeper cover off the 19th over, from Shivam Mavi. In the final over, he produced two more, whipping Prasidh Krishna over backward square leg off his toes, a la Viv Richards, and spanking the last ball over long-on, contributing 19 to an over that went for 24. An unbeaten 34 in ten balls, and SRH had a total of 174. “Is this the game changer?” asked Sanjay Manjrekar on commentary. Eden Gardens was on its feet as Khan walked off.KKR sent Nitish Rana in at No. 3 in the chase, after the openers got them 40 in 3.2 overs. It was a strategy to delay and dilute Khan’s influence – the only other time Rana had batted No. 3 that season was also against SRH. Khan was going at 9.95 per over against left-handers that season up to that point, as against 5.53 against right-handers.In the ninth over, Rana was run out – by Khan, no less, who landed his one-bounce throw from the deep on top of the stumps to catch the batter short. A working plan fell apart for KKR.First ball of his next over, the 11th, Khan flattened the leg stump of a panicky Robin Uthappa, as he looked to play the reverse sweep. They weren’t picking him, but Lynn and Karthik still managed to get 11 off the over.Lynn had lived dangerously against Khan, sweeping on all five deliveries he had faced from him till then in the game. He had survived on the first attempt, saved by the glove on an lbw appeal, and the fifth was a top edge that fell short of square leg, right after Karthik had been dismissed in the previous over. By his sixth attempt, Rashid had figured Lynn out and he went trapped him in front of middle with a googly.The numbers

21 The number of wickets Khan took in 2018, his highest aggregate in the IPL so far

8 The number of times Khan went for six or fewer runs an over that season, in 17 innings. His overall economy was 6.73, the best among the top 20 bowlers for IPL 2018

Eighty-six for 1 had turned to 108 for 5 in the span of four overs. The mood had changed, the crowd now responding every time the announcer screamed Khan’s name.The last recognised batting pair of Andre Russell and Shubman Gill decided they would play Khan out and then go about chasing the over 60 required at nine an over in earnest. It didn’t work.In Khan’s last over, Russell patted two legbreaks into the off side with his feet rooted in the crease. That made Kane Williamson bring in a short leg, in the 15th over of a T20 match, against an almost unrecognisable Russell, meek and careful at 3 off six balls. Then a googly Russell did not pick, came ripping quickly into his body and forced a late cut for which he wasn’t in position. He could only slice it as far as the slip fielder.KKR only managed 160, and SRH were through to the final. Even at the end, it was all Khan, who took the last two catches to cap one of the all-time-great all-round T20 performances: a batting strike rate of 340, an economy of 4.75, three wickets, two catches, and a run-out.The Greatest IPL performances 2008-2020

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