Newcastle set for Eddie Howe contract talks

A huge update has emerged regarding Newcastle United manager Eddie Howe and his future at St James’ Park…

What’s the talk?

According to the Daily Mail’s Craig Hope, PIF are set to discuss a contract extension with the Magpies head coach in the coming weeks.

He tweeted: “Exclusive: Newcastle to open talks with Eddie Howe over a new contract this summer.”

In Hope’s corresponding article, it is explained that Howe sees his future on Tyneside, with the club expecting a deal to be wrapped up ahead of the 2022/23 campaign.

Supporters will be delighted

Newcastle supporters will surely be delighted by this news, as it means that the club are set to secure Howe on an extended contract. This will ensure that they are not worrying about any other clubs tempting him away from St James’ Park, with his current deal due to expire in the summer of 2024.

Howe has been shortlisted for the Premier League Manager of the Year award, which shows that he is being appreciated both inside and outside of Newcastle.

Since joining the Magpies, the ex-Bournemouth boss has averaged 1.6 points per league game, accruing the magic 40-point haul in just 25 matches.

This comes after Steve Bruce averaged 0.38 points per game in his eight matches in charge at the start of the top-flight campaign. The current West Brom boss managed just three points before he left Tyneside in the autumn, and he left the club in the relegation zone upon his departure.

Howe duly came in and galvanised the team, and he is now set to be rewarded for his efforts with a new contract – and potentially an award from the Premier League to go with it.

Heading into the final day of the season on Sunday, Newcastle are in with a chance of finishing in the top half of the table. They are two points behind 10th-placed Brighton, and a win against Burnley at Turf Moor could see them end the campaign in the top ten.

This would a remarkable achievement, on top of what Howe has already accomplished, given where the club was languishing when the decision was made to cut ties with Bruce last October.

The 44-year-old has been fantastic for Newcastle so far, and that is why supporters will surely be delighted to read that he is in line for a fresh contract with the Magpies.

AND in other news, “I would say..”: Keith Downie delivers exciting NUFC transfer claim, Howe will love it…

Pundit wowed by ‘wonderful’ WBA signing

Pundit Frank McAvennie has tipped new West Bromwich Albion signing Tom Rogic to thrive at the club under Steve Bruce.

The Lowdown: West Brom sign Rogic

After nine successful years at Celtic., where he made an incredible 272 appearances, the 6 foot 2 Australia international left the Scottish champions this summer upon the expiry of his contract.

Having been without a club since July, earlier this week it was announced that Rogic had signed a one-year deal with the Baggies, with the Championship club having the option to extend this by a further 12 months.

The Latest: McAvennie’s comments

Following Rogic’s unveiling as a West Brom player, McAvennie was questioned over whether the Baggies would be seen as a step down from Celtic in the player’s career.

In response, the pundit told Football Insider: “Not really because he’s nearly 30 now.

“West Brom is a big club. Everyone thought he was going back to Australia or even to America but he obviously still thinks he’s got that competitive streak in him.

“I don’t think he would’ve played much for Celtic, no matter how much he was a wonderful player. The pace the boys are playing now, Tom might have been a bit slow. There will have been options for him, there’s no way he didn’t but he obviously thinks West Brom is the one. He’s got those itchy feet.

“When I left West Ham I went to Hong Kong and it was a great time but the football wasn’t up to my standard and I came back and signed for Celtic.

“Steve Bruce will look after Rogic, I think it’ll be a partnership made in heaven because Rogic is one hell of a player and if Steve Bruce can get the best out of him, it’s only good for them.”

The Verdict: Strong signing

Having bagged six goals and six assists in 27 Premiership appearances last season, Rogic’s arrival adds an alternative playmaker to Bruce’s struggling squad.

Having amassed 12 games in the Champions League in his career and a further three appearances in the Europa League last season, the 29-year-old has a wealth of experience playing at the highest level.

Therefore, his presence in the Albion XI could add a strong character to the Baggies’ team – something which is needed after their woeful start to the Championship campaign, having won just once in their opening ten league games.

Having been hailed as ‘outstanding’ by Australia assistant coach Rene Meulensteen, picking up Rogic on a free transfer looks like a masterstroke from West Brom.

ODI League berth, World Cup Qualifier slots at stake in final WCL Championship round

Five teams have a lot riding on the last round of the ICC WCL Championship matches in the UAE this week, from spots in the World Cup Qualifier to a berth in the new ODI League

Peter Della Penna in Dubai05-Dec-2017It has become almost cliche to describe Associate cricket tournaments as “matches with context” due to their “merit-based opportunities” that result from events such as the World Cricket League promotion and relegation pathway. So the final round of the WCL Championship may well be regarded as contextual cricket on steroids, given the immense ramifications at stake.Heading into the seventh and final round of a competition that takes place over two-and-a-half years, the winner will be guaranteed a slot in the new 13-team ODI league for 2023 World Cup qualification. Four teams still have a mathematical shot at finishing on top, while a fifth is fighting to secure a spot in the World Cup Qualifier in Zimbabwe or else be relegated to WCL Division Two in February, where they would have to battle with five other teams for the final two spots available at the World Cup Qualifier.Whereas matches in the previous six rounds were staggered over the course of several months, the final round has simultaneous games on December 6 and 8, which means the two days are sure to be filled with plenty of twists and turns up until the final ball. Here is a look at the four match-ups in the final round and what is at stake for each side.
Netherlands v Namibia – ICC Academy 1
Netherlands currently sit in first place on the points table, with 18 points, two clear of second-placed Papua New Guinea. Two wins will clinch the title for Netherlands. A loss in either match could open the door for Papua New Guinea, while two losses could see them leapfrogged by Scotland or Hong Kong as well. Regardless of the week’s results, however, they have already clinched a spot in the World Cup Qualifier.Netherlands have received a big boost in the form of Ryan ten Doeschate, who came out of international quasi-retirement at the age of 37 to join the squad. If he can demonstrate the form from his last appearances for the side, at the 2011 World Cup where he scored two centuries to cement his place as an all-time great of the team, then it will be hard for Namibia to compete.With three wins in 12 matches so far, Namibia are tied for last place and have already
been guaranteed relegation to Division Two. They will host that tournament in February for a chance at a top-two finish to reach the Qualifier, but here they have the opportunity to play spoiler. Already over the summer, they seriously dented Scotland’s chances of a first-place finish with a convincing 50-run win in Edinburgh and it’s not out of the realm of possibility that they could do it again in Dubai.Panda ManPapua New Guinea v Hong Kong – ICC Academy 2PNG won six straight matches at one point, from rounds two through four, and had briefly held the tournament lead. Split matches in rounds five and six against UAE and Scotland allowed Netherlands to get back in front with a two-point lead. Their form has gotten worse with two ODI losses to Scotland in Dubai last week, followed by an innings loss to Hong Kong in the I-Cup match preceding these ODIs.Despite that, PNG are still in a decent position because they hold a crucial tiebreaker, with Netherlands having claimed two points via a pair of washouts against Scotland. If PNG win both matches and Netherlands lose at least one to Namibia, PNG will be champions by virtue of having one more win than Netherlands. PNG are technically through to at least the World Cup Qualifier because even if they lose twice to Hong Kong, only one of Kenya or Scotland can mathematically finish above them.Their captain Assad Vala is fifth-highest run-scorer overall in the competition with 388 runs, but averaged just 24.75 across the last four ODIs against Scotland and needs to step up to give PNG their best shot at four points.Hong Kong are in fourth place and have the longest odds in terms of teams with a mathematical chance of a first place and a spot in the ODI league. However, they have the best net run rate of the top four teams. To finish first, they will need to win both matches and hope Netherlands lose both games against Namibia and Scotland lose at least one of their two against Kenya with a higher net run rate than Netherlands.On the flip side, they are also in danger of falling back to Division Two based on the tiebreaker. Hong Kong are two points clear of Kenya at the moment but that is due to two washouts that resulted in split points. If Hong Kong drop both matches, Kenya could catch up with one win over Scotland. Kenya could then take a spot in the World Cup Qualifier by virtue of more wins. A more realistic goal for Hong Kong than reaching the ODI League would be to win both games to secure their place in the Qualifier.Anshuman Rath has been the leading scorer in the competition with 498 runs from just eight games at an average of 62.25 while captain Babar Hayat produced an unbeaten double-century in Hong Kong’s innings victory over PNG in the Intercontinental Cup last week. Hong Kong’s spin duo of Nadeem Ahmed and Ehsan Khan took 17 of the 20 wickets in the I-Cup win at Sharjah and though conditions won’t be as dry at the ICC Academy, Hong Kong should still be considered favorites on recent form.Peter Della PennaScotland v Kenya – Dubai International StadiumLike the I-Cup, no team has perhaps been more adversely affected by weather in this competition than Scotland. They were in a very strong position against Netherlands at Amstelveen in the summer of 2015 when three-and-a-half days of rain resulted in a pair of splits. Another match in Hong Kong was also washed out. But in a year in which they scored wins over Zimbabwe in an ODI and Sri Lanka in an unofficial Champions Trophy warm-up, they shot themselves in the foot twice with losses to Namibia and PNG. So rather than being one point in front of Netherlands, they are three behind.In order for Scotland to finish first, they need two wins over Kenya, need Netherlands to lose both games to Namibia and at least one Hong Kong victory against PNG. At the very least, one win will guarantee them a spot in the Qualifier. However, two losses could see them calamitously drop back to Division Two: Kenya would have jumped past them and Hong Kong could overtake them with a win. Captain Kyle Coetzer was a batting juggernaut over the summer with centuries against Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe and Namibia. More runs from him are practically a given in these games.Kenya are currently in fifth place, two points behind Hong Kong for fourth place and six points behind Netherlands for first. They have no shot at the title but are desperate to not go back to Division Two for a second crack at claiming a spot in the Qualifier. As captain Rakep Patel told ESPNcricinfo on the eve of the final round, they are treating these games as “do or die.”Two wins would take them past Scotland and clinch a spot at the Qualifier. However, they can still make the Qualifier with just one win if Hong Kong lose twice to PNG. Spinner Shem Ngoche could be a major factor with the ball as the spinner is currently the fifth-highest wicket-taker in the tournament with 18 wickets, but more than likely it will take a few big innings from Alex Obanda or Collins Obuya for Kenya to get past Scotland.1:13

Come February it will be like Royal Rumble’ – Khadka


UAE v Nepal – Sheikh Zayed Stadium
Both teams have been eliminated from contention for the guaranteed spots at the World Cup Qualifier that go to the top four finishers. UAE are tied for last with six points while Nepal are in sixth place with nine points, five behind Hong Kong at the fourth place cut-off. For both sides, it’s an opportunity for key match practice while building up for their second crack at making the qualifier via Division Two in February where they’ll be joined by Namibia, Canada, Oman and whoever is the lowest placed team out of Hong Kong, Kenya or Scotland when the round ends.UAE showed promise by stretching Afghanistan into a fourth day in their I-Cup match. Chirag Suri has grown immensely since his time with the Gujarat Lions squad in the IPL and forms a solid opening tandem with captain Rohan Mustafa.Nepal split a pair of 50-over games with Kenya and USA in Abu Dhabi in the lead-up to the final round. In a story that has seemingly never changed in a decade, their batting was badly exposed in a loss to USA with captain Paras Khadka and vice-captain Gyanendra Malla resting. Dipendra Singh Airee showed some promise with his innings against Kenya though and if he can play a good support role with Sharad Vesawkar, Nepal may be able to collect a win or two to build confidence heading into Division Two in Namibia.

Australia seek returns on Mitchell Marsh investment

Australia will be hoping that Mitchell Marsh grows from an emerging allrounder into a top-quality allrounder by the end of the Sri Lanka tour

Daniel Brettig in Kandy22-Jul-2016Australia have so far invested 15 Test matches in Mitchell Marsh, the fledgling allrounder. Over that time he has shown glimpses of a match winner, broken up by rather more passages that have shown a 24-year-old cricketer still learning his game and those of others around him. In Sri Lanka, there is hope that the investment may be about to mature.Moulding an allround cricketer of high class can take a long time, and history is dotted with examples of exactly how much. After 15 Tests, Steve Waugh averaged 29.68 with the bat and 35.38 with the ball. At the same juncture, Andrew Flintoff’s averages were 20.08 and 40.31. Marsh, at 23.00 and 34.52, sits somewhere in between. Perhaps the source of most discontent is that his highest Test innings, a very fine 87 against Pakistan, dates back to his second Test in 2014. His bowling appears to have progressed more thoroughly than his batting.Batting and bowling averages of allrounders after 15 Tests

Garry Sobers – 31.47 and 44.00

Andrew Flintoff – 20.08 and 40.31

Steve Waugh – 29.68 and 35.38

Jacques Kallis – 26.47 and 41.84

Kapil Dev – 38.47 and 37.71

Ian Botham – 36.15 and 19.10

Imran Khan – 20.95 and 32.95

Richard Hadlee – 20.60 and 33.01

Chris Cairns – 20.75 and 33.48

On the recent West Indies ODI tour, Marsh was given a more central role at times by his captain Steven Smith, and rewarded that faith. Promoted in the batting order against the West Indies, he responded with a cool-headed 79 not out opposite Smith to steer Australia into the tournament final. When the decider arrived, it was Marsh’s impactful 3 for 32 that wrecked the hosts’ chances of a successful chase. Those memories remain at the forefront of his mind.”The biggest thing for me is confidence and going out there and playing my natural game,” Marsh said in Kandy. “I took a lot of confidence out of the West Indies tour because the conditions were quite similar to what we’re going to face here, it was hot and the wickets were quite slow and turned a little bit. I took a lot out of that.”There will be added responsibility for Marsh in Sri Lanka should the selectors opt for the kind of configuration suited to the dry and turning wickets they expect. A place at No. 6 in in the batting order will be allied to a commission as third seamer, with the need to bowl tightly while also looking for wickets. In his first two Tests in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, Marsh struggled to ask questions of the Pakistani batsmen but has since added pace, reverse swing and cross-seam variations to his armoury.”That’s probably the only thing that will change,” Marsh said of the potential for longer stints at the bowling crease behind the likely new-ball pairing of Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood. “Maybe bowling longer spells earlier in the innings, trying to work the ball and create some pressure for when the spinners come on and do their business.”The more Test-match cricket you play, you get a lot of flat wickets where the ball doesn’t generally do a lot, so you’ve got to work out ways to get the ball doing something. That’s something I’ve worked on over the last 18 months to be able to get wickets for the team. Hopefully I’ll be able to work on reverse swing over here and get a few wickets for us.”As a batting collective, the Australians are devoting their preparatory energy to the idea of spending long periods of time in the middle, showing patience and not allowing Sri Lanka’s spinners or pacers to goad them into errors against in and out fields. For Marsh, this is the area where he has the most improvement to make. Since that double of 87 (161 minutes, 116 balls) and 47 (164, 130) in Abu Dhabi, he has never again soaked up 100 balls, or minutes for that matter, in a Test innings.”We weren’t sure we were going to get much spin out of them in that game, but it was nice a few of us got to face a few overs against spin and it was nice to start against spin, because it’s probably going to be something I’ll come up against in the Test matches,” Marsh said of Australia’s tour game, where he made 25 from 38 balls. “Probably the biggest thing here is if it’s turning just make sure you have a game plan and stick to it from ball one no matter what. All about being as sharp as you can.”I’ve done a lot of work in the nets over the last six months playing spin and trying to improve that, so hopefully it’ll come out in the Test matches. We’ve spoken about how if it is turning its going to be hard work no doubt about that, but it’s about having a game plan and really sticking to that, and having the confidence to go out there and play your game.”At times, Marsh’s batting has shown a certain stiffness welcomed by spin bowlers, as he pushes out hard at the ball while also struggling to find a way to rotate the strike. He fared better at these skills in the Caribbean, and has also worked on developing a sweep shot as a way of fighting back against disciplined slow bowling in helpful conditions.”I’ve worked really hard on my sweep shot over the last few months so hopefully in these matches I’ll be able to get it out,” Marsh said. “Especially if it’s turning, I think it’s a great weapon to have, if the ball’s turning too much and missing the stumps it’s a great weapon to have to try to mess up the bowler’s lengths and do something different. And also get off strike, which is the most important thing. Hopefully I’ll be out there long enough to play it.”For 15 Test matches, Australia have looked upon Marsh as an emerging allrounder. By the end of this tour, the tourists’ hope is that the “emerging” prefix can be discarded.

Cricket shows off its moves in city of distractions

Even if it’s just for the World Cup, cricket has encroached on rugby turf in New Zealand. Take Wellington, for instance, where a crash course in cricket lexicon can be found on bus stops, lamp posts and even a church wall

Firdose Moonda in Wellington11-Mar-2015Wellington is a great city for distractions.It is reported to have more cafes, bars and restaurants per person than New York City, which makes for a good start. It is home to the country’s national museum – six floors that house everything from a selection of Maori instruments, that can be played at the push of a button, to a giant squid. It has a sea-side run that stretches almost 40 kilometres and a bicycle trail that goes on much longer.The South African team have taken advantage of all these things. AB de Villiers explored the city with his wife before playing a round of golf; Dale Steyn, David Miller and Kyle Abbott enjoyed sundowners at one of the many hotspots, and some of the management staff explored the terrain on two wheels.But as valiant as their attempts to get away from the cricket have been, there is actually no getting away from it even in a town where there seems to be enough of everything else, especially sport. In Wellington, as in most of New Zealand, the rugby side the Hurricanes are the headline-grabbers and billboard models but cricket has learnt to encroach on that space, even if just for the World Cup.A Learn the Terms poster clarifies that cricket’s Cabbage Patch has little to do with the dance moves•ESPNcricinfo/Firdose MoondaOn bus stops, lamp posts and even a church wall, posters have been plastered to help fans “Learn the terms” of cricket. I’ve spotted LBW, in which the bowler looks suspiciously like Dale Steyn letting out a loud appeal; stumped, where a wicketkeeper who seems to bear some similarity to MS Dhoni is shown pulling off some nifty work against a batsman, and a poster defining a cabbage patch.The cricket explosion has made it to bars that are advertising two-for-one specials during the games and extended happy hours, and to the pages of the ‘s OpEd section, where they published this cartoon.In Wellington, as in most of New Zealand, the rugby side the Hurricanes are the headline-grabbers but cricket has learnt to encroach on that space, even if just for the World Cup; that sentiment is captured best in this cartoon•ESPNcricinfo/Firdose MoondaSadly, it’s only made it as an afterthought to the Basin Reserve, possibly the loveliest cricket ground in either of the host countries. The gorgeous picket-fenced oval is merely a training venue this time, while matches are played down the road at the Regional Stadium – the only stadium at this tournament where teams choose not to train before their matches unless they want to get a feel for being under the lightsThere are no nets at the Regional Stadium – this is rugby country, remember – so for a proper bat or bowl, teams go to the Basin. Morne Morkel pointed out that the advantage of that would be to allow squads to simulate game situations on an actual cricket field but one wonders if it wouldn’t just want to make them actually play at the Basin instead.Havana Coffee Works – the aroma of fresh roasted beans can sometimes waft into the Basin Reserve•ESPNcricinfo/Firdose MoondaJust around the corner from the ground is Havana Coffee, so close you can smell when there’s a new batch being roasted from the Basin. Its name fits in with one of the sub-cultures of this vibrant city. There’s a Cuba Street and a cafe called Fidel’s. You get it?Perhaps South Africa have too, especially with their bullish attitude ahead of what is an entirely low-profile game against the UAE. “If I lose, it will not mean that it was impossible to win,” Che Guevara said. There’s a line for AB and co to remember.

Australia's close-run history

Australia are a side who refuse to accept the logic of defeat. They sculpt classic Tests out of cussedness; and if they lose the majority, at least they got so close

Rob Smyth18-Jul-2013There are truths, blessed truths and statistics. Sometimes a body of quantitative evidence is so powerful that it leaves only one credible interpretation: a batting average of 99.94, a bowling average of 99.94, and Australia’s propensity for being involved in cricket’s most dramatic matches. In the history of Test cricket, and particularly in the last 25 years, they have a monopoly on spandex-tight contests, those that are won by one or two wickets or a handful of runs. They have also been involved in both tied Tests.To some extent that is not especially surprising: their generally consistent excellence means that their spread of results is likely to be different to other countries’. What is startling is the number of those matches that Australia have lost. It is something we might expect of England, who are traditionally perceived as being vulnerable during squeaky-Pom time, or South Africa, who are stalked by the ch-word. But Australia? It’s as incongruous as finding out that Ian Chappell and Dennis Lillee drink alcopops.Until recently Australia lost most of these matches while chasing a small target; that became the theme on which most focused. But Edgbaston 2005 (target: 282) and Trent Bridge 2013 (target: 311) have changed that and pointed to a different theme: the inability to win close games.England’s win in the first Test was the 17th match in Test history with a victory margin of 15 runs or fewer. Australia have lost 11 of those, seven since 1993. Their three victories in those 17 games all occurred over a century ago. The margin of Australia’s Test defeats by runs reads like a particularly bewildering mathematical pattern: 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 10, 12, 12, 13, 13, 14. By way of comparison, England’s list of tightest defeats by runs is: 3, 6, 11, 17, 19, 22, 24, 28, 28, 28. It is the same with one-wicket wins: there have been 12 overall, five against Australia, three since 1994. Australia have won once by a single wicket.In the last 25 years, the statistics are even more pronounced. There have been six one-wicket defeats, three by Australia; five defeats by fewer than 10 runs, four to Australia; and 11 by 20 runs or fewer, with eight to Australia, two to Sri Lanka, and one India.Australia have won a few tight games themselves – particularly in World Cups – but their record in Tests is too pronounced to dismiss as a statistical freak. What is unusual is their pattern of defeats in the last 25 years: they have lost eight Tests by between 1 and 20 runs, but only four by between 21 and 150 runs. The tighter the game, the likelier Australia are to lose. This is an uncomfortable and unfathomable paradox given everything we know about Australian cricket.Some may see this as delicious evidence that Australia are the real chokers. An alternative and more persuasive explanation is that only they would be in a position to lose such games. It is a subject discussed by Steve Waugh in his autobiography, in reference to Damien Martyn’s notorious dismissal against South Africa in Sydney in 1993-94. Martyn, the ninth man out, drove Allan Donald to cover; Australia lost by five runs and Martyn did not play Test cricket again for over six years.”Damien paid the price for doing the hard work early then tripping up with the finish line in sight,” wrote Waugh. “As the last visible top-order player, he became the scapegoat. Greg Norman was a notable sufferer of this curse of being almost good. Many golfers never got themselves into a position where their moment of weakness was noteworthy. In effect, they weren’t good enough to be found out, because their race had already been run and no one took any notice. To succeed, you must be willing to face failure and its consequences. Not to know the depths of despair is to live in a bubble of safety and never test yourself.”Norman won two golf majors and finished runner-up eight times. Jack Nicklaus won 18 majors and was runner-up 19 times. Did he fail on 19 occasions or was he in the top two on 37? The pattern of Australia’s defeats, particularly in modern times, suggests that they have not so much underachieved by losing as overachieved by getting so close to victory.They are baggy green cockroaches. Almost all of their failed run-chases involve lower-order partnerships that capture the essence of defiance, such as the one between Brad Haddin and James Pattinson on Sunday. At 231 for 9, with 80 still needed, most sides would have closed their eyes and gone to sleep, but Australia always rage, rage against the dying of the Test.At Edgbaston in 2005, when they lost by two runs, they were 175 for 8 chasing 282. Against South Africa in 1994 (a five-run defeat) they were 75 for 8 chasing 117. In the heartbreaking one-run defeat to West Indies in 1993 they had been 104 for 8 chasing 184. When they lost to New Zealand by seven runs in Hobart in 2011, they had been 199 for 9 chasing 241. When they lost by 13 runs in Mumbai in 2004, they had been 58 for 7, needing 107 on a vile track. The pattern goes back further, most notably to Melbourne in 1982-83. The last man, Jeff Thomson, joined Allan Border with 74 needed. They got to within four.In Adelaide, Edgbaston, Sydney and Mumbai, Australia’s highest or second-highest scorer was the No. 9 or No. 10: Tim May, Brett Lee, Craig McDermott and Nathan Hauritz. For every tight Australia defeat there is usually a hero: Haddin on Sunday, David Warner against New Zealand in 2011, Shane Warne in Karachi in 1994-95, the young Justin Langer and May in Adelaide in 1992-93.This is not to say there hasn’t been a failure of nerve or ability in some of Australia’s defeats. The lower-order heroism has often come after a top-order collapse, while Ian Healy’s uncharacteristic imperfections led to one-wicket defeats against Pakistan in 1994-95 and West Indies in 1998-99. But the nature of the fourth-innings chases, and our understanding of Australian cricket, suggests there is strength as well as weakness.Australia are a side who refuse to accept the logic of defeat. The bastards won’t let themselves be ground down. They sculpt classic Tests out of cussedness; and if they lose the majority, at least they got so close. In short, the opposition have to beat Australia twice. The game is apparently over, then Australia stir like a horror-movie baddie before finally taking a decisive one between the eyes.A similar phenomenon is evident in football. Germany have lost more World Cup and European Championship finals than any other country – not because they have failed on the big occasion but because they have excelled in getting there. Long after the 1986 World Cup, Franz Beckenbauer, the West Germany coach, was discussing his side’s campaign in that tournament when he started laughing. “Well,” he said, “can you believe we reached the final of the World Cup with these players?”Having inferior players is rarely a problem for Australia. Yet theirs is a similar tale: of mental strength and how the habit of victory ensures defeats become more memorable, because of their scarcity and especially their nature. It seems like a contradiction that Australia are both the perennial winners and heroic failures of Test cricket. It is anything but. Their culture of victory is so powerful that it has almost turned defeat into a virtue.21.18 GMT, July 18: The article was amended to correct Australia’s record of one-wicket victories

Re-laid Kochi pitch lends Plate division bite

Kerala’s surge this Ranji season marks a turnaround in their fortunes, and their thrilling finishes against Services and Andhra on the treacherous pitch at the Nehru Stadium stand out in a season of dull draws

Nitin Sundar04-Dec-2011Four rounds into the Ranji season, Kerala are in with a solid chance of making the Plate league semi-finals, marking a strong turnaround for a side normally used to bringing up the rear. Last year, they finished winless, drawing four games and losing one, but they already have two wins and no losses this season. Kerala’s clean-sheet tells only half the story though: they came alarmingly close to defeat in two of their games, both played on the treacherous pitch at the Nehru Stadium in Kochi, but escaped with a draw and a win to keep their campaign in good health.First, Kerala’s last pair batted out 125 balls to produce a a tense draw against Services, after they had fallen to 103 for 9 in pursuit of 153. The thrills of that game, however, were made to look almost mundane by the denouement of Kerala’s fourth-round fixture, where Andhra Pradesh’s last pair added 26 to get within an outside edge of victory, before the hosts squeaked home by two runs on the last morning.Kerala’s nail-biters have lit up the normally unglamorous Plate League, and sparked interest in a season that has largely featured mindless run-fests and crawling races for first-innings honours. Part of the credit must go to the Nehru Stadium pitch where run-making has bordered on the impossible. In three matches, only once has a team managed to reach 300; even that was against the unflattering Tripura bowling line-up. Leaving out that innings, only four fifties have come in ten innings – a striking contrast from the IPL season when totals of 150 were reached in three of the four matches that weren’t curtailed by rain. It is fair to say that the pitch has undergone a complete change in character since then.The transformation, according to the KCA secretary TC Mathew, was sparked by a pitch re-laying exercise. “We re-laid the wicket last year,” Mathew tells ESPNcricinfo. “But after the IPL we had to prepare the square again as there was a crack on it. It normally takes one year for a wicket to settle down, and it should be alright by mid-2012.”Kochi’s extreme weather and the nature of the soil used on the strip are also responsible for the pitch’s volte-face. Kerala coach Biju Mathew explains: “The pitch was very good during the IPL, but I believe the BCCI’s directive was to use only clay and not the local red soil while re-laying it. When the weather is sunny it cracks up very easily and in the monsoon rains it gets very damp as well. Hence, one ball stays up, the next one stays down, and batting is close to impossible.”Strikingly, there have been no murmurs of pitch-doctoring from Kerala’s opponents. Wing Commander Deepak Bhaskar, the manager of the Services side that came so agonisingly close to winning in Kochi, believes that the current state of the track could not have been intentionally arrived at.”It is naturally this way, there’s something in the wicket itself because of the soil and climate,” Bhaskar tells ESPNcricinfo. “I had discussions with the curator when we were in Kochi, and he said they have tried several things to improve the binding, including mixing red sand into one of the practice pitches, but even that cracked up. Normally, [if the home association is trying to manipulate the pitch] one of the strips on the square will stand out for its unusual nature, be it up and down, or grassy. But here, all the pitches – even the practice strips – share the same characteristics.”In a lighter vein, Biju Mathew points out that once a batsman bats on this pitch, he becomes ready to play in any conditions. “[Tripura batsman] Vinayak Samant has played 100 first-class matches, but he scored his first double-century only now, after playing in Kochi. Similarly, Services opener Pratik Desai promptly scored 200 immediately after batting here.”Kerala have no more league fixtures in Kochi, and Mathew looks forward to playing the next round on a “normal wicket” in Tellicherry. But, given the chance, will he want to return to Kochi in the knock-out stages?”Definitely,” is Mathew’s quick and emphatic response. “For all the pitch problems, Kochi has been lucky for us. Besides, when you play a superior opponent, it is always better to have unpredictability on your side!”

Practical magic

Forty-some years before Mendis made heads turn, an Australian country boy was being hailed as Jack Iverson’s successor in the ranks of the freak spinners

Nagraj Gollapudi23-Jul-2008It was John Gleeson’s first net for the New South Wales state side. He had been added to the 1966-67 training squad after some good performances in grade cricket. NSW had special nets for its old cricketers, and Richie Benaud happened to be present. He asked Gleeson to bowl to him.The very first ball was the back-to-front orthodox offspinner. “As luck happened, it turned a little bit,” Gleeson remembered. “He was actually watching my hand rather than the ball, and it knocked out his off stump.” Benaud’s eyes lit up, his bottom lip came out a bit, and as he picked the ball up and threw it back to Gleeson, he said: “I was still at Gunnedah.”Gleeson’s eyes were alive behind his thick-framed glasses when we met behind the Clarrie Grimmett Stand at the Adelaide Oval, where Australia and India were involved in another intense clash in this summer’s Test series. He had run into two of his former Test captains, Benaud and Ian Chappell, the previous afternoon. It was lunchtime, and despite the din in the marquee tent where we sat, Gleeson spoke animatedly.Eighteen months before Gleeson flummoxed Benaud in the NSW nets, Jack Chegwyn, a former cricketer, and a selector at the time, had taken an NSW team to play in Gunnedah, a town in the north-west of the state. The Gunnedah association had picked two locals from Tamworth, including Gleeson, to play against Chegwyn’s XI, which was just about the Australian side, featuring as it did nine internationals.”In the lead-up all I was thinking was, ‘How am I going to impress Benaud with my bowling?'” Gleeson said. “My plan was to bowl two orthodox offspinners and then the one that looks like an offspinner but is a leggie, and frighten the daylights out of him.” Benaud had heard about Gleeson’s unusual bowling style and was gearing up for the battle, but after having watched Gleeson for a few overs – with a pair of binoculars – he felt anything but threatened. “The ball had been turning quite a bit, but that didn’t matter too much because I had deduced that he was simply a legbreak bowler who looked like an offspinner,” Benaud was quoted as saying by Gideon Haigh in .Gleeson had Ray Flockton caught and bowled on the seventh ball of an over, which shot his plan to bits. So he decided to bowl his trick ball first up. It pitched on off and Benaud tried to turn it down leg, but it spun the other way. “That was the only ball I bowled to him but I deceived him, put the seed of doubt in his mind,” Gleeson said. It was the first turning point in his career – no pun intended.Immediately afterwards, Benaud asked Gleeson if he had ever thought of playing in Sydney. Gleeson was 27 at the time. “I would love to play first-class cricket if I was younger,” he said. Benaud was insistent and told Gleeson he didn’t want him wondering in ten years’ time what would have happened had he played in Sydney. The next day he rang Gleeson at work. “You’re playing for Balmain against North Sydney on Saturday at the Drummoyne Oval.”It signalled a change of direction for Gleeson. “I ended up with nearly 50 wickets in the grade competition. The following year I got picked in the state squad, played five games, took enough wickets to get picked for the Australian second XI that was going to New Zealand.” The following summer he made his Test debut.The flick trick
It was Benaud’s NSW team-mate Barry Rothwell, who himself groped and fumbled against Gleeson, who told Benaud: “This bloke’s bowling Iversons.” Indeed, Gleeson’s grip was similar to that of the legendary Jack Iverson, who too flicked the ball with a bent middle finger. The difference between the two was that Iverson bowled over-the-wrist spin while Gleeson’s was from back of the wrist.Gleeson himself saw the Iverson grip only once as a kid, however. “The first time I saw it was a photograph in a 1951 magazine. I would bowl with the same grip with a tennis ball in backyard cricket, with a jacaranda tree as the wicket. It was quite natural for me to bowl a legspinner even if it looked like an offspinner – it was basically a reverse wrong’un: looks like an offspinner but is a legspinner,” Gleeson said. He always bowled legspin to right-handers and offspin to left-handers “because the best way to get someone out is to take the ball away from the bat”. The only clue for the batsmen was the seam; Gleeson’s wrist position would remain the same either way.What was astonishing about Iverson, Gleeson, and now about Ajantha Mendis, is how they propel the ball across the pitch with just the middle finger acting as the lever. Ask Gleeson about it and he says it was never an issue. “I could always project the ball the distance of a cricket wicket,” he said, while going on to acknowledge that it was an uncommon ability. “There’s a few people who can do that. Peter Philpott [the Australian legspinner of the 1960s] could only project it 15 yards.”

The papers started the mystery business. I was told I had six different balls. That was bullshit. You’ve only got three as far as I’m concerned

Haigh in his book has described the efforts Iverson expended on pitching one delivery. “The physical strain of flicking a 5.25 ounce sphere of leather, cork and twine down a twenty-two-yard pitch, both fast enough to obtain traction and precisely enough to regularly hit a perfect length, is almost unimaginable.” Describing it as a miracle, Haigh noted that where conventional spinners imparted the force with a mixture of shoulder, arm, wrist, fingers, and elbow, Iverson relied predominantly on his middle finger.Unlike Iverson, who was a tall, upright, powerful man, Gleeson was short and his force came from his eight-pace run-up. If he had an advantage, it was that his fingers were slightly longer and stronger. Also, Gleeson possibly understood the mechanics of his bowling more than Iverson.Gleeson’s mystery ball was perfected on the 1967 tour of New Zealand with the Australian second XI. On that tour he came up against slow wickets that threatened to neutralise him. “I tried to devise something to get the ball off the wicket quicker. So I held the ball with the wrist straight on, seam upright, thumb underneath the ball and the finger across the top, and I delivered straight and it came out as a topspinner. If I wanted to bowl an offspinner, I still held the thumb and the middle finger in the same position, but I changed the seam of the ball to second slip and mid-on. For a legspinner the seam pointed towards fine leg and mid-off,” Gleeson described, demonstrating with a ball.In his first year with the NSW second team, playing in Victoria, Gleeson had taken five wickets in a game when a team-mate told him Iverson was at the ground and wanted to meet him. “Oh, yeah, I would love to,” Gleeson said. Unfortunately, nothing much came of the meeting.”The first thing he said to me when I came in was, ‘How do you bowl your leggie?’ I explained it to him, but he couldn’t comprehend it because he was an over-the-wrist spinner,” Gleeson said. The reason Iverson asked was because he very rarely bowled the leggie himself, unless it was a real turning wicket. For his part Gleeson tried to pick Iverson’s brains on the “basic fundamentals of bowling – what he did, what he thought he was doing”. But nothing came flying out and hit him in the forehead. “It was a bit disappointing because I had looked forward to having a yarn with him.”From the outback to the big time… and back
Not being able to get a lot out of Iverson wasn’t much of a disappointment for Gleeson. Like many players from the bush, he was his own man, with a callow attitude towards life and cricket. As his first meeting with Benaud showed, he didn’t really harbour dreams of playing at a higher level.Gleeson started his cricket career with the Western Suburbs 3rd XI in Sydney as a wicketkeeper-batsman while he was studying at an engineering college. He was then picked as part of the Emus team, a bunch of cricket-loving players from all over the state, sponsored by a JS White, who used to organise an annual competition. Gleeson travelled with the Emus on a world tour in 1961 – as the second keeper. That was soon to change.”In a match in Vancouver, Canada, I bowled to the captain in the nets. He was impressed and threw the ball to me an over before lunch. I picked up a wicket and came back after lunch and finished with 4 for 26 and never put on the pads again in my life.”Then came the grade-cricket days, during which Gleeson had to travel about 1000km to and from Sydney to play for Balmain, but he did so without complaint. Except, he would leave the moment the practice or game got over to catch his return flight, which earned him the nickname “CHO” (Cricket Hours Only).Having impressed for the NSW second team, his first opportunity to play for the state side arrived on the southern tour, a three-leg trip spanning Perth, Adelaide and Melbourne. Gleeson’s moment of reckoning came in Adelaide. Don Bradman came to him and asked, “Would you like to bowl to me?” Gleeson, obviously, was more than delighted to. “He stood there, in his suit, at the batting crease, without a bat. I ran up and bowled. To get the ball to turn a fair bit I had to bowl a lot slower than I normally did,” Gleeson said. He decided to play the same card that had tricked Benaud. “I bowled him that ball and he tried to let it hit the net, but it went the other way, flew up, and hit him on the hip. His eyes lit up and he just picked the ball up and threw it back to me. Next ball, I bowled him the wrong’un and then he wasn’t quite sure which way to go as he wasn’t reading from the hand.”Bradman was the chairman of selectors, and Gleeson had created a strong and favourable impression. Bradman later asked Brian Booth, the NSW captain, “Who’s the 12th man?” Booth replied, “Gleeson.” Bradman said, “That’s the first mistake you’ve made.”Gleeson lets his fingers do the talking in the nets•Getty ImagesGleeson’s influential role in the next five games earned him a ticket for the New Zealand trip. “But I really thought I got picked in the practice nets in Adelaide.” he said. A year later Gleeson celebrated Christmas by wearing the baggy green for the first time, in the Adelaide Test against India.He took a modest four wickets for 74 in that game. “He was an unusual type of legbreak bowler, the sort we had not seen in the past,” Chandu Borde, who was Gleeson’s second wicket in Tests, said. The Indians didn’t have too much trouble with him. “After some time our batsmen picked him easily because we are used to watching hands, unlike those who pick it off the pitch,” Borde said. Sure enough, Gleeson went wicketless in the next Test, in Melbourne, and took just five in the next two matches.He did better on the 1968 trip to England, where he made use of the quick pitches to take 58 wickets on the tour at 20.65 apiece. On the 1970 tour of South Africa, he took 19 wickets in the four Tests. It could have been more: he reckoned 12 catches were dropped off his bowling.Indeed, a weak Australian fielding unit – especially close to the bat – cost Gleeson dear. The other detriment was having to bowl after the pitches had gotten slow. “I liked to bowl the first morning. The newer the ball, the greener the wicket, the better, because I could really get the ball off the track quicker,” Gleeson said.Soon the shroud over his mystery started to wear thin. As batsmen started to read him better, Gleeson began to rely more on bounce by “bowling at the wicket all the time”. But he didn’t have Iverson’s strength. Taller and stronger, Iverson bowled at near medium pace and could get vast amounts of purchase and bounce from the pitch.After the third Test of the 1972 Ashes, at Trent Bridge, the selectors dropped Gleeson. He played his last first-class game as 12th man for NSW in 1973. By then he had lost interest anyway. No regrets, he said.These days Gleeson lives with his wife in Tamworth, midway between Brisbane and Sydney. He used to coach but not anymore. When asked why, he said: “I live in the wrong place – I live in the bush.” When asked what it takes to be a good spinner, he lit a cigarette before saying: “To stay ahead of the batsman you have to make him think, convince him that you are doing something.”Like Iverson, and Gleeson after him, Mendis is being tagged a “mystery spinner” for his unorthodox methods. Gleeson said he had heard about the Sri Lankan but hadn’t watched him bowl.What was Gleeson’s take on the “mystery” tag? “I was not a mystery spinner. I did things a bit different to someone else,” he said. And he had maintained as much even back when the media was hyping him. “The papers started the mystery business. I was told I had six different balls. That was bullshit,” Gleeson said. “You’ve only got three as far as I’m concerned: one goes straight, one spins from the leg and the other one spins from the off. You can’t do anything else.”

No stopping Chris Cooke and Colin Ingram as Glamorgan march on

Glamorgan made it four wins out of five in their Vitality Blast campaign when they beat the Sussex Sharks by 32 runs at the 1st Central County Ground.For the third match running, their dominant figures with the bat were Colin Ingram (48) and Chris Cooke (50), whose rich vein of form swept them to a formidable total.The Sharks, though, are moving in the opposite direction. This was their third straight defeat, and their fourth in five games, and they now have a mountain to climb if they are to progress in the competition. In their most recent defeats it was their batting that let them down, but here it was their bowling.Ravi Bopara, Sussex’s captain, said: “I thought we were very poor with the ball. Obviously that’s where we lost the game. We bowled about 12 or 13 extra balls. To chase that down was always going to be hard work. That’s where we lost it.”It’s frustrating to be without certain players. We had high hopes for Ali Orr in the blast this year. That’s been a massive blow for us and we haven’t really replaced him as an opener. In this format you need quality openers. They’re generally the guys who win you games.”The guys are still learning. And learning quickly is important. It’s important we stick together. I remember at Essex we won only one game out of six or seven and we went on to win the tournament.”Chasing a huge victory target of 220, Sussex never looked in the chase despite a plucky charge from Tom Alsop, who scored 58 from 41 deliveries. Tom Clark, pulling across the line, was bowled by Jamie McIlroy in the third over and in the next fellow opener Tom Haines departed, unluckily run out through a deflected straight drive by Alsop.Sussex needed something special from Bopara, but their skipper departed in sloppy circumstances, lifting a full toss from Kiran Carlson to long-on for just ten. And two overs later Shadab Khan was caught at cow corner, just below the dressing rooms, for three.The situation was hopeless. But no-one told Alsop. And for a short period, while he found a reliable partner in Michael Burgess, the near-impossible looked on. With ten overs to go Sussex needed 148. Then, from the last five, they needed 90, at an improbable rate of 18 runs an over.But then Alsop was yorked by Dan Douthwaite to make it 133 for 5 in the 16th over and even the most diehard Sharks supporters gave up hope, not even encouraged by some poor catching by the Glamorgan fielders. At least some late hitting by Nathan McAndrew, who struck four sixes in an unbeaten 28, entertained those spectators who remained from a large crowd.Glamorgan had made the most of a flat pitch, a fast outfield and some wayward bowling and fielding from the Sharks to pile up 219-5, with Ingram and Cooke again the stars of the show. There were 23 extras in the innings, including eight no-balls and nine wides.They got off to a flyer, scoring 71 for 1 in the powerplay. There were also two dropped catches in that opening passage of play, to add to the fielding side’s frustrations, including a sitter by James Coles.Glamorgan did lose the dangerous looking Eddie Byrom early on, the batsman, injuring himself in the course of a 10-ball 17, and had to be helped off the field. But captain Carlson maintained the impetus of the innings with two sixes and three fours in a 16-ball 26 before he skied Henry Crocombe to the wicketkeeper Burgess.Sam Northeast, quiet in the opening overs, picked up his pace and raised the hundred from the final delivery of the 10th over when he clouted Shadab over square-leg for six. The Sharks dismissed Northeast at 106 in the 11th over when the batsman drove Crocombe to short extra-cover where Bopara took an excellent low catch.But because of their poor start the Sharks had difficulty stemming the flow of runs as Ingram and Cooke plundered their bowling. Shadab, bowling the 14th over, went for 18 runs and then the next over, bowled by McAndrew, went for 19 runs as Cooke raised the 150 with a marvellous stroke, carving McAndrew over extra-cover for six. Tymal Mills, Crocombe and Bopara had reasonable bowling figures but the other three, Fynn Hudson-Prentice, McAndrew and Shadab were very expensive.

Man Utd 2025-26 kit: New home, away, third & goalkeeper jerseys, release dates, shirt leaks & prices

Everything you need to know about the new Manchester United kits, including leaks, where to buy and more.

Home

Home Kit

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  • Inspired by Old Trafford, “The Theatre of Dreams"
  • Features an abstract sleeve graphic in multiple red tones, referencing the pitch, stands, and tunnel

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Away Kit

  • Features a white, plum, and modern lilac base with metallic trim
  • This colour scheme is inspired by the distinctive snowflake pattern from the 1990-92 away kit
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Third Kit

  • Black base with yellow and blue accents, echoing a 30-year-old design
  • Classic Adidas Trefoil and modern shielded club badge
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Home

Home Kit

  • Primarily red with white logos and black accents
  • Inspired by Old Trafford, “The Theatre of Dreams"
  • Features an abstract sleeve graphic in multiple red tones, referencing the pitch, stands, and tunnel

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Away

Away Kit

  • Features a white, plum, and modern lilac base with metallic trim
  • This colour scheme is inspired by the distinctive snowflake pattern from the 1990-92 away kit
  • Has an overlapping V-collar and flaunting the devil logo instead of the full club crest

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Third

Third Kit

  • Black base with yellow and blue accents, echoing a 30-year-old design
  • Classic Adidas Trefoil and modern shielded club badge
  • Subtle woven devil motif with bold yellow 3-stripes on the shoulders

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Home

Home Kit

  • Primarily red with white logos and black accents
  • Inspired by Old Trafford, “The Theatre of Dreams"
  • Features an abstract sleeve graphic in multiple red tones, referencing the pitch, stands, and tunnel

From

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Away

Away Kit

  • Features a white, plum, and modern lilac base with metallic trim
  • This colour scheme is inspired by the distinctive snowflake pattern from the 1990-92 away kit
  • Has an overlapping V-collar and flaunting the devil logo instead of the full club crest

From

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Third

Third Kit

  • Black base with yellow and blue accents, echoing a 30-year-old design
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Manchester United will continue to have adidas as their main shirt sponsor after the Red Devils signed a 10-year extension with the German giants in June 2023.

Shop Man Utd kits at adidasBuy now

The club may have dodged a bullet as adidas could have ended their £900 million ($1.12 billion) worth deal in case of relegation to the Championship, but fears of repercussions owing to their poor form linger.

Here, GOAL brings you everything you need to know about the new Manchester United kits, including where to buy, prices, leaks, rumours and more.

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  • All the new 2025-26 football kits
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    Man Utd 2025-26 home kit, release date & price

    Shop Man Utd kits at adidasBuy now

    The Manchester United 25-26 home kit officially launched on June 12, 2025. Primarily red with white logos and black accents, it is designed to capture the true essence of the club's identity, honouring its rich history and foundational spirit. The design takes inspiration from Old Trafford, also known as 'The Theatre of Dreams'.

    The club has not incorporated bespoke sleeve prints on their home shirts for quite some time, but this time, you should see an abstract sleeve graphic in various shades of red, highlighting elements of the pitch, stands, and tunnel. The last instance of a unique sleeve graphic on a Manchester United home jersey was the 1996-98 design.

    To complete the look, the kit features a stylish black and white V-neck collar and sleeve cuffs, black three-stripes running down the shoulders, and contrasting white adidas and sponsor logos. A final touch, paying homage to the club's heritage, is a 'Theatre of Dreams' sign-off on the back of the collar. A notable feature is an Old Trafford-inspired graphic on the sleeves, along with "Theatre of Dreams" printed on the collar, paying homage to the iconic stadium.

    The new Man Utd home kit can be bought for £85 ($115) for adults, with the authentic strip costing £120 ($162). These rates are for the short-sleeved shirts.

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    Man Utd 2025-26 away kit, release date & price

    Shop Man Utd kits at adidasBuy now

    The 2025-2026 Manchester United away kit, featuring a white, plum and modern lilac base with metallic trims, has been unveiled on July 16, 2025. This colour scheme is inspired by the distinctive snowflake pattern from the 1990-92 away kit, but this will not be the first time Adidas has drawn inspiration from the snowflake design for Manchester United kits. They previously used it for the 2015-16 third kit and the 2017-18 away kit. In addition, this season's away kit even incorporates an innovative snowflake M pattern.

    The new kit has an overlapping V-collar and flaunting the devil logo instead of the full club crest, a design choice by Adidas. The shorts for the 2025-2026 away kit are expected to be in a dark plum shade, which matches the colour used for the logos on the shirt.

    The pricing for the United 2025-26 away kit resonates with that of the home kit.

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    Man Utd 2025-26 third kit, release date & price

    Shop Man Utd kits at adidasBuy now

    The new adidas Manchester United 2025-2026 third football shirt, officially unveiled on August 12, 2025, brings back the iconic look of the 1993-94 away shirt famously worn by Eric Cantona. The club confirmed it would be worn for the first time on September 27, 2025 in the Premier League game against Brentford.

    The kit is predominantly black with striking yellow and blue accents, mirroring the original design from three decades ago. Key features include the classic Adidas Trefoil logo and a contemporary take on the shielded club badge. The shirt will also sport a stylish tricolour design on the collar and cuffs, with matching shorts and socks to complete the kit.

    The black and grey base exposes a subtle yet striking club devil motif, woven directly into the design, finished with authentic 3-stripes in bold yellow across the shoulders.

    Speaking of honouring the club legends with this strip, the on-field version of the kit is available to purchase for €150, while the fan version is €100.

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    Man Utd 2025-26 goalkeeper kit release date & price

    Shop Man Utd kits at adidasBuy now

    The design of the Adidas Man United 2025-2026 goalkeeper home football shirt resembles the Juventus 2025-26 keeper shirt, with a predominantly black base that smoothly transitions into grey towards the bottom. This is nicely accented by the logos and other details rendered in a light green colour.

    The jersey is built upon the new Adidas 25 Tiro Goalkeeper Competition teamwear shirt. Leaks have also revealed a blue goalkeeper drip, likely to be used for away matches.

    Meanwhile, the new Adidas Manchester United third goalkeeper kit for the 2025-26 season is similar to that of Bayern Munich. The kit features a striking bright mint green colour with subtle vertical stripes. It also showcases the classic Adidas Trefoil logo along with a shielded Manchester United crest.

    While the Man Utd home goalkeeper adult long sleeve shirt is available for £90 ($122), fans can anticipate the release and availability of the other two drips anytime around late summer of 2025.

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