England set for another shuffle

Desperately seeking the ideal World Cup combination, England are likely to continue their player rotation as the ODI series shifts to Pallekele

Alan Gardner09-Dec-2014In the past, England have been accused of not really taking one-day cricket seriously. Whether by using it as a nursery for Test players or resting them once they have made it to five-day cricket big school, it has been possible to discern an air of indifference about the 50-over format.Some of their selections during the series in Sri Lanka have looked suspiciously whimsical but at least this time the underlying strategy cannot be questioned. The ECB has made winning a global 50-overs tournament one of its goals, to the extent of shifting an Ashes series by a year, and while England’s World Cup planning is currently running on Sri Lanka time (a little way behind schedule) you can see what they’re driving at.England have long given up the selection roulette which defined the 1980s and ’90s, particularly in Tests, and set great store in keeping faith with players who are out of form. Some might say that has occasionally crossed into blind faith, with Alastair Cook’s ODI form a salient example, but the management have shown a willingness to experiment during the Sri Lanka series that seems to reflect their outwardly stated intention to be more proactive and aggressive.With the promotion of Moeen Ali to open, they struck paydirt in the opening match and they have been fiddling away ever since. Ravi Bopara has moved up two places from No. 7; Ian Bell has been dropped, first for Alex Hales – an opener brought in at No. 3 – and then James Taylor; Hales has had a chance to partner Moeen; Chris Jordan has made an impressive return based on his nets form; Ben Stokes was twice preferred to James Tredwell, possibly with deleterious effects.Some of those changes have been enforced and there will be more in Pallekele, where the fifth and sixth ODIs are to be played. Cook will return as captain after being suspended for England’s slow over rate in Hambantota, most probably for Hales, whose contributions in two matches include running out Moeen, being dismissed first ball and dropping a potentially match-turning catch. Stokes may survive another day if conditions are favourable to pace.Tredwell’s omission in Colombo at the weekend, on a pitch where the Sri Lanka spinners took nine wickets, caused most surprise but it highlighted the tension between doing well in this series and informing World Cup decision-making. If England want jam tomorrow, they may have to forgo it today.Despite being 3-1 down with three to play, they can, of course, still win here and the mantra has been that victory over Sri Lanka would be the best possible preparation. Whoever makes up the XI on Wednesday, the process is underpinned by sound principles, according to Joe Root, one of the mainstays of the side.”Your best eleven is going to change depending on the conditions and who you’re playing against,” Root said. “We’ve got to make sure in our practice, if you are in that best eleven, you do everything you can to go out and play at your absolute peak. All the guys know that, they know what their role is within the side when they fit into it. We’ve now got to make sure we put all our practice into performances.”In more than 40 years of ODI cricket, England have used more players (236) than any other major nation – and that having played fewer games than everyone barring South Africa, who were in isolation during the first half of the era. That again points to England treating the format like a bagatelle but, having committed to an intensive period of one-dayers before the World Cup, they cannot this time be accused of neglect.Whether it turns out to be the “best chance” Cook spoke of before departing for Sri Lanka could occupy several hours of debate, perhaps while seated in a Kandy tea house, with an expansive mountain view and the Mahaweli Ganga gurgling by. Before they get there, they need to work out their ideal XI; before they do that, they need to settle on a squad of 15; and before making that decision, they must play three more games against Sri Lanka. Root has not given up hope they can win them.”There’s no reason why we can’t,” he said. “We showed in every game at some point along the way that we’re capable of doing that, the thing for us now is to make sure that we put it into one complete performance. Even the game that we did win, we didn’t play at our absolute best, which again is promising. You don’t want to talk about being promising all the time, now’s the time for us to step up and start putting in performances. This is a great opportunity for us to do it under pressure before a World Cup.”We want to win this series. We know, looking at the wicket here, the conditions might be slightly different to Colombo and if we can get level going back into that last game it’s going to be a great finish. This sort of pressure is good practice for a World Cup, so in regards to preparing for it that’s as close as we can get. We’re just going to try and make sure we put in two really good performances here and finish the series well.”Root has brought his ukulele with him on tour, although he said he still sounds “horrendous”. England are trying to convince everyone they are not playing the same old tunes themselves.

Duck tales for the kiwis

Plays of the Day from the first day of the second Test between New Zealand and England in Wellington

Andrew McGlashan in Wellington14-Mar-2013Hype of the dayBrendon McCullum’s ‘Cook-Bradman’ comments were still a talking point on the first morning. Opinions varied from him being over the top, pretty accurate, showing respect or playing mind games with the England captain. No one, though, really took it all too seriously. Neither did McCullum have to worry about Alastair Cook scoring too many as, in the 11th over, he rather oddly chipped a catch to mid-on against Neil Wagner.Duck of the dayFor much of the opening session, New Zealand had someone else sharing the outfield with them. A rotund duck waddled around the square, pretty much covering a full circle. At one point Hamish Rutherford tried to shoo it away, but the duck was having none of it and happily pecked away at the grass. It was in the firing line a few times, especially when stood at midwicket to Jonathan Trott, but shortly before lunch decided enough was enough and disappeared. Maybe duck was on the menu and he thought it was best not to hang around.Repetition of the dayNo, this is not a reference to the Barmy Army song book. Instead, it’s about England’s second-wicket stands at the Basin Reserve. In adding 210, Nick Compton and Jonathan Trott followed the century partnerships by Cook and Andrew Strauss (106) in 2008 and Marcus Trescothick-Mark Butcher (115) in 2002. By the time today’s stand ended, it was England’s highest for the second wicket in New Zealand, going past the 182 added by Michael Atherton and Alec Stewart at Auckland in 1997.Spell of the dayWhen a captain has put the opposition in, he does not really want to worry about containment. But if wickets don’t fall he cannot afford the run-rate to escape. McCullum was, therefore, hugely grateful for Bruce Martin’s afternoon spell that kept England’s run-rate under three an over until tea. Martin was shown plenty of respect by Compton and Trott, completing 12 overs during the middle session for just 18 runs.Shot of the dayIt might not actually have been shot of the day, but Compton’s cover drive off Neil Wagner was a fantastic way to bring up a century. He had moved to 96 with a square drive and could have been forgiven to nursing his way over the line, but surging on confidence he punished a wide delivery through the off side and, for the second time in five days, jumped in celebration, removed his helmet, saluted the crowd while his dad soaked it all in again.

England seek to defy the odds

England have done the first half of Pakistan 1992 right, now comes the hard bit

Sidharth Monga in Colombo25-Mar-2011When India were playing West Indies in the final league game, a match that would decide which team travels where for the quarter-finals, Graeme Swann foresaw a West Indies collapse, and tweeted, “We could end up in Colombo tomorrow. Last time I was there the tuk tuk man let me drive and I defeated Harmy in an epic wacky race…”As soon as the last wicket fell, thus confirming England would play Sri Lanka in Sri Lanka, not a very enviable proposition at best of times, Swann’s Twitter page read, “Start the tuk tuk…” This is not a team, unlike what many have suggested, that is longing more to go home than to play for a trophy they have never won.Over here in Sri Lanka, a day before the game, Mushtaq Ahmed, their spin-bowling coach, entertained everyone with his impersonations of various bowlers’ actions. On demand it happened. Left-arm spin first. Out came an accurate delivery that turned away. Muttiah Muralitharan after that. And then the surprise ones, the ones that had every one in splits: Malcolm Marshall and Bob Willis, accurate right from the marking of the run-up to the run-up to the delivery stride. Hearty applause followed either side of the nets. Mushtaq looked outside, smiled, and then went back to the team.On the eve of the match that could end England’s World Cup, they didn’t look like a side that has just lost a player who was suffering from depression, having been on the road for five months. They didn’t look like a side that has lost four players to injury (one of them, though, has come back and replaced another injured player). They didn’t look like a side not sure if their most consistent bowler, Tim Bresnan, would be fit to play the quarter-final. They didn’t look like a side likely to try their third makeshift opener of the tournament.England look like a side that knows that what all they have been through is gone, for better or for worse, and matters little in the present moment. People talk about the importance of staying in the present, England have been made to live every moment of this event in the here and now.Their crazily indefinable performance in the World Cup so far – how do you make sense of defeats to Bangladesh and Ireland, wins over South Africa and West Indies, and a tie with India? – does that job for them, making sure they don’t think too far and telling them there is no point looking behind. They certainly aren’t a side that is thinking of the prospect of winning both the Ashes and the World Cup in the same winter.”Whether it’s the Ashes, or the World cup,” Andrew Strauss, their captain, said, “whenever we have looked too far into the future, we have come crashing down in a big heap. All we can do is try our utmost to win this game.”More than anything, England are a side that knows the fun and games are over. They know that if they make the kind of mistakes they did against Bangladesh and Ireland, they will be their last mistakes for a while. “I know the guys are just immensely excited about this,” Strauss said. “We have got a lot of time between the West Indies game leading up to this one, with little else to do other than imagine how we can win this one.”Going by conventional wisdom, it is hard to imagine England beating Sri Lanka in Sri Lanka. Their best fast bowler, James Anderson, seems to have momentarily forgotten the art. Bresnan, the next best, likes to hit the deck and extract movement, which is not quite what works the best here. They have too many old-fashioned batsmen in their line-up for the subcontinent’s liking. Also, how much more can they take mentally and somehow stay alive?Then again, England haven’t quite respected conventions. They have been like the erratic fast bowler who we all hate, who can bowl unplayable deliveries while bowling rubbish with a strange action. They have done the first half of Pakistan 1992 right. They don’t know what their best XI is, they have lost matches from winning positions, they have won from losing ones. They have waited on results out of their hands to keep them alive. Their bowling has been hit and miss, going from pedestrian to irresistible. Yet, somehow they are alive, even despite losses to Bangladesh and Ireland.The more difficult part of their Pakistan impersonation, though, starts now. Now they have to beat conventional wisdom. Now everything needs to come together in one unexplainable mass of awesomeness. Not many sides other than Pakistan have been able to do that sort of thing, playing continuous do-or-die games, without a settled XI, without a Plan A. The nature of the sport means if they can’t manage it, England will just be a team that entertained when the tournament desperately needed entertainment, but faded away when the event became exciting on its own and had no need for them. If they do manage it, they will have a good story to tell.

The shop-floor steward

He may be England’s leading bowler, and sixth on the country’s all-time list, but as always, Matthew Hoggard is gloomy about his prospects of keeping his place in the side

Andrew Miller03-Mar-2008
‘Just close your eyes and whang it down’ © Getty Images
It’s the final day of England’s warm-up in Dunedin, and Matthew Hoggard has been feeling under the weather. On Friday, he had to rush from the field and ended up vomiting into a rubbish bin on the boundary’s edge, a fact he confirmed in typical Hoggy fashion, by inviting a nearby photographer to come and take a look for himself. “Summat didn’t agree with me,” he shrugs, as we huddle in the main stand of the University Oval, and watch Ian Bell push along to his century. “I’m fine now.”Of course he’s fine. Hoggard is always fine. For seven years and 66 Tests, including 40 in a row up to the end of 2006, Hoggard’s indefatigability has been a given. Other flashier bowlers have come and gone, often using mystery ailments to excuse their dicky tickers, but not so the man who will lead England’s attack in the first Test at Hamilton on Wednesday. It takes more than a dodgy dinner to keep him out of the side.And yet the man himself cultivates an air of deep gloom whenever he considers his value to England. “I still feel as though I’m watching my place, watching my back,” he says. “I’m forever saying to myself, ‘Look, I need to perform.’ I still don’t think I’m a regular in the team.” In part, you might put his insecurities down to his recent, and rare, run of injuries, which enabled him to finish only two of England’s 11 Tests in 2007. But he’s been like this every step of his career. Hoggard’s insistence that he is “nothing special” is precisely what has spurred him on to become something pretty exceptional.His journey began almost eight long years ago, against West Indies at Lord’s in 2000, a match that, coincidentally or not, marked the beginning of England’s five-year rise from also-rans to world-beaters. They eventually squeaked home by two wickets thanks to an incredible West Indian batting collapse, but it would be flattering to describe Hoggard’s role even as bit part. His captain, Alec Stewart, forgot that he was on the pitch as West Indies capitulated for 54 in their second innings, and you sense that he’s known his place in the pecking order ever since.England’s heroes that day were Darren Gough and Andrew Caddick, and it was Caddick who once brazenly told The Wisden Cricketer that Hoggard wouldn’t get a look-in in a full-strength side. And yet, not only has he looked in on one or two occasions since then, he’s surpassed both the big-timers in the all-time list of English wicket-takers. He’s currently slotted in at sixth, on 247, just behind that mightiest of metronomes, Brian Statham. “Being underestimated is great, you keep sneaking round the back door,” says Hoggard, not entirely ironically. “Long may it continue.”It was Michael Vaughan who best summed up Hoggard’s role, on his breakthrough tour to the Caribbean in 2003-04. He described him as the shop-floor steward, the man to sweep up after the glamour boys had made their mark for better or worse. And the image has endured. “There’s virtues in someone pushing the batsman back and scaring the shit out of them,” says Hoggard. “But there’s also virtues in bringing the ball back into them to test their technique in both ways. I just have to bowl in the right areas often enough.”Hoggard in media mode is a curious blend of cliché and irreverence.His favourite self-summary is typical. “I just close my eyes and whang it down. Takes your chances,” he says, almost as a mantra. The first time he used the line it prompted an approving burst of laughter from the assembled press corps. These days it elicits only groans. But then again, Hoggard himself is pretty bored of hearing the same old lines being trotted out in the other direction.There’s one in particular that really gets his goat. “It’s amazing how many times everybody asks me about being England’s most experienced bowler,” he complains. “Every time I come on tour, the first question is, ‘So, you’re the experienced bowler. How does it feel?’ Just go back 18 years or whatever, and get your answer from that.”The answer, for the record, is since October 2001, when he was selected to spearhead England’s threadbare attack in India. Gough and Caddick had withdrawn for personal reasons, and Hoggard, with two Test caps under his belt, stepped into the breach alongside Andrew Flintoff, James Ormond and Richard Dawson. It was an exhausting baptism, but Hoggard survived initially and then thrived in the final game at Bangalore, where he and Flintoff shared four wickets apiece in an effort that, but for rain, could have squared the series for England.He might not have known it then, but the disciplines learned on that tour would form the bedrock of his future success. Hoggard’s next Test came at Christchurch against New Zealand, and on the first responsive surface that he had encountered in months, he made the ball sing to the tune of 7 for 63. “It was a nice green seamer, a drop-in pitch, much more like the English conditions I’d been used to at Headingley,” he recalls. “The ball swung around all day, which was perfect for me, and I thought, ‘Yeah, this is the sort of wicket I like to play on.'”No matter what job you’re doing, if someone is getting four or five times the salary for six weeks’ work, you’re thinking that can’t be bad. I’m not retired from one-day cricket – they just won’t pick me – so never say never. There’s a lot of stupid money flying around, and it’s money that makes the world go round
Hoggard on the IPLIn fact, the opposite has since been true. The next time he encountered a pitch quite so amenable was on his home ground at Headingley the following season, but in his eagerness to recreate that Christchurch magic, he tried too hard and enabled India’s Sanjay Bangar and Rahul Dravid to negate his threat time and again outside off stump. It turns out his true calling has been on the deadest of dead wickets – from Nagpur in 2005-06 to Adelaide last winter – where nothing but extreme stamina, discipline and accuracy will suffice.”I think the batsmen just switch off,” says Hoggard. “They think it’s just a little piddly fart, so we’ll play some shots. But it’s been interesting. People say I’m only a green-seam bowler and I can’t bowl in the subcontinent, but I just have a big heart, and keep on whanging it. Glenn McGrath said just keep banging a length out on off stump. He did that for years and picked up 500 wickets. It’s not a bad recipe to follow.”He’s followed it to the letter, in Asia especially, where he’s picked up exactly 50 wickets at 28.22 in 14 Tests. “If you don’t really want to bowl in those conditions, or only half-heartedly, then you ain’t going to get anywhere,” says Hoggard. “No matter what I play, I do it 100% and wholeheartedly. That comes down to the way I was brought up, and it’s either something you’ve got or you haven’t. It’s not something you can manufacture.”So how was he brought up? “My dad never let me win, never ever,” he says. “Not even when I was three or four. He said, ‘If you want to win, you’re going to have to beat me.’ I finally started winning things when I was about 12 or 13. That’s when I started learning how to cheat.” That last utterance is pure Hoggard. For a moment he was threatening to bare his soul, only to smother it rapidly in self-deprecation.His father may have been a tough opponent on the snakes-and-ladders board, but family values are the highest priority for Hoggard. In May 2007, on the eve of the first Test against West Indies, he became a father for the first time, to a robust young nipper named Ernie. Without hesitation, he puts the moment forward as the proudest of his career.”It just changes your life really,” he says. “Now there’s something in the world that’s more important than anything. It’s just completely and utterly changed my perspective on a lot of things.” He’s no longer so bothered, for instance, about his lack of recognition in one-day cricket – shorter tours mean more time at home. But at the age of 31, he’s increasingly aware of the limited shelf-life for a sportsman, and the need to provide for his family while the going is good.To that end, the booming salaries in the IPL are an intriguing sideshow, and for all of Kevin Pietersen’s recent protestations, a rich topic of conversation among the players in New Zealand. “Kerching, kerching, money talks,” says Hoggard. “No matter what job you’re doing, if someone is getting four or five times the salary for six weeks’ work, you’re thinking that can’t be bad. I’m not retired from one-day cricket – they just won’t pick me. So never say never. There’s a lot of stupid money flying around, and it’s money that makes the world go round.”For the time being, however, such thoughts are just a distant hum on the horizon. The first Test is looming, and Hoggard is more concerned about getting back to winning ways with England after consecutive series defeats. “We’ve struggled to take 20 wickets lately,” he concedes. “The wickets we’ve played on have been quite flat, but there’s been a loss of form and maybe a loss of belief among the bowlers. We’ve had a lot of injuries, and we’ve had to find new players to come in, but it’s amazing how a bit of luck can turn things your way.”The weather is drawing in, and it’s time to vacate the chilly stands for the warmth of the dressing room. First, though, I ask him to name his three proudest on-field moments. The choices are revealing. There’s the Wanderers in 2004-05, of course – the definitive Hoggard moment, when he claimed 12 wickets with the rest of the attack on its chinstraps to set up England’s win. Then there’s his hat-trick in Barbados the previous winter, arguably the first moment he felt he belonged among the big guns of that Ashes-vintage attack.
Big in the east: Hoggard has found success on flat subcontinent pitches, picking up 50 wickets in 14 Tests © Getty Images
But then there’s Adelaide – the single most gut-wrenching defeat in England’s recent history, but a match from which Hoggard took nothing but immense personal pride. “It was a flat wicket against the best in the world, where I wasn’t supposed to do anything,” he says, revealing once again the insecurity that comes with the territory. He bowled through a brick wall for England that day, taking 7 for 109 in 42 overs to secure a precious 38-run lead. But then all his fine work was squandered on that frightful final day.”It really did piss me off, to be in a winning or at least a healthy position, and then to lose it,” he says. “It really, really hurt and it was a massive turning point. We knew we could beat Australia because we’ve done it before. If we could have come out of that with a draw, it would have been a massive morale boost. Instead it was a kick in the bollocks.”So near and yet so far. One wonders what might have happened had that game gone differently. After all, Hoggard was an unfeted Ashes winner in 2005 – it had been Flintoff, Steve Harmison and Simon Jones who claimed the plaudits among the bowlers. Adelaide could have been Hoggard’s own Edgbaston moment, the moment he stepped up off the shop floor and became a hero in his own right. On reflection, perhaps it was never meant to be. Some heroes are destined to remain unsung.

Rohit returns as India aim to wrap up another series win

Big picture: India target series victory

The Wankhede Stadium might have thrown a curveball in the first ODI but neither India nor Australia will fret too much over how their batters fared in those seamer-friendly conditions. Both teams have already qualified for the upcoming ODI World Cup and this series, anyway, is not part of the World Cup Super League.Right now, it’s more about fine-tuning and finding the right combinations, and so the caravan moves from Mumbai on the west coast to Visakhapatnam on the east coast for more of that.For India, their regular captain Rohit Sharma will be back after missing the first game because of family commitments. That means Ishan Kishan is likely to sit out. Unless India value his left-handedness and give him a chance in the middle order in place of Suryakumar Yadav.

Watch live on ESPN+

In the US, you can watch the second India-Australia ODI live on ESPN+.

KL Rahul hasn’t had a great time in Test cricket of late, but he showed his value as an ODI No. 5 with a match-winning unbeaten 75 in the first game. India will also be pleased with his glovework behind the stumps. He took an excellent diving catch to his right to dismiss Steven Smith apart from making a couple of one-handed stops down the leg side. Against spin too, he was equally impressive. With Rishabh Pant unlikely to be fit in time for the World Cup, Rahul’s wicketkeeping is a big plus.Australia will be happy with the returns of Mitchell Marsh and Glenn Maxwell in the first ODI. Marsh, coming back after ankle surgery and playing this series as a specialist batter, smashed a 65-ball 81. Maxwell was playing his first international match since breaking his leg in November. He might not have contributed much with bat or ball, but he didn’t seem to be in any sort of physical discomfort.

Form guide

India WWWWW (last five completed ODIs, most recent first)
Australia LWWWW

In the spotlight: Suryakumar Yadav and Mitchell Starc

Shreyas Iyer’s absence has allowed India to play Suryakumar Yadav at No. 4. However, he has failed to replicate his T20I success in 50-over cricket. In his last ten ODIs, he has scored only 110 runs at an average of 13.75. With the ODI World Cup a little over six months away, is Suryakumar running out of time to be a serious contender for India’s squad?Rohit Sharma will be back for India after missing the first ODI•Associated Press

On Friday, Mitchell Starc showed why he is such a force in ODI cricket. His new-ball spell, during which he dismissed Virat Kohli, Suryakumar and Shubman Gill, made Australia favourites to defend 188, before they were denied by KL Rahul and Ravindra Jadeja. Given Starc no longer plays in the IPL – 2015 was his last season – he will like to acquaint himself as much as possible with the Indian conditions before the World Cup.

Team news: Rohit returns

Apart from Rohit’s return, India could consider bringing in Washington Sundar for Shardul Thakur as spinners have a better economy rate (5.64) than fast bowlers (6.15) in Visakhapatnam.India (probable): 1 Rohit Sharma (capt), 2 Shubman Gill, 3 Virat Kohli, 4 Suryakumar Yadav/Ishan Kishan, 5 KL Rahul (wk), 6 Hardik Pandya, 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 Shardul Thakur/Washington Sundar, 9 Kuldeep Yadav, 10 Mohammed Shami, 11 Mohammed SirajDavid Warner (elbow injury) and Alex Carey (illness) missed the first ODI but there is a chance that both could play on Sunday. If Warner returns, Australia will have to reshuffle their batting order. Carey will be a straight swap for Josh Inglis. They may experiment elsewhere, too, as they have said they will try things ahead of the World Cup.Australia (probable): 1 Mitchell Marsh, 2 Travis Head, 3 Steven Smith (capt), 4 Marnus Labuschagne, 5 Alex Carey (wk), 6 Cameron Green, 7 Glenn Maxwell, 8 Marcus Stoinis, 9 Sean Abbott, 10 Mitchell Starc, 11 Adam Zampa

Pitch and conditions: A shortened game?

Visakhapatnam has been a high-scoring venue with an average first-innings total of 295. The last time India played an ODI here, in December 2019, they posted 387 for 5 against West Indies with Rohit and Rahul scoring hundreds. Weather, though, could play spoilsport as there is a forecast of scattered showers in the afternoon.

Stats and trivia: Kohli in Visakhapatnam

  • India’s five-wicket win in Mumbai extended their winning streak in ODIs to eight matches, and halted Australia’s run at six wins.
  • Of the nine ODIs Visakhapatnam has hosted to date, India have won seven, lost one, and one was a tie.
  • In six ODIs at this venue, Kohli’s scores are 118, 117, 99, 65, 157* and 0.
  • Rahul has 1945 runs in 50 ODI innings. If he scores another 55 on Sunday, he will be the second-fastest Indian behind Shikhar Dhawan (48 innings) to reach the landmark.
  • Smith is 61 short of 5000 runs in the format. If he gets there in his next innings, he will be the joint second-fastest for Australia.

Botafogo tem maratona de jogos previstos para abril; confira

MatériaMais Notícias

O Botafogo terá uma maratona de jogos previstos para acontecer em abril. Depois de meses de preparação e pré-temporada no Estadual, os jogadores alvinegros agora terão novos desafios pela frente em 2023.

O Glorioso disputará quatro competições em abril: Taça Rio, Sul-Americana, Copa do Brasil e Brasileirão. Ao todo, nove partidas estão previstas para ocorrer no mês. As próximas semanas prometem fortes emoções para os torcedores.

+Veja 20 destaques dos estaduais por clubes menores que caberiam no Brasileirão

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+Botafogo encerra mês de março com uma derrota; relembre os jogos

CONFIRA EM ORDEM OS JOGOS DO BOTAFOGO PREVISTOS PARA ACONTECER EM ABRIL

Audax x Botafogo – Jogo de Ida da Final da Taça Rio
Magallanes x Botafogo – Fase de Grupos da Sul-Americana
Botafogo x Audax – Jogo de Volta da Final da Taça Rio
Ypiranga x Botafogo – Terceira Fase da Copa do Brasil
Botafogo x São Paulo – Primeira Rodada do Brasileirão
Botafogo x César Vallejo – Fase de Grupos da Sul-Americana
Bahia x Botafogo – Segunda Rodada do Brasileirão
Botafogo x Ypiranga – Terceira Fase da Copa do Brasil
Flamengo x Botafogo – Terceira Rodada do Brasileirão

+Um ano de Luís Castro no Botafogo: relembre os desafios, promessas e dificuldades do treinador

Luís Castro vem sendo muito cobrado em virtude dos recentes resultados e terá uma maratona de jogos decisivas pela frente para provar que seu trabalho está no caminho certo. As próximas semanas poderão serão determinantes para continuidade do treinador.

+Ao L!, Luis Henrique revela motivo de retorno ao Botafogo, fala sobre adaptação e elogia trabalho da SAF

Um ponto positivo deste mês é o retorno do Nilton Santos. O estádio, que entrou em reformas na segunda quinzena de janeiro, deve ficar pronto para receber os jogos do Glorioso nas próximas semanas. Com isso, os jogadores ganharão um plus nos duelos decisivos que terão em abril.

برشلونة في أزمة بسبب ملعب مباراته أمام فالنسيا.. وحل وحيد ينتظر الموافقة

كشفت تقارير صحفية موقف ملعب مباراة برشلونة أمام فالنسيا في المباراة التي ستجمعهما ضمن منافسات الجولة الرابعة من بطولة الدوري الإسباني.

ويواجه برشلونة مشاكل عديدة بسبب الملعب الذي سيخوض عليه مبارياته المحلية أو القارية، إذ لم يتم إعطاء الضوء الأخضر حتى الآن للعب على ملعب “كامب نو” بسبب عدم استكمال الأعمال البنائية.

وخاض برشلونة مباراتين ضمن منافسات الدوري الإسباني “لا ليجا” أمام ريال مايوركا وليفانتي واستطاع أن يحقق الفوز ويجمع 6 نقاط مهمة في سباق الحفاظ على اللقب.

وبالاتفاق مع رابطة الدوري الإسباني، يخوض برشلونة أول 3 جولات من بطولة الدوري الإسباني خارج ملعبه حتى يستطيع خوض مبارياته إما على ملعب “كامب نو” في منتصف سبتمبر أو ملعب آخر.

اقرأ أيضًا | موعد مباراة برشلونة القادمة بعد الفوز على ليفانتي في الدوري الإسباني

ولن يستطيع برشلونة لعب مباراته أمام فالنسيا في إطار منافسات الجولة الرابعة والمقرر إقامتها في منتصف سبتمبر على ملعب “أولمبيك دي مونتجويك” بسبب إقامة حفل موسيقي يوم الجمعة الموافق 12 من نفس الشهر.

ووفقًا لصحيفة “موندو ديبورتفو” الإسبانية، فإن برشلونة يعتبر ملعب “يوهان كرويف” منافسًا قويًا لاستضافة الجولة الرابعة في 13 أو 14 سبتمبر، بعد استبعاد ملعب “دي مونتجويك” وعدم الاستقرار على العودة مرة أخرى إلى كامب نو.

وذكررت أن رابطة الدوري الإسباني استبعدت إمكانية تغيير موعد المباراة وإقامتها على ملعب ميستايا معقل نادي فالنسيا، كما استبعد النادي الكتالوني خيارات أخرى، مثل نقلها إلى ملعب “مونتيليفي” معقل نادي جيرونا.

ويعتبر ملعب “يوهان كرويف” الخيار المتاح كإجراء طارئ لاستضافة المباراة، خاصةً أن الرابطة ليس لديها مانع من اختياره رغم سعته البالغة 6000 متفرج فقط.

ولكن لتحقيق ذلك، بمجرد أن يطلب برشلونة ذلك رسميًا، من الضروري موافقة لجنة الدوري الإسباني على المباراة، لأنه يجب عليها التأكد من استيفاء الملعب لجميع المتطلبات المتعلقة بالجوانب الرئيسية مثل الأمن، وبوابات الدخول، ومنطقة الصحافة، وغيرها، بالإضافة إلى تقنية حكم الفيديو المساعد (VAR)، إذا طلب برشلونة ذلك قبل فترة كافية فيمكن تركيب هذه التقنية مؤقتًا وبشكل استثنائي لإقامة المباراة.

Mohsin Naqvi elected PCB chairman for three years

The PCB has finally held elections and appointed a full-time chairman, with Mohsin Naqvi elected for a three-year term. The PCB announced the appointment on Tuesday without providing any other details, simply saying he had been elected unopposed as the 37th PCB chairman.”I am deeply honoured and humbled to have been unanimously elected as the chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board,” Naqvi said. “I am thankful for the trust and confidence reposed in me. I am fully committed to upgrading the standard of the game in the country and bringing professionalism in the administration of cricket in Pakistan.”Naqvi’s appointment was widely expected after Zaka Ashraf, who served as de facto chairman while officially the head of the interim management committee, quit last month. He also resigned from his position on the PCB’s board of governors, a vacancy which was filled by Naqvi, with Pakistan’s caretaker prime minister Anwar Kakar appointing Punjab’s caretaker chief minister – Naqvi – to the cricket board.Related

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Naqvi will continue to serve as Punjab’s caretaker chief minister alongside his role at the helm of the PCB. This had raised eyebrows last week when the PCB election commissioner, Khawar Shah, briefly took over the chairmanship when Ashraf resigned. But Khawar defended Naqvi holding both roles, saying the PCB rules forbade a chairman from holding an “office of profit” concurrently, and argued – somewhat incongruously – that Naqvi did not.Naqvi’s term as caretaker chief minister has already extended well beyond its constitutional realm. According to Pakistani law, a caretaker government can serve in that capacity for only three months while preparations for upcoming elections take place. Naqvi, however, was appointed over a year ago, in January 2023, with Pakistan’s elections pushed back by several months. His time as chief minister of Pakistan’s largest province will finally end later this week, when Pakistan go to the polls for general elections on February 8.While Naqvi does not have any known cricketing experience or a background in cricketing administration, that is not unusual for most PCB chairmen, especially over the past decade. Neither Najam Sethi nor Zaka Ashraf, the two men who held that position for the best part of the last ten years, had such experience before being first appointed, with Ehsan Mani and Ramiz Raja exceptions rather than the rule.Naqvi’s first major task will be to oversee the upcoming edition of the Pakistan Super League, which begins on February 17. While much of the logistical work of the tournament, including the draft, decisions on venues and ticket sales, has already happened, the league is arguably the most financially significant event for Pakistan cricket every year.The other pressing issue for the new chairmen will concern the hosting of the only ICC event Pakistan has been awarded this decade. The 2025 ICC Champions Trophy is scheduled to take place in the country, which requires significant logistical and administrative preparedness, including the construction of appropriate facilities to host as many as eight teams simultaneously. Pakistan have not played host to an event of that size since the 1996 World Cup.He will also have to find a way to deal with the potential fallout if India, as historical precedence suggests, decide against making the trip to Pakistan. When a similar situation arose ahead of the Asia Cup last year, then-PCB chairman Sethi agreed to a “hybrid” model, which saw a handful of initial games in Pakistan, with the bulk of the later games taking place in Sri Lanka. Several members of the management committee later expressed dissatisfaction with that arrangement, attributing it to the fatigue that caused injuries to a number of players. The PCB has implied they will not agree to such an arrangement this time.

لويس دياز يودع ليفربول.. موعد الفحص الطبي مع ناديه الجديد وقيمة الصفقة

يقترب مهاجم ليفربول لويس دياز، من مغادرة فريقه تمهيدًا لخطوة جديدة في مسيرته الكروية، بحسب آخر التقارير الصحفية الواردة.

وتم استبعاد لويس دياز من مباراة ليفربول الودية أمام ميلان يوم السبت الماضي، وأوضح مدرب الفريق آرني سلوت أن السبب يتعلق بمفاوضات الكولومبي مع أحد الأندية.

لويس دياز ارتبط اسمه بعدة أندية مثل بايرن ميونخ الألماني وبرشلونة الإسباني، إلى جانب أندية الدوري السعودي، وأحدهم النصر.

وبحسب صحيفة “ديلي ميل” البريطانية، غادر لويس دياز معسكر ليفربول التحضيري في اليابان تمهيدًا لانتقاله إلى بايرن ميونخ.

وأوضح الصحفي فلوريان بليتنبرج عبر حسابه على منصة “إكس” أن لويس دياز سيصل إلى ميونخ غدًا الثلاثاء، ومن المقرر أن يخضع للفحص الطبي في اليوم نفسه، وسيوقع بعد ذلك عقدًا حتى عام 2029، مع خيار التمديد لعام إضافي.

اقرأ أيضًا | عودة مُصاب.. سلوت يتلقى دفعة معنوية قبل مباراة ليفربول ويوكوهاما الودية

وسيدفع بايرن ميونخ 70 مليون يورو كرسوم ثابتة، بالإضافة إلى ما يصل إلى 5 ملايين يورو كمكافآت محتملة.

وذكرت صحيفة “ديلي ميل” أن لويس دياز تواجد مع لاعبي ليفربول اليوم في معبد إيكوين باليابان، ثم ودّع اللاعب البالغ من العمر 28 عامًا، زملائه وصعد على متن طائرة متجهة إلى ميونخ.

كان ليفربول رفض عروض بايرن ميونخ الأولى، لكن النادي الألماني تمسك بالمفاوضات مُصرًا على التعاقد مع لويس دياز إلى أن نجح في إقناع الريدز بنهاية الأمر.

رسميًا.. مدرب منتخب مصر السابق يقود عمان

أعلن الاتحاد العماني لكرة القدم، بشكل رسمي، اليوم الثلاثاء، عن التعاقد مع مدرب منتخب مصر السابق، لتولي القيادة الفنية خلال الفترة القادمة.

منتخب عمان كان قد حجز مقعدًا في التصفيات النهائية المؤهلة إلى كأس العالم 2026، بعدما تأهل إلى المحلق الآسيوي الذي يقام من مجموعتين يتأهل منه أصحاب المركز الأول مباشرة إلى المونديال.

ووفقًا للحساب الرسمي للاتحاد العماني لكرة القدم على موقع “إكس”: “يُعلن مجلس إدارة الاتحاد العُماني لكرة القدم عن التعاقد مع المدرب البرتغالي كارلوس كيروش لتولي مهمة القيادة الفنية خلال المرحلة المقبلة، وذلك ضمن جهود الاتحاد لتعزيز أداء المنتخب في الاستحقاقات القادمة”.

طالع | بسبب ركلة جزاء عُمان.. تحرك رسمي من فلسطين ضد حكم المباراة

وأضاف: “يمتلك كيروش خبرة تدريبية واسعة، فقد قاد منتخبات البرتغال، وإيران وكولومبيا، ومصر، وقطر، كما عمل مساعدًا فنيا في نادي مانشستر يونايتد الإنجليزي تحت قيادة السير أليكس فيرجسون”.

وأكمل: “ويتقدم الاتحاد بجزيل الشكر والتقدير للجهاز الفني السابق بقيادة المدرب الوطني رشيد جابر على الجهود الملموسة التي بذلوها خلال الفترة الماضية، متمنيًا لهم التوفيق في مسيرتهم المقبلة”.

تجدر الإشارة إلى أن كارلوس كيروش كان قد تولى تدريب منتخب مصر في الفترة من سبتمبر 2021 حتى مارس 2022، واستطاع أن يصل إلى المباراة النهائية في كأس أمم إفريقيا 2021 التي أقيمت بالكاميرون وخسر في النهائي أمام السنغال بركلات الترجيح، وفشل في التأهل إلى نهائيات كأس العالم قطر 2022 بعد الخسارة من السنغال أيضاً في المباراة الفاصلة بركلات الترجيح.

وتولى البرتغالي كارلوس كيروش بعد الرحيل عن منتخب مصر، منتخبات قطر وإيران.

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