Ashwin equals Kapil Dev; second to Sydney Barnes

Stats highlights from the second day’s play of the Mumbai Test between India and England

Shiva Jayaraman09-Dec-201623 Five-wicket hauls for R Ashwin in Tests – the third highest among India bowlers alongside Kapil Dev. Only Anil Kumble (35) and Harbhajan Singh (25) have taken more such hauls. Ashwin is playing his 43rd Test. Harbhajan, Kumble and Kapil took 75, 81 and 114 Tests for their 23rd five-wicket haul respectively. Among bowlers from all teams, only Sydney Barnes has been quicker to 23 five-for in Tests. Barnes took just 27 Tests.7 Five-fors by Ashwin this year – the second time he has taken seven or more such hauls in a calendar year. Ashwin took seven five-fors in 2015 as well. Only one other bowler – Muttiah Muarlitharan – has taken seven or more five-wicket hauls in a year more than once. Muralitharan did it in 1998, 2000, 2001 and 2006. Ashwin’s 14 five-wicket hauls in the last-two years equal the most any bowler has taken in a two-year period. Muralitharan had taken 14 such hauls between 2000 and 2001 and again between 2006 and 2007.18 Five-wicket hauls by Ashwin in just 26 Tests in India. Only Anil Kumble’s 25 such hauls is higher than Ashwin’s in India. Harbhajan also took 18 five-fors from 55 Tests at home.56.16 Jos Buttler’s batting average against India in Tests; his 76 in England’s first innings was his fifth score of 40 or more runs in six innings against them. Buttler’s 76 is the highest by a visiting batsman at Wankhede batting at No. 7 or lower since Adam Gilchrist’s 122 in 2001-02.1975 The only time in 13 Tests before this a team posting a total of 400 or more runs in the first innings a Tests has lost at the Wankhede Stadium. On that occasion though India had ended up trailing West Indies by 198 runs in spite of putting up 406 runs on the board. Since then, teams posting a total of 400-plus have ended up winning on seven occasions, with other six Tests ending in a draw. This is England’s third 400-plus total in their first innings at the Wankhede Stadium in their last three Tests here. England defeated the hosts after posting such totals on the previous two instances.2013 The last time before this India spinners took all the ten wickets to fall in the first innings of a Test. Ashwin had led the India spinners on that occasion too, taking seven of the ten Australia wickets to fall to spinners, in Chennai in 2012-13. Overall, this was just the eighth instance of India spinners taking all ten wickets in the first innings of a Test.1983 The last time before this India had a century stand for their second wicket in Tests at the Wankhede Stadium. Anshuman Gaekwad and Dilip Vengsarkar had added 133 against West Indies on that occasion. Overall, there have been only four such stands for India at this venue. M Vijay and Cheteshwar Pujara have added 107 runs in this innings – their seventh hundred-run stand in Tests. So far, the pair has added 2251 runs together at an average of 66.20 – the highest for an India pair that has added 2000 or more runs in Tests.

All-round Pakistan subdue Sri Lanka

ESPNcricinfo staff30-Jul-2015Ahmed Shehzad was then involved in two 30-plus partnerships – with Mohammad Hafeez and Shoaib Malik – before falling for 46 in the 12th over with Pakistan on 83 for 3•AFPAnwar Ali struck on the third ball of Sri Lanka’s chase, sending Kusal Perera back for 4•AFPTillakaratne Dilshan was next to go, edging Sohail Tanvir to the wicketkeeper in the second over, leaving Sri Lanka on 13 for 2•AFPMathews fell in the 10th over for a 26-ball 23, after which Sri Lanka fell behind the required rate through the middle overs•AFPMilinda Siriwardana and Chamara Kapugedera, however, kept them in the hunt…•AFP…but Anwar and Tanvir kept chipping away at the wickets, restricting Sri Lanka to 146 and capping up an impressive 29-run win•AFP

The perfect end

It can’t get better than a tied Super Over to finish off the Abu Dhabi leg of the IPL

Anil Joseph30-Apr-2014Choice of game
This was the last IPL match in Abu Dhabi, so I didn’t want to miss it. It seems another 20,000 people in Abu Dhabi had similar sentiments so yet another sell-out crowd turned up to bid adieu to the IPL from Abu Dhabi. Kolkata Knight Riders and Rajasthan Royals had identical 2-2 win loss ratios, and this match was crucial for both to keep their noses in front in the race for the IPL play-offs.And what a fitting farewell it turned out to be for Abu Dhabi – easily the closest match this season, and one where fortunes swung from start to finish.Team supported
I guess loyalties are not as deeply entrenched in the IPL (as compared to international matches), so most of the spectators applauded good performances from both sides even if they were more inclined towards Kolkata.I was supporting Rajasthan due to its connection with my favourite cricketer, Rahul Dravid. However, I also wanted to see Jacques Kallis, Sunil Narine and Gautam Gambhir do well for KKR, albeit in a losing cause.Getting to the ground
Parking at the Sheikh Zayed Stadium is quite an experience. The stadium is surrounded by acres of plain sand, which serves as a parking lot for the thousands of cars. I saw at least three cars that got stuck in the sand and their owners desperately trying to extricate their cars (mostly in vain). Long queues of arriving cars sometimes also caused miniature sand storms, but that would not deter the cricket enthusiasts. The security checks were extremely efficient and in no time, we were inside the stadium.One thing I’d have changed
Shah Rukh Khan made an appearance in the 18th over of the Rajasthan innings, and as has been the norm in all IPL matches, a large section of the crowd decided that catching a glimpse of SRK eclipsed any entertainment that cricket could possibly provide. For a diehard cricket fanatic like myself, ignoring a battle of Rahane-Steve Smith vs Narine-Morne Morkel in the final two overs of a T20 game for a long shot sighting of SRK was nothing short of sacrilege.Wow moment
The wow moment of the day for me was the crucial 19th over bowled by the birthday boy, James Faulkner. The three wickets he took in this over of Suryakumar Yadav, Robin Uthappa and Vinay Kumar resurrected Rajasthan’s hopes from a position of utter despair. What makes this performance all the more fascinating was that till that point, Faulkner’s only notable contribution to the match was being caught sleeping at the boundary line when Kallis offered a chance in the deep off Rajat Bhatia’s bowling in the seventh over.Shots of the day
The most stunning shot of the day was Suryakumar Yadav’s six off Shane Watson, which he picked up from way outside off stump (almost near the wide line), and casually slog-swept over square leg in a manner reminiscent of some of Moin Khan’s audacious sweeps.The other amazing shot of the day was Ajinka Rahane’s pulled six off Vinay Kumar. The first impression was that the ball was unlikely to carry very far, but the ball somehow hung in the air and went over for a highly unlikely six.Crowd meter
The excitement levels and associated decibel levels for this match remained relatively subdued for a large part, perhaps due to the attritional nature of cricket being played and the relatively fewer number of sixes and fours. However, the excitement and noise gradually rose to a crescendo during the second half of Kolkata’s innings as people realised this was going to be a close one. Towards the end, everyone was screaming, and as we trooped out of the stadium you could see the satisfaction on the fans’ faces at having witnessed something special.IPL v Pakistan’s home games
Having watched a Pakistan Test, ODI and T20 each here, I must confess only the T20 international could match the IPL for crowd support. The Test match had barely a few dozen people in attendance and the ODI was also played in a half-empty stadium. The IPL, in comparison, has been a runaway hit in these parts. I guess the Indian population in the UAE has been starved of watching Indian cricketers in action for over a decade now, and the IPL has been an avenue for the huge Indian population here to make a statement that we want to see more of Indian cricketers playing here. I have no doubt that if an India-Pakistan T20 match played here, a stadium three times the size of the existing stadia, would be insufficient to meet the demand.Overall
It was a thoroughly enjoyable day of cricket for me and my friends. A big thank you to the organisers for choosing the UAE as hosts and to Sheikh Nahyan for his unwavering support. The IPL has been the talk of the town for the last two weeks, and many of us Indians in Abu Dhabi are already feeling sad that the UAE leg is drawing to a close – a bit like a favorite cousin having visited us on a holiday and now heading back. I really couldn’t have asked for more.

Clarke and Watson, what have you done?

Michael Clarke and Shane Watson have had vastly different years but Australia’s captain and vice-captain must both stand up in 2013

Brydon Coverdale in Melbourne27-Dec-2012So this is Christmas, and what have you done? Another year over, a new one just begun. John Lennon had weighty issues on his mind when he wrote those lyrics in a Vietnam War protest song in 1971. Australia’s cricketers are involved in nothing so momentous but they can still ask themselves the same question as 2012 draws to a close. What have you done? The captain Michael Clarke and vice-captain Shane Watson would give vastly different answers.From a personal point of view, Clarke could hardly have achieved more in Tests in 2012. No Australian batsman has scored more runs in a year than the 1595 Clarke has so far accumulated. That included three double-centuries and a triple-hundred. While Clarke hasn’t missed a Test in 2012, Watson has sat out of five through injury. In the six he has played, he has averaged 31.45 with the bat and 49.16 with the ball. He hasn’t made a century or taken more than one wicket in an innings, though he has contributed to wins, like his final-day 52 in Barbados.On the second day at the MCG, Clarke and Watson combined for a 194-run partnership that batted Australia into a position from which they should win again. It was an important stand and it ensured that Australia’s strong bowling performance on Boxing Day was not wasted. But both men had multiple lives against a struggling Sri Lankan attack further weakened by the loss of the lead fast bowler, Chanaka Welegedara, to injury. No Test runs are soft, but most are scored at a higher intensity than was required here.Clarke used the opportunity to score his fifth century of 2012 and for the first time this year didn’t turn his hundred into at least a double. He was out for 106. For nearly every other batsman in history, that would be significantly above average. For Clarke this year, 106 was precisely his average. Watson made 83 before he was caught at deep midwicket, obligingly hooking straight down the throat of a fieldsman. He had done a job, but didn’t cash in like Clarke so often has.For nearly a decade, Watson has been viewed as a player of immense Test potential. At 31, he still is. But will he ever truly fulfill that promise? He has made valuable contributions with both bat and ball, but could have achieved so much more. Of course, it is hard to gain momentum when a player is injured as often as Watson. Clarke has missed nine Tests since his 2004 debut, including those for which he was dropped. Watson, who debuted three months later, has missed 50.Watson remains one of Australia’s most important players. Who else can bat in the top six and act as a genuine fifth bowler? But Australia need more from him with the bat if he is to settle into the No.4 role vacated by Ricky Ponting. Centuries are not everything in Test cricket but his conversion rate – two tons from 21 scores above fifty – must improve. He cannot afford to lose concentration, not with difficult tours of India and England coming up next year.Perhaps his 83 at the MCG will be a stepping stone. He occupied the crease for 265 minutes and with the exception of his two centuries, it was his longest Test innings in terms of duration. Against Rangana Herath, Watson’s play-from-the-crease approach was noticeable compared to Clarke’s light-footed style, and more than next year’s Ashes tour Watson’s big challenge in 2013 will be to handle the spin-friendly conditions in four Tests in India.Australia need a big year from Watson, just as they require more of the same from Clarke. The chances of Clarke batting again in this match are slim, and his 106 would be a fine way to cap off a remarkable 2012. It was a year that began with an unbeaten 329 against India at the SCG followed by 210 in Adelaide, and also included 259 not out against South Africa in Brisbane and 230 in the next Test in Adelaide. They are Bradman-like figures and in all of Test history only Bradman averaged more as a Test captain than Clarke has, of players who have led their country at least 10 times.His Melbourne hundred was good, not great, but as his first Test century at the MCG it was important to Clarke. He celebrated with a hug from his batting partner, Watson, and at the drinks break that immediately followed, one from the team physio Alex Kountouris, whose work had helped Clarke recover from his hamstring injury in time to play this match. But for all that he has achieved this year, Clarke will be judged on how he performs in 2013. He knows it, so he is not getting ahead of himself.”Not much, and I mean that in the right way,” Clarke said when asked what his immense 2012 figures meant to him. “Numbers have never really bothered me too much. It’s nice to be making runs and leading by example as one of the leaders in the team. I think it’s really important that the captain is doing that. But to me it is about winning games … as long as we keep winning, that’s my priority.”After next week’s Sydney match against Sri Lanka, that means four Tests in India and 10 Ashes Tests. The major blot of Ponting’s captaincy career was his inability to lead Australia to an Ashes triumph away from home. In 2012, Clarke bettered Ponting’s best calendar year. If his 2013 is anything like it, he might achieve something else Ponting never did.A productive vice-captain Watson at No.4 – and a Watson who can string together a full year of cricket – would be an enormous help.

A nail-biter, and disappointments

A close game against Australia and a surprise loss against West Indies later, England are returning home

Nicky Shaw13-May-2010Now that we are out of the World Twenty20, our next focus will be the summer series against New Zealand at home. It will be good to play them in the three Twenty20 matches and the one day International series.It’s hard to predict who will go on to win the World Twenty20 trophy. The gap seems to be closing in terms of the standard of cricket played by the different teams. I think the strong contenders will be Australia, New Zealand and West Indies who have done well on their home soil. With the crowd behind them who knows. Twenty20 cricket is also so unpredictable, as it just takes one or two outstanding performances and any team could be up there.Our match against Australia was very exciting though disappointing in the end for us. It was a fantastic batting pitch, both team bowled and fielded extremely well. After we were bowled out for 104, the bowlers had a tough task ahead of them, but we knew we could do it. We all stayed tight and the bowlers delivered.I bowled the 19th over with us needing two wickets to win. I was concentrating on bowling the ball straight and full and that’s it. Claire Taylor took a great catch to get Lisa Sthalekar’s wicket and we had Australia at 97 for 9. Then Beth Morgan got the run-out of Rene Farrell with a direct hit to tie the game. It was one of the best bowling and fielding performances we have produced.In the Super Over, we fielded first and Laura Marsh bowled for England as she had bowled well during the game. She managed to restrict them to just six runs and took a wicket. We then put Claire Taylor and Sarah Taylor in to bat against Shelley Nitschke. We lost Sarah Taylor so Morgan and Claire faced the last two balls. Since we got six as well, the match was decided on the number of sixes hit. Jess Cameron from Australia had hit the only one, so they were awarded the points.As for West Indies, we had a game plan that we executed accurately. But they too seemed to have done their homework, they used their bowlers well.So now it will be back to my day job, coaching at Loughborough and in schools with Chance to Shine as well as training and playing cricket for England and Surrey. Let’s hope we give New Zealand a good challenge next month.

Sri Lanka facing unknown territory

With the bold axing of Sanath Jayasuriya, Sri Lankan cricket finds itself in uncharted territory. Charlie Austin investigates

Charlie Austin11-Nov-2005

Dropping Sanath Jayasuriya, just when he has started to regain his fitness, is a major call with three weeks to go before the first Test © AFP
The announcement of Sri Lanka’s one-day squad to tour India passed with barely a whisper last month. The squad was settled and there were no surprises. But the unveiling of the Test squad for the first tour of India since 1997 is sure to create a storm of debate – and may have serious long-term implications for the future.The four-man selection panel, answerable to the Sports Minister and headed by Lalith Kaluperuma, have dared go where no panel has gone for a decade – they’ve axed Sanath Jayasuriya, one of the first choices on a Sri Lanka team sheet ever since a blistering hundred against Australia at Adelaide back in 1995/96.The decision, justified by the selection panel on the basis of poor form coupled with his slow recovery from a dislocated shoulder, is an extremely bold move that poses the obvious question: is this the beginning of the end for one of Sri Lanka’s most influential and exciting batsman in history?Ironically, Jayasuriya is undoubtedly the batsman that India fears most. He has won countless matches against them over the years and his scalp, even despite his wretched form in this series (85 runs in 6 matches), is the one they celebrate most keenly, knowing full well his dangerous potential and his talismanic influence upon the Sri Lanka batting.With hindsight, Jayasuriya should not have played at the start of the one-day series, after a banana-boat accident on a team jolly just before the tour aggravated the shoulder he dislocated during the Indian Oil Cup in August. His tentative fielding – including one embarrassing self-preserving pullout from one particular catch – showed he had not recovered sufficiently to play international cricket.But to drop him now, just when he has started to regain his fitness and even begun bowling again, with three weeks to go before the first Test in Chennai, is a major call. At 36 years old he is no spring chicken, but during the last two years his performances in Test cricket have surpassed his career average (during his last 10 ODIs he has averaged 44.94 compared to a career average of 42.17) and during Sri Lanka’s subcontinent tour, to Pakistan in 2004, he was their most prolific batsman.If the selectors have dropped him on the basis of fitness, in consultation with the team’s medical team, fair enough. But if he’s been sacked because of a run of low scores in one-day cricket then it makes little sense. Touring India is one of cricket’s hardest challenges and a team that travels without one of its best and most destructive players is taking a huge gamble. Put it this way – India must be over the moon.Jayasuriya must now ponder his future. He clearly wants to bow out at the 2007 World Cup and this, despite his relatively old age, is an achievable objective. But in one-day cricket he must reconsider his indifference to dropping down the order. His vast experience and allround ability could make him an invaluable cog in the middle order in the West Indies where the pitches can be expected to suit Sri Lanka’s style of play. However, an insistence on opening may hasten the end of his career.

Chamara Kapugedera: ‘a teenage middle-order batsman with immense potential’ © Cricinfo Ltd
Moving on, the selectors’ decision to fast-track Chamara Kapugedera, a teenage middle-order batsman with immense potential, is praiseworthy. The dearth of upcoming batting talent in Sri Lanka is so worrying that the selectors were right to hand an opportunity to someone who has had development coaches drooling with excitement for several months now. The inexperience, even if he doesn’t play, should prove invaluable.The decision too to promote Malinga Bandara ahead of Upul Chanadana is also justifiable. Bandara, ironically Chandana’s overseas replacement at Gloucestershire, has excelled during the past year with the A team and in County Cricket and he deserves a chance to restart a Test career that began and ended way back with a solitary Test against New Zealand in 1998.Sajeewa Weerakoon’s leapfrogging Rangana Herath as the No. 1 left-arm spinner in the island is recognition of his prolific wicket-taking in first-class cricket and with the A team. Whether he has the variation and the nous to trouble India’s fleet-footed batsmen – especially on flat pitches – is, however, a concern.But the selectors had one more surprise in store for the Test series: the axing of Mahela Jayawardene as the vice-captain. Of all the decisions made, this is the one that may ultimately prove the most significant. Unfortunately, it smells so strongly of politicisation that several very senior players are severely concerned.In Jayawardene’s last eight matches against India, he has played match-winning innings in three of them – not bad by anyone’s standards. Moreover, in Atapattu’s occasional absence, he has led the team astutely, displaying a clear ability to communicate well with the players and shrewdly read the game. So why has he been cast aside?Chaminda Vaas has been a loyal servant for Sri Lanka cricket for many years. His supreme skill is now acknowledged throughout the world. But there are question marks over his captaincy pedigree on the field. Vice-captains can no longer just drum up morale within the dressing room. With the international calendar so heavily congested, they inevitably have to captain the side on occasion and Vaas’s tactical acumen as a leader, based on his recent experience as Western Province skipper, appears limited.

There are few doubts as to Vaas’ class as a bowler, but question marks remain over his ability as a captain © AFP
It is no secret that Vaas has long pursued the vice-captaincy with behind-the-scenes lobbying, both personally and from his supporters, who argue that his fine contributions as a bowler merit the recognition of leadership status. For some time the considerable political pressure exerted has been resisted by the selectors. But suddenly, this has changed and it is unclear why. There are, though, two theories.The first is that Vaas’s politicking has finally struck a chord with Jayantha Dharmadasa, the interim chairman of Sri Lanka Cricket, a man that people hoped would bring meritocracy and professionalism to the cricket administration, but who has instead showed an increasingly worrisome penchant for employing his own supporters in key positions.The second theory is that the selectors, frustrated by the team management’s unwillingness to tow the line with regard to the selection of the final playing XI on tour – specifically in this tour the refusal to drop Jayasuriya – wanted a man in the team management (which includes the captain, vice-captain, coach and manager) they could control.It is unclear which theory holds the most weight at this stage – or whether either theory holds a semblance of truth for that matter – but it is clear that the decision could impact upon the internal dynamics of the team. The selectors’ job is not to make the players happy, it is true, but all their decisions must at least have a sound, rationale basis. In this case such reasoning is hard to fathom. Is Vaas being groomed as the next captain, or is he being rewarded for yeoman’s service? If it is the latter than Murali, a player that has never pursued official title and concentrated instead on taking wickets, should be the vice-captain.Sri Lanka have been thoroughly outplayed in this series. This cannot be denied. They also have issues to solve with the make-up of the team, especially the batting order, but it should also be acknowledged that playing India at home – especially an India team enlivened and rejuvenated by the end of Sourav Ganguly’s tenure and the return of Sachin Tendulkar – is incredibly difficult.Sri Lanka are a small cricketing nation with serious structural issues. School cricket appears to be in terminal decline and first-class cricket, bloated to 20 teams this year in a post-tsunami compromise, is a joke. For such a small island national the density of talent is amazing. But the resources are not so rich that mismanagement can be afforded.The squad chosen for the Test series is a massive gamble. Only time will tell whether they have chosen wisely. But the omens are not good. A squad that was settled and united before this tour, so crucial for all teams but especially those in Asia where politics plays such a depressing part, is now internally fragile. The No. 2 one-day side in the world just two weeks ago is now staring into unknown territory.

A tale of two overs – Harmanpreet and Ishaque change the script against UP Warriorz

Who can stop Mumbai Indians in the WPL?At the halfway point of the league stage, the answer is: No one. Yet, at any rate.UP Warriorz were the only team not to have played, and therefore not to have lost, to Mumbai and the set was completed on Sunday at a packed Brabourne Stadium.Mumbai have now played four and won four with the following margins: 143 runs (Gujarat Giants), nine wickets (Royal Challengers Bangalore), eight wickets (Delhi Capitals), and eight wickets (Warriorz). Comprehensive, each of them.But don’t let this latest lopsided-looking result fool you. The win over Warriorz was not as straightforward as it might seem. Harmanpreet Kaur (53 off 33 balls) stood tall and produced a remarkable knock that made a tricky chase look easy, but it could well have been tougher. That it wasn’t, when Mumbai were finally tested, was down to their captain and their other trump card, the purple-cap holder Saika Ishaque.The match, and Mumbai’s prowess, might perhaps be best summed up with the tale of two overs. One bowled by Ishaque, one faced by Harmanpreet.Two overs. Two players who are on the opposite sides of the spectrum of Indian cricket. Two (more) reasons why Mumbai have been unstoppable.Saika Ishaque starred with three wickets•BCCI

Saika Ishaque takes out Alyssa Healy and Tahlia McGrath

In the first innings, Warriorz were cruising at 138 for 2 after 16 overs, and looking good for a big total, with Alyssa Healy past fifty and Tahlia McGrath almost there. Ishaque then came in for her last over, having been at the receiving end of Healy’s aggression a fair bit earlier.”Bowler , wicket (I am a bowler, I am here to take wickets),” she had famously said when she got the purple cap for the first time this season. It’s exactly what she did. On the third ball, she dismissed Healy lbw for 58. Two balls later, she got McGrath stumped for 50. Cool as you please.She finished her spell with figures of 3 for 33, ensuring the purple cap remains firmly with her. Warriorz could only manage 159 in the end, a gettable target.Harmanpreet Kaur upped her scoring rate after a cautious start•BCCI

Harmanpreet Kaur amps it up

Then Mumbai were in a spot of bother at 72 for 2, after an uncharacteristically slow 17-ball 12 from Hayley Mathews and Yastika Bhatia falling after a good start (42 off 27). Warriorz’s spin, which had set up their previous win, was working well on a pitch that had started aiding turn, Harmanpreet and Nat Sciver-Brunt were yet to get off the mark, and the asking rate was climbing.It was still on Mumbai’s side at 88 needed from 60 balls, but Harmanpreet had taken six balls to get off the mark. She then got a stroke of luck when she was on seven. Anjali Sarvani bowled a slower one on leg stump, which seemed to graze the stumps, the bail lit up, but stayed put.Harmanpreet rode this luck to play a knock to remember.It was the 16th over, McGrath’s first. After the first ball, Sciver-Brunt was checked for concussion. One has to wonder what was discussed in the brief break because when Harmanpreet took strike again, she completely changed the game in just four balls with a four, six, four, four sequence, the six over cover such an effortlessly clean hit that it will go down as a shot-of-the-tournament contender.She took six balls to get off the mark, but got to her fifty is 31 balls. She scored 36 runs in the last 12 balls she faced. Sciver-Brunt (45 off 31) and Harmanpreet ensured that Mumbai had yet another big win in the bag, and one foot straight in the final.Just Harmanpreet things. Just Mumbai Indians things.

Revealed: Antonio Rudiger's emotional plea to Germany teammates after loss to Slovakia in World Cup qualifying opener

Germany centre-back Antonio Rudiger gave a passionate speech to his team-mates after their embarrassing 2-0 defeat to Slovakia on Thursday.

Germany suffered a historic 2-0 defeat to SlovakiaRudiger also criticised for poor performanceRudiger calls for unity and solidarityFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Germany's World Cup qualifying campaign got off to a disastrous start with a shock 2-0 defeat to Slovakia in midweek. The defensive performance was particularly poor and amateurish, with the team looking vulnerable throughout the game. At the centre of the criticism is Real Madrid defender Rudiger, whose blunders were instrumental in both of Slovakia's goals. Following the final whistle, the frustration erupted behind the scenes, with players speaking their minds in the locker room.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportTHE BIGGER PICTURE

This loss marks Germany's first-ever away defeat in a World Cup qualifier and their third consecutive competitive loss. The defeat has sent shockwaves through the national team, which is already facing questions about its collective mentality. Coach Julian Nagelsmann publicly criticised the team for their lack of "emotionality" and for playing with the "handbrake on", and it has since been revealed that he and Rudiger let the team have it in the dressing room after the game.

WHAT RUDIGER SAID

According to , Rudiger took the initiative to address his team-mates personally with the core of the message being unity and solidarity.

"We must act as a team now. We can only get out of this together. No one can help us except ourselves. We can only do it together and with solidarity."

Stuttgart defender Maximilian Mittelstadt reiterated on the same, saying: "The coach, of course, addressed the team. Toni Rudiger also spoke to the team. I don't think there's any need to talk much, though; we all know it simply wasn't a good performance. But we've shown in the past that we're capable of showing a different face."

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AFPWHAT NEXT FOR GERMANY?

Germany have a chance for an immediate response when they face Northern Ireland in their next qualifying match on September 8. The pressure will be immense, and all eyes will be on Rudiger to back up his words with a top-class performance on the pitch.

موعد والقناة الناقلة لمباراة ليبيا وأنجولا اليوم في تصفيات كأس العالم 2026

يلتقي منتخب ليبيا، اليوم الخميس، مع نظيره منتخب أنجولا، ضمن منافسات التصفيات الإفريقية المؤهلة إلى كأس العالم 2026.

وتقام المباراة بيبن ليبيا وأنجولان على أرضية ملعب 11 نوفمبر في العاصمة لواندا، ضمن الجولة السابعة من تصفيات إفريقيا المؤهلة إلى كأس العالم 2026.

ويبحث أبناء عمر المختار عن تحقيق الفوز على أنجولا، للحفاظ على آمالهم في التأهل إلى بطولة كأس العالم 2026.

طالع.. موعد والقنوات الناقلة لمباراة الجزائر وبوتسوانا اليوم في تصفيات كأس العالم.. والمعلق

يدخل المنتخب الليبي المباراة وهو في المركز الثالث برصيد 8 نقاط، متأخرًا عن الكاميرون الوصيف بـ 12 نقطة، والرأس الأخضر المتصدر بـ 13 نقطة.

أما منتخب أنجولا فيحتل المركز الرابع بـ 7 نقاط، ما يجعل المواجهة مصيرية للفريقين في سباق المنافسة على بطاقة العبور. موعد مباراة ليبيا وأنجولا اليوم

تنطلق صافرة البداية لمباراة ليبيا وأنجولا عند الساعة السادسة مساءً بتوقيت ليبيا والسابعة مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية. القناة الناقلة لمباراة ليبيا وأنجولا اليوم

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Newcastle handed brutal transfer blow after making €80m bid for Benjamin Sesko in bid to beat Man Utd to RB Leipzig star

Newcastle United have been hit with an obstacle in their bid to sign Benjamin Sesko after an €80million (£69m/$92m) bid was lodged for the Slovenian.

Newcastle bid €80m for SeskoThis reportedly falls under Leipzig's valuationSlovenian is also Manchester United targetFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

The Athletic report that Newcastle's bid for Sesko falls below RB Leipzig's valuation of the striker, who has been strongly linked with a move to the Premier League throughout the transfer window. It is not currently known exactly how far behind the valuation Newcastle sit, but The Athletic's report reiterates a previous belief that Leipzig were seeking €75m (£65m/$86m) plus add-ons – potentially eclipsing €80m overall – and a sell-on clause.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Amidst the speculation surrounding the future of Alexander Isak, it has become pertinent for Newcastle to sign a new striker in case the Sweden international were to depart. Sesko is one of the most highly-regarded young strikers in Europe, which has seen him targeted by an array of the Premier League's biggest clubs this summer. The belief now is that it is between the Magpies and Manchester United for his signature.

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Sesko would become Newcastle's record signing if he were to arrive in the North East for a fee eclipsing the £63m (€70m/$83m) spent on Isak in 2022. Sesko has scored 27 Bundesliga goals across his two seasons at Leipzig after the 22-year-old signed from Red Bull affiliates Salzburg. He was recently left out of the squad for a pre-season friendly clash against Atalanta, indicating that the German club are preparing for his departure.

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Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT FOR SESKO AND NEWCASTLE?

Newcastle may return with an improved second offer if their bid for Sesko has ultimately been rejected by Leipzig. This transfer story could have several repercussions in the wider market, as it is believed that Liverpool may walk away from Isak negotiations unless the Toon make progress on signing a replacement first.

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