Derby: Ryan Allsop ‘in talks’ with Cardiff

Derby County goalkeeper Ryan Allsop has attracted interest from Cardiff City, according to a report from Football Insider. 

The lowdown: Allsop’s career so far

Signed from Wycombe Wanderers as a free agent in 2021, the ‘keeper has become somewhat of a journeyman across English football.

The 29-year-old started out at West Brom before spells with Blackpool, Bournemouth, Coventry and Lincoln City among others before eventually pitching up at Pride Park.

It now appears that yet another club could be added to the list in the near future, as his contract comes to an end at Derby…

The latest: Cardiff want to sign Allsop

As per a Cardiff source for Football Insider, the Bluebirds are ‘in talks’ to sign the experienced stopper.

It is claimed that ‘negotiations are underway’ over a deal which would take the Birmingham native to south Wales at the end of his current deal.

The report added that Cardiff are ‘well placed’ to reach an agreement for Allsop, who was described by journalist Jake Barker as being a ‘massive breath of fresh air’ in Wayne Rooney’s side earlier this season prior to relegation from the second tier.

The verdict: Another blow for Derby

Whilst such departures from Pride Park are inevitable following the drop into League One and the ongoing off-field issues surrounding the takeover, there is no doubt that losing Allsop is a damaging blow.

This season, the Englishman kept nine clean sheets in 33 appearances overall, earning a 6.92 Sofascore rating and making 2.7 saves per game in a valiant attempt to stave off relegation.

As things stand, Allsop’s departure would leave Kelle Roos as the last remaining senior goalkeeper at the club, albeit that there are likely to be additions over the coming weeks and months as the new-look squad take shape. That is another reason why it’s imperative that Chris Kirchner’s mooted takeover is brought to a swift conclusion.

In other news… a journalist has delivered this huge update on the potential sale of Pride Park

Southampton could let one goalkeeper leave

According to The Sun journalist Tom Barclay, at least one of Southampton’s three senior goalkeepers will leave the club this summer.

The Lowdown: Goalkeepers out of contract

Fraser Forster has played every minute for the Saints since coming back into the side in December as a result of Alex McCarthy picking up a long-term thigh injury,

However, he could now be on the move following news that the club are reportedly committed to keeping McCarthy as their first-choice shot-stopper, having only put pen to paper on a new deal at St Mary’s at the end of last season.

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Willy Caballero’s time could also be coming to an end under Ralph Hasenhuttl following a lack of game-time, with the 40-year-old having made just four appearances since joining the Saints.

All but McCarthy will be out of contract in June, and Barclay has suggested that at least one of them will be on the move over the summer.

The Latest: Saints likely to let one leave

When asked how he believes Southampton’s transfer business will pan out, Barclay told GiveMeSport:

“I’m not sure about a rebuild, because there’s a lot of good stuff being done, but adding a few and letting a few go would help. When you look at it, the goalkeepers, at least one of them will go.”

The Verdict: Johnstone an ideal replacement

While there seems little doubt that McCarthy will be in control of the gloves at the start of next season, Hasenhuttl will need to sign a suitable replacement should one of the existing goalkeeping trio depart, and that person could be West Brom’s Sam Johnstone.

The 29-year-old is set to become a free agent in the summer following the expiry of his contract with the Baggies, and it has been reported by the Daily Mail that the Saints are said to be interested in his services.

Johnstone has kept 15 clean sheets for the Championship outfit this season and has previous top-flight experience having been in the Premier League with Albion last term, so a possible move to a mid-table team like Southampton could have the potential to revive his career for both club and country.

In other news… the Saints have joined the transfer race for this ‘big player

Expert provides Arsenal injury update

Arsenal youngster Emile Smith Rowe’s persistent groin problem has worsened in the last couple of months, injury expert Ben Dinnery has claimed.

The Lowdown: Smith Rowe out injured again

The 22-year-old is a hugely impressive young talent but his career has been dogged by fitness issues, a worrying trend at such a young age.

Smith Rowe is once again sidelined by a groin issue after he hobbled off after the warm-down away to Manchester United earlier this month, as he struggles to rid himself of the injury.

A concerning update has emerged regarding the midfielder, amplifying Arsenal’s woes on that front following Martin Odegaard’s training ground injury.

The Latest: Smith Rowe’s injury woes

Speaking to Football Insider, Dinnery claimed that Smith Rowe’s injury has worsened and that it is a complex issue to tackle.

The expert – who runs the Premier Injuries website and has a background in injury and data analysis – said:

“This is difficult. Calvin Ramsay has had similar issues, but he is a bit younger. Smith Rowe is 22, so this is a bit more rare as you aren’t going to see a significant growth spurt with him.

“They are pointing to issues he had during his time with RB Leipzig back in 2018-19. This is a very complex area of the body. It’s sometimes called spaghetti junction because of how much is going on in there.

“They have been aware of this for the last three or four years. In the last nine to 10 months, things have gotten worse. Conservative treatment and rest are typically the best courses of action.

“In terms of peak muscle mass, you can still be developing into your mid to late-20s. If there has been a weakening because of those issues, that’s where the problems may stem from.

“It’s difficult to give a specific diagnosis or timeframe because, with overuse issues, there are problems. You have to ease back until the problems subside and gradually increase your load and see how the body responds to those triggers.

“If it is favourable, you will continue to develop. But when you have that pain response, you have to go back to previous activity levels. It could be something that Smith Rowe has to deal with for quite a bit longer yet.”

The Verdict: Concerning issue

There is no doubt that Smith Rowe’s injury-prone nature is a concern, with the midfielder limited to 86 Arsenal appearances so far, compared to 139 for the younger Bukayo Saka.

The longer that the 22-year-old’s problems persist, the more of a worry it will become his long-term progress, with injuries having the power to hamper footballers in a recurring manner (take Daniel Sturridge, for example).

The hope is that this is still a young player dealing with growing issues, but at 22, the likelihood of that being the case is starting to feel less likely.

Who holds the record for the most runs conceded in a Test?

And have England ever fielded a Test side with players from 11 different counties?

Steven Lynch29-Oct-2019Have England ever fielded a Test side with players from 11 different counties? asked Malcolm Price from England

This is a difficult one to check – especially given the amount of player movement in recent years – but I think it has only happened twice. The first time was in the third Test against South Africa in Durban in 1930-31, when the England team included players from Glamorgan (Maurice Turnbull), Gloucestershire (Wally Hammond), Kent (captain Percy Chapman), Lancashire (George Duckworth), Middlesex (Patsy Hendren), Nottinghamshire (Bill Voce), Somerset (Jack White), Surrey (Maurice Allom), Sussex (Maurice Tate), Warwickshire (Bob Wyatt) and Yorkshire (Maurice Leyland).It happened again at Trent Bridge in 1950, when the team for the third Test against West Indies featured representatives from Essex (Doug Insole), Glamorgan (Gilbert Parkhouse), Hampshire (Derek Shackleton), Kent (Godfrey Evans), Lancashire (Cyril Washbrook), Middlesex (John Dewes), Nottinghamshire (Reg Simpson), Surrey (Alec Bedser), Warwickshire (Eric Hollies), Worcestershire (Roley Jenkins) and Yorkshire (captain Norman Yardley).Keshav Maharaj conceded 318 runs in the Test in Vizag. Was this a record? asked Kishore Mehta from India

Only two bowlers have conceded more runs in a Test than South Africa’s Keshav Maharaj against India in Visakhapatnam recently, when he took 3 for 189 in the first innings and 2 for 129 in the second. Offspinner Jason Krejza, making his Test debut for Australia against India in Nagpur in 2008-09, had match figures of 12 for 358 (8 for 215 and 4 for 143). But this unwanted Test record belongs to a legspinner – the Jamaican “Tommy” Scott, who gave away 374 runs (5 for 266 and 4 for 108) for West Indies against England in Kingston in 1929-30.In Vizag, Maharaj broke his own South African record, having conceded 283 runs in taking 12 wickets against Sri Lanka in Colombo in 2018 (9 for 129 and 3 for 154).The only other bowler to concede more than 300 runs in a Test is Arthur Mailey of Australia, who did it twice.Which Australian Test cricketer was born near Harrods department store in Knightsbridge? asked Nigel Jenkins from Australia

The answer here is someone from the very first Test match, in Melbourne in March 1877. After Australia batted, the first man to bowl a ball for Australia was the Knightsbridge-born left-arm medium-pacer John Hodges, who soon claimed their first wicket, when John Selby was caught by Bransby Cooper for 7.Hodges owed his place to the late withdrawal of another local left-armer, Frank Allan. Very little is known about Hodges: this Test was also his first-class debut, and apart from the second Test of the series he played only two other first-class games the following season, taking 3 for 11 against New South Wales. He played for the Richmond club in Melbourne.There is some confusion about his death: some claim he passed away early in 1933, aged 77, but cricket historians do not yet have confirmation. We do know that Hodges was born in 1855, in London – and although I was confident Harrods was established by then, I wasn’t sure if it was on the current site. However, it seems that the shop (founded by Charles Harrod in 1824) moved to the site of the current huge store in Knightsbridge in 1849, although the original shop there was only a small one. So Hodges must have started life close by.Dwight Eisenhower became the first American president to watch a Test match, catching a day’s play between Pakistan and Australia in Karachi in 1959•Associated PressWhat’s the highest score by someone who played only one one-day international? asked Chris Robinson from England

This peculiar record belongs to England’s Kim Barnett, who made 84 in his first one-day international, against Sri Lanka at The Oval in 1988 – and won the match award – but never played another. England’s tour of India that winter was cancelled, and Barnett was out of favour by the time the next season rolled around.How did the American president come to be watching a Test match in Pakistan in 1959? asked Jalil Ahmed from Pakistan

The match in question was the third Test of Pakistan’s home series against Australia, in Karachi in December 1959. Dwight Eisenhower, the American president, was making an informal visit to Pakistan, and was taken to the fourth day’s play.The Pakistan writer Qamaruddin Butt described the event in his tour book: “Luster was added to the scene when President Eisenhower graced the occasion with his presence at ten to twelve. His Pakistani counterpart, Field Marshal Mohammad Ayub Khan, had preceded the venerable guest to receive him. The two teams were introduced to the American president. National anthems of both America and Pakistan were played and everyone on the ground stood on his seat as a mark of respect to the distinguished visitor.”Unfortunately Eisenhower was forced to witness one of the more boring days of Test cricket: Pakistan were battling to avoid defeat, and managed only 104 runs all day, the second fewest in history (the lowest, 95, came during the same two sides’ previous meeting in Karachi, in 1956-57).Richie Benaud, Australia’s captain, gifted the president his cap after he saw that he had already been given a Pakistan blazer. Fast bowler Ian Meckiff, one of the tourists, also recalled Eisenhower’s arrival: “We had slugged away all morning without taking a wicket, but as soon as the president arrived three fell quickly. He was only scheduled to stay a couple of hours, but when Richie met him he asked him if he could stay a bit longer, given the difference his appearance had made to our wicket haul.”Use our
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Roach a glimmer amid ragged and wayward West Indies

The bowling was poor from West Indies but there were stages when the captaincy was even worse

Jarrod Kimber at Edgbaston17-Aug-20171:06

‘We had to send a slight reminder to take the new ball’

Kemar Roach comes from wide on the crease, the ball is pitching outside leg stump, and even seems to gently fade further towards the leg side. Then it lands, and like it’s been electrocuted, it jumps in the opposite direction and takes the top of off stump. It was unplayable.This was the third over, before the eighth was completed the West Indies had two wickets. Considering that in day-night Tests it’s harder to take wickets due to the later start being in the best conditions for batting it was an incredible start. It was followed by the largest partnership yet in day-night Tests.The only other unplayable ball Roach bowled was a wide to second slip. But he was still the best of bowlers, by a long way.The exciting, but young, Alzarri Joseph started by bowling as many balls in bad areas as you can manage. He was hit for three fours in an over from Alastair Cook. Yes, that Alastair Cook. All day Cook scored at over four runs an over from Joseph, Root hit a boundary pretty much every six balls he faced from him as well. Most of the day he looked like a medium-fast bowler who couldn’t quite work out why it all wasn’t working.Then there was Miguel Cummins who started brilliantly when Tom Westley missed one. But against Root, Cummins seemed to believe that he could tire him out by delivering a ball in a different spot every time. It wasn’t that Root scored quickly off him, it was that the plan seemed to be so random that there was no way you could keep pressure on Root. Cummins pitch map looked more like teenage acne than a professional Test bowler trying to get out one of the world’s best batsmen. Later he would come back and bowl a much better spell, against a Root who was now well and truly set and batting at the best time of the day.The fourth seamer was Jason Holder, who averages less than two wickets a game. He bowled the most dot balls of anyone, but not nearly enough. If you’re going to make it as a fourth seamer medium-paced bowler you at least need to be as frugal as possible. Instead, he was more expensive than Roach and Cummins. Holder was scored off with ease all around the wicket, all the time. He maintained no real pressure, came up with no real wicket-taking deliveries, and seemed injured for most of the day. If he was, it’s hard to work out why he was bowling when this team had three other frontline bowlers on offer.Miguel Cummins’ early wicket offered hope but he produced a scattered display•PA PhotosThen there was Roston Chase and his offspin. At times the ball seemed to be coming out of his hand perfectly, but when it got to the other end, it had transformed into something hideous. He bowled short, full, wide and had the control of a club offspinner who’d missed one too many training nights. It can be hard as an offspinner bowling to Root, as his activity rate is so high against them. According to CricViz, Root’s dot ball percentage against off-spin is 60%. Since his debut, only Younis Khan (59%) has a lower percentage (min. 1000 balls). Good batting like that can upset you, but Chase never found a length or line, he spent all day missing the mark. Root brought up his hundred off a half tracker that was sinking down the leg side. It was about as bad a ball as you see in Tests.In all there were 53 fours on the opening, the most on any first day of a Test in England over the last five years, and 16 more than the average. You can’t put quality players under pressure when you spend most of the day jogging over to the rope to pick up a ball.And if the bowling was poor, the captaincy tried to out suck it. After tea, the hardest time to bat in pink ball matches, England’s two best batsmen had to face the might of Chase and Holder. When the new ball was due Roach, who was in the middle of an excellent spell, was taken off so that an injured Holder could bowl, and then when he couldn’t finish his over, Chase came back on. Did I mention that all this happened with Dawid Malan was new at the crease, trying to save his career? When the new ball was finally taken, it was largely because if they didn’t take it Stuart Law was about to storm the field. And the next over Kraigg Brathwaite, and his part time offspin, bowled. The last two overs of the day, with a ball that was six overs old, were also bowled by Brathwaite and Chase.Roach tried hard, beat the bat, got edges that went nowhere and found reverse to go through Root late in the day. Just after this Roach got another one to reverse, it wasn’t unplayable, but it was good enough to get the edge of a set Cook. The edge went past slip though.For a few seconds, Roach stood mid-pitch, head in his hands, shoulders slumped, looking around for help, for luck, for anything. All he found was disappointment and another boundary.

Bangladesh cricket's seaside hope

Besides the allure of its location by the beach, the BCB’s new complex at Cox’s Bazar could help solve Bangladesh’s chronic lack of cricket facilities

Mohammad Isam in Cox's Bazar02-Feb-2016A walk around the 55-acre Sheikh Kamal International Cricket Complex tells you that, in the years to come, Cox’s Bazar should become a major hub for Bangladesh cricket. After the country’s Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina gifted this land to the BCB in 2013, it has hosted domestic matches, the Women’s World Cup, and is now being used in the Under-19 World Cup.The potential lies in the location of the complex. Cox’s Bazar is Bangladesh’s most popular tourist destination thanks to its uninterrupted, 125km sandy beach. The stadium complex’s location is such that the Laboni beach point lies at its west. You can hear the waves crashing on the shore but the beach is not fully visible due to a tree-line that stretches from the southwest to the northwest part of the complex.The allure of watching cricket by the beach is a big draw and while stands are yet to be built completely, it is a part of the BCB’s master plan. Presently there is one structure that houses the pavilions, some gallery seating and the media facilities. What it mainly offers, though, is training and playing facilities to a number of teams at the same time.Cox’s Bazar can solve the overall problem of lack of grounds in Bangladesh. While the men’s, women’s and Under-19 teams are given full facilities at the Shere Bangla National Stadium in Dhaka, it is not as easy for other cricketers or teams. Many of the Dhaka Premier League clubs no longer have their own training grounds in the city, so there are times during the cricket season when up to seven teams are practising at once at the National Cricket Academy ground in Mirpur. There aren’t too many cricket facilities in Chitttagong either.The main features of the Cox’s Bazar complex are a stadium, another full-sized ground called the academy field, and a separate training facility. There are 36 pitches in total at the three venues, the most at any cricket facility in Bangladesh. The training ground has 12 pitches while the academy ground has five centre pitches. The main stadium has seven centre pitches that have come across as typically slow Bangladesh wickets. But that’s not the focus at this stage.Hanif Bhuiyan, the BCB’s grounds committee chairman, says that the grounds often get submerged during the monsoons. The immediate work after the Under-19 World Cup is to install proper drainage in the three grounds, after which there are some beautification plans to put in place as well. “We have already planted 400 coconut trees, which in about two years will make the entire complex look better” he says. “We also plan to make proper walkways to the three grounds. There is much potential here to make it into a major cricket facility.”The size of the plot also means the BCB has options for commercial use. While there are plans to use the small lake for boating, there is even talk of building a hotel. The initial plan, though, is to build dormitories for players and staff. Once this is done, the overall dearth of venues for major teams in Bangladesh won’t be felt as much.In 1996, the then BCB president Saber Hossain Chowdhury first spoke of making use of Cox’s Bazar in-built popularity for Bangladesh cricket’s growth, by tagging it with tourism. Four years later he held the BCB’s AGM in Cox’s Bazar, and plans were put in place to find land. The BCB waited a long time to get a piece of land next to the beach, and their dream was realised 13 years later.With the intervention of the prime minister, this is the only facility in Bangladesh directly owned by a sporting federation. All other grounds in Bangladesh are leased to federations such as the BCB by the National Sports Council. While the law of the land says much of the approval comes from the NSC, the backing from the highest level gives BCB ownership of the complex.The major hindrance to the overall development in the Cox’s Bazar facility is inflexibility within the BCB. Often the thinking is short-term, which is four years of the elected time as officials and directors. Making the complex worthwhile or commercially viable could take more than four years so the current set-up under Nazmul Hasan must take a long-term call. If they can take the leap in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh cricket will be stronger.

How safe is your helmet?

At club level, there’s still a divide between those who do and don’t wear helmets. But if lids don’t offer the protection you think they do, who is safer?

Ed Kemp12-Feb-2015We hear a lot about progress in modern cricket. Players are fitter, their skills are better, the bats are thicker and the hits longer. But what about safety? How much has the humble helmet changed since its tentative introduction back in the ’70s?Despite significant improvements through the years, the answer might still be “not enough”.That’s why in the last few years the game’s governing bodies have instigated scientific reviews into helmet safety standards. And the results have been revealing, particularly as they’ve come during a period in which the incidence of high-profile head or facial injuries has sharply increased. There was New Zealand’s Daniel Flynn back in 2008, as well as Gloucestershire’s Craig Spearman – who fractured his eye socket and required extensive reparative surgery – right up to Marlon Samuels in the Big Bash League a couple of winters ago, Stuart Broad’s broken nose last summer, and Craig Kieswetter’s brutal eye injury, which has left his career hanging in the balance. There are dozens of head injuries every year. In these days of aggressive, front-dog batsmanship and high-stakes, high-octane cricket, there’s rarely a week around the world where someone’s lid get rattled.

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The tragedy of Phillip Hughes’ death has thrown the world’s attention on to the issue of helmet safety, as the mortal threat posed by a fast-moving cricket ball has become chillingly clear and jolted us out of the complacent assumption that we’ll “probably be alright”. It showed that even choosing to wear a helmet is no guarantee of safety.

At the highest level a strike on the helmet should trigger an instant change of lid, for which players and backroom staff need to take responsibility – however irksome it might seem

Specifically, Hughes’ awful case highlighted one key area, at the back of the neck, in which protection is not provided even by a helmet – at least in older models of lid. But in fact concussion injuries, affected by the shape and protectiveness of the shell, have not been the focus of recent reviews. The majority of high-profile injuries in recent years have been to the eyes and face after the ball has penetrated the gap between peak and grill, or the grill itself has been deformed – and pushed into the face – by the ball.The key realisation in recent years has been that while some of these injuries occur when the gap between peak and grill has been set wider than the diameter of the ball – in a high proportion of cases balls have penetrated the gap even when that gap was smaller than the diameter of the ball. Bottom line: even when set to their “safest” setting, helmets weren’t able to stop a fast-moving ball forcing its way through. Development was required.

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Until recently, the only industry standard (a safety test that any helmet should aim to pass before entering the market) was one written in 1998. But after years of research, an updated set of standards were agreed upon last year, by a panel led by Dr Craig Ranson – the ICC medical team’s leading helmet-safety specialist – and including representatives from several major manufacturers, the ECB, a standards testing house (Andrew Diamond of INSPEC), Loughborough University Sports Technology (Dr Andrew Harland), and the Federation of International Cricketers’ Associations (represented by Dr Angus Porter, chief executive of England’s Professional Cricketers’ Association, who also happens to have a PhD in Material Sciences).These standards have been approved and published by the British Standards Institute (most major brands of helmet are based in the UK), and while at the time of writing there is only one company who has one of their models certified to BS7928:2013 (the standard’s catchy name), the major manufacturers have all begun to test newly developed models against the most recent requirements. As a result, as Dr Ranson tells , “We are likely to see a wave of new-standard helmets on shelves and heads this pre-season.”A hit on the helmet from a bowler of Johnson’s pace can damage the shell – the spot hit can only promise to protect the skull once•Getty ImagesSo what are these new standards? The old test measured deceleration when the helmet shell was dropped onto a cricket ball-sized hemispherical anvil, but didn’t include any “projectile testing”, nor any provision for face protection as per the majority of injury cases in recent times. To pass the new test, it must be impossible to set the gap between peak and grill at a width greater than the size of the ball, and a helmet must also be able to withstand a ball fired – at realistic speeds – directly at the gap between peak and grill. A special air cannon is placed a metre away from the helmet, which fires the ball at 28 metres-per-second. This roughly equates to 65mph, which is the speed thought to replicate a delivery bowled between 75 and 85mph once it’s hit the pitch. Testing also includes thorough examination of the shell through a succession of high-speed impacts in specific areas.

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For all that improvement, technology is only part of the story here. A big part of improving safety levels will involve education. Even after the Hughes incident, with the issue of head injuries as high up cricket’s agenda as it has ever been, in the delayed first Test between Australia and India just days after the funeral, Virat Kohli was hit on the helmet by Mitchell Johnson. There was a gasp. A moment was taken. But Kohli took off his lid, gave it a quick once-over, and then popped it back on his head before facing up again. Cue consternation from protection specialists. A hit like that from a bowler of Johnson’s pace can damage the shell – the spot hit can only promise to protect the skull once. In the eyes of the experts, at the highest level, a strike on the helmet should trigger an instant change of lid; something for which players and backroom staff need to take responsibility – however irksome it might seem. As Dr Ranson says, “Players need to be educated to make the right choices, to adjust helmets correctly and pick ones that do the job, not just feel comfortable or look good. They have responsibility for their own safety.”So what does it all mean for us, recreational cricketers? You don’t face that pace of bowling, and whatever new lid you buy, you have to pay for it. How much protection do you really need? Well, helmets that pass the old standard but not the new one have not become illegal. You’ll still be able to buy them, and they’ll likely become cheaper, too. And of course, if you’re over 18, it’s not mandatory to wear a helmet at all. If you’ve never worn one, and feel like the standard you play at doesn’t merit it, you can happily carry on in a nice, sun-beaten club cap. The safety-conscious will argue that a top-edge here, an unexpected beamer there or the outside chance of a) your mate cranking up the bowling machine or b) the oppo having a ringer fast bowler, mean that, whatever the standard, you’re at risk of getting hit at dangerous speeds. But there is no compulsion on you as an individual to wear a lid, and in fact those who have never protected their heads are often better at making sure they get out of the way.But since 2000 the ECB has made it compulsory for junior cricketers to wear helmets when batting or standing up as a wicketkeeper. We now have a generation of adult club cricketers who grew up under these rules, and wear helmets as standard, expecting that they are protected. Their techniques have developed accordingly; they try scoop shots against the bowling machine and attempt to hook off the front foot. One thing’s for sure: the most dangerous situation of all is if a player feels invincible while wearing an under-par lid.At club level, those who have never protected their heads are often better at making sure they get out of the way•Rajan ThambehalliAnd if the purpose of the ECB’s initial 2000 ruling was to insist on safety, it might not be long before the rules are changed to make compulsory not just helmets but ones . Issues such as a club or school’s duty of care to its pupils or members – and even insurance – at junior or senior level – might come to include specific requirements for the highest level of protection available.Clearly one important factor here is expense – higher tech means higher price – and this has been considered throughout the review process, which has been careful not to demand helmets too heavy-duty to actually bat in. PCA chief executive Angus Porter tells : “We need to be very clear though that this is not a standard whereby if a player is wearing a helmet that meets the new standard and then gets one flush in the face from Mitchell Johnson they are guaranteed to be safe from injury. We set the bar at a lower speed to represent a reasonable entry-level benchmark that all manufacturers ought to be able to achieve. Certainly one of the ECB concerns was that we didn’t get to a situation where we over-engineered the standard to the point that helmets became unaffordably expensive.”One idea might be for those running school or club sides to start investing in a “pool” of new helmets – say three or four – to cover the whole team, to help improve safety without asking individuals to part with huge amounts of cash. It’s certainly worth considering, at least at junior level, where the potential for damage to the head is perhaps at its greatest.

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The first set of newly qualified helmets will be hitting the market this year. But Porter – whose organisation looks after professional cricketers around the country – is keen to stress that the development of helmet technologies should remain an ongoing process.”I don’t think any manufacturer should regard meeting the standard as the end of the story. I’ve encouraged manufacturers to take the view that one of the ways in which they can get a competitive advantage is not only to meet the standard but to beat it; to wind up the speed on the testing a bit further and say, ‘The standard requires an impact at 65mph – which is the ball leaving the hand at 75-80mph – but our helmet passes at 75, 80, 85, 100 or whatever. I think it’s important that we continue to strive to get better.”Cricket – believe it or not – does have its macho element, but as time goes on and the injury tally ticks up and up, it’s important that anyone using a helmet – believing themself to be safe from harm – has a lid that’s actually up to the job.All Out Cricket

Adams' sacking no knee-jerk reaction

Surrey’s mid-season sacking of Chris Adams and his assistant Ian Salisbury is more the preserve of football than cricket

Tim Wigmore17-Jun-2013Mid-season coaching sackings tend to be more the preserve of football. But no one can fairly accuse Surrey of knee-jerkism after their removal of Chris Adams as manager.Adams coached Surrey for four-and-a-half-seasons. In a total of 72 County Championship games they won 16 – and only eight in the 56 games excluding their promotion year in 2011. While Surrey won the 2011 CB40, their first trophy since 2003, they did not reach the Twenty20 quarter-finals in Adams’ reign.The statistical record, therefore, is not an impressive one. But no account of Surrey’s problems can neglect the tragedy of Tom Maynard’s death. Poignantly, the one-year anniversary of the tragedy that ripped the heart out of Surrey will come tomorrow.The players lost a friend, a lively team-mate and one of the side’s most important players. The reverberations ran deep. An emotionally-drained captain, Rory Hamilton-Brown, needed to leave the county to make a fresh start, Steve Davies suffered depression and Mark Ramprakash, one of county cricket’s most prolific and intensely-driven run-scorers, retired.Surrey recovered remarkably to retain their Division One status. The decision to entrust the captaincy to Gareth Batty was a shrewd one.But some of Adams’ other decisions were more questionable. Nothing attracted more opprobrium than the recruiting of so many older players in an attempt to provide short-term stability. Signing world-class players with a strong record of leadership such as South Africa’s Graeme Smith and Australia’s Ricky Ponting was one thing; the addition of Zander de Bruyn, Jon Lewis, Gary Keedy and Vikram Solanki was quite another.During Surrey’s recent defeat in a televised CB40 game at Chelmsford, six players were aged 37 or above, none of whom were home grown.Leaving Surrey winless after eight Championship games, eight points above the relegation zone, and with little chance of progression in the YB40 competition was certainly not what Adams envisaged when he arrived as Surrey coach before the 2009 season.After his captaincy success at Sussex, leading them to the first three Championship titles in their history, Adams, vigorous, ambitious and successful, had seemed to many to be the perfect candidate to reverse Surrey’s slump. Yorkshire had been so keen to sign him that they also sought him out to be their skipper and director of cricket in 2006, but failed to persuade him he would have the authority he wanted.Surrey made that commitment. Upon arriving at The Oval, Adams proclaimed that it was “Year Zero”. He rather had a point: the squad was old, lacking in direction and, as the jibe of “Ramprakashshire” showed, lacking quality too.There was no better indication of this than that season’s revolving captaincy. Incongruous as it now seems, the armband was worn by Michael Brown and Stewart Walters, two players of limited pedigree.The first season brought plenty of unfamiliar faces – 27 players appeared in the Championship – but rather less success. A solitary Championship win left Surrey seventh in Division Two. It was one of their lowest points in an illustrious history.

Nothing attracted more opprobrium than the recruiting of so many older players in attempt to provide short-term stability.

Adams recognised the need for radical change. In Rory Hamilton-Brown – a product of Surrey’s youth system and, briefly, a team-mate of Adams’ at Sussex – he identified a man who could, in the manner of Adam Hollioake, who had skippered to Surrey to great things, or as Adams had himself at Sussex, lead the club for an extended period.A six-figure salary and the captaincy constituted an extraordinary degree of faith in a 22-year-old who had played only six Championship games. As Adams and Hamilton-Brown stood together, with the director of cricket lavishing praise upon his young student, some reckoned it was the biggest gamble in Surrey’s history.And there were plenty of problems – Hamilton-Brown was not short of self-confidence but his batting remained stubbornly cavalier while tactically his inexperience was often clear.Despite three expensive new signings to accompany him – Batty, Davies and Chris Tremlett – Surrey remained far too erratic to challenge in any format. If 2009 was Year Zero, 2010 could only be described as Year 0.5, at best, although Adams could claim a part in England’s Ashes triumph for inspiring Tremlett’s rejuvenation. was the title of one of Ian Botham’s autobiographies, and it was an appropriate description for Surrey’s triumphant 2011. On August 12, Surrey had to reflect on a new nadir: losing 20 wickets for 177 at Canterbury. Five weeks later they were celebrating a double – Championship promotion and a CB40 triumph. Few people had seen that coming, but it suggested that Adams’ Surrey were on the march.Adams could feel especially vindicated, too: Tim Linley, given a chance where others had spurned him, took 73 Championship wickets; Hamilton-Brown, a captain beginning to attract more favourable attention, was man-of-the-match in the CB40 final; and Maynard, one of the most exciting young one-day batsmen around, had played pivotal innings.But the smiles of that day were seldom a feature of Adams’ regime. There was certainly no shortage of cricketing misfortune: persistent injuries to key players, especially overseas ones; and an Oval wicket that often seemed designed to neuter their pace bowling.But ultimately a coach with Adams’ resources was expected to overcome such problems. His years were marked by the singular failure of batsmen to learn. Signs of progress had been replaced by a sense of exhaustion and divided opinions about how to rebuild the county. Surrey decided that Adams was no longer the appropriate man for the job.

Day of mixed emotions for Indian fans

Saturday at Lord’s was marked in diaries months in advance by die-hard Indian fans. It was a big day for them, some of whom had traversed continents to witness a possible historic moment – Tendulkar’s 100th century

Nagraj Gollapudi at Lord's23-Jul-2011The little mobile shop of , the betting agency, was a beehive of activity on Saturday morning. Fans streamed in even two hours before the scheduled 11 am start and many stopped to read the white board listing the odds. The most obvious one was at the top: Sachin Tendulkar’s century fetched odds of 4/1 while Rahul Dravid, who like Tendulkar was without a hundred at Lord’s, was at 6/1.As both men came together to bat the margins reduced with Tendulkar going at 6/4 and Dravid at 6/5. Still the shop kept attracting many fans. According to a official about 200 Indian fans placed bets on the duo’s maiden centuries at the home of cricket. “I can say there was a substantial amount of money that was bet,” the official said, without revealing figures.Saturday at Lord’s was marked in diaries months in advance by committed fans. It was a big day; both in the context of the match as well as for thousands of Indian fans, some of whom had traversed continents to witness a possible historic moment – Tendulkar’s hundredth century. Some did not mind paying large sums of money – enough for a return air ticket to India – just to witness a day’s play. Some were first-timers, excited to be part of the occasion.Despite the first four days being sold out in advance, the MCC’s ticketing office got a lot of queries but could sell only about 200 tickets that had been returned. Three quarters of those went to Indian fans who shelled out anywhere between £30 and £85 per ticket.Just as the large pints that overflowed across this historic venue, the Indian fans’ emotions, too, ebbed and flowed as they anticipated something special from the trinity of Tendulkar, Dravid and VVS Laxman, playing together in a Lord’s Test for probably the final time.Last year Suresh Shankar, a 47-year-old entrepreneur, sold his business to IBM. One of the first decisions he made then was to follow important India cricket tours. He watched most of India’s big matches in the World Cup earlier this year, including the tied match in Bangalore against England and the final in Mumbai.This time he was in England only for the Lord’s Test. “It is the most significant moment in India’s cricket history,” he said, talking about the batting trio’s last outing at the ground. “It is the passing of values, sportsmanship and their ability,” he said when asked what prompted him to make the trip.At 12:28 hrs when Tendulkar walked out to a standing ovation, Shankar couldn’t stop himself from sending his wife a message. “When 25,000 people stood up to cheer one man, it was a goosebump moment. I had to tell her that,” he said. For Shankar and millions of others, Tendulkar is the greatest sportsman across all sports; big money then becomes a small matter.Vikas Manoor, a 29-year-old software engineer, travelled to watch the Tendulkar-Dravid combine and bought a ticket only for Saturday. He arrive from Edinburgh on Friday night and paid a whopping £250 for a ticket in the Mound Stand, where the original price was £80. “I didn’t mind that. I also paid £120 for my travel, but I wanted to always see Dravid and Sachin bat together,” Manoor said. “I have always been attracted to Sachin. For 22 years he has done things consistently. I could not stop myself from being here.”Sumira Chaudhri, a Canadian-Indian lawyer, was travelling through Europe in celebration of being called to the bar in Toronto, . She got hooked on Indian cricket after following the Indian team’s triumph at the World Cup. “When I heard that India were playing in England I decided to come over from my trip to Europe,” she said.She felt sad, like many, that Tendulkar failed to reach that elusive hundred. “I was hoping Sachin would get it. But then I am happy Dravid got it. He is the best Test player,” she said with excitement.Gnanamurthy Kugan, a heart surgeon, was animatedly listening to his 12-year-old son Kavin, who was recalling his observations from the training session he witnessed when Sri Lanka were at Lord’s earlier this summer. Kugan has been in England for 25 years and is a regular visitor to Lord’s. “I am disappointed about Sachin not getting it. But it is good that Dravid has,” he said while Kavin listened intently.Rajesh Marwah has been coming to Lord’s since 1986. Originally from the north Indian town of Ludhiana in Punjab, Marwah now lives in the Hounslow suburb of London and is in the business of household removals. “Brown man with a van,” Marwah, head covered in a plain, sky-blue Lord’s bandana and wearing an India ODI T-shirt, said when I asked him what he did for a living.By the time I met Marwah again, after tea, Tendulkar had already departed. But Marwah was not disappointed. “If Tendulkar starts slow, he would never get to his landmark and I knew that. I could sense his pressure, which was more about India responding well to England’s big total,” he said with an assured tone. “I am not worried. I know he will make the century in Edgbaston.”An hour after the day’s play, about 50 Indian fans gathered at the Nursery End of the ground. As Dravid made his way to the media conference with a smiling face, they rushed to get an autograph. One person caught the eye: a middle-aged woman wearing a saree. She was at the back of the charging fans’ brigade and halfway through her stride, she gave up. But she had a smile on her face, happy at having caught a glimpse of Dravid in person.For the fan, it is an emotional journey full of anticipation, patience, pitfalls and hardships, passion and dreams. And on days like these, for fan and player alike, some dreams get fulfilled and some don’t.

Sodhi's outrageous paddle-scoop, and Saqlain's <i>teesra</i>

Highlights of the first half of the ICL’s second season

Cricinfo staff26-Oct-2008The first half of games in the second season of the Indian Cricket League is over. Cricinfo looks at some of the highlights:

Ian Harvey combined with G Vignesh to bring up his team’s 50 in only 17 balls, but the record didn’t last very long © ICL
The shot
A thin line separates bravado and foolishness. Reetinder Singh Sodhi walked that line against Shane Bond, who was operating around 135kmph. At one point, Sodhi went down on his knees to a good-length delivery on middle stump and paddle-scooped it straight over the wicketkeeper’s head for an outrageous six.The ball
Saqlain Mushtaq, that innovator, was at it again. The doosra is passé now, so he decided to flip in a teesra (the third one). At the point of release, he had his palm facing towards midwicket instead of cover, which would be the normal position when bowling the conventional offbreak and doosra to a right-hand batsman. He then rolled his fingers over the seam, and the outcome was a topspinner. It was quite effective too – more than one batsman fell victim to this delivery.Fastest fifty
G Vignesh and Ian Harvey combined to bring up the Chennai Superstars’ fifty in 17 balls, the fastest in the tournament at the time, against the Dhaka Warriors. The record didn’t last long though: the Lahore Badshahs’ Imran Nazir and Imran Farhat got there in 15 balls in the carnage against the Mumbai Champs.The run out
Murray Goodwin’s effort to get rid of R Jesuraj wins the vote. He dived to his left at backward point to make a spectacular one-handed stop, but he wasn’t done yet. By the time he flipped over quickly, the ball mysteriously appeared in his right hand and he fired in a direct hit even as he lay sprawled on the ground.The hundred
Alok Kapali hit thefirst century in the ICL, but he couldn’t end up on the winning side. In the Asia Cup, he had hit a stunning hundred, his first in ODIs, against India but was upstaged by Gautam Gambhir. Here, Chris Harris managed to push the Hyderabad Heroes past the line in the last over.The crowd
Partisanship is a celebrated commodity in a city-based tournament like the ICL, and is often a mark of success of the competition. The ICL head honchos would have been delighted with the crowds in Ahmedabad. A packed stadium of 40,000 people shouted their lungs out for the home team, booed the opponents and generally created quite a ruckus.The best bowling spell
Upul Chandana’s 4 for 21 against the Lahore Badshahs wins the contest. It was an intelligent spell of legspin bowling. He not only varied his pace, length and trajectory but also the degree of turn. He also changed his style according to the stature of the batsman. Against lesser batsmen like Tahir Mughal he flighted the ball, but pushed the ball through and kept it full to Inzamam-ul-Haq, who swept him couple of times. Suddenly, he dropped one short but got it to hurry through straight and Inzamam could only nick the attempted cut shot. He anticipated the batsmen’s moves well. Sensing Imran Farhat might try to jump out, he dragged back the length and pushed it slightly wider outside off to leave his man stranded outside the crease. Realising Azhar Mahmood was itching to go for the slog sweep, he floated a ball well outside off and Mahmood couldn’t clear deep midwicket.The catch
There’s been nothing so far to challenge last edition’s special, but Abhishek Jhunjhunwala got close. Mahmood slog swept Chandana to deep midwicket. Jhunjhunwala ran to his right along the boundary rope, extended his arms as the ball dipped and somehow managed to catch the ball without going over the boundary. The right foot was barely an inch away from the rope.The repartee
“Inzy , you have lost two matches in a row,” asked a reporter in a post-match ceremony after Lahore lost their second game in a row. Inzamam looked up, locked his eyes with the questioner and drawled, “Thank you. I know that.” Uncomfortable silence. Craig McMillain, sitting adjacent to Inzamam, had a look at Inzamam before bursting out into laughter. Everyone joined in. Inzamam smiled.

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