Aston Villa set to make offer for Tarkowski

Aston Villa have stepped up their pursuit of Burnley’s James Tarkowski, according to reports.

What’s the word?

According to the Daily Mail, Villa have offered the Englishman a bumper wage deal in a bid to tempt him into a move to Villa Park this summer, with the 29-year-old set to be available on a free transfer once his existing contract expires at the end of June.

The report suggests that the Midlands outfit have made a ‘double-your-money’ offer of around £120k-per-week in an attempt to ward off interest from the likes of Everton and Fulham.

This update follows a report from Sky Sports earlier this week that suggested that Steven Gerrard’s side were ‘in talks’ with the two-cap international, having already confirmed the signing of Marseille youngster, Boubacar Kamara on a five-year deal.

The next Southgate?

Moving for a player who has just suffered relegation from the Premier League may not appear a wise move to some, although the £19.8m-rated warrior has seemingly shown enough in his 194 top-flight appearances to warrant a high profile move to an ambitious club.

While not a particularly glamorous addition – amid rumours regarding the likes of Sevilla’s Diego Carlos and Inter Milan’s Stefan de Vrij – Tarkowski could well be the solid presence that is needed for the Villans, with the club having actually conceded more goals than the Turf Moor outfit in the 2021/22 campaign.

In a side scrapping for their lives for much of the season under both Sean Dyche and Mike Jackson, the former Brentford man still managed to record a string of impressive statistics, averaging 5.2 clearances, 1.8 tackles and 1.4 interceptions per game, as well as winning 68% of his total duels.

Compared to those in his position across Europe’s top five leagues, the Manchester-born brute – who has been dubbed “outstanding” by Dyche – has also performed remarkably, ranking in the top 1% for both blocks and aerials won, as well as in the top 3% for clearances.

A sturdy and reliable defensive asset, the one-time Oldham man seemingly has similar characteristics to that of former Villa captain Gareth Southgate, the current England boss having spent six years of his playing career at the club.

Never flash nor a standout name, much like Tarkowski, the mild-mannered centre-back also had the toughness required in his game to be a success, with former Crystal Palace teammate Bobby Bowry insisting that “he [Southgate] would smash you” when needed.

The one-time Middlesborough man helped Villa to League Cup glory in 1996 and to an FA Cup final in 2000, with the hope being that Tarkowski can enjoy similar glory to that of his national team boss.

Gerrard and co will also be hoping, however, that it doesn’t end for the potential new signing as it did for Southgate, with the former England international departing the club in 2000 after relinquishing the captaincy and handing in a transfer request.

IN other news, Gerrard can now axe £20m “mistake” by signing £15m ace who’s “capable of leading” AVFC

Man City handed Ilkay Gundogan boost

Manchester City have seen numerous important players leave in recent years such as Sergio Aguero, David Silva and Vincent Kompany among others who have all been crucial to the club’s previous domestic dominance.

Now that their latest Premier League season is almost over and the club have the chance to add another league title to their cabinet, the next summer transfer window is also close to opening.

While it has been confirmed that Fernandinho will be waving goodbye to the club after nine years of service, an update has emerged regarding the future of another important figure in the squad which will surely have Pep Guardiola buzzing.

What’s the news?

According to a recent report from ESPN, the Citizens are “expecting” midfielder Ilkay Gundogan to remain at the club this summer after it was recently reported that he had been told by the club’s hierarchy that he could leave.

The report also said that “sources close to the club insist the midfielder has not expressed a desire to leave and the expectation is that the 31-year-old will stay until at least the end of his deal in 2023.”

Good news for Pep

Since joining the Manchester club back in the 2016 summer transfer window, the midfielder has gone on to make 252 appearances across all competitions.

In those appearances, the former Borussia Dortmund star has scored 47 goals, provided 33 assists and helped his side win several trophies in the process.

To further highlight the German’s importance to City, out of the 11 Premier League games that he hasn’t appeared in this season, Guardiola’s side have dropped points in six of them.

This shows that the Citizens are arguably a better side with him in the team rather than out of it.

With that in mind and the fact that City will already have to be on the lookout to bring a new midfielder in to replace Fernandinho this summer, having Gundogan stay in the squad for another season will be a big weight off the club’s shoulders

With the midfielder’s current contract at the Etihad Stadium set to expire in the summer of 2023, it’ll now be up to the club to decide when they discuss what the future could hold for the long-serving German.

In other news: Man City eyeing swoop for “immense” £60m “destroyer”, he’s better than Fernandinho

Persevering Bangladesh finally grab the spotlight

From humble beginnings in small towns to international cricket, Bangladesh’s women’s team has had a storied journey to superstardom

Mohammad Isam17-Jul-2018From humble beginnings in small towns, struggling for several years in international cricket and waiting for proper recognition even on the home front, Bangladesh’s women cricketers have certainly come a long way. In the last two months, they have shown significant improvement by winning the Asia Cup in June and, earlier this week, qualifying for this year’s Women’s World T20.They were unbeaten in the qualifying tournament in the Netherlands, even garnering support from Bangladeshi expatriates who drove hours to attend their matches. New coach Anju Jain, who was appointed only in May, said that while the players reached the playing potential they had developed over the years, it was also important for them to accept the mental challenge of not just being participants but getting over the finish line in the Asia Cup.”It wasn’t a surprise because they had the potential,” Jain said. “The girls are also very hard working. In the team meeting before the Asia Cup, we asked the girls to make their presence felt. It wasn’t just about participating and having potential. They needed to start converting that into performances.”With the goal-setting working in the Asia Cup, Bangladesh have now set a slightly more advanced goal for the World T20 later this year. “Our target [in the World T20] is to ensure that we don’t have to play the qualifiers anymore. The girls are fed up of playing qualifiers,” she said with a confident smile.Salma Khatun, the T20 captain, said that the performance in the World T20 qualifiers was proof that their Asia Cup performance wasn’t a one-off. She said that the shift has come through the batsmen’s confidence in scoring runs.”We fulfilled our target to play in the World T20,” Salma said. “By winning the qualifying tournament after the Asia Cup triumph, we have shown signs of improvement. A lot of our recent improvement is due to the batsmen doing better. Previously, only one batsman would do the scoring while the others struggled. Now we are seeing more batsmen making runs. With a bigger total on the board, our bowlers and fielders are more confident.”Panna Ghosh, who was the Player-of-the-Match in the final for her five-wicket haul, said that experienced players like herself and Salma are going through a new phase with the Bangladesh women’s team. Still, she sticks to some old practices: she said that in the final against Ireland, she tried to follow her lifelong rule of trying to keep the batsmen quiet, which ultimately produced the wickets.”I don’t bowl for a five-wicket haul. If you keep the run-scoring to a minimum, the batsmen are bound to make mistakes, which is what happened in my case. I try to follow what the coaches tell me.”I feel great that our performance has started to improve. It wasn’t like this previously. Salma, Shuktara and I started with the national team right at the beginning. I think all of us feel about this success in the same way,” she said.Panna is a professional in cricket and volleyball, a rarity in modern international cricket. She has been pursuing both careers side-by-side. But it is cricket, which she picked up during childhood while playing alongside her elder brothers in Rajshahi, that takes up most of her time. Volleyball came to her through her job at Bangladesh Ansar, a paramilitary auxiliary force.”Volleyball is the main sport in Ansar, where I am working for the last 10 years,” she said. “I started playing in 2002. I joined Ansar in 2008 and I was with BJMC from 2003 to 2007. I am a smasher in volleyball, but I feel cricket is a tougher sport.”I loved cricket from my childhood. I used to play with my elder brothers in our neighbourhood. One day, when I heard there was a girls’ training camp, I instantly joined it. I learned my basics from that camp.”Panna Ghosh took five wickets to put Bangladesh in the final of the Asian Games•BCBPanna is one of the pioneers of women’s cricket in Bangladesh. Her journey to international cricket has directly or indirectly inspired many of her team-mates, who made similar journeys to Dhaka to learn the nuances of the game.Panna said that her family had always encouraged her to play, but for someone like Fahima Khatun, the legspinner who took Bangladesh’s first hat-trick in T20 internationals during the Women’s World T20 qualifiers against UAE, the start of the journey from her hometown Magura wasn’t always smooth.”It was my elder sister Asma Akhi who used to take me to training,” Fahima said. “She was the one in the family who inspired me to play cricket. My brother and mother wanted me to focus on my studies since I was a science student. They never said cricket was bad, but I guess they felt cricket takes up a lot of time from studies.”One day there was an announcement in our area that there is going to be a women’s cricket tournament. I told my sister and she said I should definitely join training. I never looked back since then.”Fahima’s road to becoming a legspinner began courtesy an astute bit of talent-spotting by a local batsman, who recognised her knack for gripping and turning the ball like a legspinner, though she herself was completely unaware of what legspin is.”I used to play with the boys in our local stadium. I was a slow medium-pace bowler but, one day, someone saw me twirling the ball and asked me to bowl that way. I honestly didn’t know what legspin was at the time, but when he saw me turn the ball, he said I should do it. ‘Have a look at some Shane Warne videos,’ he told me. I liked Shane Warne, but I didn’t know he bowled legspin. That is really how I started bowling legspin. I started bowling legspin in the regional tournaments, and then stuck to it.”Bangladesh women’s progress has been getting long-overdue attention at home and, now, it is finally getting noticed abroad too.Former Australia vice-captain Alex Blackwell said that Bangladesh’s improvement is a mark of progress for women’s cricket as a whole. “To see Bangladesh women improve so massively is great for the women’s game,” Blackwell told ESPNcricinfo. “By the looks of it, a lot is going right there because defeating India twice to become Asia Cup champions is a big feat, and now the Qualifier… It’s great promotion for women in cricket.”

Pakistan plan for speed, but play with lethargy

Picking four fast bowlers meant that Pakistan needed to make the most of the new ball and the morning conditions, but their catching let them down

Andrew Fidel Fernando26-Nov-2016Everything about Sami Aslam was slow. He was slow to pick up the ball off Jeet Raval’s edge, and slow to move to his right. His hands closed like the gates of a warehouse in an action movie – the ball screeching through like the hero on a motorbike. After it had made its triumphant escape, Aslam rose in increments; unsticking each of his limbs from the ground. Slow is not what Pakistan wanted from this innings. It is not what they needed from this Test.When a side picks four fast bowlers, they want the game to go quickly. Not for this particular attack is “staying patient on a fifth stump line” or “tying batsmen down” with diligent lengths. Bowling dry works when a high-quality spinner plays, because on his best days, Yasir Shah can wall batsmen in for hours and hours, until the pitch is sufficiently dry that with a flick of his hair and a snap of fingertips, he can send entire batting orders cascading.But this is not the strategy Pakistan opted for. In their dream sequence for this match, Pakistan won the toss, bowled first, had Mohammad Amir get more nicks than a first-time shaver, had their two honest Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Khans shoot balls between bat and pad, then – preferably after a New Zealand batsman provoked Wahab Riaz – had Wahab send them sarcastic flying kisses, his deliveries at their grilles, and pieces of protective equipment into the stumps. The whole thing would be done in 40 overs. A demoralised New Zealand would have no more than 200 on the board.

Watling hopes weather will help

New Zealand wicketkeeper BJ Watling said the weather forecast for Sunday may assist the hosts in their hunt for five more Pakistan wickets.
“Think it might be bit overcast tomorrow and keep the juice in the wicket,” he said. “I can see it browning off a bit, but there’s random green patches that keep you honest and keep the bowlers in the game. There are two very good batsmen out there. We need to break this partnership and really put their tail under some pressure.”
Watling had arrived with the score on 119 for 5, but forged good partnerships with the tail, to remain not out on 49, when New Zealand were bowled out for 271. Tim Southee hit 29, while Mitchell Santner and Matt Henry also reached double figures.
“We could have been bowled out for 200 or 210,” Watling said. “But the tail chipped in and played positively. The quick runs helped us have a good crack at them tonight as well.”

On Friday, Amir had bowled a first over deserving of the Pakistan fantasy. He was in the New Zealand openers’ heads straight away. He pitched deliveries on lines they had to play at. He shimmied the ball away. He drew four edges with six balls, and nearly grazed off stump with one. Yet Amir came away with only one wicket in the opening over when he should have had at least two. Aslam had been the culprit then as well, trying to trap the ball with wrists instead of palms, and fending it away onto a quivering boot. Raval went on to make New Zealand’s highest score of 55, dropped on 0 and then 40. Amir was quivering himself. Maybe he wondered after a season of dropped catches off his bowling, if the universe would ever forgive him; if it would let him have the hauls his skill deserved.The drops stung because unlike in the UAE, where games pick up speed like a boulder coming down a hill, matches on green-tops come roaring out of the gates. The more quickly attacks can get through the top three, the more chance a middle order can be exposed, and the tail shot out. If the ball still had its gloss when Henry Nicholls (in his ninth Test) or Colin de Grandhomme (in his second) had come to the crease, chances of them lasting more than fifty balls apiece would have been slim. With every over bowled, the seam became a little less pronounced, and the surface grew a little less damp. Where a clinical catching side might have built enough pressure to spark a collapse, Pakistan saw New Zealand’s tail get quick runs. It was only later that they paid for failing to knock over one of the early dominoes.”Yes, they shouldn’t have got 270 on that pitch,” Sohail Khan, the most successful of Pakistan’s seamers, said. “Even though the ball was a bit damp on the first day, which prevented us from using it as well as we could have, we still won the toss. The score they got was a bit on the high side on that pitch.”When Pakistan took guard, New Zealand’s quicks showed the pressure early wickets can impart. Raval held a low chance from Aslam’s bat, and when Azhar Ali was also caught behind, an out-of-sorts Younis Khan was drawn out of the dressing room. By the end of the day 8 for 2 had turned into 76 for 5 – a huge first-innings deficit likely, unless the two overnight batsmen can defy New Zealand on the third morning.”If we get one good partnership, we can take the score very close – Babar Azam and Sarfraz Ahmed are still there,” Sohail said. “When we bowl again, this game is more like an attacking one now, and we could still finish it in a session.”For the second time in as many Tests, Pakistan are faced with a difficult route back into the match. Had they done Amir’s spell justice, they might even have had the game by its collar by now.

They came and went before he missed a match

Glamorgan’s Mark Wallace’s run of 230 consecutive county championship matches started back in 2001 and ended this week. These big-name players’ entire Test careers was within this streak

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Sep-2015Michael Clarke (2004 – 2015) Tests: 115, Runs: 8643•Getty Images Andrew Strauss (2004 – 2012) Tests: 100, Runs: 7037•Getty Images MS Dhoni (2005 – 2014) Tests: 90, Runs: 4876•Getty Images Michael Hussey (2005 – 2013) Tests:79, Runs: 6235•Getty Images

Misbah gives up the reverse-sweep

Plays of the day from the fifth ODI between Pakistan and Sri Lanka in Abu Dhabi

Abhishek Purohit27-Dec-2013The brain-fade
You’ve been denied pace from one end on a slow pitch. You see a quicker bowler at the other, and try to take some runs off him. You hit him for four over extra cover. Next ball, you cart him high over the wide long-on boundary. If you are an opener, you think that it’s enough for one over, there are plenty more to come. But Ahmed Shehzad went for glory off the third ball too, against Suranga Lakmal, and his wild mis-hit only found mid-on in the sixth over.The blinder
Sohaib Maqsood was looking in fine touch, having got off the mark with an elegant extra-cover drive for four. First ball of the 17th over, he got a short and wide offering from Lasith Malinga, and slapped it in the air behind backward point. He hadn’t timed it too well, but it was still travelling. Tillakaratne Dilshan, all of 37 years, threw himself to his left, got both hands to the ball and came down on the ground with it safely lodged in his palms.The return to convention
Misbah-ul-Haq was finding it difficult to score at the start of his innings. He turned to the reverse-sweep to release the pressure, but missed a couple of times against Sachithra Senanayake. Undaunted, he tried the stroke once more, against Dilshan this time, and almost got himself out, the ball hitting the glove and falling just short of the wicketkeeper. Realising innovation wasn’t working, Misbah turned to the regular sweep next ball, and grinned as it scurried away fine for the first boundary in 56 deliveries.The change
Having dismissed Kumar Sangakkara in his previous over, Junaid Khan pulled up after the first ball of the 31st. He had a chat with Misbah, who handed the ball to Umar Gul to complete the over as Junaid walked off the field. A fast bowler coming back after a long injury layoff and replacing a sore fast bowler. Should have been cause for concern. It was, for Sri Lanka. Gul bounded in, got the first ball to kick from back of a length and produced an edge from Ashan Priyanjan to the keeper.

How to deal with freezing temperatures

Nothing warms you up better than a victory for your side over its arch rival. Though, a quilt would be welcome, Kotla authorities

Nikhil Jha07-Jan-2013Choice of game
One of the blockbuster fixtures of cricketing rivalry – India v Pakistan was coming to town, and there was no way I would have passed on an opportunity to watch it. The poor form of our team, the freezing weather or the perceptible pessimism amongst the fans were not enough to deter me from attending the match.The only thing that could have stopped me was the ticket availability. Thankfully that was taken care of by my generous friends, and we set out hoping for a match that justified its blockbuster status.Team supported
Although supporting India has been downright depressing during the past year, this is no time to discontinue the support. A test for us fans too.Team India all the way!Key performer
Saeed Ajmal’s mesmerising bowling performance stood out for me. I could not see how MS Dhoni won the match award ahead of Ajmal.An honourable mention must go to Ravindra Jadeja, the player we fans love to hate, for a decent batting performance considering the situation, a brilliant bowling spell and a super fielding performance.One thing you’d have changed about the day
If I am allowed to be really wishful, I would have hopped aboard a TARDIS and brought back the Indian team from the 2011 World Cup. That team had players who had passion, resolve and a lot of hunger.Other than time travel, I would have a liked to see a much better batting performance from India. I know we won, but it was only because Pakistan messed up an easy chase. It was a case of “whatever you can do, we can do worse”.And how can I forget the weather! The stadium authorities should have handed a complimentary quilt to all fans who braved the elements.Face-off I relished
I really wanted to see the Indian top order, especially Ajinkya Rahane and Virat Kohli face Pakistan pace attack. Pakistan seamers won that contest hands down.Wow moment
We were seriously mulling on heading back after India’s abysmal batting performance, which, combined with the near-zero temperature made watching unbearable. But we chose to stick around and see India’s efforts in the field before taking a call. And what an effort it was! It was heartening to see the fielding compliment the tight bowling, adding to the pressure, which is critical while defending a low total.The moment that exemplified that resolve in the field was Rahane’s brilliant diving effort in the fourth over. He made a full-length dive inside the circle to cut off a boundary. All the fielders, especially Raina, came from across the ground to pat him on the back. The fielders were all charged up, and as you would expect, the result was electrifying.Shot of the day
In the last ODI I watched at Kotla, Kohli’s century and strokeplay had decimated England. Here, he started with a silken wristy shot that blazed to the midwicket boundary rope. Alas, that was the only spark we saw, as he flattered to deceive.Crowd meter
It was heartening to see people turn up in good numbers, even for a dead rubber. With all the naysayers and sceptics mocking India’s performance on social media and beyond, I had a sinking feeling that the stands may be vacant. Glad to be proven wrong!The stands were more or less full, and it was great to see quite a few neighbours from across the border make it for the match. We had a few Pakistan supporters in our stands, and the see-saw nature of the match meant a few friendly banters were exchanged, followed by acknowledging cheers from both camps.The Pakistan fans had a field day during the Indian innings and parts of the Pakistan innings, with their cheers heard all over the stands. But once India pulled up their act in the field, chants of “India, India” resonated across the stadium, making it come alive. The occasional Mexican wave also kept the spectators on their feet.The most recognisable India fan was in our stands, and he was given mini-celebrity status with people queuing up for a photograph with him. He had replaced the ever-present “Tendulkar” painted on his body with “Miss You Tendulkar”.Personally, I thought his chants were in bad taste. It is one thing to cheer for your team and another to jeer the opponents. That too, when you are like an ambassador for Indian fans across the globe.Accessories
I wish we had carried a portable heater.Overall
The weather was not the only thing that sent shivers down our spine. The Indian batting performance worsened the plight of the fans. India can learn from the quality of Pakistan’s bowling. Thankfully, the opening spells of Indian seamers showed that all is not lost. India’s fielding performance was really top-notch and helped increase the overall quality of the cricket. The crowd, cheering in spurts, came to life on seeing some heart put on the field. It was an enjoyable experience overall, barring the extreme cold weather.Marks on 10
7. One of the lowest totals to be defended and an exciting finish to the game. Points deducted for the appalling batting performances of both sides, leading to a lot of boring spells for the fans.

Thisara Perera spices up selection race

The allrounder, playing his first game of the tournament, made sure his name remains in the selection mix with a disciplined bowling effort that earned him a maiden five-wicket haul

Siddarth Ravindran in Dambulla22-Aug-2010When usually talking about a match-winning Sri Lankan bowling performance, it’s all about the unconventional. Unorthodox actions, mystery bowling, doosras. On Sunday, though, it was old-fashioned line-and-length bowling with hardly any frills that undid India. The sturdily-built allrounder Thisara Perera, playing his first game of the tournament, made sure his name remains in the selection mix with a disciplined bowling effort that earned him a maiden five-wicket haul.Previously, the only impact on the international circuit made by Perera, a 21-year-old who had seven wickets at 44.85 coming into the game, was through a couple of hard-hitting cameos which gave him an eye-popping strike-rate of 136.26.He was under plenty of pressure coming into the match, given the strong competition for places in the Sri Lankan team. Angelo Mathews has already sealed one fast-bowling allrounder’s spot, and with Lasith Malinga and Nuwan Kulasekera also being automatic picks, Perera is restricted to being the fourth quick bowler in the team. For that he has to beat the likes of Dilhara Fernando, Thilan Thushara and Farveez Maharoof, Sri Lanka’s allrounder of choice till a couple of years ago. Then there are upcoming allrounders like Jeevan Mendis to deal with, and vying for the No. 7 slot are yet another bunch of contenders.If that was weighing on Perera’s shoulders, he would have been buoyed by the slightly fortuitous wicket of Suresh Raina as early as his second delivery. There wasn’t any prodigious movement for him but he worked up a decent pace, up to the mid-130s, for the bulk of his spell.There was more encouragement in his second over, tricking Indian captain MS Dhoni into nicking a couple of deliveries past the keeper to third man. After the top-order flopped, Dhoni was the batsman Indian fans put their faith in to right the nosediving innings. It wasn’t to be as Perera had him caught behind for 10 in his third over, when Dhoni waltzed down the track and tried to work the ball from well outside off to the leg side.Sri Lanka and Perera were cock-a-hoop with India at 71 for 5, but things were to get even better for both very soon. Ravindra Jadeja and Praveen Kumar went for ducks off consecutive deliveries, and Perera found himself on a hat-trick, which Ashish Nehra managed to avert, much to the boisterous Sunday crowd’s disappointment.They were cheering again when Perera rounded off his dream day with a lovely delivery to clean up Ishant Sharma and complete a five-for. Kumar Sangakkara was thrilled the experiment to pick Perera paid off. “It was not just the conditions, we knew there was a bit of rain about, we also wanted to lengthen our batting a bit,” Sangakkara said after the match. “He is also a quality seamer, very successful against India in all his outings, so we thought it would be the right move, and it really worked for us.”Perera is yet another product of Sri Lanka’s famed school system, winning a string of prestigious awards for St Joseph’s College in their annual Big Matches against traditional rivals St Peter’s College and, as a result, earning places on Sri Lanka’s squad to the Under-19 World Cups in 2006 and 2008. Next stop was the Colts Cricket Club, where an unbeaten 113 with eight sixes followed by a five-wicket haul in a Premier Championship match against Moors Sports Club last December expedited his entry to the national team.Today’s performance marks the highlight of a success-filled career so far, but as Sangakkara stressed at the post-match conference, consistency is what needs to be achieved. Pitches like the ones in Dambulla may allow for a seam-heavy attack but on more traditional subcontinental tracks, unless he continues to make a compelling case, Perera will be overlooked.Maharoof’s recent form should be a cautionary tale; he took a hat-trick on course to a five-wicket haul against India in the Asia Cup, but after just one more failure – an anonymous performance in the final of the tournament – he has been shunted out of the squad.

Sticky dogs and captains' rearguards

Andrew Miller picks out ten of the finest batting feats in Anglo-Australian history

Andrew Miller19-Aug-2005The third Test of the 2005 Ashes was saved by a remarkable rearguard from Ricky Ponting. Andrew Miller trawls through the annals to pick out ten of the finest batting feats in Anglo-Australian history


Ricky Ponting: A captain’s innings © Getty Images

Gilbert Jessop at The Oval 1902
Gilbert Jessop would have approved of the thrilling new tempo that Test cricket has achieved in the 21st Century – after all, he was pioneering such an approach way back in 1902. Initially selected as a fast bowler who could slog, Jessop cemented his place in history with a thrilling onslaught at The Oval, as England squeaked a one-wicket victory in the fifth and final Test. Known as “The Croucher” for his up-and-at-em stance, Jessop launched himself at the Australians, clobbering 17 fours in a 77-minute century that rescued England from the mire at 48 for 5. Given that sixes were only awarded for shots that flew out of the ground, that figure would have been far swifter in this day and age. He fell with 76 runs still needed, but George Hirst and Wilfred Rhodes, famously, were on hand to “get `em in singles”.Don Bradman at Lord’s 1930
Don Bradman was, in the immortal words of RC Robertson-Glasgow, “a genius with an eye for business”, and so, instead of sifting through his litany of Ashes performances, it is better to take the man’s word for it when he said that his 254 at Lord’s in the Lord’s Test of 1930 was the greatest of his 19 Ashes centuries. “Practically without exception, every ball went where it was intended,” he wrote in his autobiography, Farewell to Cricket. Australia racked up a massive 729 for 6 to set up a four-day victory, and it was a testament to Bradman’s genius that not even his feat in his very next Test – 309 runs in a single day at Headingley – could surpass this personal zenith.Eddie Paynter at Brisbane 1932-33
The Bodyline series is remembered more for the fast-bowling feats of Harold Larwood and the unwavering captaincy of Douglas Jardine, but three feats of batsmanship stood out nonetheless – Larwood’s own 98 as a nightwatchman at Sydney, Stan McCabe’s unspeakably brave 187 in the first Test, and perhaps most notably of all, Eddie Paynter’s Lazarus impression at Brisbane. Struck down by a bout of acute tonsillitis, Paynter had been taken to hospital when he received a summons from his sick-bed, after England had collapsed to 216 for 6 in reply to Australia’s 340. Refusing the offer of a runner, he batted to the close, returned to hospital overnight, then resumed in the morning to add 92 for the ninth wicket with Hedley Verity. His intervention turned a probable 2-2 scoreline into an impregnable 3-1 series lead, and just for good measure, he sealed the match with a six.Stan McCabe at Trent Bridge 1938
The first Test of the series, and Australia, faced with a mammoth England first innings of 658, were up to their necks in it at 194 for 6. The stage was set for one of the most remarkably measured onslaughts in history. Stan McCabe was one of the few batsmen whom Don Bradman regarded as an equal, in talent, if not always in temperament. But on this occasion, the Don was in awe. “If I could play an innings like that,” he said afterwards, “I’d be a proud man.” McCabe’s feat was to score 232 out of a total of 411, with nothing but the tail for support. Of the batsmen who followed him, only Ben Barnett (22) reached double figures. Protecting his colleagues but never missing a scoring opportunity, he made 213 of the 273 runs in the day, including 72 out of a tenth wicket stand of 77.Len Hutton at Brisbane in 1950-51
Scores of 8 not out and 62 not out would not usually rate too highly on a batsman’s CV, but then few games are played on as treacherous a wicket as the first Test at the Gabba in December 1950. In the days of uncovered wickets, a violent thunderstorm had decimated the track shortly after Australia’s first innings had come to an end for 228. Manipulating their batting order in the hope that conditions would improve, England declared on 60 for 7, before Australia reciprocated with 32 for 7. Needing 193 to win, England closed a crazy day on 30 for 6, but with Hutton at No. 8, hope was not lost. Freddie Brown joined him in double figures, but in the end the damage had been done.Greg Chappell at Lord’s 1972
Bob Massie’s stunning 16-wicket debut might not have been possible had it not been for an innings of intense brilliance from the young Greg Chappell. His first century had come on debut against England in 1970-71, but at the seventh time of asking, he produced his first matchwinning performance. Replying to England’s 272, Australia had slipped to 84 for 4 as John Snow exploited the same juicy conditions to full effect. Greg’s brother Ian stemmed the tide for a time, before Rod Marsh chipped in with a hard-hitting 50, but without Greg’s six-hour 131, Australia might have conceded a fatal first-innings lead.Tony Greig at Brisbane 1974-75
Signalling your own boundaries is never the best way to pacify an enraged fast bowler, but Tony Greig was always big enough to look after himself. His survival instincts, however, were tested to the max at Brisbane in the opening match of the 1974-75 Ashes. England had naïvely assumed that Australia would have no fit pacemen to speak of, so when a patched-up Dennis Lillee and his dervish of a sidekick, Jeff Thomson, tore into England in front of a ferociously partisan crowd, there was no place to run. But only Greig had the wherewithal to stand his ground, as he slashed over the slips and drove aggressively through the covers, feeding off the fury as Lillee and Thomson threatened to explode. His 110 was a rare example of resistance in a futile campaign, but no less noble for that.Rick McCosker at Melbourne 1976-77
The Ashes weren’t at stake in this legendary commemorative match, but the blood and guts of Anglo-Australian contests were on full display nonetheless, in a resounding five-day tussle that was witnessed by every Ashes veteran who was still fit and able to travel. Derek Randall’s 174 was the stand-out performance in terms of runs, but it was McCosker’s contribution that ultimately proved the most valuable. In the first innings, his jaw had been splintered by a vicious bouncer from Willis, and it seemed he would take no further part in proceedings. But, second-time around, with jaw wired shut and swathed in bandages, he emerged at No. 10 and produced 25 priceless runs, including a hooked four off Lever. His ninth-wicket partnership with Dennis Lillee realised 54 runs – the winning margin was just 45.Steve Waugh at The Oval 2001
Nobody did more than Steve Waugh to ensure that the Ashes battles of the 1990s and early 2000s were a one-sided walkover. He racked up ten centuries in his 46 encounters, and never lost a series from the moment of the first of these, at Headingley in 1989. But no innings was more typical of his bloodymindedness than his farewell to England at The Oval in 2001. Three weeks earlier, he had been stretchered out of Trent Bridge with a torn calf muscle, but now he was back, with just one serviceable leg, to graft his way to 157 not out. It was a performance that mocked the injury crisis that had wrecked England’s summer, but it almost came at a cost – after the flight back to Australia, he was hospitalised with deep-vein thrombosis.Ricky Ponting at Old Trafford 2005
Australia’s 16-year Ashes hegemony had never been in graver peril than when Ricky Ponting entered the fray in the second over of the final morning at Old Trafford. Needing to bat out the entire day to avoid a 2-1 series deficit, Ponting produced what might come to be regarded as his defining innings. Out of touch for much of the summer, and facing a barrage of criticism for his lacklustre captaincy, he was unyielding for nearly seven hours, as a succession of his team-mates were whittled away by England’s incisive seam attack. Though he was ninth man out for 156 with four overs remaining, Brett Lee and Glenn McGrath staved off defeat.

'The whole world could see' – Ola Aina steers blame on Premier League officials for Nottingham Forest team-mate Taiwo Awoniyi's horror injury that required emergency surgery

Nottingham Forest star Ola Aina says Taiwo Awoniyi's serious injury would never have occured if the assistant referee had raised his flag earlier.

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  • Awoniyi suffers serious injury
  • Assistant referee raised flag late
  • Aina says injury could have been avoided
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Awoniyi was awoken from an induced coma on Wednesday after undergoing surgery to repair a serious abdominal injury that stemmed from the 27-year-old colliding with a post in Forest's 2-2 draw with Leicester City on Sunday. Antony Elanga was offside in the build-up to the incident but the assistant referee did not raise their flag until the play was completed. But team-mate Aina suggested this protocol, which was introduced in 2020, should be binned as "the whole world could see" Elanga was offside.

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    WHAT (INSERT NAME) SAID

    He told The Daily Mail: "Anthony was miles offside. The whole world could see and so could I from where I was. You think 'offside' straight away. Surely you could just lift the flag up? None of this would have happened to 'T' if the flag had just gone up, would it?"

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Injuries like this may lead to a rethink of this protocol but the way this incident was handled by Forest has also drawn scrutiny. Club owner Evangelos Marinakis came onto the pitch at City Ground after the game, allegedly to express his frustration to manager Nuno Espirito Santo – who had used all his blocks of substitutes and therefore could not replace Awoniyi – how this was handled. This has been a dark few days for Forest.

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    WHAT NEXT?

    While Awoniyi continues his recovery, Forest are set to open an internal review into the incident and establish just what went wrong.

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