Newcastle can form dream duo with Ndombele

Newcastle United have been linked with Tottenham Hotspur midfielder Tanguy Ndombele and the Frenchman could form a superb partnership with Bruno Guimaraes in Eddie Howe’s midfield.

Recent reports have claimed that the Toon could target the former Lyon man this summer, as Howe looks to strengthen his midfield options at St James’ Park.

The door is open for Ndombele to leave the North London club, with the latest reports claiming that Conte has effectively ‘banished’ him from his squad, with fitness issues plaguing his time at the club.

He was limited to just nine appearances in the Premier League last season and was sent back on loan to Lyon in January, where he made 15 appearances.

There is no doubting Ndombele’s talent, but he has struggled to show that on a consistent basis during his time at Spurs, failing to average above a 7/10 rating from WhoScored in any of his three seasons at the club.

However, the £120k-per-week earner did enjoy a strong spell of form under Jose Mourinho in the 2020/21 season, which led the Portuguese manager to sing his praises after he scored a wonderful goal in a win against Sheffield United.

He said: “The goal is amazing, but I don’t care about the goal, I care about the performance and the performance was magnificent and I’m really pleased that he’s come to this level. He’s playing very, very well.”

With regular game time, there is no reason why Ndombele couldn’t find his consistency in Howe’s side, and he could form a magnificent partnership with Guimaraes in the midfield.

According to WhoScored, the Brazilian excels at defensive aspects such as tackling, blocking the ball and concentration, whereas Ndombele can offer more creativity with his strengths of dribbling, through balls and key passes.

Last season saw Newcastle’s main central-midfield options manage just four assists between them, whereas Ndombele has shown in the past that he can offer that creative quality in the middle of the park, managing seven assists in his final full campaign with Lyon back in 2018/19.

So far, Howe has added Nick Pope, Matt Targett and Sven Botman to his squad, and the Toon could arguably do with some extra quality in midfield with a fourth signing.

Ndombele might not have had the most successful spell with Spurs, but his talent is unquestionable, and he could be an excellent fourth signing for Newcastle this summer.

Manchester United: Journalist makes Youri Tielemans claim

Youri Tielemans would ‘definitely’ be interested in leaving Leicester City for Manchester United, journalist Pete O’Rourke has told GiveMeSport.

The lowdown

The 25-year-old is into the final year of his contract with the Foxes and, according to Fabrizio Romano, he’s not considering signing a new deal at the King Power Stadium.

That could force the Foxes to either sell at a reduced price, or face the prospect of losing one of their most valuable assets on a free transfer next summer.

United have been pursuing a central midfielder in the form of Barcelona’s Frenkie de Jong, but Samuel Luckhurst says that deal is very much up in the air.

That could lead the Red Devils to pursue Tielemans as an effective plan B, with Romano recently stating that they have been ‘exploring’ a possible move for the Belgian.

The latest

Speaking to GiveMeSport, O’Rourke explained that Tielemans would be drawn to playing for ‘one of the biggest clubs’ in the world and the ‘exciting’ project under Erik ten Hag. While the player’s preference would be to play in the Champions League, it’s though that it wouldn’t be a dealbreaker for the Belgian.

O’Rourke stated: “I think he’d definitely be interested. It’s Manchester United we’re talking about, one of the biggest clubs in the world.

“Obviously, it’s a new project under Ten Hag as well so I’m sure that will be exciting to any prospective transfer target as well. If Manchester United come calling it’s pretty hard to turn down.

“I’m sure that will be the case for Tielemans as well, even with no Champions League football on the horizon this season as well, which Tielemans is keen to be playing in. but I think Manchester United is still a huge draw for any player across the world.”

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The verdict

The admiration would appear to be mutual. According to CBS Sports journalist Ben Jacobs (20 July), United hold a ‘genuine’ and ‘growing’ interest in Tielemans, with Ten Hag shortlisting him as a midfield candidate.

Like De Jong, Tielemans makes and receives a high volume of progressive passes, can pop up with occasional goals and assists and isn’t particularly active defensively.

On paper, he certainly looks like a ‘far cheaper and far less complicated’ option for United than De Jong, in the words of Jacobs.

On top of all that, he has the advantage of vast Premier League experience, having played 120 games in the English top flight, so perhaps he is the one worth pursuing over the Barcelona midfielder.

Leeds: Tavolieri drops De Ketelaere update

Sacha Tavolieri has dropped an update on reported Leeds United transfer target Charles De Ketelaere.

What’s the talk?

In a recent interview with CMIT TV (via Sport Witness), the Italian journalist revealed that, despite Leeds having submitted a €30m (£26m) offer for the Club Brugge attacking midfielder – a bid the Whites believe AC Milan will be unable to match – the 21-year-old would much prefer a move to the San Siro ahead of one to Elland Road this summer.

Speaking about the interest in the Belgium international, Tavolieri said: “Now De Ketelaere’s choice is clear: he wants to go to Milan. De Ketelaere doesn’t want to go to Leeds; he wants to play the Champions League with Milan.

“We can say that €25m (£21m), bonuses, a percentage on resale, the player’s pressing, and De Ketelaere goes to Milan. De Ketelaere no longer wants to play on the right or left; he wants to be in the centre of the game.”

Orta will be livid

Considering the fact that Leeds appear to be more than capable of outbidding Milan in the race for De Ketelaere’s signature, coupled with just how promising a talent the forward-thinking midfielder undoubtedly is, Tavolieri’s claim that the 21-year-old is not in favour of a move to the Premier League this summer is sure to have left Victor Orta livid.

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Indeed, the £27m-rated Belgian is one of the most exciting young talents in European football at present, having scored 14 goals and registered eights assists over his ten appearances in the Champions League, the Beker van Belgie and the Belgian Supercup.

So promising a player is the Brugge starlet that he has already been dubbed the next Manchester City and Belgium legend, Kevin De Bruyne, while Football Talent Scout Jacek Kulig also described the £17k-per-week forwards’s traits as the following: “Strong, excellent technique, creative, versatile, high work rate. Complete package. Lovely player to watch.”

As such, should Leeds indeed miss out on a move for the 21-year-old to Milan this summer, it would certainly come as a gutting blow to Orta, Jesse Marsch and supporters of the Whites alike – as it is clear that De Ketelaere is destined for great things in the professional game.

AND in other news: Victor Orta can seal “unreal” signing with Leeds bid for “outstanding” £30k-p/w target

Gooch signs new Sunderland deal

The Chronicle journalist James Hunter has been left ‘pleased’ by the latest contract news he has seen from Sunderland.

The Lowdown: Gooch deal

As per the official website of the Stadium of Light outfit, Lynden Gooch has now signed a new two-year contract that will now keep him on Wearside until 2024, after it was due to expire this summer.

He is the longest-serving player at the club, and has now linked up with the rest of the squad for pre-season training.

The Latest: Hunter ‘pleased’

Taking to Twitter, Hunter was left ‘pleased’ by the news of Gooch’s contract, claiming that it is ‘excellent’ that he has signed on for another two years:

“New two-year deal for @LyndenGooch is excellent news. I’m pleased he’s staying – quality player and a top man, too.”

The Verdict: Relief

It will certainly come as a relief to the Black Cats supporters that Gooch has signed a new deal, especially given that there was reported interest from some of their Championship rivals for his signature.

The United States international was a mainstay in the side last term under Alex Neil, making six assists, which helped SAFC finally win promotion back up to the Championship from League One.

Nonetheless, he has shown his loyalty to the club over some of their most difficult years, and so it was only right that he is rewarded with a new deal for his efforts.

Liverpool interested in Christian Pulisic

Liverpool have been linked with a move for Christian Pulisic this summer and now a new update has emerged on the potential signing for the Kopites.

What’s the latest?

talkSPORT reporter Alex Crook has confirmed that Liverpool have a genuine interest in signing Chelsea forward Pulisic ahead of next season but also details this could change with the completion of the signing of Darwin Nunez.

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Crook told GIVEMESPORT:

“I think Liverpool’s interest is genuine, or it was before the Darwin Nunez deal really accelerated. So, whether they need another attacking player now, probably, I would say no.”

Imagine him & Nunez

Although Crook takes the view that Liverpool may not make the move for Pulisic should they complete the signing of Nunez, if they did act upon their interest it could bring another fresh perspective and form a new well-oiled attacking partnership at the club between the two players in the forward line.

It is no surprise that the Reds are linked with a move for Pulisic, as Jurgen Klopp is a huge admirer of the former Borussia Dortmund star, reserving high praise for him in an interview following his brace against Liverpool in 2018 (via FourFourTwo): “He’s a fantastic skilled boy, and it’s not a surprise to see.

“He’s a smart player, and unfortunately the USA needs more of these players.”

The £42m gem who was dubbed “wonderful” and a “leader” by Jurgen Klinsmann has struggled to get consistent game time during his time at Chelsea but has shown glimpses of his talent in front of goal when given the opportunity to.

Pulisic scored six goals, delivered two assists and created one big chance, while taking 1.3 shots on goal and winning 3.5 duels on average per game over 22 Premier League appearances.

Klopp will need to prepare for the inevitable blow of Sadio Mane’s departure alongside the contract expiration of Divock Origi, and Taki Minamino is expected to be sold too summer.

With that being said, by only making the signing of Nunez it could leave Liverpool with a weakened squad in terms of goal scoring players, however, if they did make the signing of Pulisic it could be a great opportunity for Klopp to add an experienced attacking mind to bolster his forward line.

AND in other news: “I’m told..”: Romano drops behind-the-scenes Liverpool update that’ll upset supporters 

Wolves join the race for Calvin Bassey

Wolves have joined West Midlands and Premier League rivals Aston Villa in the race to sign former Leicester City and current Rangers left-back Calvin Bassey this summer.

What’s the story?

That’s according to the Daily Record, who claim that as well as Villa, Fulham and Brentford are all keen on acquiring the 22-year-old this summer.

The Nigerian has been a revelation for Rangers since making the move to Ibrox in 2020, playing 65 times for the Glaswegian outfit, including last Wednesday night’s Europa League final defeat to Eintracht Frankfurt and Saturday’s Scottish Cup victory against Hearts.

Now it is believed that Wolves are amongst the frontrunners to sign the defender who may well cost around the £20m mark this summer according to Kenny Miller.

Wolves must sign Bassey

Having earned his stripes with Rangers after failing to make the breakthrough at Leicester, it appears as though Bassey is now ready to play in the Premier League.

The Nigerian never made a senior appearance for Leicester despite playing just shy of 100 games for the Foxes’ youth sides and City’s loss could be their Midlands rivals’ gain.

With Marcal confirmed to depart this summer upon the expiration of his contract, Bruno Lage will certainly be looking to add a left-back to his squad with Jonny currently his only senior option.

In the Europa League this season, Bassey has been a colossal contributor to his side’s run to the final which saw the likes of Borussia Dortmund, Braga and RB Leipzig toppled before a cruel defeat on penalties in the final.

Claimed to be “like van Dijk” as well as being “superb” by Jamie O’Hara on TalkSPORT, the left-back averaged 37.4 passes a match at an 83% accuracy whilst making 61.1 touches.

Defensively, the £6.4k-per-week earner also produced 1.4 interceptions, 1.6 tackles and 1.6 clearances as well as winning 60% of his duels.

As for Jonny in the Premier League, the Spaniard has averaged slightly fewer touches at 60.3 as well as fewer passes with 32.6 with an 83% accuracy too.

Defensively though, Bassey has recorded the more impressive statistics with the Wolves wing-back providing 0.8 interceptions, 1.9 tackles and 0.4 clearances a match.

Lage will be keen to see his side improve on this season and push for a European spot with the West Midlands outfit’s poor run at the end of the season costing them a place in Europe for next season.

Therefore, adding a player of Bassey’s quality will certainly be a must this summer.

AND in other news: Great news: Huge Wolves transfer development emerges; supporters will be ecstatic

Wolves: Hwang fails to take his chance

Wolves failed to sign off from Molineux with a victory today as they were held to a 1-1 draw by already-relegated Norwich City in the Premier League.

The visitors took the lead through Teemu Pukki after 37 minutes before Rayan Ait-Nouri equalised early in the second half.

However, the West Midlands outfit were unable to find a winner and are now six games without a victory in the top flight.

To not be able to win in front of their own fans against a side whose fate has already been confirmed was incredibly poor with numerous passengers in the side.

Forward Hwang-hee Chan was certainly one of them after a quiet display against Dean Smith’s side.

The South Korean returned to the starting lineup having been on the bench against both Chelsea and Manchester City but struggled to make an impact.

With just one shot off target and another blocked, the forward made little impact in the final third whilst also giving the ball away on eight occasions, having made just 37 touches, meaning he lost possession once every 4.6 touches.

Moreover, there was little defensive contribution from Hwang as well with zero clearances, blocks and tackles whilst making just one interception.

As well as that, the South Korea international lost most of his duels at 64% having won four from an attempted 11.

Lage’s biggest area to improve on over the summer will be his attack, with the lack of goals scored being an issue all campaign.

Only three sides have scored fewer goals than Wolves’ 37 in 37 matches with two of them already relegated.

With the likes of Raul Jimenez, Fabio Silva and Pedro Neto, as well as Hwang, able to play up front, the Portuguese manager will have to find a solution to unlock the talents of his best possible partnership.

It seems as though a dip into the transfer market will also be needed, which could spell trouble for the 26-year-old having only recently joined Wolves permanently from RB Leipzig after initially joining on loan from the Bundesliga outfit.

What is for sure is that Hwang will have to work hard over the summer and through pre-season to ensure he earns regular playing time at Molineux next campaign.

AND in other news: Wolves can get summer off to a blinder with “unplayable” £46k-p/w brute who Lage wants

'When you're taking wickets in T20, you can be brave'

India’s best all-format bowler talks about the knuckleball, and why Sunrisers Hyderabad has the best bowling attack in the IPL

Interview by Nagraj Gollapudi19-May-20182:11

Sunrisers Hyderabad mentor VVS Laxman talks about Bhuvneshwar Kumar’s workload, investing in good Indian talent, and the benefits of showing faith in youngsters

Would you say this current Sunrisers attack is the most complete T20 bowling unit you’ve been part of?
 It is a very good bowling attack. What is good about this unit is, whenever anybody has been asked to deliver he has done it – Basil Thampi played a couple of matches and he did whatever the captain asked of him or the team needed.It is an attack that has defended small targets. Like in the away match against Mumbai Indians, where you defended 118. When you defend such a small total, what does the bowler need to focus on?
Everyone knows that when you defend a small target there is not much room to make any mistake. The good thing is, whenever we have defended a low total, we have always taken wickets.I was not in Mumbai, but when I spoke to the guys who played in that match, they said that everyone wanted to focus on bowling the dot ball at the beginning. The batsmen made mistakes or went after the bowlers as the dot balls increased, and that is how we kept taking wickets at regular intervals. So the bowlers were not going after the wickets, they just wanted to bowl dot balls.How difficult is it to defend small targets like those?
It is difficult to defend a low total because there is no pressure on the batting side. One or two good overs and they know then they’ll only need [about] a run a ball. When you are defending a low total, the key is, all bowlers need to be on the same page: either you go for wickets or you contain the run rate. Either option could work. If you go for wickets, you could contain the run rate, or you could get wickets by containing the run rate.Is it good to be attacking while defending a small target?
It totally depends on the bowlers, the team. Like, in the Mumbai match, our bowlers were just defensive. They wanted the batsmen to make mistakes, because sometimes batsmen can relax while chasing a low total, since they know one over can change the whole game. But when you keep bowling dot balls, they come under pressure and commit mistakes, and that is what happened in the Mumbai match.

Bhvuneshwar Kumar’s bowling by delivery type in IPL 2018

DeliveryOversRuns% of ballsW% of WEconDot%Knuckleball9.310430.667510.9528.07Yorker143.2112.54.0050.00Moved in8.54928.5112.55.5552.83Slow ball0.442.2006.0025.00Legcutter0.331.6006.000Straight2.4188.6006.7537.50Moved away5.54218.8007.2060.00Bouncer0.341.6008.0033.33Reverse Swing0.241.10012.0050.00Full toss0.5142.70016.800

While chasing a big target, batsmen usually try and hit the first ball of the over for a boundary, to put pressure on the bowler. As a strike bowler what is your mantra for the first ball?
For a bowler it doesn’t matter whether it is a first ball or a last ball. We always want to take a wicket or bowl a dot ball. Yes, when you get hit on the first ball, you are always under pressure because you still have to bowl five more balls and the batsman has got the upper hand. For a bowler all six balls matter. You might bowl five dot balls and then get hit for a boundary off the last delivery.Yesterday, against Daredevils, you were taken for 17 runs off the last over of the innings. You rarely leak so many runs at the death.
Exactly. I have not given so many, but whatever bad balls I bowled, the batsmen converted. When you are going through a good patch, even if you bowl bad balls, batsmen might only convert 50% of those deliveries.You are the only Indian bowler to have a five-for in each of the three international formats. The last time you picked up a five-for was in the T20 series in South Africa. Three of the wickets in that match came off the slower ball. How important is that variation for you?
It is very important, especially in the T20 format, because everyone goes after the bowler straightaway, but when you have a variation, the batsman thinks twice before hitting you. Overseas, most times the ball comes nicely on to the bat and batsmen always want to hit you square of the wicket if they are good at the cut and pull. So if you can take the pace off the delivery, you can contain the strengths of the batsman.Say about five years ago, what percentage of your deliveries were the slower variation?
I do not remember what percentage, but it depends on the situation, ground conditions, and the batsman. A few batsmen are very good against the slower ball, a few are very good against the yorker, so you don’t want to bowl those variations against them. But a slower ball is a necessary variation because when the batsman is in his flow, all he wants is pace on the delivery. So when you bowl the slower ball, it becomes effective.Is the slower ball reactive?
In the T20 format you have to be proactive instead of reacting to things. Yes, it can be a reaction if you get hit for a boundary or a six, then you can bowl a slower one, depending on the conditions. But even if you go for runs, it is better to be proactive.Bhuvneshwar Kumar in recent IPL seasons

In the last four IPL seasons (from 2015), Bhuvneshwar is the leading wicket-taker in the last five overs, with 49 wickets at 15.46, and an economy rate of 9.11. The next-highest wicket-taker is Dwayne Bravo with 40

Only Bravo, with 503 balls, has bowled more deliveries at the death in this period than Bhuvneshwar, who has bowled 499 balls.

Among the 14 bowlers who have bowled over 35 overs at the death in the last four IPL seasons, Bhuvneshwar’s average is the best, and his ER is fourth best.

In the current IPL and the 2017 edition, Bhuvneshwar has taken eight (23.5%) of his wickets with knuckle balls and seven (20.6%) with slower balls, which makes it a total of 44.1% from these two variations.

How many types of slower ball do you have?
Offcutter, legcutter and knuckleball.And you bowl them all with same grip?
The grip remains mostly the same – just a slight change for the knuckleball. I bowl the cutters with the upright seam; the only difference is how you roll the fingers. It is not a mystery. The batsmen can see whether it is a legspin or offspin.When it comes to the knuckleball what is different about the grip?
I just try to hold the ball by the tips of my fingers. A few bowlers grip it with the knuckles, but I am not comfortable doing that. The seam is always upright and not scrambled. That is how I started, learned, and have practised since then.Do you remember how it was the first few times the knuckleball left your hand?
I was not comfortable because you are used to holding the ball with both fingers [and thumb] with a good grip, whereas when you are bowling the knuckleball you are gripping with the fingertips. It would slip. In fact, I remember, the first few times I tried the knuckleball, it would pitch near my legs or lob over to the wicketkeeper. It took nearly a week to start pitching it properly.I think it was two years ago when I tried it for the first time on the big stage. It was during the IPL.How do you practise it in the nets?
I do not bowl too many knuckleballs in the nets. I usually bowl that delivery against a single stump in the centre – that is how I get more ideas about the delivery.Former South Africa fast bowler Charl Langveldt was amazed at how easily and how soon you learned to master the knuckleball. He himself took several years.
I think he was the first guy I noticed bowling the knuckleball. He used it bowl it very well. Unfortunately no one picked it up till Zaheer Khan tried it, and now many bowlers  use the knuckleball.Langveldt also thinks your knuckleball almost floats.
I don’t know about that, but the good thing is it goes with the seam and swings.How is the delivery different for you from how others bowl it?
It is difficult to read it because there is no change in my action, no change in my wrist position.”A slower ball can only be deceptive if it is different, if it is floating, swinging”•AFPThe knuckleball is a wicket-taking ball. When you bowl offcutters and legcutters, batsmen can pick them from the wrist, but the knuckleball they have not been able to read. They might pick it in the air or after pitching. That is why a knuckleball is very effective, because it looks like the ball is coming at the same [good] pace, and the batsman gets beaten. So they cannot see anything different in my loading, in my run-up. Only once I release it, they notice the change.In terms of putting doubt in a batsman’s mind, the bowler has to think. It’s not possible to teach that, is it?
You cannot teach that. That is what experience teaches you. You have been in those situations many times before, so you know the possible outcomes if you try something. Also, it is about doing the process right and not thinking what is going to happen. If you do that, then sometimes your body can get tense and you will not be able to deliverA slower ball of any kind basically is deception. How did you teach yourself that?
Anything that a batsman cannot pick from the wrist is deception. Almost every bowler bowls a slower ball, but not many can be deceptive. A slower ball can only be deceptive if it is different, if it is floating, swinging. If you look at [Dwayne] Bravo’s slower ball, it is deceptive because it floats and dips.Ben Laughlin floats his knuckleball and it swings. If you ask me whether I can bowl the way these guys deliver, I cannot, because their actions are different. I might want to bowl the slower ball like Bravo but I can’t.Does the pitch matter?
Of course, it does. If you bowl a slower ball and the pitch is slow, then it will be difficult for the batsman to hit. If it is a flat wicket and nothing is happening, it is easier for the batsman to pick to the slower ball.Any particularly memorable wickets that you’ve taken with the knuckleball?
Upul Tharanga in Sri Lanka. It was a normal outswinger and Tharanga attempted to flick and was beaten by the pace.What do you need in order to be brave as a fast bowler in T20 cricket?
You need wickets to be brave. When you get wickets, you can try anything. But when you don’t, you always hesitate to try a few things because it is not always about giving runs and getting wickets.Azhar Mahmood, the current Pakistan bowling coach, said bowlers win you tournaments. Do you agree?
I agree. You see teams buy a lot of batsmen for a lot of money because they are good batsmen. But you also need good bowlers to get them out or contain the runs. If you bowl first and you can get the opposition out for 130-140 then it is a good total to chase. If your team has made 160, a par score in T20, you can help win the match. In T20 cricket, bowlers win you matches.

Gohel's 359* shatters 117-year-old record

Gujarat opener Samit Gohel broke a host of first-class records during the course of his big score in the Ranji Trophy quarter-final against Odisha in Jaipur

Bharath Seervi27-Dec-2016357* The previous highest score by an opener who carried his bat in first-class history. Bobby Abel achieved this for Surrey against Somerset in 1899. Gujarat’s Samit Gohel carried his bat during the 359 not out against Odisha to set a new record in the Ranji Trophy quarter-final in Jaipur. WG Grace (318* in 1876) and Bill Ashdown (305* in 1935) are the only others triple-centurions to carry their bat. The highest by an Indian who carried his bat prior to Tuesday was Dheeraj Jadhav, who made an unbeaten 260 for India A against Kenya in 2004.1 Number of scores higher than Gohel’s 359 in the second innings of a first-class match. Don Bradman scored 452 for New South Wales against Queensland in 1929-30. This was the third triple-century in the team’s second innings in the Ranji Trophy, after Vijay Hazare’s 309 (while following on) in 1943-44 and Cheteshwar Pujara’s 352 in 2012-13.3 Number of bigger scores than Samit Gohel’s unbeaten 359 in the Ranji Trophy. BB Nimbalkar’s 443 not out in 1948-49, Sanjay Manjrekar’s 377 in 1990-91 and MV Sridhar’s 366 in 1993-94 top the list. Gohel equalled Vijay Merchant’s score, made in 1943-44. Gohel’s score is the second-highest in a Ranji Trophy knockout match, behind Manjrekar’s 377 in the 1990-91 semi-final.

Highest individual scores in Ranji Trophy (350 or more)
Batsman Runs Team Against Season
BB Nimbalkar 443* Maharashtra Kathiawar 1948-49
Sanjay Manjrekar 377 Bombay Hyderabad 1990-91
MV Sridhar 366 Hyderabad Andhra 1993-94
Vijay Merchant 359* Bombay Maharashtra 1943-44
Samit Gohel 359* Gujarat Odisha 2016-17
VVS Laxman 353 Hyderabad Karnataka 1999-00
Cheteshwar Pujara 352 Saurashtra Karnataka 2012-13
Swapnil Gugale 351* Maharashtra Delhi 2016-17

723 Balls faced by Gohel – the sixth-highest in first-class matches (where number of balls have been recorded) and third-highest in Ranji Trophy history. Punjab’s Bhupinder Singh faced 738 balls in his innings of 297 in 1994-95 and Himachal Pradesh’s Rajeev Nayyar scored 271 off 728 in 1999-00.964 Minutes Gohel spent at the crease during his mammoth knock, the third-longest in first-class history. The longest, and the only player to bat over 1000 minutes, is Rajeev Nayyar in his innings of 271 against Jammu & Kashmir in 1999-00.

Longest innings in first-class cricket, in terms of minutes
Batsman Runs Minutes Team Against Season
Rajeev Nayyar 271 1015 Himachal Pradesh Jammu & Kashmir 1999-00
Hanif Mohammad 337 970 Pakistan West Indies 1957-58
Samit Gohel 359* 964 Gujarat Odisha 2016-17
Vineet Saxena 257 907 Rajasthan Tamil Nadu 2011-12
Gary Kirsten 275 878 South Africa England 1999-00

641 Gujarat’s highest-ever total in Ranji history. They went past the 640 they made against Maharashtra in 1995-96. This was their second 600-plus total of the season, after their 624 for 6 against Punjab, in which Priyank Panchal scored 314 not out. Before this season, they had scored 600 or more only thrice. Prior to this season, no Gujarat batsman had made a triple-ton – there have been two such instances in this season.

Cook marshals a near faultless display

There are four matches to go and as we saw in 2005 and 1997, sides are capable of coming from behind to win Ashes series. There will be no complacency from England. But there will be confidence

George Dobell in Cardiff11-Jul-20154:01

Are new England the real deal?

It says something about the trepidation among England supporters, something about the years of hurt and disappointment, something about the number of times they have been stung by Ashes defeats that, even at the start of the fourth day, even with Australia requiring a record fourth-innings total, there was a sense of fear and foreboding around the ground in Cardiff on Saturday morning.It was not that they did not have confidence in their side. It was they did not dare have hope. It has, so often, been the hope that hurts.But there is hope for the future of this England side’s future now. By the end of a golden day – a golden four days – for England cricket, everything seemed possible. All of a sudden it seems reasonable to presume that, if you re-watch the DVDs today, Paul Gascoigne will make that slide in Euro 96, Mark Cueto’s try will stand in the rugby World Cup final of 2007 and Muhammad Ali won’t get up from Henry Cooper’s left hook at Wembley in 1963. After the Cardiff Test, almost anything seems possible in English sport.Maybe we should not be surprised. Australia’s record away from home is modest – they have now lost 11 of their last 17 away Tests and they have won only one of their last 15 Tests in England (or Wales) – while England have now won five of their last six home Tests. It is, after all, 14 years since Australia won the Ashes away from home.Suddenly, Australia are the side with all the problems. The cracks in their team – its lack of balance, its age, its injuries, its discomfort on slow surfaces, its three-man seam attack and its wicketkeeper living on past performances – can no longer be obscured. Certainly, they did nothing to disprove Jason Gillespie’s suggestion that they had a Dad’s Army look to them. In due course, we may reflect that they are, like the England side in Australia in 2013-14, at the end of their life cycle as a team.Perhaps it is too early to draw such conclusions. There are four matches to go, after all, and as we saw in 2005 and 1997, sides are capable of coming from behind to win Ashes series. There will be no complacency from England. But there will be confidence.The fact is, England looked the better side in this game. While it is true that they benefited hugely from the dropping of Joe Root in the first innings, they appeared to have more discipline with the ball and more application with the bat. In these conditions – and it is a long time since we have seen a quick Test wicket in England – their ability to bowl a “relentless” line and length, in Alastair Cook’s words, is a major asset. There is no more mileage in Australia complaining about the pitches here as there is England asking for a slower Perth wicket.Alastair Cook’s move to bring Moeen Ali back before lunch worked wonders, in a superb match for the England captain•Getty ImagesThe convenient narrative will suggest that England have been freed up by the promotion of Paul Farbrace and the arrival of Trevor Bayliss. And no doubt both have made important contributions.But this has been a performance that has been coming for some time. We saw in Antigua, in Grenada and at Lord’s that England were attempting to play a more aggressive style of cricket. We saw, from the time that Ben Stokes cemented his place in the side in the Caribbean, that England benefitted from the presence of four seamers offering slightly different angles of attack – swing, seam, pace and reliability – and offering more opportunity to keep the two strike bowlers just that little bit fresher.And we saw the benefit of a deep batting line-up with a man good enough to score an ODI century as an opening batsman coming in at No. 8. England now have depth with bat and ball and look less reliant upon one or two standout performances. There are still some questions to answer, but they are looking ever more solid as a team.That may have been the most pleasing aspect of this victory. Almost everyone contributed. Stuart Broad delivered perhaps his most consistently good performance for a long time – he has been excellent in patches, but rarely so good throughout a match – Gary Ballance and Ian Bell made the contributions they required to regain some confidence and the time England spent practising their catching practise in Spain (“we practised our catching from first thing in the morning to last thing at night,” Cook said) was rewarded with a series of outstanding efforts. Only one chance was missed; that was a significant improvement on recent efforts.Among the many positives to emerge from this match from an England perspective, one of the most surprising, was to see Cook out-captain Michael Clarke. Almost everything Cook attempted in the field worked: his decision to stick with Bell at slip was rewarded with some fine catches – and a player whose confidence was not further eroded by more demotion – while recalling Moeen Ali for the over before lunch on the fourth day brought the immediate wicket of David Warner with a fine arm ball.Equally, the decision to have a short-leg for Clarke – setting him up for the short ball – and then luring him into an unbalanced drive with his weight on the back foot was masterful. The short midwickets, the decision to give Root a bowl and the gamble with asking Broad to bowl on the third morning with the new ball just 10 overs away were all innovative and were all rewarded.Cook may well have to temper his style of batting if he is to get the best out of himself in the long term – he became a record-breaking player through accumulation, not aggression – but, in the field at least, he has never had a better game as leader.”We always tried to take the attacking option,” a modest Cook said afterwards. “But as a captain, you’re only as good as your bowlers and our bowlers were brilliant.”It was really important for this group of players to show we can compete with Australia. It shows that, if we do the basics well and play with that kind of attitude, we can put Australia under pressure.”It won’t work every time but if we can go out there and show off our talent – we keep talking about that – then we’re a dangerous side.”An entertaining one, too. All of a sudden the future looks a little brighter. All of a sudden, spectators are starting to share the team’s belief: England can win the Ashes.

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