Is this Ashes up there with 2005?

It is difficult to separate the series of 1981, 2005 and 2023 for the cricket played or the impact they had

Mark Nicholas01-Aug-2023″Don’t bother looking for that, let alone chasing it. That’s gone straight into the confectionery stall and out again,” said Richie Benaud of a hit by Ian Botham at Headingley in 1981. From a position of nowhere after the first two Tests of that summer, “Beefy” stole the series; so much so that it was immediately christened Botham’s Ashes and has remained so ever since.Andrew Flintoff did much the same in 2005 but didn’t quite manage to get his moniker stuck to it. Freddie bowled like the wind that golden summer and struck the ball like the warrior he was from the first day we saw him as an outsize youth to that last Ashes day at The Oval in 2009, when he limped home, spent.We might have expected the next in the line of great England allrounders to stamp his name all over the 2023 edition, but a dicky knee and the hidden demands of captaincy stole the title from him. Of course, there were heroics that came mainly with the bat and his unwavering message of cricket without inhibition but in the end Ben Stokes gave way to Chris Woakes as gamebreaker writ large across three Tests that so nearly did something only Don Bradman’s Australians managed 87 years ago.Related

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The show-stopper, however, was neither Stokes nor Woakes but Stuart Broad, whose sense of theatre is very Beefy and Fred; not that even those two gargantuan figures of the English game could finish in a front of a full house at The Oval by hitting their final ball faced in Test cricket for six and take the wicket that squared the series the following evening* with the last ball they ever bowled in first-class cricket. You couldn’t make it up.This stunning triumph and the amazing scenes that followed were nothing more than England deserved. The cricket played by Stokes’ team brings pride to its supporters and inspiration to the generation now growing up with so much else to grab their attention. Various sessions, not least the last two hours yesterday, have been as electrifying as anything in the arena of sport, and some of them more so. It is risk and reward in a way most professional sportsmen look to avoid for fear of the wheels coming off. It is exemplified by names such as Botham, Best and Ballesteros; Flintoff and Federer; Stokes, Senna and Sobers. Only, this time Stokes has press-ganged a whole team to walk in the steps of its leader.

Over-analysing this period in English cricket history is not so much futile as it is unnecessary. Rather, we must applaud the light, the hope, the faith and the brilliance

Probably England deserved the 3-2 margin in their favour simply because of the extent of their ambition. It is one thing to entertain, quite another to avoid becoming only a Harlem Globetrotter. There is a practicality to winning cricket matches otherwise known as game management, and as the series progressed, so England began to log in. When the free spirit joined forces with clear thinking, it became an unstoppable force.As it was, rain in Manchester denied this result and in a strange sort of way it doesn’t now seem to matter too much. Sure, Australia retained the Ashes but everyone knows what happened and who made it so. Two fine teams went at it with an iron will and by the end could not be separated. One took the game to a soaring new height of expressionism, the other did it by the book of words long written into history. This contrast was in itself a fascination.The clamour in the immediate aftermath is to call it the greatest Ashes ever. How we love to rate things!Frankly, it is difficult to separate the series of ’81, ’05 and ’23 for the cricket played or the impact they had on the nation, or should we say nations? How do Australians see Ashes defeats that followed a winning start? In 1981, Botham left the field at Lord’s to silence from the MCC members: probably not the same ones who gave Usman Khawaja and Co a serve early last month, but members nonetheless. The match was drawn but England had been outsmarted in a low-scoring game and the grim reaper followed England’s captain and talisman up those steps to the dressing room, in which he decided upon resignation. Mike Brearley took over and the rest, well, it’s thrilling history.Sense of theatre much? Stuart Broad struck to take the final two wickets at The Oval and level the series•Getty ImagesBrearley’s contribution was immediate. Twenty-four years later, Michael Vaughan matched it with bells on, though Vaughan had long planned the mission while assembling a gifted team driven by an engine of fast bowling of the sort rarely seen in the storied life of England cricket. After a dramatic and hugely promising first session in the first Test at Lord’s, England were humbled – hammered actually – by a great Australian team. What followed was remarkable. Far from retreating into themselves, Vaughan and his troop fashioned a comeback for the ages amid four nail-biters and mighty resistance from cricket’s most charismatic talent. Across that draining seven weeks Shane Warne took 40 wickets at 19.9 each and made 249 runs at 27.6 from No. 8 in the order. But still England won.At The Oval yesterday my mind cast back to Kevin Pietersen’s explosive innings which secured the series and led to all manner of eccentricity in celebration. Pietersen was Bazball long before Ben or Baz, an outlier untouched by English reservation and in situ for a good time if not necessarily a long time. Actually, he was around longer than many thought, and never dull. To save The Oval Test, he hooked Brett Lee’s searing bouncers from his eyebrows and into the crowd. When finally out for 158, Australian players shook him by the hand. Well, one. Warne.Eighteen years on and Stokes’ team was being picked apart by the finest Australian batter of the day. Steven Smith had a fortunate match, having been given the benefit of the doubt after a review in as tight a run-out call as you can imagine during the first innings and then surviving Stokes’ “catch” at leg slip in the second. Eventually Woakes of Warwickshire found his edge and Zak Crawley at slip did the rest.There has been controversy throughout the series and the sense, from afar, that the players have been more on edge than they have revealed. For once, dignity has not been the first to leave. Probably, the IPL is to thank for players who understand each other better then at any time previously. A few names from the past have grumbled about how “nice” everyone is to one another on the field, but rather there be a kind face for our game than a sneer.

Probably England deserved the 3-2 margin in their favour simply because of the extent of their ambition. It is one thing to entertain, quite another to avoid becoming only a Harlem Globetrotter

It is a sign of the times that the 1981 series was played across 75 days, the 2005 battle fought through 52 days and nights (ask Vaughan about his sleep, or lack of it) and this little corker of a five-match set has taken 46. No wonder Pat Cummins began to look knackered. Remember that he started in early June with the final of the World Test Championship, and has been on the edge of his nerves ever since. It seems mean to question his suitability for the job.The relevant question is whether such a schedule compromises the quality of the cricket and the longevity of its players. Of the three series, 2005 is the standout for me. England were able to beat an Australia side jammed with a collection of the country’s greatest ever cricketers. Each day was hard-fought, won and lost, as against some in this current series that were relinquished.Truth be told, by throwing all signs of caution to the wind, England made a surprising number of mistakes. Australia judged these to be the cause of an unsustainable method and chose to play more pragmatic cricket themselves. Game management is a skill, albeit an unglamorous one. Self-awareness is an attribute. At various times in the series England have missed the mark on both, and costly it has been. The second-innings freefall with the bat and dropped catches cost them Edgbaston; a first-innings slide into chaos and further missed chances cost them Lord’s. But does one come with the other? Is the corollary of inhibition the fallout from consistency?The same happened at The Oval. Four wickets were lost for 28 on the opening day and five for 35 in the second innings – most of them to batting that was, not so long ago, perceived as madness. We must buy in and watch on with a joyous heart. Over-analysing this period in English cricket history is not so much futile as it is unnecessary. Rather, we must applaud the light, the hope, the faith and the brilliance.For me, 2005 nicks it but only because 2023 has been a series of flawed genius within the parameters of cricket as entertainment. But when the free spirit kicked in and the clear thinking held its own – think Woakes and Mark Wood bowling and batting at Headingley, and specifically, the manner in which they ushered England over the finish line – well, the potential of cricket seemed to have become endless. For that, captain, we thank you.03:38 GMT, August 2, 2023: The article originally said Broad hit his last six and took his last wicket on the same day. This was corrected.

How Ashwin stopped worrying about technique and started loving his old game again

He seems to have gone back to trusting his hands and eye, and allowing his innate attacking game to flourish

Karthik Krishnaswamy03-Jan-20224:05

Ashwin: ‘Maybe our total is a bit short’

It’s not often that anyone outscores Rishabh Pant in a partnership, but R Ashwin on a good day is a plausible candidate for doing so. And after four years when his gifts of eye and timing lay frustratingly dormant, the good days are growing in frequency.Having averaged 16.72 and scored just one fifty in 39 innings from the start of 2017 to the end of 2020, Ashwin has been back among the runs. He’s averaged 26.73 since the start of 2021, and his manner of run-scoring in this period has been as encouraging as the scores he has made.Related

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His 46 on Monday was of a piece with other counterattacking knocks he’s played of late: the 27-ball 22 in the World Test Championship final, and a pair of 30s against New Zealand in Kanpur in November. He moved into strong positions from which to drive down the ground and through the off side, prompting mental flashbacks to his early years in Test cricket when the languid elegance of his strokeplay routinely drew comparisons with VVS Laxman.That fluency had been missing for most of the 2017-20 period, a time when he tinkered constantly with his technique in an effort to get back among the runs.Over the last year or so, Ashwin seems to have gone back to trusting his hands and eye and allowing his innate attacking game to flourish – particularly against fast bowling. Since – but not counting – his stonewalling efforts to save the Sydney Test last January, he’s scored at a strike rate of 69.17 against pace, with 30 fours in 292 balls, a rate better than one every ten balls.Ashwin says he hasn’t made any conscious effort to go after fast bowling; his scoring rate, he reckons, has simply been an outcome of getting into better positions at the crease.”Look, in between, somewhere, for a couple of years, trying to get very technically right or whatever it is to try and build on scores, I think I lost a bit of my flow with respect to getting into good positions at the crease,” Ashwin said, at the end of the first day’s play at the Wanderers.”Even before that I have always batted at a good clip, so there’s not been a conscious effort to go out there and keep playing those shots. If it’s there, it’s there. For me, I get into positions where I can play some of those shots which maybe some of the other specialist batters might not be able to play, but this freedom is what gave me success in the past.”R Ashwin – “I get into positions where I can play shots which maybe some of the other specialist batters might not be able to play”•AFP via Getty ImagesThat line about playing shots that specialist batters might not be able to play is, of course, no idle boast. Even his briefest innings have sometimes been lit up by an incandescent stroke; think of the back-foot drive that he hit off Josh Hazlewood on a pitch of hugely uncertain bounce in Bengaluru, back in 2017, before being bowled by a grubber while attempting a repeat.There were at least three shots in Monday’s innings that might stick in your memory: an effortless push straight of mid-on off Lungi Ngidi, an inside-out drive through the covers off Keshav Maharaj, and an on-drive over midwicket off Kagiso Rabada.”It’s still about choosing [shots] correctly and also getting the flow of my hands right, which I think I’ve been able to get back ever since Australia, or a little bit before Australia,” Ashwin said. “[Batting coach] Vikram Rathour has been very helpful in terms of having those communications and also trying to get those things sorted in the nets.”Ashwin acknowledged that his innings got off to a flier because he got a few balls in his area first up, but he also felt South Africa’s bowlers may have helped him get into rhythm by attacking him with the short ball when he came to the crease.”The moment I went in I got a straight ball which I hit down the ground, then I got one which I hit on the up off Lungi Ngidi on the off side,” Ashwin said. “So the balls presented themselves, and I responded. There was no attempt to try and go there and play at that strike rate; sometimes it happens, sometimes it doesn’t, that’s the beauty of playing the game.”And also, I thought, getting a hang of the pitch. Initially they started with the short ball again, so I feel like whenever I get started off with the short ball, it gets me going a bit, so yeah, I had gameplans. Glad it worked out, and it’s also about building on and trying to be more productive for the team.”

Man Utd now make approach to sign exciting gem who shone at U-17 World Cup

Manchester United have an exciting production line of stars for the future, and now appear to be interested in adding to that by capturing a gem that shone at the Under-17 World Cup.

The Red Devils will have enjoyed taking some time over the international break to digest what has been a credible start to the Premier League campaign, even if Ruben Amorim came under pressure during the early stages at Old Trafford.

Sitting tenth with a game in hand, Manchester United could move as high as fourth position with three points against Everton on Monday night, albeit they could be without Matheus Cunha due to a surprise injury concern.

Ben Jacobs confirmed on X that the Brazilian had suffered a head knock during training, forcing him to miss Altrincham’s Christmas light switch-on as a result, sparking attention on social media.

Nevertheless, the nature of his injury looks only to be minor, so there may still be a chance that he features against the Toffees if deemed fit to do so by the Red Devils’ medical staff.

As ever, Manchester United will hope to avoid a mounting list of absentees over the festive period. However, that is bound to affect everyone, especially with a heavy fixture schedule.

The January window could prove pivotal at Old Trafford, and the Red Devils are now favourites to sign Ajax prodigy Jorthy Mokio ​​​​​​amid concerns over Casemiro and Kobbie Mainoo.

Now, they also have eyes on a gem who performed at his best during the Under-17 World Cup, which has garnered attention from clubs around Europe.

Man Utd make approach to sign Mohamed Zongo

According to Africa Foot, Manchester United have made an approach to sign Tenakourou Academy star Mohamed Zongo, who they are now keen to hold discussions over signing on a permanent basis.

At only 15 years of age, the Burkina Faso youth international shone at the Under-17 World Cup with two goals and three assists to his name, leading to him being dubbed a “revelation” in some quarters.

Earning man of the match awards several times during the competition, his highlight came in a 1-0 victory over Germany where he was the only scorer in a famous victory for his country.

An attacking midfielder by trade and capable of featuring across the forward areas, Zongo is also on the radar of Manchester City, Villarreal and Anderlecht, illustrating how high his ceiling could potentially be with the correct development path.

Ultimately, he still has a tonne of growth left before coming into contention at first-team level overseas. However, Manchester United may be the best environment to earn his stripes.

Mainoo 2.0: Man Utd can axe Ugarte for one of England's "best young players"

MLS Cup preview: Can Thomas Muller’s Vancouver Whitecaps spoil Lionel Messi and Inter Miami’s party?

Lionel Messi and Thomas Müller meet in an MLS Cup final full of storylines, from farewells to uncertainty, driving what should be a strong match this Saturday.

So, here we are: the MLS Cup final. Forget the hipster picks, ignore the insiders – this is the matchup everyone secretly wanted when the playoffs began. Miami-Vancouver (LAFC wouldn’t have been a bad shout, but still). Two elite teams, one trophy. This is what it’s all about.

In most circumstances, you’d back Miami without hesitation. This is Lionel Messi’s team, and they don’t seem capable of losing right now.

But…

Vancouver are scorching hot in their own right. They also have this guy called Thomas Muller – one of the most decorated players of all time – who just so happens to have a winning record against Messi. That’s something. And if you want another wrinkle: they’ve beaten Miami already this season.

So maybe this is a little closer than anyone’s pretending. GOAL previews the MLS Cup final ahead of what should be a terrific contest.

  • Getty Images Sport

    Key storylines

    And so we have our dream MLS Cup final. But this is about more than just the fact that Messi will be playing against his supposed kryptonite. Muller does has a good record against him, but there's plenty of other stuff to follow:

    The last dance for the Barça boys

    Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba have already announced they’ll retire after the final. This is their last professional game. Luis Suárez could join them, even if he hasn’t said so publicly. One more trophy would be quite the goodbye.

    Vancouver’s future is uncertain

    The Whitecaps confirmed before the season that they were interested in selling the team and with that has come speculation over relocation. Their lease at BC Place ends this year, and while a soccer-specific stadium has been discussed, nothing is close to done. It’s not impossible that this version of Vancouver is gone in two years. One final run? Maybe.

    First-year coaches on center stage

    Vancouver's Jesper Sørensen arrived with little name recognition. Javier Mascherano arrived with doubts after a tough first stint in management with the Argentina U23s at the Olympics. Yet both managers have guided their teams to the biggest game of the season. One of them will lift a trophy at the end.

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    Inter Miami and the keys to victory

    Why Inter Miami will win it

    Yes, it starts with Messi. If he catches fire, Miami are almost impossible to stop. But the key may be what happens behind him. Miami’s defense has tightened up in recent weeks. They’re still vulnerable in central areas and at right back, yet if they keep things tidy and limit Vancouver’s chances, they’ll give Messi and the attack enough platform to win it.

    Why Inter Miami won’t win it

    They can get outrun. Messi and Sergio Busquets no longer cover the ground they once did, and Vancouver bring relentless energy from the opening whistle. In a one-off final, that could matter. Miami also have a tendency to start slowly, and an early barrage from Vancouver could put them in a hole they can’t climb out of.

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    Key player for Inter Miami

    There's no need to intellectualize this. The key player is Messi. There have been some real impressive performances around him in recent weeks, especially from Tadeo Allende, who has gotten red hot in the playoffs. But Miami live and die by their star man. It's a good thing he's on fire then, averaging well over two goal contributions per 90 minutes. If he bags a couple (he will), then Miami will have a chance – no matter their weaknesses elsewhere. 

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    Vancouver Whitecaps

    Why they will win it – They're a better all-around team than Miami. Muller is on fire, and he has given an already solid team an extra cutting edge. There are no real weaknesses here. They are strong in midfield, lethal up front, and good enough at the back to see out games. And perhaps more crucially, they are well-balanced. This is a team that likes to have the ball, but they also don't mind defending, either. They don't have a Messi, but they have 11 guys who can come together and nullify his best. 

    Why they won't win it – No one can stop Messi. End of. 

Multan Sultans owner Ali Tareen makes taunting apology to PCB

The Multan Sultans owner Ali Tareen has apologised to the PCB in their ongoing dispute concerning the PSL, though in a manner that could escalate rather than defuse matters. The PCB had sent Tareen a legal notice charging him with breaching a clause in their franchise agreement and demanding an apology for his recent public criticism of the league.In a nearly five-minute-long video released on his social media accounts, Tareen apologised for his comments on the PCB in a tone heavy with sarcasm, while continuing to taunt the board, claiming it wanted to be surrounded by “yes-men and minions”.”You don’t even want to work with your stakeholders,” Tareen said, while flashing the legal notice the PCB sent him. “You cannot bear any criticism from anyone. If you were even remotely competent, you would have known this is not the way to manage things.”Only a big man apologises. I apologise for wanting to make the PSL better. I apologise for raising my voice when I saw problems. It is my fault, not yours, that I was dissatisfied with your mediocre mindset. I apologise for being unhappy that you give yourselves so much credit for doing so little.”Related

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He went on to further criticise the handling of the PSL, referring to the player draft, where issues with microphones persisted through the event, and for lip-syncing rather than live singing through the opening ceremony.He concluded the video by saying, “I hope you like my apology video,” holding the legal notice up to the camera and ripping it in half.ESPNcricinfo reached out to the PCB for comment, and understands the board will consult with its legal team before determining what, if any, further action to take, or whether to accept Tareen’s “apology”. While it does technically satisfy the PCB’s legal demand for a public apology, it appears set to only escalate the feud between the two sides.ESPNcricinfo has also seen a copy of the legal notice the PCB sent to Tareen on September 12. It accuses Tareen of breaching his franchise agreement and making “false, malicious, baseless, and defamatory allegations” in the build-up to the tenth season of the PSL. In the weeks leading up to the tournament, Tareen had become increasingly trenchant in his public criticism of the PSL management for what he believed was a lack of communication, ambition or transparency from the league, while deriding them for their incompetence.While the PCB had maintained a public silence in the months since, the legal notice threatens the most severe action the board, and the league, are in a position to take: blacklisting Tareen from franchise ownership, effectively stripping Multan Sultans away from him. Most seriously, Tareen is accused of deliberately seeking to devalue the PSL brand – with each franchise set for reevaluation at the end of the year – in order to pick up ownership rights to the Sultans at a lower value.The PCB also claims other franchise owners had urged action against Tareen earlier “for deliberately attempting to sabotage the marketing campaign and value of the PSL brand.”Amid the serious legal language, there are also allegations that display the triviality to which this feud between league and franchise owner has devolved. The PCB letter mentioned a video in which Tareen was filmed speaking to the Sultans players, telling them to target the opposition batters with bouncers in exchange for financial reward if they hit the helmet. The PCB called this “reprehensible,” accusing Tareen of disregarding players’ mental health and seeking to destroy their livelihoods.Tareen claimed the video was a joke and taken down, with Multans Sultans telling ESPNcricinfo their bowlers had bowled “the fewest bouncers in the league” last season, and accusing the PCB of desperation in their attempts to malign Tareen.Some aspects of the feud also appear to boil down to personal tastes. In the letter, the PSL called their trophy reveal at the opening ceremony “creative”. The trophy was unveiled as part of a short film that depicted it as lost at sea, with a military helicopter and expert divers sent to retrieve it. Tareen sarcastically called it a “game-changer” saying that it “gave me goosebumps”.While the nature of the feud may have become petty, its consequences are potentially severe for both the league and Tareen. The PSL could, in theory, preclude Tareen from rebidding to purchase Multan Sultans, meaning he would not be a part of the PSL as owner in the upcoming season. There remain plenty of unanswered questions for the PSL, too. Two new teams are to take part in the upcoming season but the PCB has not made any public statement revealing their identity or the date of the PSL draft.

كاراجر: ليفربول يفتقد شيئًا قد يحرمه من دوري أبطال أوروبا الموسم المقبل

يعتقد جيمي كاراجر قائد ليفربول السابق أن فريقه قد يغيب عن دوري أبطال أوروبا الموسم المقبل، إلا إذا قام بشيء واحد بسبب نتائج الفريق هذا الموسم.

ويشهد موسم ليفربول حالة من الفوضى حيث فاز الفريق بأول خمس مباريات في الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز قبل أن يواجهوا فترة صعبة للغاية.

وخسر ليفربول خمس من ست مباريات ويحتل الآن المركز الثامن في جدول الترتيب بفارق ثماني نقاط عن آرسنال المتصدر.

ويخشى كاراجر على مسيرة ليفربول في الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز، وقال في تصريحات نشرتها “مترو” البريطانية: “أعتقد أن هناك الكثير من التفاصيل الصغيرة لكن بصراحة بالنظر للمباريات التي خسروها ونوعيتها، يتبين أنهم لا يستطيعوا التعامل مع القوة البدنية في الدوري الإنجليزي”.

أقرأ أيضاً.. جاتوزو: منتخب أيرلندا الشمالية لا يستسلم أبدًا.. و ليس لدي مشكلة مع لاعب ليفربول

وأضاف :”أراد سلوت أن يجعل ليفربول أكثر ازدهاراً في كرة القدم وأكثر تسجيلاً للأهداف وأكثر متعة، عندما لعب ضد سيتي الأسبوع الماضي، كان يشيد بجوارديولا كما لو كان بطله وهو كذلك بالفعل بالنسبة للعديد من المدربين”.

وواصل: “هذه هي كرة القدم التي يفضلها، إنه يحاول دفع ليفربول في اتجاه واحد واعتقد أن الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز قد تراجع من حيث القوة البدنية”.

وتابع :”لا أعتقد أن هذه المجموعة من اللاعبين مؤهلة للفوز بالدوري الانجليزي حتى مع النقاط التي حصدوها ولم يحصدوها، ربما في يناير يحتاجون للتعاقد مع لاعبين يتمتعون ببنية بدنية أكبر وسرعة أكبر وقوة أكبر، أعتقد أنه إذا لم يتعاقد ليفربول مع مدافع في يناير فقد يحرم من التأهل لدوري أبطال أوروبا”.

جوارديولا يشكك في الـ فار.. ويكشف حديثه مع جيماريش وحكم مباراة مانشستر سيتي ونيوكاسل

تحدث مدرب مانشستر سيتي بيب جوارديولا، عقب هزيمة فريقه أمام نيوكاسل في الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز، وسُئل عن حديثه مع حكم المباراة، ومع برونو جيماريش لاعب الخصم.

وتعرض مانشستر سيتي للهزيمة من نيوكاسل بهدفين لهدف في إطار مباريات الجولة الثانية عشر للدوري الإنجليزي، وأدلى جوارديولا بتصريحات لـ “سكاي سبورتس” و”بي بي سي”، ونشرت شبكة “سيتي إكسترا” تصريحاته أيضًا.

وقال جوارديولا عن هزيمة مانشستر سيتي أمام نيوكاسل: “إعلان رائع للدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز!، نيوكاسل فريق كبير، ولاعبون مميزون، ومدرب رائع، لذا للأسف لم نتمكن الليلة من الحفاظ على زخمنا، كانت مباراةً ممتعة، أتيحت لنا فرصٌ كثيرة، ثم تغير زخمنا، وفي النهاية لم نتمكن من الفوز”.

وأضاف: “كان دوناروما استثنائيًا، أهدرنا فرصًا، وكنا أفضل في الشوط الثاني، واستقبلنا هدفًا، وبعد تبديل كلا الجانبين (الجناحين)، وفي النهاية لم نستطع أن نصل إلى نتيجة”.

وعن انتهاء الشوط الأول بالتعادل السلبي، أشار: “كان حارسا المرمى جيدين، وبعد أن أهدرنا فرصًا كثيرة، كانت مباراةً ممتعةً شهدت العديد من الفرص، كنا أقرب في البداية”.

وبشأن هدف نيوكاسل الثاني، علّق جوارديولا: “حدث ذلك في مباراة بورنموث، وتكرر اليوم، هذا ما حدث بعد قرار حكم الفيديو المساعد، إنهم يدركون ذلك تمامًا”.

وواصل: “لقد بذلنا قصارى جهدنا، أردنا أن نخطو خطوةً للأمام كما فعلنا في الشهرين الماضيين، ولكن بعد فترة التوقف الدولي، لا يكون الأمر سهلاً دائمًا، لكن الطريق لا يزال طويلًا جدًا”.

وعما قاله للحكم سام باروت بعد نهاية المباراة، أوضح: “لا، لا شيء، كل شيء على ما يرام، هذا هو الوضع”.

وعن محادثته مع برونو جيماريش لاعب نيوكاسل، أفاد: “أخبرته بمدى جودته، سألته عما حدث مع دوناروما وهو، وأعتقد أن الأمر على ما يرام”.

وحول غضب دوناروما بعد هدف نيوكاسل الثاني، استرسل: “حدث الأمر أمام بورنموث، وحدث مرة أخرى، دوناروما رأى اللقطة، وإلا، لو أنه لم يشعر بوجود احتكاك، أما أنا فلم أرها، لكنني أثق كثيرًا بلاعبيّ، لذا لم أرها، لكن تقنية الفيديو والحكام قرروا عكس ذلك في الشوط الأول وفي الشوط الثاني، هذا هو الوضع، لقد اعتدنا على ذلك”.

وحول أداء هالاند المتواضع وعدم تسجيله للأهداف، أكد بيب: “فرصتان أو ثلاث فرص يحصل عليها دائمًا لأنه الأفضل، لننتقل للسؤال التالي”.

وعن هزيمة الفريق مرة أخرى خارج أرضه، أشار جوارديولا: “أنا متأكد تمامًا أن جميع الفرق تُفضل اللعب على أرضها بدلًا من خارجها، ولسنا استثناءً”.

وأتم: “لطالما كان نيوكاسل صعبًا، حتى في مراكزهم المتأخرة في الجدول وبعد هزيمتين متتاليتين، بعد أن يُصفوا ذهنهم ويأخذوا إجازة لعشرة أيام، يُمكننا أن نُحقق لحظات جيدة، لقد قاتلنا، وكان اللاعبون حاضرين، لكننا لم نُحقق النتيجة المرجوة”.

Sem Morumbi, São Paulo deve mandar jogo na casa de rival

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O São Paulo não poderá contar com o Morumbi contra o RB Bragantino, em duelo válido pela 32ª rodada do Campeonato Brasileiro, e deve mandar jogo na casa do rival Santos. O Tricolor entrou na procura por outro local para mandar sua partida, pois o seu estádio será palco de alguns shows.

+ Veja tabela do Campeonato Brasileiro-2023 clicando aqui

A Vila Belmiro deve hospedar o confronto. A diretoria alvinegra, que possui boas relações com a gestão de Julio Casares, aceitou disponibilizar o estádio após os tricolores solicitarem o uso.

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O Morumbi, que não conseguirá comportar o duelo contra o Bragantino no dia 8 (quarta), sediará o shows do Red Hot Chilli Peppers no dia 10 de novembro (sexta), e do grupo mexicano RBD, que fez sucesso no Brasil com a novela Rebeldes, nos dias 12 (domingo) e 13 (segunda)

Então, vale ressaltar que a Vila Belmiro enfrentará uma bateria de jogos. O Santos terá confronto contra o Cuiabá no dia 6 (segunda), e contra o próprio São Paulo no dia 12 (domingo).

TRICOLOR NÃO CONSEGUE VENCER FORA DO MORUMBI NO BRASILEIRO

No Campeonato Brasileiro, o São Paulo não conseguiu uma vitória sequer atuando fora do Morumbi. Longe dos seus domínios na competição nacional, a equipe paulistana tem zero vitórias, sete empates e oito derrotas.

Cummins backs Green as 'long-term' No. 3 amid Australia's batting reset

Pat Cummins has indicated that Cameron Green will be given an extended run to cement the No. 3 role in Test cricket as Australia look to bed down a batting order ahead of the Ashes later in the year.Green has been encouraged not to look too deeply at his lean returns on his comeback to the side in the World Test Championship final against South Africa, where he was dismissed twice by Kagiso Rabada across five balls for just four runs. He had come into that match on the back of three centuries for Gloucestershire.There was an opening for Green to drop back down to No. 4 for the first Test against West Indies in Barbados due to Steven Smith’s injury – the position where he made 174 not out against New Zealand last year – but Josh Inglis will take that role as part of a fresh-looking top four that includes the recalled Sam Konstas.Related

  • Hard work done but no pay day for Green as questions linger

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  • Winds of change in Barbados as Chase era begins for West Indies

  • Plenty left in the tank: Khawaja eyes more Ashes glory and mentoring role for Konstas

“I always like to not have too many moving parts,” Cummins said. “We see that [Green at No. 3] as a long-term option. I think going into last week he’s hitting the ball really well, he’s moving really well. He had a Test match where it obviously didn’t go to plan. Think he only faced three or four balls, so the message is not to look into that too much. We’re really happy with where his game’s placed and I dare say we’ll get a decent run of No. 3.”Barring injury, therefore, it leaves Marnus Labuschagne likely needing substantial runs at the start of the Sheffield Shield season to push for a recall to face England.”I think him at his best is a well and truly an international standard Test batter,” Cummins said. “If there’s an opening we could see him fighting his way back into the Test team at some point. Obviously the focus now is giving a couple of other guys a go. He’s had a pretty good run and obviously didn’t make the most of it as well as he would like, so [we are] offering that opportunity to the next couple of guys.”There remains hope that Smith will be available for the second Test in Grenada, which starts on July 3, as he continues his recovery from the compound dislocation of his right little finger he suffered at Lord’s. He is due to return from New York midway through the Barbados Test. “He’s got a few return-to-play kind of protocols he’s got to tick off,” Cummins said. “I know the medical team have got a bit of a program for him.”Pat Cummins and Roston Chase with the Frank Worrell Trophy•AFP/Getty Images

Only three of the top six played in the Gabba Test early last year which West Indies famously won (Usman Khawaja, Cameron Green and Travis Head), but Shamar Joseph’s name has never been far from the build-up to this Test.When new captain Roston Chase, who himself wasn’t part of that Test, was asked whether there would be any lingering memories of that day in the Australia line-up, he responded with a smile and a hint of a chuckle.”I hope there are some scars,” he said. “I mean, if they’re still thinking about that going out there tomorrow, that would be very good for us. I think that that would be part of the job done for us. So, yeah, I hope they’re still hurting.”Cummins, who had spoken before Chase, said, “A couple of the West Indian guys, particularly Shamar, had a day out. I’m sure the batters [have] been talking about how to manage him and counter that.”

Man Utd player ratings vs Liverpool: Harry Maguire silences Anfield – cult hero secures statement win for Ruben Amorim as Bryan Mbeumo, Casemiro and more shine

Harry Maguire ended Manchester United's long, long wait to win away at Liverpool as he snatched a 2-1 victory which could kickstart the Ruben Amorim era at last. Maguire headed home Bruno Fernandes' swerving cross in the 85th minute to restore United's advantage shortly after Cody Gakpo had cancelled out Bryan Mbeumo's quick-fire opener.

The victory was United's first at Anfield since January 2016 and also gave Amorim successive Premier League wins for the first time as Red Devils' boss.

United grabbed the lead on exactly 60 seconds thanks to some razor sharp reactions after Virgil van Dijk, Mbeumo and Alexis Mac Allister went down from an aerial challenge. Fernandes set Amad Diallo away down the wing in space and the Ivorian threaded a ball for Mbeumo, who was back on his feet quickly, to run towards and knock past Giorgi Mamardashvili. 

United had a cautious game plan and were fortunate when Cody Gakpo hit the post after a lightning quick break. The Dutchman later hit the woodwork twice more, but United also threatened on the break, and Fernandes should have scored when he lashed an Amad cut-back off the outside of the post. The captain then saw his free-kick skim the top of the net after taking a flick off Gakpo while Mason Mount had an effort repelled by Mamardashvili.

The Red Devils lost their edge as the game progressed, particularly after Casemiro and Amad were taken off, and Liverpool kept on threatening until Gakpo appeared at the far post to tuck in Federico Chiesa's cross after poor defending from United on the whole.

The stage looked set for Liverpool to complete the comeback victory, but instead it was United who were left celebrating thanks to Maguire.

GOAL rates United's players from Anfield…

  • Getty Images Sport

    Goalkeeper & Defence

    Senne Lammens (8/10):

    Hard to believe it was his second game and first away match. Transmitted confidence to his defenders, taking crosses with conviction. Made a smart save from Isak with his legs, caught a stinging shot from Jones and did enough to put Salah off from close range. Took a no nonsense approach to kicking which served him well.

    Harry Maguire (9/10):

    Justified starting ahead of Yoro by getting his head in front of every ball and anticipating the danger well. A good performance became a great one when he headed in the winner and ended a 10-season wait for United to win at Anfield.

    Matthijs de Ligt (7/10):

    A decisive and dominant display at the heart of the defence. Showed strength to barge Kerkez out of the way early on and helped weather the storm, save for the defence switching off when Gakpo struck.

    Luke Shaw (8/10):

    An excellent display from start to finish. His tidy play under pressure seamlessly created the move leading to Fernandes' chance while he made key challenges on Chiesa and Mac Allister.

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  • Getty Images Sport

    Midfield

    Amad Diallo (8/10):

    Back towards his best after a difficult start to the season. His threaded pass to Mbeumo set up the crucial goal while he would have gotten a second assist had Fernandes taken his chance. Had Kerkez on the back foot for most of the game. Taken off shortly after being booked.

    Casemiro (8/10):

    A gigantic presence for his hour on the pitch. Won every header and challenge while his positional sense was impressive, allowing him to control the middle of the pitch without having to exert himself.

    Bruno Fernandes (7/10):

    Crucial to both goals. Showed his quick thinking to release Amad for the opener and sould have scored himself when he struck the post. Made amends in other ways, such as when he dispossessed Isak in the box. Kept the move alive leading to Maguire's winner.

    Diogo Dalot (5/10):

    The only weak link and was somewhat fortunate his lapses, such as losing Van Dijk at a free-kick and sending a clearance to the feet of Isak, were not punished. 

  • Getty Images Sport

    Attack

    Mason Mount (6/10):

    Not a vintage display and yet he helped the team execute Amorim's tactical plan with clever movement. Had two half-chances to score.

    Matheus Cunha (6/10):

    A surprise choice as the false nine but it just about worked as he linked the play well, even without creating many clear chances.

    Bryan Mbeumo (7/10):

    Got the team off to a flying start by quickly bouncing off the floor and using his pace to get onto Amad's pass and score. Kept working hard, leading the press with his selfless running. 

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  • Getty Images Sport

    Subs & Manager

    Manuel Ugarte (5/10):

    Not nearly as assured as Casemiro and United's performance dropped when he came on, although he did play his part in preventing another equaliser.

    Patrick Dorgu (6/10):

    A little scrappy but dug in and did his job to protect the lead late on.

    Benjamin Sesko (6/10):

    Put himself about well and his aerial presence came in handy in his own box.

    Kobbie Mainoo (N/A):

    Introduced in the 85th minute to see out the win.

    Leny Yoro (N/A):

    Came on to put an extra body on the line and get the win over the line.

    Ruben Amorim (8/10):

    His finest display and result in 11 months in charge. His tactics were spot-on and he at last has back-to-back wins, getting the all important victory at Anfield of all places.

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