Trott buries Australia with debut ton

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsJonathan Trott sprints through to reach his maiden Test hundred•Getty Images

Jonathan Trott entered Ashes folklore with the innings of an instant veteran, as England’s batsmen sauntered into a position of absolute dominance, only for Australia’s openers to keep their nerves a-jangling with a coolly compiled 80-run stand, on another enthralling day at The Oval. Trott’s 119 from 193 balls was the 18th century by a debutant in England’s Test history and the first against Australia since Graham Thorpe in 1993, but given the magnitude of the occasion, it ranked among the finest of all time. His efforts left Australia facing a climb as forbidding as Mont Ventoux, as Andrew Strauss declared on 373 for 9, with a massive target of 546 in the bag.But Australia, to their credit, refused to yield to any presumptions of defeat and decided attack was the best route to the summit. Simon Katich and Shane Watson banished any lingering demons from the first innings, and backed themselves to play their shots against the new ball, and the policy paid off in an opening stand of 80, as they reached the close with their hopes renewed and England’s anxieties sharpened in a manner reminiscent of the final day at Lord’s. Nevertheless, as the ball lost its hardness and Stuart Broad’s offcutters began to grip, it was clear that survival will become harder and harder the longer the innings wears on. Having collapsed from 73 for 0 to 160 in their first innings, Australia know just how tough the next six sessions are sure to be.The Oval pitch, the subject of much controversy overnight, carried on producing wild puffs of dust from almost every delivery, but as England’s lower-order clubbed a supine attack to all corners of South London, adding 205 in the last 37 overs of the innings, the heat went out of the debate about its merits. In fact, England’s progress seemed at times almost too comfortable for their series prospects, as Australia’s bowlers abandoned any hope of salvaging their team’s situation and instead settled for damage limitation with a view to batting out for the draw.Nevertheless, the steep bounce that the part-time spinner, Marcus North, had continued to extract was enough to confirm the suspicions that batting last, with men packed around the bat, would be a fraught experience. Sure enough, Swann entered England’s attack as early as the ninth over, and though he didn’t make a breakthrough with the still-hard new ball, he found sufficient purchase to suggest his time will come. For the time being, however, North, who came into the game with just two Test wickets to his name, emerged as the most potent spinner on show, with 4 for 98 from 30 testing overs.If the expectant buzz around The Oval had been dampened a fraction by the close, then it would never have become so electric in the first place, had it not been for Trott’s magnificent scene-setter. For the second time in consecutive Ashes battles at the venue, England’s visions of glory were filtered through a South African-born lens, and perhaps that same filter removed the fear of failure as well, because as with Kevin Pietersen’s unforgettable 158 in 2005, Trott scarcely blinked for an instant.He had been a controversial selection for such a pressure-cooker contest, but to give the selectors credit where it is due, the skill, determination and confidence of his performance made the men around him in England’s middle-order look like the international novices. His nerveless shot selection, at an even tempo of roughly a run every two balls, provided the scaffolding for a series of carefree cameos at the other end – including a farewell frolic from Andrew Flintoff, and a spanking 63 from 55 balls from Swann, who fine-tuned his confidence going into the defining fourth innings.Aside from a brush with a Peter Siddle bouncer, and a hairy moment on 97 when he deflected Ben Hilfenhaus inches past his leg stump, Trott barely played a false stroke until the very moment of England’s declaration, when he chopped Stuart Clark to North in the gully. In fact, his most palpable moments of alarm came from his first two deliveries of the morning, first when Siddle believed he had made the breakthrough with an off-stump lifter (umpire Asad Rauf correctly ascertained that the ball had flicked only the thigh pad on the way through to Brad Haddin) and then when Trott followed up that escape with an awkward spoon into the covers off a leading edge.Graeme Swann hit a swashbuckling 63 to increase England’s lead•PA Photos

With impressive ease, however, he put those dramas out of his mind, perhaps sensing that he’d experienced the most capricious deliveries that could come his way. He added 118 for the fourth wicket with his overnight partner Andrew Strauss, to ensure there would be no continuation of the late-evening hiccup that had taken a layer of sheen off England’s remarkable second day, and as early as the first hour of the day, Australia’s hopes of an attainable run-chase had been quashed.Strauss’s contribution was an unflappable and agenda-setting 75, which served as a moist flannel on his country’s fevered brow. He left the ball with nerveless certainty outside off, demanding that Australia’s bowlers bowled to his strengths rather than probe for non-existent weaknesses, and when he lashed Clark for three fours from nine balls faced as England upped the ante in the half-hour before lunch, he looked a dead-cert for his, and England’s, second century of the series. With four balls remaining of the session, however, he was lured by a ball of fuller length from North, who extracted enough rip off the track to find the edge to slip.Matt Prior, for once, played only a minor role in England’s momentum shift – although he did manage to send Ricky Ponting into the lunch break with a mouthful of blood after drilling the ball into his face at silly mid-off. Three overs after the break, he called for a crazy single after picking out the dead-eyed Katich in the covers, and was run out by a distance for 4. Nevertheless, his departure ensured that the crowd got one last glimpse of the man they really wanted to see, and when Flintoff clubbed his second delivery violently through midwicket for four, it was abundantly clear how he intended to pace his final Test innings.Three more boundaries followed, each greeted with rapture, but alas the magic could not last. With 22 from 17 balls to his name, Flintoff came down the track once more to launch North into the Harleyford Road, but Siddle steadied himself on the long-on ropes to pouch a simple catch. The Aussies stood in the middle to applaud Flintoff back to the pavilion as he saluted all corners of the ground, while down the steps – replacing him in every sense – came the man of the moment, Broad.He did not disappoint either. Feeding off Mitchell Johnson’s regressive line and length, he dabbed the first of his five fours through backward point, then climbed into North in a violent over containing three further biffs down the ground, the first of which went arrow-straight back over the bowler’s head to land just inside the boundary’s rope. He eventually took one swipe too many, and picked out Ponting in the covers, but into the fray strode Swann, in a mood for violence – just as he had been in the final innings at Headingley two weeks ago, when England’s predicament could hardly have been more different, but when the licence for thwacking had been every bit as liberating.With Trott trotting along beside him, Swann belted two-thirds of England’s runs in an eighth wicket of 90 from 80 deliveries that left observers wondering if he’d win the race to three figures. Australia took the new ball in that period as well, but offered Swann far too many opportunities to unfurl his exuberant drive, which accounted for six of his nine fours before Hilfenhaus pulled his length back at last and skidded a bouncer off a miscued hook to Haddin.For the best part of their day in the field, England had simply had it too easy, and by the close, Watson and Katich had shown them just how ready Australia are to hand over their urn. All the same, the series is coming to a crescendo, and as in that unforgettable summer of 2005, there is an air of anxious expectation in SE11.

Cruzeiro ganha quatro mil sócios com ida à final da Copa do Brasil

MatériaMais Notícias

Classificado para a final da Copa do Brasil, depois de bater o Grêmio, nos pênaltis, na semifinal, o Cruzeiro viu seu número de sócio-torcedores crescer consideravelmente. Os 55.021 que estavam contabilizados na última quinta-feira, passaram a ser 58.908 nesta segunda. A prioridade na compra de ingressos para a final contra o Flamengo é uma das grandes responsáveis pelo aumento de associados.

O aumento significou um alívio para os cofres do clube celeste, que viu o número de associados ter uma grande queda nos últimos meses. De dezembro de 2016 a fevereiro de 2017, mais de 20 mil pessoas deixaram de ser sócio-torcedores da Raposa.

Para o jogo de ida, marcado para quinta-feira, 7 de setembro, no Maracanã, o preço do Setor Sul, que é o destinado à torcida cruzeirense, é de R$300,00 (inteira). A diretoria do Cruzeiro já informou que comprará toda a carga de ingressos e que revenderá os mesmos em Belo Horizonte, com os sócio-torcedores tendo prioridade na compra. Estes poderão garantir a entrada através do aplicativo ou da página na internet. Para a partida de volta, os preços ainda não foram definidos, mas seguem a lógica do jogo de ida.

Flamengo e Cruzeiro se enfrentam na quinta-feira, 7 de setembro, às 21h45, no Maracanã, valendo o primeiro jogo da final da Copa do Brasil. O jogo de volta acontece dia 27, no mesmo horário, no Mineirão. A Raposa busca seu quinto título na competição, enquanto que o Flamengo está atrás da sua quarta conquista.

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Martinez could replace Bielsa as Leeds boss

Former Granada manager Diego Martinez could potentially replace Marcelo Bielsa as Leeds United boss, according to journalist Adam Leventhal.

The Lowdown: Bielsa’s contract expiration

Bielsa has been a wonderful manager for the Whites since 2018, but it remains to be seen how long he will be in the Elland Road hot-seat.

The 66-year-old’s current Leeds deal expires at the end of this season and it could be that he feels next summer is the time to move on, having hopefully cemented the club as a permanent fixture back in the top flight.

[freshpress-quiz id=“375277″]

The Latest: Martinez linked with Leeds

Should Bielsa bring an end to his time at Leeds, Martinez is somebody who could come in as his replacement.

That’s according to The Athletic‘s Leventhal, who states that he “has links with Leeds director of football Victor Orta” and that working in England is “on his radar.”

Martinez is currently without a club, having left Granada earlier this year.

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The Verdict: Bielsa hopefully stays

Martinez is a talented young manager known for operating on a tight budget and making his teams tough and compact with electrifying counter-attacks, but the hope is that there is no need to find a Bielsa replacement for a number of years.

The Argentine is arguably the most important figure at Elland Road, transforming the club in the last three years and bringing great quality and success on the pitch.

Bielsa is known for only signing one-year deals, so hopefully, that happens again when his current contract runs out. If it doesn’t, Martinez, with a 1.62 points-per-game average at Granada, is certainly a name to keep an eye on.

In other news, Leeds have been boosted ahead of their Premier League clash with Southampton. Read more here.

Aston Villa suffer Leon Bailey injury blow

Aston Villa manager Dean Smith has confirmed that Leon Bailey will miss the Premier League clash against Manchester United on Saturday afternoon.

What’s the story?

The Jamaica international came on as a second half substitute to great effect against Everton last week, scoring one goal and essentially making another. However, his home debut ended under a cloud, with the winger forced off due to injury less than 15 minutes later.

Speaking in his pre-match press conference ahead of the game against United today, Smith said: “Leon has a strain which is likely to keep him out until after the international break. We would be hopeful that he would be available for the Wolves game but we will need to assess him nearer the time and see how he progresses over the next ten days or so.”

Dean Smith will be devastated

The incredible impact that Bailey had on that game against the Toffees showed exactly why he might well turn out to be the best signing of the lot when it comes to Villa’s summer transfer business.

The searing pace and directness with which he took the game to the Merseysiders brought a much-needed energy to Villa, and to now be missing him for a number of matches is undoubtedly a major setback.

After initially seeing Bailey go down with injury, former Villa man Alan Hutton responded by saying: “He’s a little bit different to some players because he’s so explosive. That’s kind of a red flag. You need to be careful, especially if you’re coming back from a hamstring injury or things like that. He’s that quick off the mark that he needs to be right.

“The intensity of the Premier League is massive so it’s always going to put strain on your body. They’re going to have to be careful with him, he is playing catch up. I’m sure over the coming weeks, depending on how bad he is, they’ll take their time with him and try bed him in really slowly.”

Make no mistake about it, Smith will be devastated to discover that Bailey will not only miss today’s game against United, but a few more after that as well, given the enormous impact that he can bring (and has already brought) to Villa’s team.

Meanwhile, Gregg Evans has delivered some transfer insight into this Villa academy starlet…

Paul Pogba was super for France

Manchester United midfielder Paul Pogba put in an excellent performance over the weekend as France secured their maiden UEFA Nations League title.

Les Blues saw off Spain 2-1 in an entertaining final after well-taken goals from Karim Benzema and Kylian Mbappe cancelled out Mikel Oyarzabal’s opener.

The two goalscorers understandably took the majority of the acclaim after the final whistle, but Pogba’s influence over proceedings was arguably overlooked amid the celebrations as Didier Deschamps’ charges secured another piece of silverware.

Just after the hour mark, the 6 foot 2 gem went on a typical surging run, slaloming his way through two challenges before picking out a Mbappe, with the move eventually ending up with Theo Hernandez hitting the crossbar.

It was a sign of things to come for the engine room operator as Pogba then played his part in Benzema’s emphatic equaliser just minutes later, linking the play from midfield to attack as he does so well at club level.

Although he didn’t record a goal or an assist, the Red Devils gem was instrumental in France’s victory, and his control over proceedings from the centre of the pitch was pivotal to his side’s success.

Pogba’s impressive display saw him awarded a match rating of 7.9 out of 10, the highest total for any player on the pitch, as per SofaScore.

And it’s easy to understand why when taking a closer look at his underlying numbers. Pogba completed all six of his attempted dribbles, won a whopping 13 duels and made one key pass throughout the 90 minutes.

The 28-year-old also made a telling contribution defensively too, making three tackles, two clearances and one interception for his national team.

United manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer will be hoping Pogba can maintain this sort of form when the Old Trafford outfit take on Leicester City in the Premier League on Saturday, inspiring them to a much-needed three points.

And, in other news…Solskjaer could unearth Man Utd’s Juan Mata heir in “jet-heeled” 16y/o prodigy

Ex-atacante do São Paulo critica Casagrande em rede social

MatériaMais Notícias

A partida entre Flamengo e São Paulo mexeu com os ânimos dos torcedores do Tricolor paulista. Após mais um jogo sem vencer no campeonato, é normal que nas redes sociais os torcedores comecem a cornetar a equipe. Neste domingo, no entanto, Françoaldo Sena, o França, ex-jogador do São Paulo, usou o Twitter para reclamar, mas não foi da equipe. França criticou o comentarista esportivo da Rede Globo, Walter Casagrande.

No Twitter, França reclamou dos comentários de Casagrande na partida e o chamou de fanático:

— O fanatismo do Casagrande chega a dar nojo… Só sabe criticar o SPFC e falar do ex-time…

Os torcedores do SPFC e seguidores de França dividiram as opiniões em relação aos comentários de Casagrande. Há quem concorde que o comentarista está sendo clubista. Ma também há quem discorde e ache que, na verdade, o time não está fazendo um bom trabalho e por isso não merece boas críticas.

Confira a publicação!

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Big Benn chimes for Windies

England left the subcontinent shortly before Christmas, but it might be worth reminding a few of the batsmen of that fact, after they endured an unexpected trial by spin on the opening day at Sabina Park

Andrew McGlashan in Jamaica05-Feb-2009
Sulieman Benn: keeping England on a tight leash © Getty Images
England left the subcontinent shortly before Christmas, but it might be worth reminding a few of the batsmen of that fact, after they endured an unexpected trial by spin on the opening day at Sabina Park. The pitch itself could have been transplanted straight out of Bangalore or Chennai, which was the first marker of how the game in the Caribbean is now so different to what it once was.Sulieman Benn entered the action in the 15th over of the day and eventually bowed out in the 79th. He and Chris Gayle bowled unchanged for 24 overs either side of lunch and tea, completing 51 between them for the day. In years gone by spin was an afterthought for West Indies captains, something used to rest the fast men or speed up the over-rate, this was an extraordinary deviation from the norm. The changing nature of the pitches, from quick and bouncy to low and crumbling, has necessitated a change of ideas.However, while most who hark back to the glory days of West Indies recall the four quicks of the 80s, there was a generation before that where spin dominated in the form of Sonny Ramadin, Alf Valentine and, a little while later, Lance Gibbs. The 2009 versions will need more days like this to earn places among that exalted company, yet at times England played them as though faced with spitting cobras. They were crease-bound and virtually scoreless for long periods and the partnership between Kevin Pietersen and Paul Collingwood registering 23 runs in 17 overs – all against spin.Benn was the one who really caught the eye, using his height and long fingers to good effect and extracting appreciable turn and bounce from the surface. The pitch isn’t rapid, but Benn still managed to put enough on the ball to beat, and take, the outside edge on regular occasions. He has developed since making his debut against Sri Lanka, in Guyana, last year when he appeared to be more of a roller than a spinner. Now he puts more into his action at the crease, staying tall and giving it a rip.”I’m hungry to take wickets, personally I’m proud of the spinners in the Caribbean,” Benn said. “There are some decent spinners around, there has been some talk about the lack of quality of spinners in the Caribbean and I want to prove the [those] people wrong. I’ve been playing cricket pretty much all of 2008, done a lot of bowling and am getting better, hopefully.”Indeed he is getting better, especially with his subtle variations. The arm-ball caused plenty of problems, beating both Pietersen and Andrew Flintoff, and contributing to their lack of desire to get down the pitch. A boundary came off his third ball when he dropped short and was cut through point by Pietersen, but he didn’t concede his second until Pietersen drove him through the covers in his 23rd over.And Benn showed impressive nerve when Pietersen finally had a dip to race towards three figures. He was driven, swiped and swept before, next ball, firing it in fuller and Pietersen got a huge top-edge. A wicket to remember for Benn – “right up there” in his limited Test scalps, he said. “Obviously I was very satisfied with it, he had hit me for 14 in the previous three balls, so it was very satisfying,” he added. “When he was in the eighties I could see that he wanted to get to his hundred pretty quickly, it was just a matter of staying patient and staying in the zone.”As a spinner, you’ve got to bowl long spells, you can’t get away from it, especially if the pitch is that slow,” he said with weary satisfaction. “I’ve bowled some decent spells, but I reckon this is the best ever.”And the amount of spin didn’t half help with the over-rate, too. At the end of the first hour West Indies had bowled 12, but by mid-afternoon they were ahead of the required target. The ICC will be pleased. However, it was also to West Indies’ advantage that they kept the rate up as a stack of overs whizzed by and the score had barely moved.While that is less of a concern in Tests than one-dayers it still plays on the mind of naturally attacking batsmen who feel they should be scoring upwards of three-an-over most of the time. England went from the 22nd to the 50th over without hitting a boundary before Flintoff pulled Daren Powell through midwicket when Gayle eventually recalled his pacemen. Such is the fragile nature of this West Indies side, that as soon as England started to play positively their demeanour became less confident.That is why the removal of Pietersen was so crucial, if he had remained for the rest of the day he could have carried the momentum firmly away. Danger still lurks in the shape of Flintoff, who has played an impressively restrained innings, and the lower order, while some of the quick bowling in the final hour was wayward.”I think we are ahead at the moment,” Benn said. “Obviously we would have liked six or seven on first day but given the pitch, I think we bowled well and fielded well and we are pretty satisfied.”The key for West Indies is stringing together entire good days, not letting it slip after two good sessions. However, what they needed to do was back up talk of their improvement with a performance on the field. They have done that, in an unexpected way, now let’s hope it wasn’t a one-off.

Jemson: Davies gained a lot of experience from time at Liverpool

Former professional footballer Nigel Jemson believes that Ben Davies will have learned a lot from his spell at Liverpool. 

The 26-year-old signed a season-long loan deal with Sheffield United earlier this month and featured in the Blades’ most recent Championship outing against Huddersfield Town.

Davies has had plenty of Championship experience after featuring three assists.

The centre-back signed for Liverpool from Preston in February but failed to make a senior appearance for the Reds, although Nigel Jemson believes that he will have learned a lot from his time at Anfield.

“You know what it did do, it certainly gave Ben a good experience being around top, top professionals for a short time. So, I’m sure he gained a lot of experience in the short spell there to take with him to Sheffield United and see what happens from there,” Jemson told Transfer Tavern.

It has not been the best start to life back in the Championship for Sheffield United and manager Slavisa Jokanovic so far, with Blades only collecting one point from a possible 12.

Jokanovic has had previous success in the Championship, having guided Fulham to promotion to the Premier League after beating Aston Villa in the play-off final at Wembley in 2018.

Tendulkar's mission control

Effortlessly, Sachin Tendulkar brought people back to the actual game, and with Sourav Ganguly’s help, India into the match

Cricinfo staff17-Oct-2008
There was plenty of reason for the actual game to get sidetracked today, but Sachin Tendulkar put matters, and India, back on track © AFP
The lead-up to this Test had been full of distractions – Anil Kumble’s injury, the players still fighting like children over who brought forward moral victories from Bangalore, the unseasonal rains in Mohali raising doubts over the match going the distance. Around a quarter past one on the first day more distractions were about to unfold. When Rahul Dravid played Brett Lee onto his stumps, the Test sort of took a back seat and another aside started: Sachin Tendulkar’s progress towards Brian Lara’s record.It was a pretty edgy hour and a quarter – so edgy it was surreal – that followed, during which Tendulkar made his way to the record and India lost two more wickets. What followed immediately after was more distraction from Test-match cricket: fire-crackers went off at the PCA Stadium and continued for three minutes. The Australians rushing to congratulate Tendulkar was expected but when it happened it felt unreal coming from a team that plays its cricket hard.There would be other milestones to follow, too: Tendulkar would go past 12,000 runs and Sourav Ganguly past 7000. But when Tendulkar bats as he did for the next two hours, distractions don’t matter. Effortlessly, he brought people back to the actual game and, with Ganguly’s help, India into the match.India had a confident, brisk start on a pitch conducive to one; the bounce was true but not big and there was no sideways movement. The immediate assessment was a total close to 500 would be par for this track. Gautam Gambhir and Dravid looked to put India on the way, but failed to score centuries – crucial for both of them, for different reasons – that appeared there for the taking. This was a pitch on which a batsman, once settled, would kick himself for not reaching three figures.Gambhir is due a big score. He has done well since forcing his way back to the Test side following his limited-overs success, and has been a good foil to Virender Sehwag at the top. He has scored 427 runs in nine innings on comeback, against tough opposition and in trying conditions, but his best has been 72. That he gets starts points to his form – perhaps the best of his career – but he also leaves the team in a spot of bother by not converting those starts into big innings, as he did today and during the first innings at the PSS in Sri Lanka this summer. In 19 Tests Gambhir only has one century, against Bangladesh. That should be enough to rile and inspire him.The way he batted in the first session today, it seemed certain Gambhir would end that century drought. For some reason, despite being an excellent rotator of strike in limited-overs cricket, he got bogged down when the field spread and the bowling became accurate. Having eased to 25 from 39 balls, Gambhir slowed down. He went into lunch on 53 from 90 balls and in the next hour or so he faced 50 balls for just 14 runs.If this was uncharacteristic, so was Dravid’s innings. Instead of the patchy starts he’s had recently, Dravid began, instinctively speaking, the way he did when at the top of his game. But this was his 11th score between 30 and 100, to go with one century, in his last 15 Tests. When scoring was made difficult, Dravid didn’t seem to show the kind of patience one associates with him. Once he went after a delivery wide outside off stump, and missed. In his prime Dravid would have left such deliveries alone for the next half hour; today, he went for the next delivery and failed to connect properly. Three overs later he went to cut another wide one, which was marginally too full, and chopped it onto his stumps.At this point Australia had taken three wickets, only one of them earned. A fourth followed, amid the frenzy around Tendulkar, but Mitchell Johnson should consider himself lucky to dismiss a quality batsman like VVS Laxman with a leg-side ball that didn’t deserve a wicket. Suddenly India had lost three wickets for 13 runs and were in danger of getting bowled out for a below-par total on a good batting track.Thankfully for India Tendulkar, once he’d acquired Lara’s record, batted with fluency. There was nothing circumspect about the way he played after tea. Ganguly took the initiative, but it was Tendulkar who showed Australia how hopelessly unhelpful the pitch was on the first day. There was no discrimination: no bowler nor shot escaped Tendulkar. Ganguly, in distinct patches of quietness and aggressive intent, was solid throughout. The difference in India’s approach after tea was clear: the first time Tendulkar faced the new ball he deposited it to the cover boundary.Australia were reduced to being honest witnesses who relied on the batsmen’s mercies and mistakes. And a mistake is what they drew from Tendulkar towards the end of the play. As a result, while they didn’t have any say in the way the game progressed, they ended the day pretty much even. India need a big partnership tomorrow morning to take a clear advantage. And tomorrow, there won’t be as many distractions from Test cricket.

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