Forget Saka: Arteta may have unearthed the new Henry in 10/10 Arsenal star

Arsenal’s sensational showing against Real Madrid at the Santiago Bernabéu last night secured their place in the semi-finals of the Champions League, setting up a clash with PSG.

Mikel Arteta’s men produced a perfect showing in Spain, restricting the hosts to minimal chances and shutting down any chances of another famous comeback.

Two second-half goals from Bukayo Saka and Gabriel Martinelli wrapped up a 5-1 aggregate triumph, dumping the current holders out of the competition.

Such a result has moved the Gunners within touching distance of a first Champions League final since 2006, with Arteta having the chance to write himself into the club’s history forever.

If they are to go all the way and lift the trophy, the side will have to replicate such a display in the following rounds, with numerous players catching the eye during the victory in Madrid.

Arsenal’s star performers against Real Madrid

After his huge rise to stardom in recent months, it’s easy to forget that left-back Myles Lewis-Skelly is just 18 years of age, with his showing last night way beyond his tender years.

He managed to win 80% of the ground duels he entered, making five clearances and two interceptions, playing a key role in preventing the hosts from getting back into the tie.

Madrid vs Arsenal

However, another academy graduate in the form of Saka also managed to produce an incredible display, with his latest goal taking him to four Champions League goals this campaign.

The 23-year-old registered a 100% shot accuracy, getting all three of his efforts on target, but also starring defensively, winning 100% of the tackles he entered against the Spanish giants.

The aforementioned pair certainly played a vital role in the quarter-final victory, but one other star has managed to repeat the feat of a fan favourite, given his showing in Madrid last night.

The player who has become Arteta’s new Henry

Back in the last campaign in which Arsenal reached the Champions League final, they also defeated Madrid en route, with forward Thierry Henry tearing the opposition apart.

His stupendous solo effort at the Bernabeu was the difference between the two sides over the two legs, with his moment of magic making the Gunners the first English side to win at the stadium.

Such a showing catapulted Arsène Wenger’s side to the latter stages of the competition, with his outing that night 19 years ago still living long in the memory of supporters.

However, the current generation has their own version of the Frenchman in the form of midfielder Declan Rice after his own showing against Carlo Ancelotti’s men last night.

The England international built on his two-goal haul in the first leg, securing the Man of the Match award for the second successive outing against the LaLiga outfit, highlighting how impressive he was in the triumph.

The 26-year-old completed 96% of the passes he attempted against the European giants, with three of which going into the final third, allowing the likes of Saka to kill off the tie.

However, despite his impressive showing with the ball, he was also just as effective without, winning 100% of the tackles he entered, offering a real commanding force at the base of Arteta’s midfield.

Minutes played

89

Passes completed

25/26 (96%)

Passes into final third

3

Tackles won

2/2 (100%)

Interceptions made

4

Clearances made

3

Blocks made

2

He also made four interceptions, three clearances and two blocks – leading to journalist Paul Hayward labelling him “superb” in what was one of his best performances for the club.

As a result of his display, Rice was handed a 10/10 match rating by The Express’ Fraser Watson, further indicating how sensational his showing was against the defending champions.

Whilst he operates in a completely different role to Henry, his outing at the Bernabeu was similar to that in stature of the forward, helping the side advance to the next stage of the Champions League.

If the Gunners are to finally get their hands on the trophy in the coming months, there’s no denying Rice will have a crucial part to play, with his big-money fee a bargain should he lead the side to European glory.

Better signing than Isak: Arsenal in talks for 'one of the world's best'

Arsenal could be about to pull off a deal that could see them forget about Alexander Isak.

ByEthan Lamb Apr 16, 2025

عمرو مصيلحي: بلدان عربيان مرشحان لاستضافة سوبر السلة.. واهتمام وزاري بملف التجنيس

أشاد عمرو مصيلحي رئيس الاتحاد المصري لكرة السلة، بالجيل الحالي من اللاعبات تحت 16 سنة والمشارك حاليًا في بطولة الأفروباسكت في رواندا، كما أعرب عن سعادته بالمستوى المميز، متمنياً لهن التوفيق وتحقيق اللقب.

وكان منتخب مصر لكرة السلة تحت 16 عاماً، قد تأهل اليوم إلى الدور نصف النهائي ببطولة الأفروباسكت المقامة في العاصمة الرواندية “كيجالي”، وذلك بعد الفوز على أنجولا.

وقال عمرو مصيلحي في تصريحات عبر برنامج “7*1” على إذاعة “أون سبورت إف إم”: “الهدف الرئيسي في الفترة المقبلة يتمثل في زيادة الموارد المالية للاتحاد، بما يتيح تنفيذ البرامج المخططة والصرف بشكل جيد على المنتخبات الوطنية، إضافة إلى تنظيم دورات دولية تحتاج إلى مصروفات كبيرة”.

طالع أيضاً.. مجلس إدارة الأهلي يُصدر بيانًا عاجلًا بعد قرار الخطيب عدم الاستمرار في منصبه

وأشار: “الدكتور مصطفى فوزي، رئيس لجنة الموارد، له دور كبير في ذلك، كما أن الاتحاد حقق إنجازات في هذا الملف ويتطلع لمزيد من النجاحات الأخرى في المستقبل القريب”.

وأكد عمرو مصيلحي على دعم اتحاد السلة لمنتخب 3×3 قبل مشاركته في بطولة العالم تحت 23 عاماً، مشدداً على أن الاتحاد يساند الفريق بشكل قوي لضمان ظهوره في الأولمبياد مستقبلاً.

وعن السوبر المصري قال: “الاتحاد يسعى لإقامة المباراة خارج مصر بالتنسيق مع دولتين عربيتين، على أن يتم تحديد المكان رسمياً في وقت لاحق”.

وأتم: “تحدثت مع الدكتور أشرف صبحي، وزير الشباب والرياضة، عن ملف التجنيس ووعدني بالاهتمام بالأمر خلال الفترة المقبلة، هناك محاولات سابقة لم تكلل بالنجاح لكن الاتحاد سيواصل العمل على هذا الملف في المرحلة القادمة”.

What do we mean when we say a cricketer is mentally tough?

It’s a misunderstood, misused term that is not very useful in describing elite athletes

Paddy Upton29-Apr-2019At this juncture, it is worth having a conversation about the concept of ‘mental toughness’, which is currently the most overused and least understood concept in sports psychology. I neither agree with nor use the term.When helping the Indian players to develop better mental resolve and manage their emotions in preparation for the World Cup, we were not attempting to create ‘mentally tough’ athletes. Because there is no such thing as mental toughness, and even if there was, the idea of striving to be mentally tough is flawed.There’s no such thing
I contend that mental toughness is like Batman and Superman. We all know them. But they’re not real and don’t actually exist.In a review of over thirty published academic papers on mental toughness involving forty-four world-class researchers, it emerged that there is no agreement on the definition of mental toughness. Sport psychologists cannot agree on what mental toughness is. In trying to define this concept, they broke it down into subcomponents like grit, resilience, focus, emotional control, mental control, hardness and so on. Collectively, those thirty-plus papers present as many as seventy-five subcomponents that supposedly make up mental toughness!Of all the instruments available to measure mental toughness, there are only two that have been validated: The Australian Football Mental Toughness Inventory (AFMTI) and Mental Toughness Q48 (MTQ48). These are the only two instruments that reliably measure what they are supposed to measure.However, there is no agreement on whether these instruments are relevant for both men and women. There is disagreement about the relevance to different age levels, different experience levels, different levels of competitiveness and, importantly, there is no transfer between sporting codes. Thus, the Australian Football instrument does not necessarily apply to other sports.Further, when ‘mentally tough’ players assess themselves, and coaches, who know them well, also assess them, the results are fundamentally different. There isn’t even agreement over how players see themselves and how a coach sees those same players. There is also no agreement on whether mental toughness is to do with nurture (something we’re taught), or nature (something we are born with).What becomes patently clear from a review of these academic papers and literature on mental toughness is that sport psychologists, who are supposed to be the experts, cannot define and don’t even understand the concept. And yet, as coaches and parents, we continue to use the term and judge players based on it. Players also use it to judge each other and commentators apply it liberally in their descriptions of players.How then should we ordinary sportspeople interpret the findings and subcategories in those thirty-odd research papers on mental toughness? Let’s have a closer look.

I have worked with a few psychopaths. I’ve seen the so-called attributes of mental toughness in them, which help deliver results on the field. I have also seen what it looks like when their mental toughness is unmasked as psychopathic behaviour

The following is what, and who, some of these researchers studied: 160 elite athletes, ten international performers, twelve mentally tough UK cricketers, eight Olympic champions, and thirty-one elite coaches. In other words, what the world’s academics are trying to tell us is that they’ve studied the world’s best.Psycho-what?
When we study the best of the best, consider the following as a list of definitions associated with mental toughness: massive belief in self and one’s ability; emotional control; clear thinking under pressure; ruthless pursuit of goals; operating well in chaos; not intimidated by others; unaffected by loss and failure; easily spots weakness in opponents; inspirational, popular, influential; and compulsive liar.I would bet that, until you got to the last point, you were in agreement that this was a pretty accurate list of mental toughness attributes.However, the list I provided above is not a list of definitions of mental toughness – those are character traits of psychopaths taken from an article on psychopathy.At this juncture, you’d be perfectly justified in asking why on earth I would include this list of psychopathic traits in a discussion on mental toughness. What if I told you that the academics who studied mental toughness amongst elite athletes might unknowingly have unearthed their psychopathic traits and prescribed these as characteristics of mental toughness? Barring only one or two, the traits are the same.Okay, so who are these people, and how many of them are out there?Psychopaths are born with brain functioning that is different from ‘normal’ people, and this is not reversible. As luck would have it (for them), these brain differences manifest outwardly in that individual possessing many of those performance assets mentioned earlier – all of which are highly sought-after qualities for success (and leadership), and of so-called mental toughness. This is the reason for so many psychopaths achieving such high levels of success in business, as well as in politics and sport.Prof. Clive Boddy from Middlesex University suggests that one out of every hundred people is born a psychopath. He suggests that one in twenty managers in corporate America is a psychopath, called a ‘corporate psychopath’ because they thrive in business environments. In industries like the media, the legal fraternity, finance, banking and politics, Boddy suggests one in five top executives or CEOs are in fact psychopaths. Research has not yet been conducted on the prevalence of psychopaths in sport, but do the math.If this is the first time you’ve encountered the concept of corporate psychopaths, you may be struggling to join the dots between serial killers and successful businessmen (and athletes). The only difference between a corporate psychopath and Hannibal Lecter (Silence of the Lambs) and Co. who torture animals as children and end up as jailed serial killers as adults, is their propensity for violence. Illustrating this point, one study at the University of Surrey on thirty-nine high-level British executives compared their psychopathic traits to those of criminals and psychiatric patients. They found that business executives were more likely to be superficially charming, egocentric, insincere and manipulative, and just as likely to be grandiose, exploitative, and lacking in empathy as criminals and psychiatric patients. The criminals only scored higher than these executives on being impulsive and physically aggressive.Paddy Upton watches Rohit Sharma bat in the nets, 2008•AFP/Getty ImagesIf you’re still not quite joining the dots, remember Lance Armstrong, the cancer survivor and seven-times Tour de France champion who put both cycling and the fight against cancer on the world map! A study of Armstrong the cyclist will reveal possibly all you need to know about what mental toughness looks like.This is the same person that the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) called ‘the ringleader of the most sophisticated, professionalised and successful doping programme that sport has ever seen’. He cheated, lied and bullied his way to those seven titles, and when threatened with exposure, he covered his tracks, intimidated witnesses and lied to hearing panels and to the world. When the prosecution presented irrefutable evidence of his doping from twenty-six people, including eleven of his own teammates, he still vehemently denied having ever doped. The prosecution went on to suggest that some of the most shocking evidence had to do with Armstrong’s vindictive, mendacious and vicious character. One report suggested, ‘He comes across less like a cyclist, more like a psychopath.’Without going too far down this rabbit hole, the following is worth noting: What sport psychologists, coaches, parents and players are prescribing as a model of mental toughness is equally likely to be the success-producing traits of highly successful and highly functional psychopaths. I have worked with a few psychopaths. I’ve seen the so-called attributes of mental toughness in them, which help deliver results on the field. I have seen how fans, friends and the media adore these people. But I have also seen what it looks like when their mental toughness is unmasked as psychopathic behaviour. They come across as being narcissistic and entirely self-serving, compulsive (and clever) liars, manipulators without any remorse and an inability to take responsibility for their errors. These are not qualities we should encourage as general conditions for performance.In short, psychologists themselves cannot agree about what mental toughness is. At best they have provided a list of seventy-five subcomponents to describe the concept. There’s also a case to suggest that researchers have inadvertently identified the success-producing traits of a sports version of the ‘corporate psychopaths’, and are prescribing those as a model of mental toughness. Although only a recently detected (and initially confusing) phenomenon, there are already a few papers published and books written on corporate psychopathy, which we might hear more about in the time to come. One final note is that corporate psychopaths exhibit degrees of psychopathy, with some possessing a greater number of psychopathic traits than others, both positive and negative.Mental toughness as a failed concept
The second reason Gary and I were not trying to create mentally tough players relates to the judgement directed at athletes based on this. It’s sad that someone is either mentally tough, or not. And if they’re not mentally tough, they’re ‘fragile’, ‘weak’, ‘soft’, ‘they crumble under pressure’, ‘they can’t handle the heat’, ‘they’re insecure’, ‘they’re vulnerable’ or ‘they’re doubting’. That’s how we label athletes who make mistakes under pressure.Here’s the rub. Except for out-and-out psychopaths, all other athletes, professional and amateur, make mistakes, often under pressure, and all of these so-called mistakes are frequently labelled as ‘weak’ and ‘soft’. Almost every one of us has doubts and insecurities. I have hardly ever worked with an athlete who is fully confident, secure and ever positive. Sure, I have worked with some who are good at hiding their doubts, but their vulnerabilities and insecurities still gnaw away at them from the inside. They try really hard to protect themselves from the public perception that these normal human fragilities are in fact unforgivable weaknesses. But they all have them. The ‘mentally weak’ labels we place on those who fall short of our unrealistic expectation of perfection are harsh, unfair and I’d say, uneducated.

We’re often told to ‘face your fear’, to embrace it rather than run or hide from it. It turns out, we might also benefit from facing and experiencing negative emotions

I did some of my best , he suggests taking a radically different stance towards those things most of us spend our lives trying hard to avoid, like failure, negativity and death. He makes a case for learning to enjoy uncertainty, embracing insecurity and becoming familiar with failure. We’re often told to ‘face your fear’, to embrace it rather than run or hide from it. It turns out, we might also benefit from facing and experiencing negative emotions – or, at the very least, by not running quite so hard from them. Fear of failure is one of the world’s most prominent negative thoughts. Failure will happen, so why not rather face and embrace it?After all those sessions of trying to get Gautie to be more ‘positive’, which never worked, at least not for any length of time, I changed track and got him to try and accept exactly how he felt.We made it okay to feel frustrated, negative and disappointed. Once these thoughts and feelings were acknowledged, we’d say, ‘Okay. So, what do you need to do to get even better?’Seligman contends that it is possible to learn to be more optimistic about a negative situation; he calls it ‘learned optimism’. Let’s use the example of a batsman scoring three low scores in a row. An optimistic approach would be to attribute it to external circumstances. ‘It was unlucky’, rather than the pessimistic approach of turning the mirror inward and blaming yourself by saying, ‘I’m not good enough’. Next is to see it as a setback in one small area of your life: ‘It’s just my batting, but so much else about my game and life is great’, rather than an all-encompassing negative perspective of ‘I’m a failure’. Finally, and not necessarily in this order, is to see that the failures are temporary. ‘This will soon pass and I’ll be back to scoring runs’, rather than ‘I don’t know if I’ll ever get out of this slump’, which is the more permanent worldview of the pessimist.Because of the way they view problems, pessimists suffer ‘poor form’ for longer than optimists. In fact, Seligman’s work suggests pessimists are eight times more likely to become depressed when bad things happen, they do worse at school, in sport and at their jobs than their talent suggests, have poorer health, shorter lives and rockier relationships. This is a tough pill to swallow, considering that over 50 per cent of people are wired on the pessimist side of the continuum. The good news is that optimism can be learned, by attributing the problem to external factors, seeing it happening in only a small area of your life, and as being temporary.

‘Mental toughness’ is closer to being a placebo prescribed by coaches, psychologists and academics who don’t really appreciate the art, beauty and complexity of working with athletes as individual human beings first

It’s also worth mentioning that a dose of pessimism is healthy, especially in situations where mistakes may have significant consequences. Where optimists will charge ahead with full (sometimes unfounded) confidence and without much considered thought, pessimists will think through everything that can go wrong, take necessary precautions and come up with contingency plans. Pessimism helps by preventing us from taking unnecessary risks or acting recklessly. Any athlete engaging in a dangerous sport needs to have a healthy dose of pessimism. Too much, and they’ll never get out of the starting blocks; too little, and they may not reach the finish line. George Bernard Shaw famously said, ‘Both optimists and pessimists contribute to society. The optimist invents the aeroplane, the pessimist the parachute.’Because people are different, the concepts of being mentally tough, positive and optimistic, or of being in control of one’s emotions, at least outwardly, are unrealistic for everyone. M.S. Dhoni, as an example, has incredible emotional control. He by Paddy Upton, published by Westland Sport

Rodgers must drop Idah to unleash Celtic ace who could "become world-class"

Celtic moved one step closer to clinching a fourth successive Scottish Premiership title on Saturday with a hard-fought 5-2 win over St Mirren away from home.

The Hoops took advantage of Rangers losing 2-1 to Motherwell by winning their match and extending their lead at the top of the table to a staggering 16 points.

It now feels like a matter of when, not if, Brendan Rodgers and his men will be parading the trophy around Parkhead and Glasgow, with just nine matches left to be played.

The Scottish giants did make hard work of their win over St Mirren, though, as they were pegged back at 1-1 and 2-2 before going on to win the game comfortably.

There was a touch of controversy around the victory, however, as Alistair Johnston’s studs-up challenge, as shown above, went unpunished by the referee or VAR.

Rodgers will focus on things that he can control, though, and he may not have been too pleased with the performance of his starting centre-forward, Adam Idah.

Adam Idah's performance against St Mirren

The Ireland international was recalled to the starting line-up by the Northern Irish head coach after Daizen Maeda had been selected ahead of him as the number nine in the 5-1 win over Aberdeen in the previous match.

It was a huge chance for the summer signing from Norwich City to prove to the manager that he has what it takes to start regularly for the Hoops, rather than playing a back-up role behind Maeda for the rest of the campaign.

Unfortunately, it was an opportunity that the 24-year-old marksman did not take, which tracks with his performances over the course of this season, as he failed to put in a strong performance at the top end of the pitch.

Vs St Mirren

Adam Idah

Minutes

64

Shots

0

Key passes

1

Dribbles completed

0/1

Duels won

0/2

Pass accuracy

71%

Stats via Sofascore

As you can see in the table above, Idah offered very little in the final third, with no efforts on goal in 64 minutes, and did not provide the physicality that he is capable of, standing at 6 foot 3, with zero duels won.

The Irish attacker, who has only scored eight goals from 10.28 xG in the Premiership this season, has been wasteful in front of goal in the division, but did not even manage to get the better of defenders to work the goalkeeper against St Mirren.

Chalkboard

This shows that the opposition defenders were able to easily outmuscle and ease the former Norwich academy graduate out of the game before he was taken off in the 64th minute.

Therefore, Rodgers must instantly and ruthlessly drop Idah straight back down to the bench for next weekend’s SFA Cup quarter-final clash with Hibernian.

The Celtic star who should replace Adam Idah

Whilst Maeda, who has scored 26 goals in all competitions this season, should replace Idah as the starting centre-forward, moving across from a wide position, Rodgers must bring in a player from the bench to take the Irishman’s place in the starting line-up.

The former Leicester City and Liverpool head coach has plenty of options to pick from, including Johnny Kenny, Jota, and Hyun-jun Yang – who were all on the bench to start with against St Mirren.

It is Yang, however, who should be given the nod to start out wide against Hibernian in the SFA Cup clash, because his outstanding cameo on Saturday should be rewarded by Rodgers.

As you can see in the clip above, Yang made it 3-2 to Celtic with a terrific header after coming off the bench, before he also assisted Maeda’s goal to make it 4-2 and then added a fifth for the Hoops with another header in stoppage time.

It was a terrific cameo from the South Korean star, who earned the Player of the Match award despite playing 25 minutes, and that is why he should be unleashed from the start against Hibernian to give him the chance to showcase his quality from minute one.

Hyun-jun Yang's progression this season

It is fair to say that Yang has progressed since his debut campaign with the Hoops last term, as he has offered far more to the team at the top end of the pitch.

After the win over St Mirren, Rodgers suggested that the player’s girlfriend being in the country has helped him to shine on the pitch, and that is something that supporters may not think about, as Yang arrived at Celtic last summer in a new country, a new continent, and may not have felt entirely comfortable without his family or loved ones.

He has now had over 18 months to acclimate to life in Glasgow and having his partner with him has seemingly allowed him to flourish on the pitch.

Hyun-jun Yang (Premiership)

23/24

24/25

Appearances (starts)

24 (10)

17 (8)

Goals

1

4

Big chances created

5

3

Key passes per game

0.9

0.9

Assists

3

2

Stats via Sofascore

As you can see in the table above, Yang has already racked up more direct goal contributions than he managed in the league last season, despite playing seven fewer matches so far.

At the time of his move from Gangwon in the summer of 2023, his former club president Kim Byung-ji claimed that the young winger has immense potential and compared him to another South Korean sensation, saying: “I hope Yang will continue to grow. He could easily become a world class player like Son Heung-min.”

Heung-min Son for Tottenham

Whilst it remains to be seen if he will go on to score 126 goals in the Premier League, as Son has, Yang is on the right track at Celtic, as shown by his progression this season.

The 22-year-old star has produced five goals and six assists in all competitions for the Scottish giants and will be hoping to add to that tally if he is included in the starting line-up on the flank against Hibernian next weekend.

Rodgers has unearthed his next Idah in Celtic star with "incredible pace"

The Celtic head coach may have found his new Adam Idah in the impressive loan star.

2

By
Dan Emery

Feb 28, 2025

His incredible showing off the bench, coupled with Idah’s poor display from the start, suggests that Rodgers should drop the Irish striker in order to unleash Yang in the quarter-final clash.

Explainer – Making sense of Babar Azam's unexpected resignation as Pakistan captain

First things first, why did Babar Azam resign?

Well, some degree of change invariably tends to follow poor ODI World Cup campaigns. When Pakistan failed to make the semi-finals in 2019, head coach Mickey Arthur and batting coach Grant Flower were sent packing. Within a year, Sarfaraz Ahmed was gone as ODI captain.Related

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  • Babar Azam resigns as Pakistan captain in all formats

Pressure had begun to mount on Babar’s captaincy, and lingering concerns about his decision-making, particularly when it came to in-game situations, never really went away. When Babar was appointed Pakistan captain, it wasn’t for technical astuteness; that was widely believed to be a weak spot in his game. Rather, he was the best batter in the side, and the only guaranteed all-format starter at the time.He oversaw a poor run of late with the Test side, including home defeats against Australia and England, the latter Pakistan’s first ever home whitewash. A home series draw against New Zealand was followed by an impressive 2-0 away win in Sri Lanka, but those were Pakistan’s first Test wins in a year. Aside from his first series as captain in January 2021, Babar never oversaw a Test match win at home.The 2023 Asia Cup was viewed as a disappointment, with Pakistan finishing fourth and, at the 2023 World Cup, they lost five of nine games, including one against Afghanistan, which sent them tumbling out in the first round.

Reluctant resignation, you say?

There is limited evidence Babar truly wanted to step aside. Following Pakistan’s final match at the World Cup, he told Michael Atherton at the post-match presentation that he wished to lead the rebuild, and he reiterated that at the press conference. The PCB said it told him yesterday it had decided to remove him as white-ball captain, and offered him the chance to keep the Test captaincy. Babar appears to have seen the writing on the wall after that, and decided to resign across formats.While still key to Pakistan’s fortunes with the bat, Babar Azam has not had a good time of it as captain of late•ICC/Getty Images

Wait, this is an interim management committee. Can it really sack a captain?

Almost certainly not. The PCB chairman has the authority to appoint and remove captains, and while Zaka Ashraf is currently performing that duty, he is the head of the PCB management committee on a temporary basis, a role he had extended for three months by the Pakistan caretaker prime minister. A court in Pakistan ruled the committee did not have the power to make significant changes during its tenure, and was to operate only on a caretaker basis.So to get rid of Babar as captain, it needed Babar to offer his resignation himself. Theoretically, had he refused, he would have remained Pakistan captain in all formats, and the PCB would have no mechanism for removing him.Well, it would still have one avenue: simply not selecting him. But for obvious cricketing reasons, that always seemed untenable.

So who replaces him? Is it one person across formats?

We know the answer to that is no. The PCB seemed extremely prepared for his resignation, some would say suspiciously so. Within an hour, it appointed Shan Masood, summoned to PCB headquarters in Lahore – even though the committee had ostensibly offered Babar the option to continue as Test captain – as the new Test captain. Shaheen Afridi is the T20I captain. In a moment that perfectly encapsulates the workings of this PCB administration, it also announced Shaheen as ODI captain on social media, before that graphic was swiftly deleted. It later said the ODI captain would be announced “in due course”.

You mentioned Mickey Arthur was sacked after the 2019 World Cup. What’s his deal now? Is he still with Pakistan cricket?

Well, yes and no. The PCB announced team director Mickey Arthur, as well as head coach Grant Bradburn, have had their roles “reassigned”. There is no information on what they have been reassigned to do, but ESPNcricinfo understands this means neither will travel to Australia next month for Pakistan’s next assignment, a three-match Test series.Mickey Arthur: to stay or not to stay?•Getty Images

So if coaches won’t travel with the team, why not remove them?

Because at this point the board probably can’t. It also likely falls outside the scope of what this PCB management committee can do. In the absence of Arthur or Bradburn offering their resignations, as Babar did, the PCB has to keep them on. It is understood that resignations from either are not expected anytime soon.

So who’s going to coach in their steads in Australia, then?

Zaka Ashraf met, among others, Mohammad Hafeez on Tuesday, and it seems that meeting went rather well, because he offered him Arthur’s job. Hafeez will take over as team director, and it is understood he will go to Australia and New Zealand with the side. Hafeez will also take over as head coach, effectively ending the practice of appointing two separate people as team director and head coach. The practice only started with Mickey Arthur’s ascension to team director while grant Bradburn was already in situ.

Well, all this seems quite chaotic. When will we get a PCB administration that is allowed to make actual decisions?

We thought we’d have one by now when Ashraf came into the role, but with Pakistan’s caretaker government having stretched its role beyond the constitutionally allotted three months, the caretaker prime minister also handed Ashraf and the management committee a further three months.That should take us through to February, when Pakistan is due to hold general elections. Any prime minister that emerges out of those will have the authority to nominate a PCB chairman, and once PCB elections are held, a full PCB administration will have all the powers they have traditionally possessed.Shan Masood takes charge of Pakistan in red-ball cricket – for now at least•Getty Images

What does this mean for Babar, Arthur, Bradburn, Masood and Shaheen?

Simply that any developments that have occurred in the past 24 hours are liable to be reversed. If Najam Sethi returns as chairman in February, a definite possibility, it could mean good news for Arthur and Bradburn. He had made clear his desire that Pakistan hire foreign coaches, and publicly pursued Arthur for months before landing a deal for him to return. He would also have the authority to appoint or remove any captain or coach.

So these changes are only going to be in effect for the tour of Australia?

That, and the following five T20Is in New Zealand, yes. After that, as ever in Pakistan cricket, all bets are off.

Middlesex embrace batting demons as Ryan Higgins leads bonus-point quest

Three wickets fall on truncated first day as relegation fight with Kent hots up

ECB Reporters Network26-Sep-2023Relegation-threatened Middlesex closed a truncated opening day of their LV= Insurance County Championship match against Nottinghamshire on 162 for three as they began the last round of the 2023 season with one eye on Kent’s progress against Lancashire in Canterbury.Middlesex have to better Kent’s result or match it with at least one more bonus point than their rivals if they are to avoid joining Northamptonshire in Division Two next season.Given that they have won only two batting bonus points all season, skipper Toby Roland-Jones might have taken a few by surprise with his decision to bat first, although he might argue that his players are at least close to the four-an-over run-rate required in the 42 overs possible after rain delayed the start until 2pm.Whether they turn that into a substantial hand of points is another matter, especially since they have also lost Stevie Eskinazi, at least for the moment. He was hit on the head by a ball from Lyndon James on 23 and was not deemed fit to continue.It looks vital that the partnership between Ryan Higgins (60) and John Simpson (26), currently worth 69, turns into something substantial on day two.The day had begun with Nottinghamshire announcing the pending departure from the club of Jake Ball, their 32-year-old former England fast bowler, who was integral to the county winning the T20 Blast in 2017 and 2020 but has made only a handful of Championship appearances in recent seasons because of recurrent injury problems.Thankfully fit currently, and with Nottinghamshire already assured of remaining in Division One next season, Ball was given the chance to say a proper goodbye, making his first outing in the red-ball side since July in place of the Sri Lankan Asitha Fernando.He took the new ball alongside Brett Hutton, who has been the mainstay of the Nottinghamshire attack this year with Olly Stone and Luke Fletcher also sidelined. Neither of them started particularly well but took wickets in consecutive overs to remove both Middlesex openers with 33 on the board.Ball struck first, drawing an edge from Sam Robson for his 204th first-class wicket for the county, before Hutton straightened one to dismiss Mark Stoneman leg before.Eskinazi had an escape on four, dropped by Joe Clarke at first slip with Ball about to celebrate a second wicket, but the introduction of Lyndon James as Hutton took a breather brought a divided immediately when the all-rounder’s first delivery, angled in to Max Holden, took out the left-hander’s middle stump.Middlesex were 93 for three when Eskinazi, struck a nasty blow on the side of the head attempting to pull James, had to leave the field. Ironically, Eskinazi’s last Championship appearance in a disappointing season, against Lancashire two weeks ago, was as a concussion substitute after Holden was hurt during the warm-ups on day two.A brief stoppage for a shower at 117 for three was followed by another interruption after Steven Mullaney landed heavily making a diving stop, the Nottinghamshire skipper becoming the second injury casualty of the day, although he was soon back on the field.It will be determined overnight whether Middlesex need a concussion sub for Eskinazi. In the meantime, Higgins is taking the lead role on the field, reaching his second consecutive fifty and his ninth of the season, from 63 balls with six fours.The three changes made by Middlesex included the omission of Tim Murtagh, who is retiring at the end of the season at the age of 42, which means that his appearance in the eight-wicket defeat to Warwickshire at Lord’s, in which he took six for 83 in the first innings and eight in the match, was his final farewell after 23 years as a player, first at Surrey, and at Middlesex since 2007.

'Doesn't sit right!' – Gary Lineker, Micah Richards and Alan Shearer disagree over 'incredible' Europa League reward as Man Utd and Spurs vie for Champions League qualification despite awful seasons and Arsene Wenger's protest

Tottenham and Manchester United's chance to qualify for the Champions League "doesn't sit right" with Micah Richards, amid Arsene Wenger's protests.

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  • Rest is Football team debate qualification chances
  • Spurs face United in Europa League final
  • Winner qualifies for Champions League despite awful campaign
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Gary Lineker, Alan Shearer, and Micah Richards discussed Arsene Wenger's claim that the winners of the Europa League should not automatically qualify for the Champions League during The Rest is Football podcast, with the three coming to contrasting conclusions. While Lineker, a former Spurs player, was defensive of the practice – insisting the rule has existed for some time – both Richards and Shearer are agog at the fact that one of the two teams who are currently 16th and 17th in the Premier League table will be playing in Europe's elite club competition next season.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Neither United nor Spurs have won any of their last five Premier League games, but they will go head-to-head in Bilbao next week. A win for United would do wonders for their summer transfer planning, but Spurs may well sack Ange Postecoglou regardless of the result.

  • WHAT THE REST IS FOOTBALL PODCAST SAID

    Richards said: "It's only been highlighted because Spurs and Man United have been so bad in the league. That's the reward for winning it!"

    Lineker added: "It's not like they've thrown this in at the last minute, it's been like that for a few years."

    Richards replied: "It doesn't sit well with me though that you can be so bad in the league, win a trophy, and then get Champions League football, it's supposed to be the consistency throughout the season. But rules are rules, I don't think we should start debating that now, it's been like that for a while and you just roll with it."

    Shearer mused: "That competition's different this year because the teams that drop out of the Champions League usually go into the Europa League so I think the standard in that competition has probably not been as high as it has been, hence why teams that are going to finish fourth and fifth bottom of the Premier League are going to be in the Champions League. It's incredible, really, when you think about it. Fourth and fifth bottom of the Premier League, Man United and Spurs, oh my goodness, it's like… wow."

  • AFP

    WHAT NEXT?

    Both teams have league fixtures before the final next week. Spurs face Aston Villa on Friday, while United face Chelsea on the same evening.

£302k-per-week striker could terminate deal as Arsenal consider signing him

Arsenal have been named as surprise contenders to sign a striker who’s weighing up the possibility of terminating his deal, with Mikel Arteta’s side believed to be positioning themselves to tempt him with a north London move.

Arsenal preparing for crucial Premier League clash with West Ham

With news that defender Takehiro Tomiyasu will join Kai Havertz and Gabriel Jesus in being out for the rest of this season, after undergoing surgery on his right knee to fix a persistent injury, Arteta’s options are growing thinner by the week.

Arsenal can now sign star striker for just £33m after rejected January bid

They attempted a deal in the winter.

2 ByEmilio Galantini Feb 19, 2025

There is still hope for the Gunners to pip Liverpool in the Premier League title race, though, with Liverpool dropping points again in a 2-2 draw away to Aston Villa on Wednesday evening.

Arsenal can close the gap to five points with victory at home to West Ham on Saturday, and it is likely Arteta will go with the same attacking line-up which eventually beat Leicester City 2-0 at the King Power in dramatic late fashion.

West Ham (home)

February 22nd

Nottingham Forest (away)

February 26th

Man United (away)

March 9th

Chelsea (home)

March 16th

Fulham (home)

April 1st

Mikel Merino was brought on as an emergency striker to bag a last-gasp brace in the final ten minutes against Ruud van Nistelrooy’s side, but it is unclear whether Arteta will start with the Spaniard up top against West Ham.

Their clash with the Hammers comes as yet another crucial 90 minutes for Arsenal in their quest to win a first domestic league crown in 21 years, and their lack of options, particularly in the forward area, has attracted criticism towards the Gunners’ recruitment policy.

Arsenal made a low-ball offer for Aston Villa striker Ollie Watkins in the January window, which was rejected out of hand by Unai Emery’s men, with the north Londoners eventually opting not to pursue a deal, despite Villa’s willingness to negotiate at a fee of £60 million (David Ornstein).

As such, they will have to wait until this summer to bring in a world-class centre-forward. Arteta did hint at the possibility of signing a free agent for Arsenal recently, but the names available wouldn’t do much to upgrade the squad’s attacking choices.

Roberto Firmino thinking about terminating Al-Ahli deal with Arsenal interested

Now, a very left-field potential target has emerged in the form of former Liverpool striker Roberto Firmino. The South American, who starred under Jürgen Klopp with 111 goals in 362 appearances for the Reds before departing, could depart current club Al-Ahli in unceremonious fashion.

As per a Spanish media source, Firmino is thinking about terminating his Al-Ahli contract, with Arsenal opening the door for him and in position to potentially entice him with a switch back to England.

The 33-year-old earns a staggering £302,000-per-week in the Middle East, which would make him Arsenal’s highest earner, and it is likely he’d need to settle for a lesser wage if he were to agree a transfer to the Emirates.

Despite scoring 10 goals and assisting five others across all competitions for the Pro League side this season, Al-Ahli decided to leave him out of their league squad list in favour of new arrival Galeno – plunging Firmino’s long-term future into doubt.

Haris to lead Pakistan A in Emerging Asia Cup in Sri Lanka

Pakistan A will play against India A on July 16

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Jun-2023Mohammad Haris will lead Pakistan A in the eight-team Men’s Emerging Asia Cup, which will run from July 14 to 23 in Sri Lanka. Omair Yousuf has been named his deputy in the 15-member squad that includes the likes of Saim Ayub, Shahnawaz Dahani and Mohammad Wasim among others.Haris was part of the senior T20I squad in the most recent series that Pakistan played against New Zealand at home. In all, he has represented the senior side in five ODIs and nine T20Is. Others in the squad who have senior international experience include Arshad Iqbal, Kamran Ghulam, Wasim, Ayub, Dahani, and Tayyab Tahir. Wasim is the most experienced out of the lot, with two Tests, 14 ODIs and 27 T20Is under his belt.Haris’ deputy Yousuf has not turned out for Pakistan but has a good domestic record, wherein he averages 43.33 in 40 first-class games. In List A cricket, Yousuf has scored 1158 runs in 41 matches at 32.16. He was Pakistan A’s leading run-scorer when they visited Zimbabwe for a six-game unofficial ODI series in May this year, with 275 runs in four outings at 91.66. Pakistan A had gone down 4-2 in that series.Pakistan A, the defending champions, have been placed in Group A alongside India A, Nepal and Sri Lanka A. They will open their campaign against Nepal A on July 14, followed by the clash against their Indian counterparts on July 16 and Sri Lanka A on July 18. The tournament will be held in the 50-over format. Group B consists of Afghanistan A, Bangladesh A, Oman and UAE.The top two sides from each group will qualify for the semi-finals. The final will be held on July 23.Pakistan A squad: Mohammad Haris (capt & wk), Omair Yousuf (vice-capt), Amad Butt, Arshad Iqbal, Haseebullah, Kamran Ghulam, Mehran Mumtaz, Mubasir Khan, Mohammad Wasim Jnr., Qasim Akram, Sahibzada Farhan, Saim Ayub, Shahnawaz Dahani, Sufiyan Muqeem, Tayyab TahirReserves: Abdul Bangalzai, Mohammad Abbas Afridi, Mohammad Junaid, Rohail NazirPlenty of internationals in Afghanistan AShahidullah Kamal will lead a strong 15-member Afghanistan A squad consisting of eight capped players for the competition. The squad has the likes of Ihsanullah Janat, Ikram Alikhil, Riaz Hassan and Noor Ali Zadran in the mix. Noor, who has represented Afghanistan in 51 ODIs and 20 T20Is, is the most experienced out of the lot.Afghanistan A are part of Group B and start their campaign against Oman on July 14, followed by Sri Lanka A on July 16 and Bangladesh A on July 18.Afghanistan A squad: Shahidullah Kamal (capt), Ikram Alikhil (wk), Ishaq Rahimi (wk), Riaz Hassan, Ihsanullah Jannat, Noor Ali Zadran, Zubaid Akbari, Baheer Shah, Allah Noor Nasiri, Sharafuddin Ashraf, Izharulhaq Naveed, Wafadar Momand, Ibrahim Abdulrahimzai, Salim Safi, Zia Ur Rehman Akbar, Bilal Sami.Reserves: Abdul Malik, Asghar Atal, Abdul Baqi, Zuhaib Zamankhil

Knight calls on batters to replicate 'outstanding' second day

England captain praises centurion Beaumont’s “concentration and skill level”

Andrew Miller23-Jun-2023Heather Knight has called on her batters to “go again tomorrow” and earn the right to be dominant on a run-laden surface in the Women’s Ashes Test at Trent Bridge, after closing the second day on a promising 218 for 2, thanks to an outstanding century from Tammy Beaumont.Although England still trail Australia’s first-innings 473 by a hefty 255 runs, Beaumont’s first Test century, coupled with 57 from Knight herself and a typically free-flowing 41 not out from Nat Sciver-Brunt allowed England to ratchet up the pressure on the visitors, with the promise of many more runs to come if – as Knight put it at the close – they can be “clinical” upon the resumption.”I’m really proud of Tammy,” Knight told Sky Sports, after Beaumont had emulated her own achievement as the only other women’s cricketer to score an international century across all three formats. “Honestly, it’s hard work being out in the field for so long. But I think the concentration and the skill level that she showed was outstanding.”

After the early loss of Emma Lamb for 10, Beaumont and Knight shared in an important second-wicket stand of 115, and it required one of the balls of the day from Ashleigh Gardner to separate them, as Knight was drawn forward and undone by turn and extra bounce, for Alyssa Healy to complete the catch behind the stumps.Prior to that, however, the pair had progressed smoothly against a largely off-colour Australian seam attack, and it was only the twin spin of Gardner and Alana King that was able to apply much pressure on a surface that Knight admitted was drier than she would have ideally wished for.”The Aussies tried a few different things, they went cross-seam and banged it into the wicket but there’s not too many demons in it,” she said. “Then a couple started to spin so we just talked about how we’re going to play the different types of types of spin … Ash trying to bowl a more attacking line outside of off, and then Kingy gets a little bit of drift and towards the end started to get a little bit of turn.”It was just about getting in and trying to play every ball on its merits,” she added. “If you bowled straight and targetted the pads with straight fields, it was actually quite hard to score when the ball went soft. We just talked about our strengths really, trying to be really decisive on the balls that we want to attack. And it’s about earning the right when the ball stops swinging to then be able to put pressure back on, like Nat did there at the end.”The pitch has probably been a little bit dry, we wanted a little bit more grass and carry,” Knight added. “It’s been a bit disappointing that the nicks haven’t really carried, but I think one of the reasons for bowling first was I don’t think it’s going to deteriorate too much. I think it’s still one where you can go big as a batter, and get really good value if you’re really clinical on how you want to score.”That opportunity awaits for Beaumont and Sciver-Brunt on day three, as they resume a stand that is already worth 67 in 12.4 overs. However, as Knight herself noted, Australia had been in a very similar situation at 202 for 2 in their own first innings, before a collapse of 4 for 36 undermined their dominance, with Sophie Ecclestone’s maiden Test five-for proving instrumental in that fightback.Knight was “so impressed” with Lauren Filer’s Test debut•AFP/Getty Images”We’ve got to go again tomorrow,” Knight said. “Today was outstanding for us with the bat, but we have to go again. They were obviously in quite a similar position with the score two-down and then lost a few wickets in that middle period.”So we’ve got really turn up tomorrow, try and boss that middle period and, if we get two batters in, as you saw at the end there with us dominating the spinners, it can be a bit easier to score. The middle order will be quite aggressive and look to score, but it’s about managing the different situations and obviously trying to get to where they are.”Ecclestone may have been England’s most successful bowler in the first innings, but England’s trump card for the second could yet be their debutant, Lauren Filer, whose rare 75mph-plus speed proved unsettling for Australia’s bowlers, albeit she only claimed two wickets.Knight acknowledged that, on a pitch that was pretty dead for the bowlers on both teams, Filer had risen to the occasion of her maiden England appearance with more composure than she could have hoped for.Related

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Australia rebuild advantage after Tammy Beaumont drives England with mighty 208

“I’m so impressed,” she said. “It’s a bit of an unknown to be honest, potentially quite a risky call because she can be quite raw, but she’s bowled with brilliant control as well, which has been one of the most impressive things. We brought her in to try and make an impact and take wickets and every time she came into bowl the crowd got behind her.”It felt like something was going to happen, so it’s quite exciting. She was one of the only bowlers where it felt like the nicks were going to carry, which is quite hard on a docile pitch. She certainly ran in all day and it’s about keeping the plan really simple for a new player as well. She’s risen to the occasion brilliantly. She’s gone even better than I thought she would actually, and she’s really made an impact for us, which is great.”As with any captain and a new toy, however, Knight admitted one of her main challenges was not to get over-excited with Filer’s potential, and to keep her to short bursts of four or five overs.”It’s really hard, she’ll have probably bowled three or four, and I’ll think she’s looking threatening here, but her effectiveness is having short spells and being able to come back and bowl fast again. So it almost feels like, when I want to give her one more, that’s probably enough. I want to use her as an impact bowler that can make things happen.”

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