Liverpool make contact with Van Dijk 2.0

Liverpool have reportedly made contact with Braga’s Portuguese centre-back David Carmo.

What’s the word?

That’s according to O Jogo, via Sports Witness, who claim that Liverpool are once against showing interest, with the 22-year-old expected to leave the Liga Portugal outfit this summer.

The latest report states that Braga are “very likely” to sell and that the left-footed centre-back “has already been sounded out by several Premier League clubs, including Liverpool.”

The Anfield side are said to be “following closely” as a result of Jurgen Klopp’s “recommendation.”

Braga’s chief Antonio Salvador is reportedly not interested in a sale and has stated that the clubs who are interested in acquiring Carmo’s services will need to activate his €40 million (£33.7m) release clause.

The next Van Dijk?

Klopp tried to sign  Carmo throughout last year’s January transfer window, in a deal that would have seen the Braga starlet join the Reds on loan, with a €20 million (£16.8m) option to buy.

Braga rejected their offer and about a month later Carmo suffered a nasty injury.

Carmo has started just 29% of Braga’s games this season, thanks to the ankle injury that sat him on the sidelines for 351 days.

Since his return, he has played 3-1 Europa League loss against Rangers, in which Carmo scored his side’s only goal.

In comparison to Van Dijk, Carmo has notched up some defensive numbers that, whilst similar to Van Dijk’s, just give him the edge over the Netherlands international. Carmo’s 0.7 tackles per game out do Van Dijk’s o.4 tackles per game, though both share the same clearances per game metric with an average of three.

In possession, it is an entirely different story, with Van Dijk’s 70 passes per game placing him in the elite 95th percentile, according to FBref. Carmo’s average of 34 passes per game are not so impressive, considering his position – however, both metrics can be affected by the way the team plays, with Liverpool’s possession metrics much stronger than Braga’s.

Being left-footed, Carmo would offer Klopp a slightly different option in defence. Though, if his move to Liverpool comes to fruition, he will be looking to nab Van Dijk’s spot – which will be a tough ask for the 22-year-old.

In other news: Liverpool can unearth their new Gerrard by plotting bid for “outrageous” £50m gem…

Celtic: Hoops scout Mohanad Jeahze

Celtic sent scouts to watch Hammarby IF defender Mohanad Jeahze this week, according to Swedish newspaper SportExpressen and Fotboll Direkt (translated by Sport Witness). 

The lowdown: Hoops’ interest

This comes after an original report from the same source claimed that the Hoops were eying a £1.6million move for the Iraq international left-back this summer.

Formerly of Mjallby AIF, Jeahze has amassed 124 senior appearances during a professional career spent exclusively in Sweden.

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Now, a move to Glasgow could be on the cards as Ange Postecoglou steps up the transfer plans…

The latest: Scouting mission

As per the Swedish outlet, translated by SW, Celtic sent a representative to observe Hammarby vs Malmo on Monday night in the Allsvenskan.

The match ended goalless with Jeahze replaced on 68 minutes following a 7.10 rated Sofascore display containing 3/4 successful duels, one key pass and 79 touches.

Meanwhile, Hammarby sporting director Jesper Jansson has admitted that there is ‘certainly an interest’ in the 25-year-old when quizzed about the links to Celtic Park.

The verdict: Bargain move

The suggested fee for the four-cap Iraq ace makes this move a no-brainer as Postecoglou looks to add senior competition for places to the squad.

So far this season Jeahze – who was hailed as ‘class’ by Darijan Bojanic – has scored once and provided five assists in 14 appearances across all competitions, eclipsing the four direct goal contributions for Bhoys left-back Greg Taylor this term.

Overall, the Sweden-born star has earned an impressive 7.63 average Sofascore rating this season, making 2.7 tackles and 2.3 interceptions per game on average, showing he does his defensive duties with aplomb too.

Despite being untested amongst Europe’s elite, Postecoglou has already proven to be a savvy operator in the market and should be backed to sign whoever he sees fit, whether they’re a household name or not.

In other news… a Celtic ace has been backed to make a permanent move away from Parkhead this summer.

Rangers must unleash Kemar Roofe

Rangers are on the verge of playing one of their most important matches of the season as Giovanni van Bronckhorst’s men prepare for a huge clash in Europe at Ibrox.

The Gers are 1-0 down on aggregate heading into this game as they attempt to land a place in the final of the Europa League.

They will need to overcome the one-goal deficit in order to book a spot in Seville and come into the match off the back of a 1-1 draw with their rivals in the Premiership at the weekend.

Gio van Bronckhorst may look to make changes to his starting XI to give his team the best chance of coming out on top against RB Leipzig and one player who must finally be unleashed from the start is striker Kemar Roofe.

He has missed the last three matches with a knee issue and it has been reported that he has made good progress in his recovery. The Dutch head coach is reportedly expecting him to be fit enough for the squad and the Jamaican must finally make his return from injury for this game.

Roofe has four goals and one assist in his last three matches for Rangers in all competitions and this suggests that he has the ability to be the match-winner for the club tonight. The centre-foward was hitting his stride prior to his blow and must now be given a chance, if fit, to show that he can continue to be the main man at the top end of the pitch for van Bronckhorst.

Noel Whelan previously claimed that the forward, who was dubbed a “Duracell Bunny” by Steven Gerrard, can be “invaluable” for Rangers and his recent statistic suggest that to be the case heading into this clash with Leipzig.

One player who desperately needs the striker to start is winger Ryan Kent. The former Liverpool man cut a frustrated figure as he had to play in a front two with Scott Wright in the first leg. He was made to play without a natural striker to link with and only managed one key pass as a result of that.

The winger has produced one goal and four assists in the Europa League this season, with 18 assists in all competitions, and his creativity combined with Roofe’s goalscoring can be the key to Rangers winning the tie. Therefore, they must be unleashed as part of a front three tonight, with the ex-Anderlecht hitman making his return in the number nine role.

AND in other news, Rangers are now set to repeat their awful Gilmour disaster, Gvb will be livid…

Celtic linked with move for SPL goalkeeper

Celtic could potentially now sign Livingston goalkeeper Max Stryjek in the summer transfer window, according to manager David Martindale.

The Lowdown: Stryjek impresses for Livingston

The 25-year-old has become an influential figure for Livi in the Scottish Premiership this season, helping them to seventh place in the table and being hailed as ‘superb’ by his boss earlier in the campaign.

Stryjek has made 33 league starts in total in 2021/22, winning two Man of the Match awards from WhoScored, outlining his importance to the cause.

It looks likely that the Pole could move on to pastures new this summer and Celtic could be a contender to sign him.

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The Latest: Celtic mentioned as suitor

Speaking to The Daily Record, Martindale admitted that Stryjek’s time at Alderstone Road may have come to an end, mentioning the Old Firm clubs as a possible destination for him:

“The unique selling point for anyone who comes into our club is to try and get themselves a move to England or to the Old Firm, or failing that, to the Edinburgh two or Aberdeen, where the wages are substantially more than you’re going to get at Livingston.

“Everybody who comes here uses us as a stepping stone.

“I do believe Max is probably not going to be here, because there is a good bit of interest, so I’ve got to do what’s right for the squad and I think, from what I’ve seen of Ivan, he’s more than capable of being the number one next season.”

The Verdict: Good competition for Hart

Celtic could do with having stronger competition for Joe Hart moving forward, especially with the Hoops’ first-choice ‘keeper now 35 years of age.

Stryjek could be exactly that, pushing the Englishman for a starting berth and hopefully getting the very best out of him, in order to keep his place in the team.

At 25, the Livingston man would also come in as a long-term investment, with goalkeepers more than capable of playing all the way through their 30s.

Whether or not Celtic get him remains to be seen, but he ticks all the boxes, in terms of his age, experience and even the fact that he knows the Scottish Premiership inside out.

In other news, one Celtic player has been tipped to leave the club this summer. Find out who it is here.

McLeish talks up Jota signing for Celtic

Celtic signing Jota on a permanent deal this summer would be ‘great, great business’ by the club, according to former Scotland manager Alex McLeish.

The Lowdown: Jota shines for Celtic

The 23-year-old traded Benfica for the Hoops on a temporary basis last year, in order to enjoy regular playing time away from the Portuguese giants.

Jota has scored nine goals and registered ten assists in the Scottish Premiership, playing his part in Ange Postecoglou’s side sealing title glory in 2021/22.

The hope is that all parties agree that a permanent move to Parkhead makes sense in the summer, with the club working hard to get a deal done.

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The Latest: McLeish talks up signing

Speaking to Football Insider, McLeish admitted Jota would be a superb long-term signing Celtic:

“Bite their hand off. Celtic should bite their hand off because he’s been magnificent.

“Even though I’m a Rangers fan, you just look for a player like that to get on the ball. You think he can do really good things with it. With his contribution and scoring, he looks like he is ready to go to an even higher level.

“That would be a great, great business. It seems as though he’s happy, he says the right thing in his television interviews. You would think he would want to stay at Celtic. Maybe produce that level of football for the next couple of years. Hopefully, Rangers and Aberdeen keep him quiet.

“At first you thought: ‘Ah, he is just a fancy Dan,’ as he did tricks and stepovers, things like that. But no, he’s got a hell of a lot in his locker. He’ll have gained confidence over the year after the season he’s had with Celtic.”

The Verdict: Sign him up, Hoops

The thought of Jota not playing for the Hoops next season is a grim one, with the Portuguese gem already making such a big impact at the club, being hailed as ‘unbelievable’ by Postecoglou.

Benfica are seemingly happy to let the winger leave for good, however, and the fact that he seems happy at Celtic certainly heightens the possibility of him staying put.

The lure of playing in the Champions League for the Hoops surely works in their favour, too, with failure to qualify for the competition something that could put off players of Jota’s calibre.

In other news, Celtic have been linked with a move for one player this summer. Read more here.

Carlos Brathwaite isolating after Covid-19 case on flight from UK

The allrounder is doubtful for Jamaica Tallawahs’ opening match on Friday

Alex Malcolm24-Aug-2021Carlos Brathwaite has been forced into isolation and is in doubt for Jamaica Tallawahs’ opening match of the Caribbean Premier League on Friday after a positive Covid-19 case was reported on his flight from the UK to St Kitts and Nevis.Brathwaite travelled from Manchester to Basseterre ahead of the CPL after captaining Manchester Originals in the Hundred. A fellow passenger tested positive for Covid-19 and he was told to isolate until further notice.”My tests have been negative as far as I know,” Brathwaite said. “We’ve been asked to be in quarantine. I still don’t know the full extent of it. I’ve just been told I need to continue to quarantine as opposed to being allowed to walk around the hotel as was initially allowed. So I’m just as much in the dark as you are, unfortunately.”Related

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  • St Lucia Kings expect du Plessis to be fit for their CPL opener

Speaking from his hotel room following the announcement that he re-signed with Sydney Sixers for the upcoming BBL season later in the year, the allrounder said he was unsure whether he would be available for the Tallawahs’ opening clash with Saint Lucia Kings on Friday.”Not sure,” Brathwaite said. “I haven’t actually received anything official yet to know when day one is and how many days of quarantine, etc. So yeah, I’m just skipping in my room and doing sit-ups and hoping to be at least physically ready to go if I can.”Brathwaite was retained by Tallawahs along with Andre Russell after they were knocked out in last season’s semi-final by eventual champions Trinbago Knight Riders. He believes Knight Riders won’t have it all their own way this season.”The tournament is going to be interesting,” Brathwaite said. “I don’t think it will be an undefeated run to the finals as Trinidad had last year. I think it will be a little closer. I think all the teams are more evenly matched.”Brathwaite said runs from the top order will be key to Tallawahs’ chances given the quality of the allrounders and spin-bowling.”I feel as though we have a few potential match-winners. Myself, Russell, Rovman Powell obviously in the middle. Our spin attack, we’ve lost Mujeeb and we’ve lost Sandeep but we have Qais Ahmad, Veerasammy Permaul, and Chris Green. So when you look at it that’s a real balanced spin attack, left-arm orthodox, right-arm offspinner, leg-break bowler.”I think we just need to get some runs at the top of the ordr and middle order to provide a good platform. I think too many times last year we were 30 for 3, 40 for 4 and we didn’t really have a good platform to go on and get big scores.”So this year, setting a good platform and if we add the firepower that I know myself, Russell and Rovman can give, added with the spin stocks that we have and the whole bowling unit actually, I think we’ll do well.”

Josh Bohannon lifts Lancashire and spectators alike

Batter defies gloomy trend to reach unbeaten fifty in pursuit of Warwickshire

Paul Edwards31-Aug-2021Lancashire 100 for 1 (Bohannon 59*, Wells 35*) trail Warwickshire 371 (Benjamin 127, Hain 118, Mahmood 4-77) by 271 runsUntil Josh Bohannon began to bat at Emirates Old Trafford late this afternoon scoring runs had looked a ponderous business. Warwickshire had made 371 in their first innings but it had taken them 139.1 overs, and even their centurions, Chris Benjamin and Sam Hain, had sometimes found it tough to keep their side’s total ticking over. There were many periods in the visitors’ innings when batting had appeared wreathed in entanglement and complication.No matter, the travelling supporters thought, when makeshift opener George Balderson was leg before wicket to Liam Norwell for nought in the third over of Lancashire’s reply. But five minutes later Bohannon drove Norwell to the cover boundary and eased him through midwicket for three. The tone had been set for a 44-over evening session in which Lancashire would make a hundred runs, 59 of them from the bat of Bohannon, whose nine fours brightened our gloom and made the day memorable.Three of those boundaries came in the 18th over of the innings when Craig Miles was clipped to the rope at square leg and midwicket before being driven through the covers. In fairness to him, Miles bowls an attacking length but that is a risky business when Bohannon is such rich form. This, after all, was sixth score above fifty in this season’s County Championship, an impressive statistic in itself but nothing like as startling as the fact that he has played only 13 innings in 11 matches. Let that be noted when the white-ball obsessives are insisting that we should have less red-ball cricket.Bohannon is in excellent form: he has already scored 618 first-class runs with an average of 61.8 but cricketers both older and younger than the 24-year-old Boltonian need time and opportunity to polish and perfect their skills over a season in which at least a couple of matches are almost always lost to the weather.This season’s Championship will be decided over the next three weeks or so and this game at Old Trafford between two of the three sides currently leading the early Division One table is poised for an intriguing final couple of days. Rather than simply being reduced to a struggle for bonus points, it has been enlivened by the batting of Bohannon and also by that of Luke Wells, who finished the day on 35 not out after being dropped by Sam Hain at short leg on 18 when he had inside-edged Danny Briggs onto his pad.Lancashire’s positive reply – they were cantering along at nearly three an over before opting to bat for the morrow late in the evening session – was something of a contrast to the first five sessions of the match. But at least a slow Monday had been followed by a sloe Tuesday morning at Old Trafford. Tom Bailey’s hopes that Lancashire would go “bang-bang” were fulfilled when he and Saqib Mahmood removed Sam Hain and Will Rhodes inside the first seven overs of play but these successes paled when set beside press-box tales of foraging for elderberries and bullaces at Speke Hall, the Tudor manor house incongruously situated on Merseyside, a few hundred yards from both John Lennon Airport and a housing estate.Certainly Warwickshire’s batsmen did not enjoy such rich pickings once Hain had been trapped on the crease and Rhodes had been beaten by pace and low bounce. Only 21 runs were scored in the first 15 overs of play and this mattered because having begun the day with some prospect of gaining four batting bonus points the visitors failed by two runs to pick up three, a deficiency the significance of which will not be clear for around three weeks. But it all added a dollop of drama to an innings which had occasionally borne a distinct resemblance to one of Ingmar Bergman’s broodier efforts.In truth, though, it was hardly as though Howard Hawks was behind the camera at any stage of the first session. Having limited Lancashire to one bowling point, Michael Burgess and Matt Lamb strove to bat their opponents out of the game, however long that took, and only 58 runs were scored in 32 overs before the lunchtime curry arrived.The afternoon session began with a touch of Feydeauesque farce when Burgess received a disgusting full toss from Matt Parkinson and, rather in the manner of a Sunday XI slogger, smacked it directly skywards. Wells took the catch at slip and looked embarrassed to have played any role in the affair.Danny Briggs made 11 before falling to the same combination when reverse sweeping and shortly afterwards Lamb was on the end of a few old-fashioned comments when he decided to change his bat. The theory that he had finally swapped Mogadon for Mjolnir was strengthened when he smacked Parkinson for a six over long-on but the leg spinner bowled him shortly afterwards for a 171-minute 36 with a shortish ball that scuttled on and Mahmood took the last two wickets to finish with 4 for 77. Warwickshire, though, had battled away for a day and a half to make a competitive total and we must wait to see if their patience will aught avail them.

Rahul Tripathi's dramatic six takes nervy Knight Riders into final

From needing 13 in 25 balls, KKR lost 6 for 7 in 3.5 overs to almost lose an un-loseable match

Saurabh Somani13-Oct-20217:06

Manjrekar: Capitals didn’t look like a champion team when it mattered

They spent a large part of the chase in cruise control, and then Kolkata Knight Riders hit a wet patch that almost threatened to skid them right off the path and into an abyss. From 13 runs needed in 25 balls, Knight Riders lost six wickets in 3.5 overs with only seven runs added, and faced an equation where Rahul Tripathi was facing up to R Ashwin needing to score six in the last two balls. Tripathi had scored six from ten balls till then, missing more than connecting, while Ashwin had given up one run in four balls while nabbing two wickets.Tripathi had set himself up for a quickish length ball outside off, and threw a season’s worth of verve into a flat-batted hit that was carried as much by nervous energy as anything else over the long-off boundary. Knight Riders’ resurgence in the UAE leg of IPL 2021 continued, with their seventh win in nine games. They are in the final, where Chennai Super Kings await.Delhi Capitals had seemed down and all but out of the contest for most of the second innings, but they came alive with a vengeance as Knight Riders panicked with the finish line in sight.Before the nail-biting finish, Knight Riders set themselves up with a familiar template: the spinners choked the life out of the opposition, and the openers muscled a strong reply. Varun Chakravarthy was the bowling hero, taking 2 for 26 in four hard-to-read overs, which could have easily been 3 for less than 26 if he hadn’t over-stepped by a millimeter.While batting, they had the fearless Venkatesh Iyer to thank, the opener’s insouciant 55 off 41 setting up a foundation strong enough to withstand the earthquake that came later.

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Delhi Capitals’ brief flutter at the top

Sent in to bat, Capitals began sedately but overs three and four together brought 26 runs. Prithvi Shaw had begun aggressively while Shikhar Dhawan hit a couple of sixes off Sunil Narine after having spent his first seven balls score-less. Both openers flowing and the score at a healthy 32 for no loss in four overs meant Capitals looked strong, but that was as good as it got for them while batting.Varun struck with his first ball, Shaw not reading the one coming into him to be trapped in front. That began Knight Riders’ familiar spin strangulation. Dhawan looked like he would aim to bat through the innings, but fell to Varun before the pacers would come on at the death. The returning Marcus Stoinis added balance to the Capitals side on paper, but batting him at three after so much time out in the cold didn’t come off. When Rishabh Pant too fell cheaply, Capitals were 90 for 4 in 15.2 overs, struggling to get above a run a ball.Venkatesh Iyer scored his third half-century of the season•BCCI

The no-ball and Shreyas Iyer’s grandstand finish

Shreyas had come in to bat in the 12th over, which is later than he generally comes out for Capitals. For most of his innings, he just rotated the strike. His fifth-wicket partner Shimron Hetmyer was more adventurous, though he had a slice of luck when on 2 in the 17th over. A shovel was brilliantly caught by Shubman Gill diving forward at long-on, but Varun had over-stepped – by a thin margin. Hetmyer whacked two sixes against Lockie Ferguson’s pace in the next over, though he gave it away when going for a non-existent run to be caught short of the crease by a long margin.Shreyas then provided a rousing end to the innings, hitting a four and a final-ball six off Shivam Mavi as he conceded 15 in the final over, and the Capitals’ total was in competitive territory given how the pitch was playing. Mavi, who had 1 for 12 in three overs till then, had his figures spoilt somewhat.Venkatesh Iyer takes off
Venkatesh encapsulated the Knight Riders’ opening stand with one shot. In the fifth over, he sauntered down the track and clubbed the ball effortlessly over long-on, and he did it against Kagiso Rabada. He had earlier deposited Axar Patel over deep midwicket too, and that nonchalant six off Rabada reinforced how dominantly Knight Riders had started. The powerplay brought 51 runs with the openers still going strong, Shubman Gill playing the supporting role to Venkatesh’s swashbuckling strokeplay.The end of the powerplay didn’t slow the scoring down. Dew had set in with force just before Capitals’ innings ended, and they got the worse end of the conditions. But even if the dew made the ball more difficult to grip and come on to the bat more easily, it still needed the batsmen to execute their shots against bowlers of high pedigree, and they did that with panache.Venkatesh reached his half-century in 38 balls, eventually falling to Rabada when he pulled straight to deep square leg. That broke the opening stand, but by then Knight Riders already had 96 runs on the board and only 12.2 overs had been bowled.R Ashwin goes on a celebratory run after dismissing Shakib Al Hasan•BCCI

The scramble at the death
There was no hint of the drama that would unfold when Nitish Rana pulled Anrich Nortje to deep square leg at the end of the 16th over. But it began a procession that didn’t look like it would end. Gill, who had essayed a breath-taking front-foot pull off Nortje over long-on, was caught behind off an uncharacteristic poke after a controlled innings and Knight Riders suddenly found there weren’t that many wickets to spare.The final over began with seven runs needed, and Knight Riders scored just one run off the first four balls while also losing Shakib Al Hasan and Narine. It was left to Tripathi to provide the final punch.Capitals, who had looked the best team on show in the league stage while deservedly topping it, ended their campaign with three straight losses.

Zeeshan Maqsood rues Jatinder Singh's dismissal, but happy to have put Bangladesh 'under pressure'

The Oman captain was hopeful they can overcome Scotland to make the Super 12s

Mohammad Isam20-Oct-2021Oman captain Zeeshan Maqsood said that had Jatinder Singh’s sweep shot, at the end of the 13th over, gone to a slightly different direction, they were genuine contenders to upset Bangladesh. Instead Liton Das took the easy catch, giving Bangladesh the advantage of having two new batters at the crease.Bangladesh bowled better in the last seven overs, rounding up the game by 26 runs, and keeping themselves alive in the T20 World Cup. Oman, too, are in contention for a Super 12s spot, but their last match against Scotland on Thursday is now a knockout game (if Bangladesh beat Papua New Guinea in the earlier match).”We were in the game till the 14th over,” Maqsood said. “I am happy the way we put up a fight. Bangladesh were under pressure. They knew if we had one or two 15-plus overs, the game was ours. But we didn’t bat well in the last five or six overs. We lost a lot of wickets. I am happy with the way the bowlers did. We restricted them to 153. We have to improve [our] fielding. We didn’t field well in the first ten overs, for the second time in a row.”Jatinder, who made 40 to follow up his half-century against PNG, kept Oman in the hunt chasing 154. He struck the ball sweetly, especially against pace, but was equally adept against spin. Maqsood rued his dismissal, but said that he can’t be blamed for the shot.”Jatinder was batting very well against the likes of Shakib. He found the fielder in the deep unfortunately. It happens. We can’t say anything to the players. They are trying their best for the team,” he said.Maqsood said that Jatinder got into great form in the last 18 months, although he is the sort of character who doesn’t get fussed by low scores as well. “Jatinder is in good nick. He batted very well in the last game (against PNG) also. We fully back him to play the way he is playing right now. We are happy to see how he is batting against a Test side.”He is a very positive player. He improved in the last one and a half year. Credit goes to him and the coaches. He is getting the reward of his hard work. Jatin is a naughty person. Always happy. Even when he doesn’t get runs, he is not too worried. We help each other in the team,” he said.Maqsood was hopeful that they can overcome Scotland on Thursday, especially after running Bangladesh close in their second game.”It is a do-or-die game. We have a bit of an advantage on home soil. The way we played today as well, we are fully confident. We have to play positive cricket to beat Scotland, but it won’t be easy. They are playing well also.”Qualifying (to the Super 12s) will be a huge achievement for Oman. The group is open, but the net run rate margin is very little between the three sides. We will go through if we win the game,” he said.

David Warner hits form as Australia ease to two wins in two

Combined bowling efforts from Zampa and Starc tied Sri Lanka down to 154 for 6

Alan Gardner28-Oct-20212:57

Jayawardene: Sri Lanka finished around 15 runs short

David Warner returned to form with a powerful half-century as Australia started the Super 12s with back-to-back victories. For the second match in a row, Australia chased a target – although there was minimal drama this time, as Sri Lanka were made to pay for dropping Warner early in his innings.Sri Lanka’s attack has played a big part in their success in the tournament so far, but the challenge provided by Australia represented a step up. Their three frontline quicks were largely treated with disdain, allowing Australia to tread carefully against the legerdemain of Maheesh Theekshana. Two wickets in consecutive overs from Wanindu Hasaranga, accounting for Aaron Finch and Glenn Maxwell, did lift Sri Lankan hopes only for a half-century stand between Warner and Steven Smith to steady the chase.

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Having chosen to bowl, Finch was grateful to the combined efforts of Adam Zampa and Mitchell Starc as Australia dragged the innings back during the middle period. With Charith Asalanka providing the spark, Sri Lanka rattled along to 53 for 1 in the powerplay and were well-placed approaching halfway, only for Zampa to induce a slide from 78 for 1 to 94 for 5.Zampa finished with fine figures of 2 for 12, while Starc’s pace accounted for Kusal Perera, Sri Lanka’s joint top-scorer alongside Asalanka, and the dangerous Hasaranga. Some resourceful batting from Bhanuka Rajapaksa helped repair some of the damage, as Sri Lanka managed to set a target above 150 – but it was not enough to stretch Australia, who became the 13th side out of 17 to win batting second in Dubai this year.The Zampa and Starc Show
Legspin and pace – always an exciting combo, and two of the weapons of choice in T20. Sri Lanka had recovered well from the early loss of Pathum Nissanka, with Asalanka and Perera racing during a second-wicket partnership worth 63 before Zampa made the breakthrough in the 10th over. Sri Lanka have the worst record against legspin since the last World Cup, among all teams in the Super 12 stage, and Asalanka’s dismissal slogging against the turn of a googly precipitated a middle-order collapse.In the next over, Starc responded to being slammed for six over long-on by sending a searing yorker through Perera’s defences and into the base of leg stump. Avishka Fernando top-edged an attempted slog-sweep off Zampa and Wanindu Hasaranga was then caught behind aiming an expansive drive at Starc, as Sri Lanka lost 4 for 16 in the space of 17 deliveries to put Australia on top.Openers find form
Australia have kept faith with Finch and Warner at the top of the order, despite their slim recent returns – and that faith was repaid handsomely, as the experienced opening pair took advantage of a sloppy Sri Lanka start with the ball to reach 63 without loss after six, the highest powerplay score in all T20 World Cups.Defending what was roughly a par score batting first on this ground, Sri Lanka needed early wickets. But Chamika Karunaratne’s first over was loose, twice going short and wide to allow Finch to cut fours – with those two boundaries, Australia’s captain had already raised his highest score in seven T20I innings in the UAE. And with the ball coming on nicely under lights, he took on the extra pace of Lahiru Kumara and Dushmantha Chameera, ramping the former over third and then lofting a straight six, before another four off Chameera brought up Australia’s 50 in the fifth over.Warner has been in even worse nick, but he reverse-scooped a boundary in Theekshana’s exploratory over and rode his luck on the way to his highest T20 score since making 85 not out for Sunrisers Hyderabad almost a year ago. He should have been dismissed on 18, after gloving Chameera behind, but Perera dropped a simple chance and Warner drew on all his experience to produce the goods when needed.Balancing act
The switch from playing five specialist bowlers to trying to fiddle their allocation from a clutch of allrounders has been a recent one for Australia, and this match demonstrated both sides of the coin. Maxwell got through four cheap overs in the win over South Africa but was taken down by Asalanka in the powerplay here, meaning Finch turned to Marcus Stoinis – only for Rajapaksa to collar him at the death as Sri Lanka kicked on.In all, four overs from Australia’s “fifth bowler” cost them 51 runs, almost exactly a third of Sri Lanka’s total. But the benefit of adding depth to their batting was also clear to see. A confident start from the openers, hitherto lacking out in the UAE, meant Maxwell could be sent in at No. 3 to attack the spinners; and although he failed, Smith kept things ticking over before Stoinis came out and whacked 16 off seven balls to demonstrate his appetite for the finisher’s role. Mitchell Marsh, who wasn’t required to bat or bowl and was rarely called on in the field, couldn’t have had much easier night’s work.