Man United fans can have no complaints if Fellaini decides to find a more loving home

Jose Mourinho’s refusal to sanction a departure in January shows how immensely disappointed he’ll be if Marouane Fellaini leaves Manchester United on a free transfer next summer. After a revival in popularity under the Portuguese, some Red Devils supporters will be left disappointed as well. And sometimes in football, disappointment can turn into fury or at the very least an underlying sense of resentment – the idea of an important player turning his back on the club over the issue of wages inevitably doesn’t sit well with the die-hards.

Yet, supporters can have no genuine complaints should the Belgium international decide to move on next summer. Despite the criticism he’s relentlessly received, despite the perception of him being the poster-boy of the attritionalisation of United’s style of play over the last four years, few players have sacrificed as much as Fellaini to be a part of the post-Ferguson era.

In fact, Fellaini’s first sacrifice came before he was officially made a United player; wavering a £4million loyalty bonus owed to him by Everton to secure a transfer to Old Trafford on summer Deadline Day 2013.

But more significantly than money, Fellaini has given up what are theoretically the peak seasons of his career, arriving at Old Trafford as a 26-year-old, to be little more than a squad player for the Red Devils – accepting his unique traits will only be applicable to certain scenarios and inevitably limit his chances of holding down a regular starting berth.

Regardless, Fellaini has never moaned or complained; he’s done, quite simply, what every Manchester United manager since Sir Alex Ferguson has asked of him – whether it’s to knock down long balls in the final third, fight and scrap at the base of midfield or provide gangly dynamism in between.

And there’s something to be said for the fact that every United manager Fellaini has played under has turned to him in times of need. Even Louis van Gaal, a manager whose entire philosophy centred around the technical quality to retain possession to a frustratingly laborious degree, depended on Fellaini to inject aggression, physicality and goal threat into his often-rudderless sides.

Without Fellaini’s six Premier League goals during 2014/15, three of which were game-winning goals and one of which was an outright winner against Crystal Palace, the Dutchman may not have even survived his first season with the Red Devils. It certainly would have put their Champions League qualification in jeopardy.

In many ways, that encapsulates the paradox of an idiosyncratic talent like Fellaini becoming such an unexpectedly influential figure at a club like Manchester United, famed for their exuberance and attacking flair. While the towering midfielder may pale in comparison technically and intellectually to the man he immediately succeeded in United’s midfield, the legendary Paul Scholes, he’s a world-class executor of the very specific strengths of his own game; most particularly aerial dominance in both boxes.

There are few players in world football, and even fewer at clubs of Manchester United’s magnitude, who can turn hopeful hoofs forward into something more significant and substantial with the same consistency. Fellaini, whether you love or loathe him, is undoubtedly a rare breed in the modern game.

In that sense, Fellaini has clearly been an under-valued and under-appreciated figure for the vast majority of his United career. Only this season has it truly felt as if the lion’s share of United support have warmed to the Belgian, and even that acceptance came six months after some Red Devils supporters booed him for simply warming up following a costly mistake against former club Everton the weekend prior.

Most of his United tenure has attracted scoffs and groans for largely superficial reasons; association with David Moyes and subsequently styles of play that have inevitably failed to match the entertaining glamour of the affluent Ferguson years.

“He’s a very important player for me. Much more important than you can imagine. I feel weaker without Fellaini in my squad. It doesn’t matter if he’s on the pitch or bench. So if his condition improves he’ll be selected.”

Fellaini may now be a considerably more important player, one Mourinho claims he ‘feels weaker’ without, in comparison last season and that may well be recognised more by the Old Trafford doubters who once jeered his very name.

But the simple fact is that Fellaini’s given everything to support United during their most difficult and turbulent era since the 1970s – his best years and at times his reputation – with incredibly sparing gratitude or reward. If Fellaini decides to leave that all behind next summer for a new chapter in his career, no United supporter can justifiably hold a grudge.

After such servitude, Fellaini deserves to find a home where he’s truly loved.

Celtic fans continue to enjoy Pedro Caixinha’s public comments

It’s fair to say that Rangers boss Pedro Caixinha hasn’t had the most comfortable relationship with the media in Scotland since arriving in Scotland. Whether that’s down to newspapers and outlets seeking drama or the Portuguese’s no nonsense, open style is down to opinion but what’s inarguable is that his comments continue to dominate the back pages and create controversy.

After a very public spat with Aberdeen boss Derek McInnes last week prior to the Dons’ 2-1 victory at Ibrox, Caixinha is again making waves with his latest comments about Charlie Nicholas.

When asked about criticism the former Celtic striker laid at him and Rangers this season, he’s reported to have said, “who?” The manager went on to say he doesn’t care if no-one likes him as long as he has the support of the club.

Hoops fans haven’t exactly been receptive to his comments in press conferences over the last few months and have generally found humour in things he’s had to say.

That’s no different recently and they took to Twitter to share their thoughts on his recent media appearances…

Crystal Palace eyeing Bosman swoop for Chelsea’s Ivanovic

According to reports from Mirror Football, Chelsea defender Branislav Ivanovic has emerged as a potential transfer target for Crystal Palace.

What’s the word?

After a starring role in Chelsea’s 2014/15 Premier League title, Ivanovic has endured almost 18 months of continually declining form. Indeed, he was dropped for significant periods by Jose Mourinho last season (although he certainly wasn’t the only Blues regular to suffer the Portuguese’s wrath) and was deemed culpable for a spate of concedes during Chelsea’s three-game winless run under Antonio Conte in September – including defeats to Liverpool and Arsenal.

Fan feeling towards the Serbian international has significantly changed in that period (evident enough through our poll below) and his contract is due to expire at the end of the season. Chelsea’s policy of only handing one-year extensions to players over 30, and usually at the latest point possible, is well-known, but Mirror Football claim Crystal Palace are interested in taking the veteran defender off the west London outfit’s hands – one assumes on a free transfer next summer, rather than in January.

Has Ivanovic been made a scapegoat?

To some extent. Chelsea’s entire squad performed below expectations last term, not least including 2015 PFA Player of the Year winner Eden Hazard, and the Blues’ dramatic improvements defensively since Ivanovic was dropped after the Arsenal defeat stem as much from Conte’s switch to a 3-4-3 formation as the consequential change in personnel.

Nonetheless, it’s hard to ignore that Chelsea have claimed four wins and four clean sheets whilst the 32-year-old has been left on the sidelines and originally converted from a centre-half, he just doesn’t have the pace or stamina to perform the almost box-to-box services expected of modern day full-backs. Likewise, Ivanovic could theoretically line up as a wing-back or a centre-back in Chelsea’s current formation, but Conte has overlooked him for both roles – which in itself is rather telling.

Would he be a good signing for Palace?

Already into his veteran years, Ivanovic would only ever be a short-term acquisition for Palace. But only five sides have conceded more goals than Alan Pardew’s team this season and they’re still awaiting a first clean sheet of the campaign, excepting a 2-0 win over fourth-tier Blackpool in the League Cup. Clearly defensive improvements are needed and with Damien Delaney now 35 years of age, Ivanovic represents an experienced replacement at the heart of defence – although the Eagles did sign James Tomkins from West Ham during the summer.

At right-back, however, Joel Ward’s long-term association with the South London club has seemingly made him a permanence in that position regardless of Palace’s league standing, so it seems unlikely he’ll be ousted in favour of a defender who’ll turn 33 by the time he (hypothetically) arrives at Selhurst Park next summer. Here’s a look at how his form has compared to Palace’s other defensive options this season based on per-game metrics, courtesy of Squawka.

Is there any truth to the rumour then?

No doubt, Palace are a logical club to link the Serb with. A player of Ivanovic’s experience and profile would naturally appeal to them and mid-table Premier League sides could certainly do a lot worse than signing a former Champions League winner on a free transfer, even if he comes with sizeable wages. At the same time, it’s likely Ivanovic will want to stay in London if Chelsea don’t offer him fresh terms beyond the summer.

Yet, Mirror Football’s report isn’t the most convincing. It labels Ivanovic as a ‘potential’ target, doesn’t make clear whether Palace want to sign him in January or next summer and ambiguously claims several other Premier League teams, clubs from across Europe and the Far East are all interested, without naming any of them. Likewise, the Eagles aren’t actually mentioned after the first line of the article.

With that in mind, this story could well be sourced from Ivanovic’s representatives, trying to force Chelsea’s hand in offering a new deal. But that’s pure speculation on Football FanCast’s part.

[ad_pod id=’playwire’ align=’center’]

Barcelona player ratings vs Antwerp: Welcome to the Joao Felix show! Portugal star shines again in easy Champions League opener

The Atletico Madrid loanee scored twice and assisted another as the Blaugrana saw off the Belgian champions with a 5-0 win

Barcelona got off to a winning start in their 2023-24 Champions League campaign as they swept Antwerp aside in a 5-0 victory that was inspired by the superb performance of Joao Felix. The Portugal international scored the opener and set up another in the first 45 minutes, netting with a clever pulled finish, and then laying on Robert Lewandowski's second with a sumptuous cross that gave the Pole a simple volleyed finish.

Barca's third came more by luck than judgement, as a cross sent into the box by Raphinha was inadvertently deflected into his own goal by defender Jelle Bataille. After half-time, meanwhile, Gavi added a fourth with a powerful finish into the top corner, as the Catalan giants scythed through the Antwerp defence.

Felix then scored a superb back-post header after Raphinha's cross to make it 5-0, and put the cherry on what was an absolutely sublime performance.

GOAL rates Barcelona's players from the Olympic Stadium…

  • Getty Images

    Goalkeeper & Defence

    Marc-Andre ter Stegen (6/10)

    Really didn't have much to do, bar a superb double-save in the second half, prior to the flag being lifted for an offside during the attack. A quiet night.

    Joao Cancelo (7/10):

    Was allowed to push forward and operate in the final third. Tucked into midfield at times, and was clever with his distribution, crossing well and passing slickly.

    Jules Kounde (6/10):

    Dealt with everything thrown at him comfortably and often pushed forward into the opposition's half. Even tried a 25-yard shot, although it flew over the crossbar.

    Andreas Christensen (6/10):

    Always in control in defence, and was given plenty of time to distribute. Calm and composed.

    Alejandro Balde (6/10):

    Essentially played as a left winger at times. Had a chance in the first half but hit the side netting. Perhaps one of his quietest nights in a Barcelona shirt.

  • Advertisement

  • Getty Images

    Midfield

    Ilkay Gundogan (7/10):

    So elegant with his passing and slid Felix through for the opener. Metronomic with his distribution, and effective in winning the ball back too. An excellent midfield display.

    Frenkie de Jong (8/10):

    Played a beautiful pass in the build-up to Lewandowski's goal. Imperious in midfield, constantly driving forward and making things happen. Replaced by Romeu before the hour but his impact was keenly felt.

    Gavi (7/10):

    Booked needlessly for a late challenge in midfield but it was his only mistake. Scored Barcelona's fourth with a fierce finish into the top corner.

  • Getty Images

    Attack

    Raphinha (8/10):

    Set up Barca's third, as he crossed the ball, and it took a nick off the defender before hitting the post and finding the back of the net. Delivered a superb cross for Felix's second, and Barca's fifth.

    Robert Lewandowski (6/10):

    Involved in the build-up for Felix's goal and scored the second with a simple finish at the back-post. Missed a late one-on-one. Strangely, Barca's least effective attacker even with his goal, but it mattered little.

    Joao Felix (10/10):

    Scored the opener, finishing superbly into the bottom corner, then teed up Lewandowski for the second. Added Barca's fifth with an excellent back-post header after Raphinha's teasing cross. A stunning display, with every touch important.

  • ENJOYED THIS STORY?

    Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

  • Getty Images

    Subs & Manager

    Oriol Romeu (6/10):

    Replaced De Jong and kept Barca ticking in midfield.

    Fermin Lopez (6/10):

    On for Gavi. Kept it simple on the ball and did little wrong after his introduction.

    Lamine Yamal (7/10)

    Replaced the sublime Felix. Had a superb chance to score, as he rounded the goalkeeper but went too wide and hit the side netting. A livewire on the ball; Barcelona have a player on their hands.

    Ferran Torres (6/10)

    On for Raphinha and almost scored with his first touch, although he was not as effective as the man he replaced.

    Sergi Roberto (6/10)

    On for Joao Cancelo and saw the game out at right-back.

    Xavi (7/10):

    This was always likely to be a comfortable win but Barcelona achieved it in style, and Xavi had the good sense to rest some first-team stars before La Liga resumes this weekend. A good night's work.

Real Madrid player ratings vs Athletic Club: Karim Benzema signs off in style as Los Blancos pip Atletico to second place in La Liga after final-day draw

Karim Benzema concluded his Real Madrid career in style, scoring the equaliser in a home draw against Athletic Club.

The legendary striker converted from the spot to salvage an otherwise underwhelming Madrid performance, helping Los Blancos snatch a 1-1 draw against a lively Athletic Club side.

The visitors could've taken the lead inside 10 minutes when they were awarded a penalty for a Toni Kroos handball, but Thibaut Courtois made a full stretch to keep things level early on. The home side threatened sparingly for the remainder of the first half, although Vinicius Jr and Rodrygo both came close.

Oihan Sancet changed things, though, lifting the ball over Courtois after a scrappy sequence to give Athletic Club a 1-0 lead just after the break. But Benzema grabbed his obligatory goal to level things, smashing home from the spot after a dubious decision gave Madrid a penalty. He was substituted shortly after to the adulation of 61,000 Madridistas.

It was a season to forget for Madrid, who will finish at least 10 points behind league winners Barcelona, but they did at least finish ahead of arch-rivals Atletico, who drew 2-2 with Villarreal in their final game.

Still, Sunday was about celebrating a club legend, one that will make a rumoured move to Saudi Arabia having bagged 354 goals and won every possible trophy in the Spanish capital. Madrid won't be the same without him.

GOAL rates Real Madrid's players from the Santiago Bernabeu…

GettyGoalkeeper & Defence

Thibaut Courtois (7/10):

Made an excellent save from a spot-kick early on. Made another vital one-on-one stop in the second half. Could perhaps have done better on the goal.

Dani Carvajal (5/10):

Did a lot of running, but was lacking in his final ball and could've seen red for a very poor challenge.

Eder Militao (6/10):

Won the penalty that Benzema eventually scored. A bit shaky at the back again. He will benefit from a summer break.

Nacho (7/10):

A solid performance at centre-back from a player who could yet leave this summer. A good servant of the club over the years.

Antonio Rudiger (6/10):

Another left-back run out. More natural in the middle.

Advertisement(C)Getty ImagesMidfield

Toni Kroos (7/10):

Pinged it around, completed the most passes on the pitch and created two chances. Blasted one over at the death.

Dani Ceballos (5/10):

Dispossessed in the run-up to the Athletic opener. A few nice moments but short of ideas creatively. Unsure if he will be handed a new contract.

Eduardo Camavinga (6/10):

Will have been glad to start in centre-midfield. Won the ball a lot, but also made a few mistakes in possession.

Getty ImagesAttack

Rodrygo (7/10):

A real mixed bag on the day. Created well for Benzema, but missed a late chance that would've won it.

Karim Benzema (8/10):

Scored in his final game in a Madrid shirt. Everything else is sort of irrelevant.

Vinicius Jr (8/10):

Electric on the left, combined well with Benzema in his last game. Baffling that he didn't win a penalty after being shoved over in the box in the second half.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

GettySubs & Manager

Marco Asensio (6/10):

Given half an hour to impress in his final Madrid appearance. Standing ovation when subbed.

Aurelien Tchouameni (5/10):

Anchored the midfield, but didn't get involved in play too much.

Luka Modric (N/A):

A lively cameo.

Lucas Vazquez (N/A):

No time to make an impact.

Carlo Ancelotti (5/10):

Put out a near-full-strength lineup despite the relative unimportance of the game. And it was a familiar showing. Madrid lacked ideas in the final third and conceded a preventable goal early in the second half. He was bailed out by Benzema one last time.

Flamengo x Botafogo: prováveis times, onde acompanhar, desfalques e palpites

MatériaMais Notícias

O primeiro clássico entre Flamengo e Botafogo de 2020 será realizado neste sábado, às 18h, pela segunda rodada da Taça Rio. O palco será o Maracanã, que deve receber um público considerável, apesar de protagonistas dos dois clubes sendo ausências. Do lado rubro-negro, mandante do confronto, Jorge Jesus pode optar por uma equipe recheada de reservas, visando o compromisso pela Libertadores no meio da semana que vem.

> Confira a tabela do Campeonato Carioca

Já do lado alvinegro, além da incerteza quanto às condições físicas de Pedro Raul, Keisuke Honda teve a sua estreia adiada. Já regularizado, o astro japonês só vestirá a camisa do Glorioso pela Copa do Brasil, na terça-feira. No entanto, a rivalidade e o último encontro bastante competitivo – e pegado – são temperos consideráveis para o embate da vez.

FLAMENGO X BOTAFOGO
2ª RODADA DA TAÇA RIO

Estádio: Maracanã, no Rio de Janeiro (RJ)
Data:7 de março de 2020, às 18h
Árbitro:Bruno Arleu de Araújo
Assistentes:Rodrigo F. H. Corrêa e Thiago H. N. Corrêa
​VAR:Rodrigo Nunes de Sá
Onde acompanhar: rádios, FLA TV e Tempo Real do LANCE!
Parcial de vendas:42 mil mil ingressos vendidos

FLAMENGO (Técnico: Jorge Jesus)
César; João Lucas, Gustavo Henrique, Léo Pereira e Renê; Willian Arão, Diego, Vitinho e Michael; Pedro Rocha (Bruno Henrique) e Pedro.

Suspensos: –
Pendurados: –
Lesionados: –

BOTAFOGO (Técnico: Paulo Autuori)
Gatito Fernández; Federico Barrandeguy, Marcelo Benevenuto, Ruan Renato e Danilo Barcelos; Cícero, Alex Santana e Bruno Nazário; Gabriel Cortez, Luís Henrique e Pedro Raul.

Suspensos: –
Pendurados: –
Lesionados:-

PALPITES: Na redação do L!, 40% acreditam em vitória do Flamengo e 30%, na do Botafogo. O restante, 30%, em empate.

RelacionadasFlamengoFerj muda data de jogo do Fla e trio convocado poderá jogar contra BanguFlamengo06/03/2020Seleção BrasileiraTite fala sobre convocação do trio do Flamengo e exalta Everton RibeiroSeleção Brasileira06/03/2020BotafogoHonda estreará pelo Botafogo contra o Paraná, na próxima terça-feiraBotafogo05/03/2020

Glamorgan steady after Hankins shines

ScorecardGraham Wagg picked up three wickets as Gloucestershire were dismissed cheaply•Getty Images

Glamorgan captain Jacques Rudolph led the way in the final session on day one of the County Championship game against Gloucestershire in Bristol, to leave the Welsh county in a position of relative strength.The former South Africa Test batsman survived the early loss of opening partner Mark Wallace to help Glamorgan to 82 for 1 at the close, in reply to Gloucestershire’s 262 all out. With Rudolph 33 not out and Will Bragg unbeaten on 45, the visitors looked well set to not only consolidate their work on Sunday, but push for a first victory of the new season.The day was not so rewarding for Gloucestershire who, batting first under a near cloudless sky, soon found themselves in trouble. Openers Chris Dent and Cameron Bancroft departed for 6 and 5 respectively, as Glamorgan left-armer Graham Wagg made early inroads.Graeme van Buuren, on his first start for the county since arriving last month, played one or two shots of real quality, but eventually flashed at one too many and was caught, at the second attempt, by Chris Cooke at third slip.By lunch, Wagg, Timm van der Gugten and Harry Podmore had left the hosts struggling on 98 for 5, with captain Gareth Roderick and Hamish Marshall departing too. Roderick was snapped up in the gully by Andrew Salter for 12 before Marshall was trapped lbw by the impressive Wagg.The innings required a steady hand and that, somewhat surprisingly, came from the former Millfield School batsman, George Hankins. The 19-year-old came to the crease at 69 for 4 and batted without fear. After losing sixth-wicket partner Kieran Noema-Barnett, who was run out for a single shortly after lunch, he added 42 for the seventh wicket with the rather fortuitous Jack Taylor.Taylor, who was dropped at first slip before scoring by Bragg, was given another chance off the very next ball when Cooke spilt a straightforward catch, off Podmore, at third slip. Thereafter, he struck 24 in quick time, before being trapped lbw by Michael Hogan.Hankins continued to dominate the bowling and duly reached his maiden first-class half-century off 55 balls. Six runs later, he was bowled by Van Der Gugten, having struck 10 boundaries in his 74-ball stay at the crease.Glamorgan would have been excused for thinking the hard work had been done, as Hankins left to a standing ovation. Unfortunately Craig Miles and David Payne had other ideas and without ever looking in trouble, the pair added 90 for the ninth wicket. Payne eventually perished, for 39, as did Yorkshire loanee Josh Shaw, for 1. Miles was unbeaten on 49 as Gloucestershire were finally bowled out in the 68th over.Glamorgan made a terrible start when Wallace gifted debutant Van Buuren a catch, off Miles, in the second over of the innings. But Bragg joined Rudolph at the crease and the left-handed pair provided an even keel in the 25 overs remaining.

Di Venuto joins Surrey as head coach

Surrey have announced Michael Di Venuto as their new head coach on a three-year deal to replace Graham Ford who has recently returned to work with Sri Lanka.Di Venuto, who played nine ODIs, is currently Australia’s assistant and batting coach and recently took charge of the team when Darren Lehmann suffered DVT. His final Australia assignment will be the T20 tour of South Africa next month and he will join Surrey in early April ahead of the start of their Championship campaign against Nottinghamshire on April 10.Greg Blewett, who is currently Australia’s fielding coach, will take on the batting responsibilities with the national side.Di Venuto has extensive experience of the county game having played for Sussex, Derbyshire and latterly Durham with whom he won back-to-back County Championship titles in 2008 and 2009.”It has been a huge honour and privilege to have worked with the Australian team but the chance to come to a club of the size and potential of Surrey as head coach was too big an opportunity for me to turn down,” Di Venuto said.”As someone who has always enjoyed the county game, I have followed Surrey’s progress over the last couple of years and look forward to working with this talented squad of players.”Alec Stewart, the Surrey director of cricket, said: “Following the departure of Graham Ford it was vitally important that we found another high quality coach with a great work ethic and excellent knowledge of the English county game.”Michael is a good people person and his twelve years of county experience will be invaluable. He is highly regarded within the Australian setup for his ability to work with and get the best out of players both individually and collectively.”Being able to appoint a coach from a top quality International team can only serve to benefit the club and I would like to thank Cricket Australia for their professional dealings and understanding in enabling us to make this appointment in time for the start of the new season.”Pat Howard, Australia’s general manager, thanked Di Venuto for his work alongside Darren Lehmann over the last three years.”Michael has played a very important role supporting the Australian team over the last three years, including this past home summer when he stood in for Darren Lehmann as head coach,” Howard said.”He has brought a tremendous work ethic and commitment to the role and we have no doubt that this head coaching opportunity with Surrey will provide him with fantastic experience leading his own team, continuing his rapid development as an elite coach.”

الأهلي في المونديال | الخطيب يؤازر اللاعبين قبل مواجهة اتحاد جدة

حرص محمود الخطيب، رئيس مجلس إدارة النادي الأهلي، على لقاء لاعبي الفريق وجهازهم الفني قبل التوجه لأداء المران الثاني بجدة في السادسة مساء اليوم الأربعاء بتوقيت السعودية «الخامسة بتوقيت القاهرة»، استعدادًا لخوض غمار بطولة كأس العالم للأندية.

وتواجد الخطيب مع بعثة الأهلي، من أجل دعم وتحفيز اللاعبين على الظهور بشكل قوي قبل مواجهة اتحاد جدة السعودي.

وقت إضافي أم ركلات ترجيح مباشرة.. فيفا يخطر الأهلي باللائحة حال انتهاء مواجهة الاتحاد بالتعادل

ويستعد الأهلي لمواجهة فريق اتحاد جدة السعودي الجمعة المقبل، على استاد الجوهرة بمدينة جدة، ضمن منافسات بطولة كأس العالم للأندية بالسعودية 2023.

وتستضيف المملكة العربية السعودية بطولة كأس العالم للأندية، التي انطلقت مساء أمس الثلاثاء، وتستمر حتى يوم 22 ديسمبر الجاري.

ويشارك الأهلي في كأس العالم للأندية باعتباره بطلًا لقارة إفريقيا، بينما يخوض الاتحاد منافسات كأس العالم للأندية بصفته بطلًا للدوري المحلي للبلد المستضيف.

Australia surge after Kohli-Rahane special

The centrepiece of day three was a stand of 262 between Ajinkya Rahane and Virat Kohli, which left Steven Smith wondering where his next wicket was coming from and also kept open the prospect of an outright result

The Report by Daniel Brettig28-Dec-2014
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details2:16

Five for the day – ‘Fearless, spectacular Rahane’

For one minute short of four hours, Ajinkya Rahane and Virat Kohli made the future of Indian Test cricket look very bright indeed. For the two hours or so either side, the rest of the touring side confirmed why that future is still some way short of being realised.A hot and occasionally hot-tempered third day at the MCG had numerous fluctuations. First Australia prospered with a pair of early wickets to hasty strokes from Cheteshwar Pujara and M Vijay, and later they did so again through Nathan Lyon’s persevering spin and a sharp spell of reverse swing from the admirable Ryan Harris.But its centrepiece was a stand of 262 between Rahane and Kohli, a union that was both substantial enough to leave Steven Smith wondering where his next wicket was coming from but also swift enough to keep open the prospect of an outright result in this match, which India must win to stay in contention for the Border-Gavaskar Trophy.Rahane set the tone of the partnership, skating past 30 at better than a run a ball to shift momentum away from Australia. Kohli was a little more collected, but carried on beyond the loss of his partner and other members of India’s exceedingly collapsible tail to 169, his highest Test score. It was not until the last over of the day that Kohli fell, his edge clasped by a diving Brad Haddin.The second exceptional Haddin catch of the day contrasted with some rather indifferent fielding by Australia through mid-afternoon, when at least three chances went down. Nathan Lyon missed the gentlest of return catches from Rahane in the final over before the second new ball became due, and after Mitchell Johnson took it an edge from Kohli’s bat was grassed by Shane Watson, diving to his left and into territory commonly reserved for Haddin.Australian frustration with the Rahane-Kohli partnership was illustrated when Johnson fired a return at the stumps and caught Kohli in the lower back – words were exchanged at other times, and any visible acknowledgement of the Indian pair’s hundreds could best be described as low key. They were more generous to Rahane upon his departure, and Kohli was applauded by all sections of the ground as he led the players off at stumps.Pujara had seemed unusually eager to see bat on ball, and from Harris’ second ball of the morning he aimed an uncharacteristic cut/glide to a ball he would have often left. The edge was thick and Haddin flew through the air, the milestone dismissal among his more spectacular, atoning for dropping the same batsman the previous evening.Kohli was greeted by some fast stuff from Harris and Mitchell Johnson, but it was Vijay who was struck by the latter on the helmet with a short ball that reared up in defiance of an easy-paced pitch. Vijay shrugged off the blow, though its proximity to the rear of his head and neck made for a queasy replay viewing.Mitchell Johnson apologised to Virat Kohli after striking him with a throw during his follow through•Getty Images

He had played and missed at more than his share of deliveries during another innings of otherwise calm temper, but he became impatient when teased by Watson’s line and medium pace. Aiming a cut shot similar to Pujara’s, he too offered a thick outside edge that this time sailed as far as Shaun Marsh at first slip.This wicket seemed to tilt the morning towards Australia, but Kohli and Rahane responded with a counterattack of considerable verve. Rahane wasted very little time, and after a fortunate first boundary which bisected Haddin and Watson from a Lyon away-drifter, he struck a quartet far more convincing to help raise a 50-stand in as many minutes.They went on with it in the afternoon, mixing some handsome and inventive strokes with eager running between the wickets and manipulation of Smith’s fields. The certainty with which Rahane and Kohli played seemed to work against Australian concentration, so when chances arrived they were not quite sharp enough to take them.Lyon in particular will wonder for a long time how he managed to hash Rahane’s bunted return catch: in the 80th over of the innings it would have been a pivotal blow. But the miss allowed the stand to go on past tea, and to a point where India began to ponder a first-innings lead.Ultimately it was Lyon who broke the stand, winning an lbw verdict from Kumar Dharmasena against a sweeping Rahane, though replays suggested the ball had not straightened enough to flick off stump. Having waited so long for his debut innings, KL Rahul’s stay was short but action-filled as he was dropped by substitute Peter Siddle when he tried to flick Lyon over midwicket, then held at short fine leg when trying an ambitious sweep next ball.Harris gained some sharp bend and proved too good for both Dhoni and R Ashwin, before a somewhat off-key Johnson tempted Kohli into error in the day’s final over. With Rahane, Kohli had made this India’s day, but the less flattering passages either side of their stand meant the match may still lean towards Australia.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus