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Ten Hag: Modern players offended by criticism

Published in Soccer
Wednesday, 26 February 2025 07:42

Former Manchester United head coach Erik ten Hag has said this generation of professional footballers find criticism offensive and demotivating in direct contrast to players of his era.

Ten Hag had a number of high-profile clashes with first-team players during his stint at Old Trafford, including Cristiano Ronaldo, Jadon Sancho and Marcus Rashford.

The Dutch coach was sacked in October after two-and-a-half years in charge.

"This generation usually find it difficult to deal with criticism," Ten Hag told SEG Stories, the media arm of his management agency. "Criticism really gets to them.

"The generation that I grew up in had much thicker skin. You could be much more direct.

"I was approached much more directly. If I would do that with my current group of players I would demotivate them.

"If you do that to the current generation they find it offensive."

Ten Hag's entire playing career took place in the Netherlands between 1989 and 2002.

Ten Hag's first season at the helm saw United finish third and qualify for the UEFA Champions League, as well as winning the Carabao Cup. However, he notably fell out with Ronaldo midway through that season, with the Portugal star telling Piers Morgan's TalkTV show that he had no respect for the coach.

The second full season in charge was considerably less successful as United finished eighth -- their lowest ever placing in the Premier League -- with a record number of defeats (14). The coach had a public spat with Sancho at the start of the season after criticising his work-rate in training ahead of a trip to Arsenal -- a game they lost 3-1 -- with the England international responding on social media.

Rashford was dropped by Ten Hag after reporting himself ill amid confusion over the timings of a night out in Belfast in January 2024.

United did beat Manchester City in the FA Cup final in May, leading to a two-year contract extension for Ten Hag, though he was sacked in October after winning just four of the team's opening 13 league games.

Ten Hag told SEG that he has had offers to return to management since his dismissal, though he would not consider taking a job until July 1.

United have continued to struggle under Ruben Amorim, Ten Hag's replacement. They are 15th in the standings on 30 points having lost 12 of their 26 games in the league.

Drogba defends Mourinho amid Gala racism row

Published in Soccer
Wednesday, 26 February 2025 06:58

Former Chelsea and Galatasaray striker Didier Drogba weighed in on the racism row involving his old coach Jose Mourinho on Wednesday, saying the Portuguese coach "is not a racist and history is there to prove it."

Mourinho, who coaches Fenerbahce in Turkey, was accused by Galatasaray of making racist comments after a 0-0 draw between the rivals teams that was refereed by a Slovenian official on Monday.

Mourinho was asked about a challenge early in the match and said a Turkish referee would have reacted with a yellow card "after the big dive and their [Galatasaray's] bench jumping around like monkeys."

Galatasaray said they planned to start criminal proceedings against Mourinho, citing "racist statements," and filed complaints with football's governing bodies.

A day later, Fenerbahce rejected the accusation, saying the remarks had nothing to do with racism and were "deliberately taken entirely out of context and distorted in a misleading manner."

The club said it was planning to take a legal action "against this baseless accusation."

In a post on social media platform X, Drogba -- who played under Mourinho at Chelsea in two separate spells -- said he had seen the comments about his former coach.

"Trust me when I tell you I have known Jose for 25 years and he is not a racist and history [past and recent] is there to prove it," Drogba, who is Black, wrote. "Let's focus on our games, support our brilliant lions and let's win the league."

Drogba added: "How can my 'Dad' be a racist. Come on guys."

The Turkish football federation's disciplinary board is expected to make an announcement on the incident in the coming days.

Dominik Szoboszlai had nothing left to give. After the final whistle had blown at Manchester City on Sunday, the Hungary international collapsed to the turf in exhaustion, having just delivered one of the outstanding individual performances of the Premier League season so far.

Szoboszlai had been involved in both goals in Liverpool's 2-0 win at the Etihad, teeing up Mohamed Salah to score the first before collecting the ball from the Egypt international and rifling clinically past Ederson to notch his sixth goal of the season in all competitions.

While it was his brilliance inside the 18-yard box that gave Liverpool the advantage against Pep Guardiola's side, it was his relentless work ethic that helped ensure the league leaders kept their noses in front. It was a victory that, by the end of the 90 minutes, had the triumphant away fans demanding that City hand over their Premier League crown. When asked post-match for his reaction to the supporters' chants of "we're going to win the league," Szoboszlai told Sky Sports: "I didn't hear it, I was so tired."

Liverpool's clash with City was their fourth game in the space of just 12 days, with Szoboszlai one of only two outfielders (alongside captain Virgil van Dijk) to have played every minute during that run. With that in mind, it's perhaps little wonder he felt tired.

The rewards for such a herculean effort, though, promise to be great for Szoboszlai and for Liverpool. Arne Slot's side now boast an 11-point lead at the top of the Premier League table -- albeit having played a game more than second-placed Arsenal -- with just 11 games left. Should Liverpool win the club's 20th league title this term then the likes of Salah and Van Dijk will, rightly, earn much of the acclaim. But while it is his teammates who might grab the headlines, Szoboszlai has this season cemented himself as one of the most vital cogs in Slot's machine.


'He was born for football'

Szoboszlai is used to his reputation preceding him. When he joined Hungarian top-flight club MTK Budapest in 2015, academy director Zsolt Székely was already well aware of his talent.

"I knew of him before I worked with him because two of his father's friends worked at MTK, and they often told me that I had to watch this kid because he was really good," Székely tells ESPN. "They always said if he was faster, he could have a big future. I first went to watch him at 12 years old and he was amazing."

Szoboszlai was scouted by RB Salzburg at the age of 15, but the club were keen for the midfielder to hone his skills back in his homeland before moving to Austria. He spent a year at MTK, which is widely regarded as Hungary's best football academy.

"He was a great football player," Székely says. "He had very high football intelligence, he had incredible technique. How he kicked the ball, it was something new to us. When he passed the ball, players always passed it back to him. He always wanted to have the ball at his feet.

"He always stood out. I have never seen such a complete player as him. It was always clear he would be successful. His life was football. He was born for football. He didn't have a smartphone; he didn't have Facebook. He just played football all day, with us or with his father. He was crazy about it."

On the international stage, too, it didn't take long for Szoboszlai to make a name for himself. In 2017, the midfielder was part of the Hungary squad bidding to qualify for the European Under-17 Championship, lining up against a Norway side spearheaded by a striker named Erling Haaland -- who later became Szoboszlai's teammate at Salzburg.

"Hungary needed a win to qualify, but the game was tied heading into the last few minutes," Hungarian football journalist Bence Bocsák tells ESPN. "Then Szoboszlai received the ball on the edge of the box and just smashed it into the top corner to win it. After that, literally everyone was talking about him."

The noise around Szoboszlai only grew louder when he moved to Salzburg in 2018, and again when he made the switch to RB Leizpig in the Bundesliga three years later. By that point, the midfielder had already written himself into his country's history books by scoring the goal that sealed Hungary's place at Euro 2020, and he was made captain of the national team in November 2022.

"He is a true leader, a strong character, which is rare in his age," Hungary head coach Marco Rossi said of his decision to hand Szoboszlai the armband. "The players discussed it; it would be the right decision if he became the team captain.

"He is internationally recognised for his abilities, but the most important thing is that he can be sure that he can handle this responsibility and that it will not hinder his development. He is not a top player yet, but he will soon become one."

More than two years on from those comments, Szoboszlai is well on his way to fulfilling that prophecy.

'When Liverpool play, everyone in Hungary is watching'

When Szoboszlai joined Liverpool in a 60 million deal from Leipzig in July 2023, it was, in a sense, a full-circle moment. The Hungary international already had a tattoo on his arm of a quote attributed to Liverpool legend Steven Gerrard: "Talent is a blessing from God, but without incredible will and humility, it is worthless."

With Guinea international Naby Keïta having left Anfield that summer, Szoboszlai inherited the vacant No.8 shirt which Gerrard had worn with great distinction for more than a decade. But if following in the footsteps of an icon comes with pressure, Szoboszlai didn't show it in the early months of his Liverpool career, with his all-action displays in the middle of the park earning him plenty of plaudits.

"You have these people who come into the room and click with everybody, he has that, charisma," then-Liverpool boss Jürgen Klopp said in a news conference in September 2023. "He was in the team in an instant, that's clear, and was so happy to come here. It was really nice to see how much it meant to him and that's it."

But, like a number of his Liverpool teammates, Szoboszlai's form dipped in the second half of the campaign, and he started just one of the Reds' final seven league games as they fell away in the title race, ultimately finishing third behind City and Arsenal.

There was little time, though, for the midfielder to rest and recover before Euro 2024, where Hungary agonisingly missed out on qualification for the knockout stages, winning just one of their group-stage games. It was a lot of responsibility to shoulder for one so young, but Szoboszlai has never been the sort of player to shy away from the spotlight.

"I went to South Korea about 18 months ago, a few months after Szoboszlai had signed for Liverpool, and I saw all of these posters of Son Heung-Min," Bocsák says. "He was literally everywhere, and I told all my Hungarian friends this is what is going to happen with Szoboszlai, and that's proved true.

"He had a McDonalds meal named after him in the summer, he's the face of one of the country's biggest telephone companies. He's pretty much everywhere. When Liverpool play, everyone in Hungary is watching."

Szoboszlai could be 'star' for Liverpool

For Szoboszlai and his Liverpool teammates, this season was a clean slate, with Slot arriving from Feyenoord Rotterdam last summer to replace Klopp in the dugout. One hallmark of the Dutchman's Anfield tenure so far has been his willingness to speak plainly about areas for improvement within his team and, ahead of Liverpool's Champions League clash with AC Milan in September, he was particularly clear about his expectations for Szoboszlai.

"Something I have to work on with him is that he is also even more involved in scoring goals and creating chances for us because I think last season he scored three [in the league] if I remember correctly," Slot said.

"For an attacking midfielder at Liverpool his numbers need to go up, but I am really happy with the way he has done until now. I am 100% sure that if he plays in a team with so much quality around him and with the quality he has, he will in the end score more goals as well."

Szoboszlai, too, has acknowledged that he can add further gloss to his numbers. But, playing in a midfield alongside the ingenuity of Alexis Mac Allister and the technical brilliance of Ryan Gravenberch, the 24-year-old is under no illusions about the fact it is down to him to bring the running power to Liverpool's engine room.

"I can play better, as the gaffer said I can score more goals, I can give more assists, but I am doing the 'dirty job' as well for the team and that is the most important thing to me," Szoboszlai said back in October. "While we are top of the league and I don't score any goals, I'll take it."

Szoboszlai's willingness to put in the hard yards was evidenced emphatically at the Etihad on Sunday, where he ran 11.5km -- more than any other player on the pitch. By comparison, Kevin De Bruyne, who has been the heartbeat of City's midfield for nearly a decade, ran just 8.1km, while Nico Gonzalez and Omar Marmoush ran 9.3km and 8.4km respectively.

Considering Liverpool had just 33.9% possession against City -- their lowest in a Premier League victory on record since 2003-04 -- the importance of Szoboszlai's impressive work rate cannot be overstated. Still, though, there is a sense that the midfielder is yet to reach his full potential.

"I think he can be better," Bocsák says. "The conversation in Hungary is that he's still not as good for Liverpool as he is for the national team.

"He took a little bit of time to really get going and become the main man in Salzburg and the same for Leipzig, so I think next season is when we will really see him become the star of this team. He's got that potential, and I think, with time, he'll get there."

With three months of the season still to play, neither Szoboszlai nor his teammates will allow themselves to celebrate just yet. However, if he does go on to become the first Hungarian to win the Premier League this term, it will mark another remarkable chapter in an increasingly extraordinary career.

"He is a sign for every Hungarian kid that if you work hard enough and you have enough talent you can be successful," Székely says. "I'm not sure if there is a higher step in world football than Liverpool, but I'm sure Dominik could be a key player for anyone in the world."

Arne Slot touchline ban: What can Liverpool boss do, and where?

Published in Soccer
Wednesday, 26 February 2025 05:06

Liverpool manager Arne Slot has been given a two-match touchline ban and fined 70,000 by the Football Association after his red card amid fractious scenes at the end of the Merseyside derby on Feb. 12.

Slot admitted to the charge of acting "in an improper manner and/or used insulting and/or abusive words and/or behaviour towards both the match referee and an assistant referee." He had approached referee Michael Oliver after a melee between the two sets of players following the full-time whistle had seen Everton's Abdoulaye Doucouré and Liverpool's Curtis Jones sent off for second bookable offenses.

Slot will be absent from the touchline for Wednesday's game at home to Newcastle United, and the visit of Southampton to Anfield on Saturday, March 8. The suspension will not affect Liverpool's Champions League game at Paris Saint-Germain on Wednesday, March 5.

How much involvement will Slot have in those two Premier League fixtures?

Can Slot be in the stadium?

Yes, as this is just a touchline ban.

There is a separate sanction which can see a manager banned from the ground completely.

Can Slot communicate with his bench?

Yes. The Football Association's Media Essentials Guide states that from his seat in the stand he can "communicate with those in the dugout by either phone or a 'runner.'"

Can Slot be involved in the prematch warmup?

No. Slot cannot be "on the touchline before, during or after the match, and this includes participating in the team's warmup."

Is Slot allowed in the changing room?

Yes, he can go into the changing room before the match and at halftime to deliver his team talk.

If the Football Association's Regulatory Commission had imposed an "extended" touchline ban, Slot wouldn't have been able to communicate with the team from 30 minutes prior to the game and until 30 minutes after the game.

Former Australia captain Ricky Ponting reckons Virat Kohli will give himself the "best chance to be remembered as the all-time leading run-scorer" in ODIs.

"With someone like Virat, you never write him off, because I'm sure he'd be motivated by that [achieving the record], I think," Ponting said on the ICC Review Podcast. "Now that he's gone past me and only two ahead of him, I'm sure he wants to give himself the best chance to be remembered as the all-time leading run scorer in the game.

"So, as long as the hunger's there, obviously, physically wise, he's probably as fit as he's ever been and works exceptionally hard on that side of his game. So, if the hunger's still there, then I'm never going to write him off.

"I know he's nice and close to Sangakkara now. I don't think it's going to be long, maybe the next game before he goes past Sangakkara. But still, a little way to go to catch Sachin."

Calling Kohli the best 50-over player he has ever seen, Ponting was also amazed by the fact that Kohli is still more than 4000 runs adrift of Tendulkar's record despite being at the top of his ODI game for so long.

"Congratulations to him [Kohli]. He's obviously been a champion player for a long, long time. And particularly, probably in the white-ball formats where he's been an unbelievably good 50-over player," Ponting said. "In fact, I think I'm on record before saying I don't think I've ever seen a better 50-over player than Virat Kohli.

"It's crazy when you think about it, isn't it? Just how good Virat's been over such a long period of time, yet he's still 4,000 runs behind Sachin. I mean, it just goes to show how good Sachin was, but also his longevity in the game. How long Sachin played for and how long you're able to maintain such high levels for as an individual player? And that's the one thing I've always judged excellence on, is how long you can maintain it for."

Kohli's form has been under scrutiny for a while. He had a lean Border-Gavaskar Trophy 2024-25 in Australia where he averaged 23.75 with one century in nine innings. In the two ODIs against England, he managed 5 and 52, while he was dismissed for 22 in India's Champions Trophy opener against Bangladesh. However, Ponting wasn't surprised that Kohli brought his best foot forward against Pakistan.

"Look, I've always said big games equal big names. You need your big names to stand up in those big moments. And no bigger game for India than a game against Pakistan. So, it's no surprise to me that that has happened," he said. "I think it's very much the same as what we would say whenever we play England. Your reputation is forged in what you do in the biggest contests on the international stage.

"And no bigger moment than Sunday night when Pakistan had batted first on a tricky wicket. It needed someone at the top of the order to play a match-winning innings like that. And once again, it was Kohli to get the job done."

10.50am GMT: The story was updated after Kohli moved up to No.5 on the ICC rankings

Kuhnemann cleared of suspect bowling action by ICC

Published in Cricket
Wednesday, 26 February 2025 03:40
Left-arm spinner Matt Kuhnemann has been cleared to bowl in international cricket by the ICC. He had been reported for a suspect action following the two-Test series in Sri Lanka where he had picked up 16 wickets in the series as Australia won 2-0.
Kuhmemann, who had never previously been reported in a professional career dating back to 2017, was tested in Brisbane and learnt of the outcome on Wednesday.

"He...underwent an independent bowling assessment at the National Cricket Centre in Brisbane on 15 February, where it was revealed that the amount of elbow extension for all his deliveries was within the 15-degree level of tolerance permitted under the ICC Illegal Bowling Regulations," an ICC statement said.

Kuhnemann could have continued playing domestic cricket while his action was assessed although the thumb he dislocated during the BBL has kept him out of action since. It is not known yet if he will be fit in time for Tasmania's next Sheffield Shield game against Queensland in Hobart from March 6. He is a strong chance of being selected for the Test tour of West Indies in June and July.

During the testing process, Kuhnemann went through a session that lasted more than one hour, where he was asked to bowl at a similar speed and with similar revolutions to what he did in the second Test in Galle. ICC experts were at hand to observe the proceedings as Kuhnemann bowled, wearing markers on his body and surrounded by several high-speed cameras and a 3D motion analysis system.

"We are pleased for Matt that this matter is now resolved," Ben Oliver, CA executive general manager national teams said in a statement. "It has been a challenging period for Matt, however he has carried himself exceptionally well.

"He has had the full support of Australian cricket and he can now move forward to the next phase of his international career with great confidence."

Not long after he had been reported, his Australia team-mates rallied behind him, with Steven Smith, Australia's captain in Pat Cummins' absence, saying, "It's come as a bit of a surprise to me. He has been playing for eight years in professional cricket and nothing has been said in that amount of time.

"I am thinking of him, at present, he has to go through the process. We're confident he will pass. He will go through that process back home. We wish him all the best."

Kuhnemann has taken 25 wickets in five Tests at 22.20.

If you're looking for the reason why Pakistan crashed out of their own home tournament, look no further than this one: personnel. Specifically, the inexperience of that personnel. This was the main thrust of white-ball head coach Aaqib Javed's post-mortem.

Pakistan have one more match to play, of course, against Bangladesh, who are also already out of contention for the semi-finals in the Champions Trophy. That match in Rawalpindi on Thursday is also under serious threat from rain, and perhaps a sodden outfield, with this having been a wet week in the city.

Javed spoke at length about the various permutations and combinations in selection that could have improved the team's output this tournament. But clearly still hurting from the loss to India on Sunday, he also made the point that India's XI had a far greater body of work on their resume than Pakistan's.

"When Pakistan and India is playing, it's not only cricket - it's more than that. You need a lot of experience," Javed said. "This Indian team was the most experienced - they have almost 1500 games together. And Pakistan is on the bottom, with less than 400 games together. If you look at players like Babar Azam is the only one who has played more than 100 games. Then there's Mohammad Rizwan (88 ODIs) and then Shaheen Afridi (64 ODIs).

"The rest of them have less than 30 matches. Tayyab Tahir has played like eight games. Imam-ul-Haq (73 games) was coming back in the team. The main thing is, when nothing works, and when you are talking about more than a game, then the experience counts. There is no doubt."

Part of this lack of experience was also down to having lost Fakhar Zaman, one of their most-aggressive batters and one of the stars of the 2017 Champions Trophy, in the first game of the tournament. They were also without Saim Ayub, who had hit 235 runs and taken two wickets in Pakistan's 3-0 ODI series in South Africa in December. Ayub had been ruled out of this tournament with an ankle injury.

"Similarly, we had to bring in Khushdil Shah because Saim was unfit. The reason is that in one-day cricket, you cannot go with 5 bowlers. You have to make a combination of seven batsmen and four bowlers.

"When Saim was there, he used to bat at the top and he used to bowl five to seven overs. When he was not there - we saw that if you do a little research - even with the terrific performances that Khushdil Shah has given in one-and-a-half years of cricket, his wicketsthere's no comparison. It was not even a close case or anything. But our job in the selection committee was to give him the best replacement option."

In the absence of these players, it was down to the big five: Babar Azam, Mohammad Rizwan, Haris Rauf, Naseem Shah, and Shaheen to step up, Javed said. But match-winning performances from these players never came.

These players have come under particular fire in Pakistan since the team's exit.

"A common person who doesn't play and is not part of the team management wants reasons and the names of people because of whom this team is losing," Javed said. "As far as Babar, Rizwan, Shaheen, Naseem, and Haris are concerned, our plan was to make the best possible 11 or 15. There is no doubt that Shaheen, Naseem, and Haris are excellent bowlers. If you compare them with the bowling attack of any team, they are one of the best fast-bowling options.

"And if you look at Babar - apart from him what other options do you have? We always say that if the team loses, change the team. This is the most inexperienced team already."

Andrew Fidel Fernando is a senior writer at ESPNcricinfo. @afidelf

Mumbai Indians bring in Kalita for Sisodia and opt to bowl

Published in Cricket
Wednesday, 26 February 2025 06:02

Toss Mumbai Indians chose to bowl vs UP Warriorz

Mumbai Indians captain Harmanpreet Kaur won the toss and decided to chase against UP Warriorz in Bengaluru.

She said the fast bowlers would get some assistance early in the game and wanted them to "take advantage" of the conditions. Mumbai made one change to the side that beat Royal Challengers Bengaluru, with Jintimani Kalita coming in for Parunika Sasodia to give an extra pace-bowling option. Kalita played ten games for Mumbai in the last WPL but got to bowl only in four match, where she picked up one wicket at an economy rate of 7.40.
Warriorz captain Deepti Sharma wanted to bowl first as well. They remained unchanged from the XI that clinched the Super Over thriller against RCB. Chamari Athapaththu continued to warm the bench.
Both team have won two games each so far, though Mumbai have played one game fewer than Warriorz' four.

Mumbai Indians: 1 Hayley Matthews, 2 Yastika Bhatia (wk), 3 Nat Sciver-Brunt, 4 Harmanpreet Kaur (capt), 5 Amelia Kerr, 6 Amanjot Kaur, 7 S Sajana, 8 G Kamalini, 9 Sanskriti Gupta, 10 Shabnim Ismail, 11 Jintimani Kalita

UP Warriorz: 1 Kiran Navgire, 2 Vrinda Dinesh, 3 Deepti Sharma (capt), 4 Tahlia McGrath, 5 Shweta Sehrawat, 6 Grace Harris, 7 Uma Chetry (wk), 8 Chinelle Henry, 9 Sophie Ecclestone, 10 Saima Thakor, 11 Kranti Goud

Malewar 138*, Nair 86 stabilise Vidarbha after early wickets

Published in Cricket
Wednesday, 26 February 2025 07:32

Stumps Vidarbha 254 for 4 (Malewar 138*, Nair 86, Nidheesh 2-33) vs Kerala

Danish Malewar and Karun Nair at are different stages of their careers. At 21, Malewar, a heavy run-getter in the age-group circuit, is in his maiden season. At 33, Nair, a two-time Ranji Trophy winner with Karnataka, has overcome a serious form slump to enjoy a second wind which has the potential to turn into something bigger, possibly an unlikely Test call-up eight years after he last played in one.

On Wednesday, Malewar and Nair were at the forefront of an incredible Vidarbha fightback on the opening day of the Ranji Trophy final against first-timers Kerala in Nagpur. The pair added 215 for the fourth wicket as Kerala's bowling reserves were severely tested. Vidarbha recovered from 24 for 3 in the first hour and looked primed to take the opening-day honours when Nair's run out late in the day for 86, after being sent back by Malewar as they tried to steal a bye, gave Kerala a late lift. Vidarbha went into stumps on 254 for 4 on a VCA Stadium surface that flattened out as the day progressed, with Kerala at the receiving end of a slow-burn kind of treatment they meted out to Gujarat in the semi-final.

Malewar and Nair superbly negated Kerala's major threat - spin - as Jalaj Saxena and hometown hero Aditya Sarwate, who made the switch from Vidarbha ahead of the 2024-25 season, proved ineffective. The spin twins had combined figures of 0 for 92 off 26 overs, although Saxena was the only bowler who induced a possible opportunity when he managed to induce the outside edge from Malewar after he was beaten in flight and drift while on 110. The resultant edge as he pushed at the delivery that didn't turn as much flew past a vacant slip that had only a few overs earlier been taken out.

That was the only genuine wicket-taking delivery all afternoon; the Nair dismissal was entirely down to Rohan Kunnummal's presence of mind and pinpoint accuracy as he ran to his right from the slips to stop the ball that deflected off the keeper's pad. Then he fired a flat throw to the stumps to catch Nair well short after he was sent back by Malewar. Yash Thakur was sent in as a nightwatcher and remained unbeaten on 5 alongside Malewar, who was 138 not out - his highest score yet.

The partnership between Malewar and Nair not only denied Kerala for large parts of the day but also covered up for a slightly unconventional move from Vidarbha that may have been scrutinised had they collapsed. Vidarbha promoted Parth Rekhade, a lower-order batter to open in place of Atharva Taide, who had been left out. And after he was out two balls into the game - courtesy an lbw decision Kerala overturned through DRS - they sent in Darshan Nalkande, a seam-bowling allrounder who bats in the lower-order, at No. 3. That move backfired too as Nalkande mistimed a pull to deep square as Nidheesh picked up a second wicket.

Kerala's boisterous energy and keenness to take the game on had them burn an lbw review off Dhruv Shorey, the only genuine top-order batter in the top three. Shorey looked assured for the brief while he was at the crease but nibbled at a short and wide delivery from 19-year-old seamer Eden Apple Tom to the wicketkeeper to leave Vidarbha in choppy waters.

Malewar and Nair joined hands at a time of crisis and slowly rebuilt the innings, not through denial but by picking runs whenever the bowlers erred. Malewar left the ball well outside off, forcing the bowlers to attack the stumps. And as they went full, Malewar brought out some incredible wrist work - at times picking length balls from middle-and-off through midwicket and mid-on. He was equally impressive off the back foot, while tucking deliveries off his hip.

Malewar got to his half-century in style as he stepped out to launch Sarwate over the long-on boundary. The first real rash stroke he played was to get into the 80s when he chased a short and wide Nidheesh delivery to slash it towards third man. Nair occasionally kept pepping Malewar every time he erred, and was the more industrious out of the two - sweeping spinners off their lengths, on a couple of occasions reverse sweeping Sarwate to prevent him from settling into a rhythm.

Nair's driving through the covers was imperious - especially off rookie Apple Tom who was playing in only his third game, three years after debuting as a 16-year-old. Nair's defence was compact, as he negated Kerala's tactic of attacking the stumps and looking to get some reverse swing with a short midwicket in place.

Like he raised his fifty, Malewar showed no sign of nerves in the 90s either, stepping out to launch Sarwate over long-on to get to 99, and then whipping him through midwicket for a boundary to raise his century. Nair, meanwhile, brought up his half-century off 125 balls and then feasted on some tired bowling to charge towards what would've been his fourth hundred of the season, and 23rd overall, in the final session. Before his run out had him uncharacteristically flinging his bat in disappointment as he walked back to a dressing room that stood up to applaud a rescue.

Shashank Kishore is a senior correspondent at ESPNcricinfo

Sources: Titans allowing LB Landry to seek trade

Published in Breaking News
Wednesday, 26 February 2025 07:10

The Tennessee Titans have granted former Pro Bowl linebacker Harold Landry III permission to seek a trade, sources told ESPN's Adam Schefter on Wednesday.

Landry is getting the chance to look at his options after he led the Titans with nine sacks last season while starting all 17 games and playing 83.1% of the team's defensive snaps. He also had 71 tackles, nine sacks, 18 pressures and four pass deflections.

He is due a $17.5 million base salary for the 2025 season.

The Titans hold the No. 1 pick in this year's draft after going 3-14 and met with Penn State outside linebacker Abdul Carter -- the No. 2 draft prospect on ESPN's Mel Kiper Jr.'s Big Board -- during this week's scouting combine.

Landry, 28, earned his only Pro Bowl honor in 2021 when he had career highs in sacks (12) and tackles (74). The Titans signed Landry to a five-year, $87.5 million extension with $52.5 million guaranteed following the 2021 season, but he then didn't play in 2022 after tearing the ACL in his right knee that September.

He has 50.5 career sacks since joining the Titans as a second-round pick in 2018.

ESPN's Turron Davenport contributed to this report.

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