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Sources: Man Utd agree terms with Fernandes

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 16 January 2020 03:17

Manchester United have agreed personal terms with Bruno Fernandes but the transfer still hinges on finding an agreement with Sporting Lisbon, sources have told ESPN.

United have held talks with the Portuguese side about signing the midfielder this month but a deal between the clubs is yet to be reached. Sporting value Fernandes at around €80 million while United are keen to pay closer to €60m.

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The 25-year-old, capped 19 times by Portugal, is ready to move to Old Trafford after talks which have involved agent Jorge Mendes, but is waiting for Sporting and United to find a compromise during the last 15 days of the January transfer window.

Sporting have rejected the chance to take goalkeeper Joel Pereira as part of the deal while their attempts to sign defender Marcos Rojo have so far been rebuffed.

Meanwhile, Ashley Young's hopes of sealing a move to Inter Milan have been hit with the Italian side on the brink of signing Roma left-back Leonardo Spinazzola.

Spinazzola has undergone a medical at Inter ahead of a move which would see Matteo Politano heading in the other direction.

Young, 34, was hopeful of moving to Inter either in January or at the end of his contract in the summer. He has been offered a new deal to extend his stay at Old Trafford but was keen to move to Serie A.

Watford, West Ham and Crystal Palace are among other clubs interested in his signature. Young has been left out of United's squad for the last three games with manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer having said the defender is unavailable because of injury.

From Kingston to Karachi: England's ten greatest away wins

Published in Cricket
Thursday, 16 January 2020 03:12

As England take the field for their 500th overseas Test at Port Elizabeth (which was, coincidentally, the scene of their first in South Africa in 1899), ESPNcricinfo takes a look back at ten of their finest away wins, out of a current tally of 149.

Kingston 1989-90

The gold standard of England's overseas Test wins. It wasn't simply that this result was unexpected, it was beyond the bounds of possibility, as wild a sporting upset as you could wish to encounter. England's record against West Indies going into the first Test of 1990 was played 15, lost 14, drawn 1. They hadn't won a Test against them since 1974, and they arrived in the Caribbean off the back of a 4-0 Ashes drubbing with a squad that had been ravaged by Mike Gatting's rebel tour of South Africa. But in Graham Gooch's first outing as full-time England captain, he inspired a rag-tag army to surpass themselves. Angus Fraser claimed 5 for 28 to skittle West Indies for 164; Allan Lamb produced a majestic hundred to ensure that advantage didn't go to waste. Despite an anxious wait for rain to clear in the closing stages, Wayne Larkins sealed an incomprehensible win by nine wickets.

Sydney 1894-95

Only three teams in history have won a Test match after following on, and Australia have been on the receiving end on each occasion - most recently at Headingley in 1981 and Kolkata 20 years later, but also way back in the mists of time on Andrew Stoddart's tour of Australia in 1894-95, when Wisden declared the first Test at Sydney to be "probably the most sensational match ever played either in Australia or in England". Australia recovered from 21 for 3 to rack up a massive 586, with Syd Gregory's ninth-wicket stand of 154 with Jack Blackham remaining an Australia record to this day, before chiselling England out for 325 by the close of day three. The follow-on proved arduous for the Aussies as Albert Ward's 117 kept them in the field for 181 further overs, but a target of 177 ought to have been achievable. However, heavy overnight rain coupled with a steaming hot sixth day gave the pitch an attack of the vapours, and Bobby Peel required no second invitation - despite apparently needing to be stuck under a cold shower to ease the effect of his own overnight watering. "Give me the ball, Mr Stoddart, and I'll get t'boogers out before loonch!" he is said to have declared. He wasn't wrong. Australia collapsed from 130 for 2 to 166 all out, losing by ten runs with two minutes of the session remaining.

Bridgetown 1993-94

The events in Barbados in April 1994 are proof, if nothing else, that long before the World Test Championship was introduced to provide officially sanctioned "context", each individual Test match counted for something irrespective of the series scoreline. At 3-0 down with two to play, England were dead and buried on their 1994 tour. Their one chance at salvation, in the previous Test in Trinidad, had been scorched by Curtly Ambrose in their 46-all-out debacle, and after being routed by a West Indies Board XI in a practice match in Grenada, the prospect of a third blackwash in ten years was a clear and present danger - especially as they headed for Fortress Bridgetown, a venue where West Indies hadn't lost since 1935. But then the miracle started taking shape. Alec Stewart and Mike Atherton added 171 for England's first wicket, with Stewart going on to the first of his twin hundreds, before Fraser pounded through West Indies' defences with a career-best 8 for 75. It couldn't change what had gone before, but in a decade featuring just nine away wins, this was right up there with the best.

Adelaide 2010-11

Andy Flower, rarely one to let his guard slip, declared this to be nigh on the "perfect" England win, and despite the hyperbole, it's hard to deny he had a point. This was a masterful initiative-seizing victory, a strike right at the heart of a rattled Australia team who had seen a routine win in the first Test at Brisbane quashed by the small matter of England's second innings: 517 for 1. And Australia's response to that indignity was calamity: a scoreline of 2 for 3 on the first morning as James Anderson snaked his way through the top order before Alastair Cook continued where he'd left off with another dry-as-dust 148. Enter Kevin Pietersen, who slapped a sun-baked attack for a punitive double-hundred, before Graeme Swann took his cue on the final day with five match-sealing wickets. To make it all the more perfect, the outfield was drenched by a thunderstorm barely half an hour after the finish.

Mumbai 2012-13

It may all have ended in tears and recrimination, but like ABBA or Fleetwood Mac, Cook and Pietersen sure made some beautiful music when the mood took them. Two years after Adelaide, they reprised the same rhythm with another chalk-and-cheese alliance, and this time the impact on their opponents was even more stark. India had eased to victory in the opening Test in Ahmedabad, though not before Cook's 176 in the second innings had shown his team the requisite bottle for Indian conditions. But when he repeated that dose in the first innings at the Wankhede, this time Pietersen was waiting to turn on the style. Newly "reintegrated" to the England team after the textgate row of the summer, he disintegrated India's resistance with an astonishing onslaught - 186 from 233 balls included a firestorm of boundaries against spinners R Ashwin and Pragyan Ojha. And talking of spinners, who should be waiting to ice England's cake? Their own spin twins, Swann and Monty Panesar - the perfect combo for the conditions - who wrapped up the contest with 19 wickets between them.

Sydney (and Melbourne) 1954-55

Blows to the head aren't generally advised in this day and age, but one of the most famous blows of all time is widely acknowledged as the catalyst for one of the great series turnarounds. Two years after winning the Ashes back on home soil for the first time in 19 years, Len Hutton's prospects of retention weren't looking too promising after an innings thumping in the opening match of the 1954-55 series, in Brisbane. His key fast bowler, Frank Tyson, claimed 1 for 160 in that match, and his tour took another turn for the worse when he was knocked out by a Ray Lindwall bouncer in the second Test at Sydney. But from that moment on, the joke was on Australia. "I was a little cranky," Tyson later admitted, as he blew through Australia with six second-innings wickets, to turn a 74-run deficit into a famous 38-run win. Two weeks later in Melbourne, he was in an even crankier mood - nothing could survive his second-innings 7 for 27, as Australia were wrecked for 111.

Brisbane 1986-87

Okay, so the quality of the contest was a notch below the usual standards - Australia really were at a low ebb in this post-Lillee, pre-Warne era. But who could failed to be swayed by the optics? Like the cackle of Emperor Palpatine in the trailer for the latest Star Wars, the first Test at Brisbane heralded the rise of an Australian nemesis whose best endeavours had been buried for so long, you could only assume he was finished. But no! Back he strode to his throne of Ashes - revoltingly mulleted and broader at the midriff than in his heyday, but still possessed of an eye like a dead trout. Merv Hughes bore the brunt of Ian Botham's 14th and final Test century, as England seized an initiative that carried them to glory with a Test to spare. Can't bat, can't bowl, can't field indeed...

Johannesburg 2004-05

England's tour of South Africa in 2004-05 was a bruising, shattering bunfight - ideal preparation, in hindsight, for the ultimate test that awaited that summer against Australia, but at the time it seemed likely that the two teams would punch themselves to exhaustion. England might have been 2-0 up after two, but for South Africa's epic rearguard at Durban, and instead it was 1-1 with two to play after a Jacques Kallis masterclass had set up an innings rout in Cape Town. Cue the craziest contest of the lot at the Wanderers, where Marcus Trescothick transformed a faltering third innings with a blistering 180 - including 58 priceless runs for the tenth wicket with Steve Harmison. The only trouble was... who was left to take the wickets? Harmison the bowler was on his last legs, and the rookie Anderson was out of his depth at this early stage of his career. Up stepped the shop steward, Matthew Hoggard, with an inspirational 7 for 61, including a first-ball outswinger to Kallis that has to rank among the greatest deliveries in English Test history.

Karachi 2000-01

"Stay in the game at all costs!" Nasser Hussain's exhortation was writ large across this magnificent heist, as his team of honest toilers gained their rewards at the end of an exhausting series dominated by slow and at times thoroughly tedious batting. But with the series deadlocked at 0-0 with just minutes left to play of the penultimate evening in Karachi, Ashley Giles unpicked the lock with the vital scalp of Inzamam-ul-Haq and England sensed their moment to strike. Pakistan lost their final seven wickets in just under 30 overs on the final day to leave England with a race against time - 176 runs before nightfall. Pakistan's captain, Moin Khan, mocked their optimism, knowing full well that the encroaching winter darkness would save them before long, but umpire Steve Bucknor refused to give in to his time-wasting and insisted that play had to go on. Graham Thorpe anchored the chase with a masterful 64, as victory was sealed with an inside edge past the stumps, and through a Pakistan infield that could no longer see where the ball was going.

Port of Spain 1973-74

In a week when debate has raged about the relative merits of England's great allrounders, here's a compelling submission from the forgotten master, Tony Greig. His decision to join World Series Cricket in 1977 - and the concurrent rise of Botham - mean that his derring-do is too easily overlooked, but when his game was on song he was every bit the colossus. Needing victory to square the series in the final match of their 1974 tour of the Caribbean, Greig used every inch of his 6ft 6in frame to unleash his lesser-spotted offspin to devastating effect. He racked up 8 for 86 to restrict West Indies to a first-innings lead of 38, then added a further 5 for 70 in the second innings as the hosts, chasing 226, collapsed from 63 for 0 to 199 all out. It was the end of the road for Garry Sobers and Rohan Kanhai, two Caribbean greats, who never played again. But England wouldn't win again for another 16 years, as Clive Lloyd and his mean machine prepared to roll into the region …

Big Picture

India won't ideally like to use it as an excuse, but ODIs are their No. 3 priority this year. Their opponents have come fully armed. The 10-wicket win in the series opener was not entirely unexpected. India were without Hardik Pandya and Bhvuneshwar Kumar, they were experimenting with their batting and playing their best ODI batsman out of position. Australia were clinical and near full strength. Not to mention they had won their previous ODI series in India too, without David Warner and Steven Smith, just before the World Cup.

ODIs might not be India's top priority right now, they might not be full strength, but they have celebrated long and hard the ODI series win in South Africa (Faf du Plessis, Quinton de Kock and AB de Villiers out, a greenhorn captaining) and the Test and ODI series win in Australia (Smith and Warner out). By the same token, if they don't manage to salvage this ODI series, it will hurt them equally. Any loss against Australia does that to Indian teams post 2001. Back-to-back home series losses will cause serious hurt.

In an attempt to salvage the series, India's conviction in their experiment will be tested. It is easy to say Virat Kohli should return to No. 3, but was the move such a failure? Kohli remains India's best bet in the middle order because his game possesses all the gears required in ODI cricket. It is perhaps KL Rahul and Shikhar Dhawan who can be faulted for getting out after getting in. One of them is a potential beneficiary of Kohli's move down. However, it is important to not see Kohli's move down a sacrifice for these two, but for the improvement of the middle order. Whether they are so clear-minded will be tested when the first wicket falls in Rajkot.

India will be hoping that their first wicket is also not the first wicket of the match: Australia's real test will arrive when they are defending with a wet ball against a very good chasing side in home conditions. That toss becomes all the more important when the visiting team is a proper match for the home team.

Form guide

(last five completed matches)

India LWWLW
Australia WLLWWW

In the spotlight

In the extremely short run, Rishabh Pant's concussion comes as a blessing in disguise: it opens the door for Kedar Jadhav, who can provide some much-needed balance and assurance to the bowling with the promise of his three-four overs. While Jadhav's batting numbers remain excellent, it is his fitness history and his age that prevents him from being a long-term prospect, especially with the next 50-over World Cup due in 2023. He will like to prove otherwise both with his runs and physical fitness.

With the big wicket of Virat Kohli, Adam Zampa now has a big bull's eye on his back. Kohli will be itching to have his own back, the way he did with Kesrick Williams in the limited-overs series earlier in the season. Will Zampa continue to capitalise on the slight weakness Kohli might have against legspin in the limited-overs game?

Team news

Jadhav is set to slot in with Rahul taking the keeping gloves. With no other allrounder in the squad, Ravindra Jadeja will continue keeping one of the wristspinners out. There is nothing in the Rajkot pitch to suggest three spinners should play. That leaves India a choice to make between Kuldeep Yadav and Yuzvendra Chahal. The batting order remains fluid.

India (possible): 1 Shikhar Dhawan, 2 Rohit Sharma, 3 KL Rahul (wk), 4 Virat Kohli (capt.), 5 Shreyas Iyer, 6 Kedar Jadhav, 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 Shardul Thakur, 9 Kuldeep Yadav/ Yuzvndra Chahal, 10 Mohammed Shami/ Navdeep Saini, 11 Jasprit Bumrah

Australia have no reason to change their XI after outplaying India in all three departments. The only change could be to give Josh Hazlewood a game by resting one of the quick bowlers.

Australia (possible): 1 Aaron Finch (capt.), 2 David Warner, 3 Marnus Labuschagne, 4 Steven Smith, 5 Alex Carey (wk), 6 Ashton Turner, 7 Ashton Agar, 8 Pat Cummins, 9 Mitchell Starc, 10 Kane Richardson, 11 Adam Zampa

Pitch and conditions

The Rajkot track is getting baked in the sun and was nicely rolled a day before the game. It looks like a flatter pitch compared to Wankhede, and the dry and hard surface is likely to yield a high-scoring game. With a bit of nip, the temperature may not cross 25-27 degrees during the day.

Stats and Trivia

  • India have now lost four straight ODIs to Australia at home. They have had only two worse home streaks against a particular team: five straight losses against Pakistan in 1999 and 2004, and against West Indies they lost 15 games in the 1980s with a break of just one win after the seventh loss.

  • It might not sound like a weakness on the face of it, but Kohli averages 72.26 against legspin in ODIs and takes 6.3 runs per every over of legspin. Against all wristspin the average improves to 74.4 and strike rate to 6.32 per over. So, as Zampa said in the press conference, the weakness might be only when legspin is brought on when he is new to the crease.

Quotes

"We have spoken about this series and how big this series is, particularly after the disappointing end to the World Cup. We can achieve something pretty special here. It's going to be a big deal if we can get two away series wins in a row in India, so we have spoken about that briefly."

Adam Zampa on the prospect of Australia winning their second straight ODI series in India.

"Well it happens that (sometimes) you are not prepared. Well, the country was not prepared to see us collapsing in such situations but it is a part and parcel of the game. You have to take it in your stride and move forward."

Shreyas Iyer on where India stand right now.

Alfred Kipketer suspended for ‘whereabouts failures’

Published in Athletics
Thursday, 16 January 2020 02:59

Olympic and world 800m finalist is charged with breaking anti-doping rules

Alfred Kipketer, the 2014 world under-20 800m champion and Rio 2016 Olympic finalist, has been charged with breaking ‘whereabouts’ anti-doping rules, according to the Athletics Integrity Unit.

The 23-year-old Kenyan, who also claimed world youth gold in 2013 and raced in the 2015 senior world final in Beijing, has been provisionally suspended until his case has been heard and a final decision reached.

World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) rules require athletes to submit their whereabouts for one hour every day, plus overnight accommodation and training information, in case they are needed for out-of-competition testing.

British 800m runner Kyle Langford, who was narrowly beaten by Kipketer to the world youth title in 2013, took to social media to say: “Another one of my competitors busted!”

When Kipketer won that world youth title in Donetsk, he did so after an incredible first lap of 48.63, whereas he employed similar tactics in the Olympic final in Rio in 2016, running the first 400m in a fast 49.23, before fading to seventh as David Rudisha took gold. Since then he has clocked a best of 1:42.87.

News of Kipketer’s suspension comes just a few days after the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU) announced that another Kenyan athlete, former marathon world record-holder Wilson Kipsang, had been suspended for ‘whereabouts failures’ and ‘tampering or attempted tampering’.

Further details about both cases have not yet been disclosed by the AIU.

Earlier this week the AIU also announced the provisional suspension of Morocco’s Al Mahjoub Dazza for ‘Use of a Prohibited Substance / Method (Article 2.2) – ABP case’.

ABP stands for ‘athlete biological passport’, with the World Anti-Doping Agency describing the fundamental principle of the ABP as being “to monitor selected biological variables over time that indirectly reveal the effects of doping rather than attempting to detect the doping substance or method itself”.

Britain's Samantha Murray Sharan was knocked out in the first round of Australian Open qualifying by China's Yue Yuan.

The 32-year-old world number 217 won the opening set but lost 2-6 6-4 6-4.

Canada's former Australian Open semi-finalist Eugenie Bouchard progressed with a 6-3 6-1 victory over Australia's Maddison Inglis.

Meanwhile, in the men's draw, Belgian Steve Darcis played the final match of his career in a first-round defeat.

The 35-year-old, who beat Rafael Nadal in the 2013 Wimbledon first round, lost 7-5 7-5 to France's Elliot Benchetrit.

"A wonderful page in my life turns," said Darcis on Twitter following his exit.

"Thank you all for your support and thank you also to those who by demolishing me made me stronger."

British number two Heather Watson made it through to the semi-finals of the Hobart International with a 6-7 (5-7) 6-4 7-5 win over Elise Mertens.

Following a rain delay at 4-4 in the second set, Watson broke the Belgian and held serve to level the match.

There were seven breaks of serve in the third set, with the decisive one coming when Watson went 6-5 up.

The 27-year-old held serve for victory in three hours 33 minutes to progress in an event she won in 2015.

During the match, the draw for the Australian Open, which will take place between 20 January and 2 February, took place and Watson, ranked 101st in the world, will play Czech world number 62 Kristyna Pliskova - twin sister of second seed Karolina - in the first round.

Turn of the decade: ‘Jha’ man for the job!

Published in Table Tennis
Thursday, 16 January 2020 02:33

Similar to many other players it has not been an easy ride for the young fellow.

A strong build-up

He emerged successful at the 2017 ITTF World Junior Circuit Finals in Luxembourg, won the boys’ singles title at the Pan American Junior Championships for the third consecutive year and proved himself a step ahead of the field.

After celebrating his 18th birthday in a year where he took a major step forward to become established in the senior ranks, he was tested to the limit whenever he competed with seasoned players of pedigree. Undoubtedly success at junior level was very welcome but it also had a grounding effect on the American.

On several occasions over the years, Jha has shown a consistency in skill as well as a display of mental strength. Whether it was against Chinese Taipei’s Lin Yun-Ju to secure the bronze medal at the Buenos Aires 2018 Youth Olympic Games or at the 2018 Team World Cup in London when he beat Wong Chun Ting – these results marked his coming of age.

The progress of Kanak Jha has been monitored by Massimo Costantini, the ITTF High Performance Elite Coach, who some years ago spent time in the United States.

“He has a good fighting spirit. Sometimes at that age, they get upset and are not mature. We’re working on the mental side to make him stronger. A simple mistake can compromise the entire match. You need a strong mental balance, and he has that.” Massimo Costantini

Moving towards the glory years?

Under the cosh after being termed “prodigy” due to his performances, 2019 was supposed to be a year where Kanak Jha stepped up to the plate and hit it out of the park. For the German based Youth Olympic Games bronze medallist, making good on such a promise to push the profile of the United States in table tennis was a task he took very seriously.

Starting the year by giving the legendary Ma Long plenty to think about at the Liebherr World Championships in Budapest, his displays across the season only got better. Lining up next to Zhang Kai and Feng Yijun, Jha led the United States at the ZEN-NOH 2019 ITTF Team World Cup where the world was ready to see him for his real talented self.

Having competed in six World Championships already, Jha had plenty of experience to call upon when his team were in danger of an early elimination in Japan. Down by a game, Jha stepped up first to beat Swedish fan favourite Kristian Karlsson in a brilliant four game match-up.

Eventually, it all came down to a decider where Jha was again the hero, then involved in a pendulum-thriller of a match against Källberg. Giving the fans an absolute feast of table tennis bliss, Jha used his changes of pace to secure a deserved 3-2 win.

Now after success at the 2019 ITTF North American Olympic Qualification tournament in Rockford, Jha is creating history at a moment of enormous significance for United States table tennis.

Named at no.275 on the men’s world rankings when the Rio 2016 Olympic Games was staged, now at in January 2020 at no.27; the progress has brought him the steel and experience which will be critical for him to push on into a year meant for bigger things. Despite his young age, Jha has always been straightforward about his targets and is not afraid to work towards becoming better.

Speaking to the Olympic Channel, he displayed his grounded-nature and ability to look ahead with humility in mind. If this is any evidence, 2020 and the decade beyond are sure to prove the best for United States table tennis, with Jha leading the line.

“When I went to Rio, I was a lot less experienced and I just went in there to enjoy myself and not worry too much about results. I hope by Tokyo 2020, I’ll be a different player and we’ll go there hopefully with a different mindset.” Kanak Jha

Well well well, Kanak – look how that turned out!

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Adam Beard: Wales lock signs new Ospreys deal

Published in Rugby
Thursday, 16 January 2020 02:03

Wales lock Adam Beard has signed a new two-year contract that will keep him at Ospreys until the end of the 2021-22 season.

The 6ft 8in, 24-year-old is the latest to commit his future to the Swansea-based region.

Wales Six Nations squad member Beard is a product of Ospreys' academy and has made 20 Test appearances.

Beard made his Ospreys debut against Glasgow in January, 2016 in what was then the Pro12.

His new deal follows Wales centre Owen Watkin's decision to remain at Ospreys, who have won only once this season.

Beard said: "Signing for the region shows how much it means to me and how we all want to stay around and make this region great again.

"There have been tough times, but I am sure there is light at the end of the tunnel and there is a lot of young talent in this squad and, with the experienced guys we have here, I am sure we can do something special.

"The Ospreys gave me all those chances many years ago, and without the Ospreys I wouldn't have had the chance to play international rugby so I know how lucky I have been in that sense."

Beard has made 68 Ospreys appearances while competing with Wales captain Alun Wyn Jones and Bradley Davies, who has also captained Wales but has been overlooked for the 2020 Six Nations.

For the latest Welsh rugby union news follow @BBCScrumV on Twitter.

UEFA change Team of Year to include Ronaldo

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 16 January 2020 02:18

UEFA changed their Team of the Year formation so that Cristiano Ronaldo could be included, sources have told ESPN.

European football's governing body announced the XI -- which is based on fan votes -- on Wednesday.

The team was arranged in an unusual 4-2-4 formation, and sources told ESPN that was due to a desire by UEFA chiefs to ensure Juventus' Ronaldo appeared, despite the 34-year-old receiving fewer votes than fellow forwards Lionel Messi, Sadio Mane and Robert Lewandowski.

Ronaldo's inclusion and the formation change came at the expense of Chelsea midfielder N'Golo Kante, according to ESPN sources.

Five-time Ballon d'Or winner Ronaldo joined Barcelona's Messi, Liverpool's Mane and Bayern Munich's Lewandowski in the UEFA Team of the Year's frontline, while Manchester City midfielder Kevin de Bruyne paired with Barca's Frenkie de Jong in midfield.

Ronaldo's Juventus teammate Matthijs de Ligt joined Liverpool's Virgil van Dijk at centre-back, with the two Netherlands internationals flanked by Liverpool pair Trent Alexander-Arnold and Andy Robertson.

Alisson got the nod in goal, meaning Liverpool had five players in the team -- more than any other club.

UEFA Team of the Year: Alisson; Alexander-Arnold, De Ligt, Van Dijk, Robertson; De Jong, De Bruyne; Messi, Ronaldo, Lewandowski, Mane.

Shoaib Malik, Mohammad Hafeez back for Bangladesh T20s

Published in Cricket
Thursday, 16 January 2020 02:15

The experienced pair of Shoaib Malik and Mohammad Hafeez will return to the Pakistan side for the T20I series against Bangladesh next week. Mohammad Amir and Wahab Riaz have been left out, with pace bowler Muhammad Musa keeping his place in the shortest format, while batsman Ahsan Ali and fast bowler Amad Butt were called up.

For the second T20I squad in succession, head coach Misbah-ul-Haq rung in the changes as Pakistan look to break a streak of seven T20Is without a win. Pacer Shaheen Afridi returns to the side for the first time since May, having sat out the T20s against Sri Lanka and Australia as he recovered from about of dengue fever, while Usman Qadir keeps his place and may finally be in line for his debut. Haris Rauf has also been called up after his impressive season in the Big Bash League with the Melbourne Stars.

Squad: Babar Azam (capt), Ahsan Ali, Amad Butt, Iftikhar Ahmed Haris Rauf, Imad Wasim, Khushdil Shah Mohammad Hafeez, Mohammad Hasnain, Mohammad Rizwan (wk), Mohammad Musa, Shadab Khan, Shaheen Afridi, Shoaib Malik, Usman Qadir

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