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Cech hoping for 'remarkable end' in Chelsea final

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 09 May 2019 19:06

Arsenal goalkeeper Petr Cech is relishing playing his former club Chelsea in the Europa League final, which could make for a "remarkable end" to his glittering career.

He helped his side reach the final in Baku on May 29 with a thumping 7-3 aggregate victory over Valencia on Thursday, while Chelsea saw off Eintracht Frankfurt on penalties to set up an all-London showdown.

- Cox: Aubameyang flashes European credentials with hat trick
- Arsenal ratings: Perfect '10' for Aubameyang against Valencia

"It would be a remarkable end to my career if I play a European final against my former team," Cech, who made 333 appearances for Chelsea between 2004 and 2015, told BT Sport.

"You have days when you play well and you think you could continue but I've made the decision to retire with a lot of thought. I could possibly go on another two years but I'd rather retire too early than too late. I wanted to do it on my terms."

Cech, who started the season as the club's No. 1 but lost his place to Bernd Leno, has played in every Europa League knockout round, keeping two clean sheets against Napoli in the quarterfinals.

With Arsenal all but out of the running for a top-four finish in the Premier League -- they require an eight-goal swing and for fourth-placed Tottenham to lose -- manager Unai Emery must decide whether to give Cech an extra 90 minutes of football in the final league match to prepare for Baku.

"With all my experience I can compensate for the match rhythm with my preparation," said the 36-year-old former Czech international, who announced in January that he would retire at the end of the season.

"The key is always how you prepare in training and I always behave the same whether I am starting or on the bench. I always feel confident that I'm ready to play.

"The last dream was to play this European final and it has come true. Now the dream is to win it."

Chelsea, Arsenal seal all-English finals in Europe

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 09 May 2019 22:16

England became the first country to provide two finalists in both European competitions in the same season after Chelsea and Arsenal made it through to the title match in the Europa League on Thursday.

It adds up to a season of domination for English clubs in Europe, with Liverpool and Tottenham reaching the final of the Champions League this week by overturning three-goal aggregate deficits at various stages of their semifinals against Barcelona and Ajax, respectively.

Chelsea beat Eintracht Frankfurt 4-3 in a penalty shootout at Stamford Bridge, after a second straight 1-1 draw between the teams in the semifinals.

Arsenal's path to the final was more straightforward, beating Valencia 4-2 thanks to a hat trick from Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang to complete a 7-3 win on aggregate.

Ames on Chelsea: In likely swan song, Hazard shows poise

Cox on Arsenal: Aubameyang lifts club to promised land

Ogden on Tottenham: In season of close calls, Spurs still survive

Ogden on Liverpool: Barca bore witness to Anfield magic

The Champions League final will take place in Madrid on June 1. This is the seventh time two teams from the same country will meet in the Champions League final, and the fourth time in the past seven seasons. It is the second time two English clubs have met in the UCL final, the last coming in 2008 between Manchester United and Chelsea.

The Europa League final will be staged in Baku, Azerbaijan, on May 29. It is the first time since the 1972 UEFA Cup -- when Wolverhampton Wanderers took on Tottenham -- that two English teams squared off for the title in any of that competition's various guises.

Arsenal will likely need to win the game to get into next season's Champions League as it probably won't finish in the top four of the Premier League. Chelsea is already guaranteed a top-four finish heading into the final round of fixtures this weekend.

There is guaranteed to be an all-English UEFA Super Cup in August in Istanbul as that match will pit the winners of the competitions.

"It's not easy for an English team to arrive in the last month in a good condition physically," Chelsea boss Maurizio Sarri said of his side after Thursday's win. "We play more than other countries. We played match 61 today. It's a big difference with other countries."

Chelsea have the final match of the Premier League against Leicester City on Sunday then a friendly to play in the United States before earning 10 days' rest to prepare for the final in Baku.

A game between London rivals Chelsea and Arsenal normally covers a distance of six miles. For the May 29 final, they will need to travel 2,469 miles to Azerbaijan.

"Here [in England] the level is very high," Sarri added. "To get into the League Cup final [in February], we had to play Liverpool and Tottenham and then played the best team in Europe, Manchester City. The Premier League is the best league in the world."

Information from Reuters was used in this report.

Final request? Real-linked Hazard wants title

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 09 May 2019 19:05

LONDON -- Eden Hazard vowed to try and sign off with a trophy if the Europa League final proves to be his last game to Chelsea after scoring the winning penalty in a dramatic shootout win over Eintracht Frankfurt at Stamford Bridge.

Kepa Arrizabalaga saved two spot kicks after Luka Jovic's 49th-minute strike had cancelled out Ruben Loftus-Cheek's first-half opener, leaving Hazard to coolly send Eintracht goalkeeper Kevin Trapp the wrong way from 12 yards and set up a mouthwatering final with London rivals Arsenal in Baku.

Chelsea player ratings: Kepa's shootout saves make him hero

Ames: In likely Stamford swan song, Hazard shows poise

How Prem clubs' European qualification will play out

Sources have told ESPN FC that Hazard wants his desired summer transfer to Real Madrid finalised as soon as possible, but after the match the Belgian refused to confirm if the Europa League final will be his last match for Chelsea.

"If it's my last game I will try to do everything for this club to win a trophy," Hazard told BT Sport. "In my mind I don't know yet. I don't think about that. I'm only thinking about winning something for this club and this squad."

Asked about his decisive penalty, Hazard added: "I always take my responsibility when I have to. Today we are happy but it's not finished. We have another game to play against Arsenal. We need to go there and play with quality and win the game."

Kepa emerged as Chelsea's other hero after 120 gruelling minutes against Eintracht, but after the match the Spain international played down his own contribution to the victory.

"Penalties are down to luck," said Kepa. "Today we won and in the Carabao Cup final we lost, but this is football. Today was really good and we played against a very difficult team and we are very happy.

"We always prepare for the penalty shooters before each game and today we are lucky. Wembley is in the past and I learned from it. I said I was sorry but we always keep moving forward and today was another game and we are happy to get to the final."

The win also preserves Maurizio Sarri's hopes of claiming silverware in his first season at Chelsea, but first the Italian must take his squad to the United States next week for a friendly against New England Revolution to raise money and awareness for the fight against anti-Semitism.

"We played 61 matches, so it's very difficult," Sarri admitted. "We need to rest, of course. Unfortunately we have to go to the U.S. to play a match. And then we have, after the U.S., 10 days to prepare the last match.

"We played the first final [this season] against Manchester City and lost. So now we want to win. In our opinion, our group deserves to win. We were in trouble three months ago and, here in England, if you're in trouble the level of opponents is very high and it's not easy to overcome difficulties. We were able to do it. So now we deserve to win a trophy."

In likely Stamford swan song, Hazard shows poise

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 09 May 2019 17:43

LONDON -- Eden Hazard was shot, knackered, spent. The Europa League is not his stage, not really; everybody knows that and it is one reason why, as Chelsea plugged along through their previous 15 outings in the competition, he had only been wheeled out for 228 minutes in total. Here he had dragged himself through an entire two hours of Thursday's semifinal second leg, those whirring legs slowing up to eventually resemble paddles sludging their way through mud. The juice had run out; the ideas had really too. Eintracht Frankfurt had brought this tie to a knife edge and, with it, had put Hazard's grand finale on the line.

Stamford Bridge is Hazard's stage. It has been for seven years now, no matter what the competition. Hazard's fire has raged during that time, ever so occasionally dying down to merely a flicker. He has slalomed his way to titles; bewitched his way to individual awards; carried dying teams on his shoulders; jinked into the club's pantheon of greats to such an extent that the drawn-out, opaque departure process he has undergone this season has drawn barely a murmur of disapproval from the stands.

But Hazard had never faced a situation like this. He had watched Cesar Azpilicueta miss in the shootout and give Eintracht one foot on the final. He had then seen Kepa Arrizabalaga, wise to Martin Hinteregger's attempt to drill the ball down the middle, stand firm and wedge it between his legs. He knew his time was coming when Goncalo Paciencia, his stuttering run-up postage stamped with inevitability, let Kepa save again. Now, he had his chance: one last shot for one last final; one last shot in front of the crowd that he adores and who have, with no need for encouragement, reciprocated that in bundles; one last moment of high drama to bookend the lightning bolts of sheer magic.

Hazard did not miss. Nobody seriously thought he would; that he would score was probably the nearest thing to a certainty on a wild, snarling night that swung this way and that. He sent Kevin Trapp the wrong way, perhaps grateful for the 10 minutes he had been given to clear his mind since the end of extra time. It was a crisp, lucid finish; they usually are, and as most of his teammates flocked to mob Kepa, Hazard ran slightly behind, eyes trained on the Shed End's mass of part-relieved, part-delirious limbs.

- Chelsea ratings: Kepa the shootout hero for Blues
- Chelsea vs. Arsenal: When is the Europa League final?
- Johnson: How Prem clubs' European qualification could play out

"I always take my responsibility," Hazard said afterward. His responsibility was to score, whether or not this was his last kick of a ball at Stamford Bridge; but if he is indeed to leave Chelsea this summer, there is something else at play too. He has helped them to hold their nerve domestically -- to a sounder degree than their rivals, in any case -- and quality for next season's Champions League. If he can send himself off with a second Europa League title, beating Arsenal in Baku and adding to the trophy won in 2012-13, then perhaps he can leave in the knowledge that a fractured club is finally beginning to heal.

Because, make no mistake, Chelsea's home is a complex, troubled place.

Five minutes before the end of normal time, Maurizio Sarri replaced Ruben Loftus-Cheek -- the scorer of their first-half opener but a diminishing influence as Eintracht clawed their way back into the tie -- with the fresher legs of Ross Barkley. Ordinarily, it should not have been a controversial move, but the disdain for Sarri, palpable since the winter, needed little excuse to rear its head even on what was, whether they liked it or not, Chelsea's biggest game of the season. The boos rang out from all four sides; it was far removed from the expectant, supportive environment that might be expected when things were going to the wire against excellent opponents, but nothing about this season in west London has fitted preconceived notions.

Everything feels on thin ice here. Sarri has steered them to a respectable finish and might well top that with a European trophy, but his philosophy, his preference for method over indignant, us-against-the-world belligerence, simply does not seem to fit. When Eintracht's brilliant young striker Luka Jovic equalised after half-time, the tension was that of a crowd waiting to turn.

"Over the 120 minutes, we were the better team and had the better chances," the Eintracht coach Adi Hutter claimed. He was probably right: The substitute Sebastien Haller saw two extra-time efforts cleared off the line; and from beginning to end, it was only the visiting supporters -- surely the loudest, most inventive bunch heard at any top-level match in England this year -- who seemed energised to offer unconditional support.

They and their vibrant team, which faces a breakup comparable to that of Champions League heroes Ajax, deserved more. But Chelsea themselves might lose a huge part of their modern identity come August. The chances of seeing anyone capable of such sustained brilliance as Hazard -- whose name was greeted with bellows of approval before kickoff as a flag bearing his image was passed along the Matthew Harding Stand -- gracing this turf in the foreseeable future are remote.

At least they could wring out every last drop here. It was Hazard who set up Loftus-Cheek's goal before, by his exacting standards, failing to match perspiration with end product. That was before he settled the issue, threw his shirt to the crowd and disappeared down the tunnel for what was surely the final time.

"In my mind, I don't know yet," he said, inscrutable as ever, when asked about his future. "If it is my last game [against Arsenal], I will try to do everything."

One last flourish could yet fix Chelsea and Sarri. But after delivering so poetically here, you wonder what more he could possibly do.

VALENCIA, Spain -- Unai Emery's first campaign will be deemed a success or a failure based upon the 58th and final game of Arsenal's season.

After the dreadful performance in a 1-1 draw at Brighton on Sunday effectively confirmed that Arsenal would miss out on Champions League qualification through the conventional route, this hugely impressive 4-2 victory away at the Mestalla means they'll travel to Baku, Azerbaijan, later this month to face rivals Chelsea to earn a place in Europe's premier competition for 2019-20.

It was Emery's prowess in the Europa League that led to his appointment in the first place. His three straight triumphs with Sevilla between 2014 and 2016 made him an ideal candidate for the role, and while Arsenal's recent slump means their league finish is a disappointment, it's worth remembering that Arsenal started the campaign as very much sixth favourites for the top four.

The Europa League always seemed of huge importance to Arsenal this season, and Emery has successfully steered Arsenal through tricky ties against Napoli and Valencia, where Arsenal have taken two-goal first-leg leads away from home and not merely defended them, but added to their margins of victory.

This was a huge test for Emery, against the club with which he spent a four-year spell and made his name as top-level coach. The home supporters' welcome wasn't friendly, with anti-Emery chants as the Arsenal coach arrived, boos when Emery emerged from the tunnel and an electric atmosphere from the outset.

- Arsenal ratings: Auba 10/10, Lacazette 8/10
- Chelsea vs. Arsenal: When is the Europa League final?
- Johnson: How Prem clubs' European qualification could play out

Initially, this looked like being a long night for Arsenal. Kevin Gameiro's opener arrived in just the 11th minute, then five minutes later, Rodrigo sent a fizzing half-volley narrowly wide of the far post from outside the box. It would have put Valencia ahead in the tie. Arsenal were hanging on.

But then Arsenal burst into life with a goal out of absolutely nothing. There was a clever touch from Alexandre Lacazette to provide the assist, but this was really all about the finish, swept into the net from outside the box, with the outside of Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang's right foot. It was an unusual, elegant finish and contrasted sharply with his late miss against Brighton at the weekend, when he tried to engineer an outside-of-the-boot finish with an elaborate scissor-kick. In some ways, these incidents summarise Aubameyang, a prolific striker who nevertheless sometimes struggles to convert the easiest of chances.

On this day, he was clinical, but it wasn't just the goals that he and his strike partner earned praise from Emery for: "They are very good strikers, but I am proud of them because of how they worked defensively. We needed that today, and the big players can be good as strikers, but [I am happy] when their commitment is like today, defensively."

But this was his best performance in an Arsenal shirt. It was a game that suited him; with Valencia forced to do the running and Arsenal allowed to play on the counterattack, this meant Aubameyang could concentrate on using his speed into the channels. He and Lacazette rotated positions but positioned themselves wide rather than as a central strike duo, with Mesut Ozil prowling behind in a 3-4-1-2.

Aubameyang, as ever, missed chances. His headed effort from a corner was wayward, his left-footed effort after good interplay on the edge of the box was tame. But this always felt like his game. Toward the end of the first half, he sped down the right and cut the ball back for Lacazette, who swept a shot against the outside of the post. It felt like Arsenal might live to regret that.

Lacazette can let his head drop after that type of miss, but Aubameyang always remains bright, lively and energetic, and it was his determination and ambition that created Arsenal's second, with Lacazette the beneficiary. Aubameyang hesitated when confronted with Jose Gaya, knowing the full-back could match him for pace. And sure enough, his knock past the left-back was reached first by Gaya, but Aubameyang won back possession immediately, the ball fell to Torreira and he transferred it into Lacazette, who made no mistake. Aubameyang had successfully counterpressed his own concession of possession. Valencia now needed four goals, and a once-raucous Mestalla started to empty.

The Gabon international wasn't finished, though. His second came from a classic near-post run across the opposition centre-backs to convert a low ball from Ainsley Maitland-Niles. The 21-year-old had spent the first half under pressure as Valencia concentrated their attacks down his flank but ended the game having provided the most memorable moment of his Arsenal career to date.

And Aubameyang can say the same, after he completed his hat trick with two minutes remaining, slamming the ball into the top of the net from a tight angle on the right. It felt like confirmation of his brilliance, the type of moment Thierry Henry used to provide away from home on European nights in that same No. 14 shirt -- away at Inter, away at Roma and away at Real Madrid, to mention a few.

Those were all Champions League nights, and no Europa League game can ever be considered on the same level. But that, of course, is the whole point: Arsenal desperately yearn for a return to that competition, and on this occasion, Aubameyang looked like a Champions League player in a Europa League tie. Another performance like that in Baku and Arsenal will be back in the big time.

Langer 'slept better' after Smith's show of form

Published in Cricket
Thursday, 09 May 2019 18:10

Australia coach Justin Langer said he "slept a lot better" after Steven Smith showed some of his best form since returning from elbow surgery with the unbeaten 89 in the second match against the New Zealand XI on Wednesday.

Smith dominated the back-end of the Australian innings, collecting 39 off his last 17 deliveries with increasingly dominant strokeplay including four sixes, three of them lofted drives and the other a pull, as he continued his recovery from the operation he had in January.

Smith found form during the latter part of his IPL stint with Rajasthan Royals, hitting three half-centuries in five innings, before making 22 in the opening match in Brisbane batting at No. 4 before his eye-catching display at No. 5.

"I certainly slept a lot better, it warmed my heart to be honest," Langer told SEN. "I watched him on the weekend, he had a nets session on Sunday night and I was sitting with a couple of coaches and I just said 'How good is this kid'. We've seen the statistics and we know the stories but when you see him first hand…[The 89] was a tutorial in batting. It's great for the team."

There remain a few question marks over Smith's ability to throw at full tilt due to his elbow, but a diving catch he took in the first match suggested progress is being made. He has also impressed the management with his general fitness levels since returning to national colours for the first time since his ban.

There were fewer form-related questions surrounding David Warner heading into the pre-tournament camp following is prolific IPL with the main debate surrounding the position he will bat. He was at No. 3 in the first match before opening with Aaron Finch in the second and Usman Khawaja in the third as all the combinations were tried.

Langer said the "obvious" choice was that Warner would open but did not go as far as to confirm that would happen following the success of the Finch-Khawaja pairing in Australia's run of eight consecutive wins against India and Pakistan.

"The obvious thing is we should [open with Warner]," Langer said. "But I think he's quite an adaptable player, too. What I've loved is the partnership between Finchy and Usman Khawaja as well. They gel really well and in the past Finch and Warner gelled really well. I'm not trying to pull the wool over anyone's eyes, but we've got really good options there."

The other question that still needs to be decided around the batting line-up is which player misses out presuming that Glenn Maxwell and Marcus Stoinis will take the five and six positions. It could be that Shaun Marsh, who scored four centuries in eight innings against England, South Africa and India does not find a spot in the side.

The final league game of the three-team Women's T20 Challenge in Jaipur set off a debate over whether Mithali Raj's Velocity should have squandered the opportunity to play a compelling brand of cricket and compete for a win, instead of securing qualification into the final via a botched chase based largely on a "calculative", net-run-rate-centric approach.

The purpose of the four-match tournament, carrying official T20 status, is to build up to a full-fledged IPL-style league for women, by drawing in more audience with high-quality cricket. On Thursday though, Velocity's innings - following No. 3 batsman Danielle Wyatt's dismissal - exemplified anything but, before a 7000-strong crowd.

Chasing 143 against Harmanpreet Kaur's Supernovas, and with both spots in the final up for grabs, the qualification scenario upon Wyatt's departure was that Velocity needed 66 off 51 balls to win. But in the larger scheme of things, they needed at least 40 runs in those 51 balls to qualify for the final even if it came in a loss on the night. Getting to 117 would've allowed Velocity to finish the league on second and pip third-placed Trailblazers on NRR for a final showdown with Supernovas. The target of 117 was the fail-safe for Velocity should they lose the game.

After scoring 77 for 3 from the first 69 balls of the innings on Thursday, Velocity made 53 off the remaining 51 without losing a wicket. They hit only two fours, off 43 balls, until reaching the 117-run mark, their qualification cut-off. By then, the equation for a Velocity win had ballooned to 25 runs off eight balls, and they eventually managed to take only two singles and two more fours.

Steering the chase since Wyatt's dismissal had been Raj and Veda Krishnamurthy, who remained unbeaten on 40 off 42 and 30 off 29 respectively. Krishnamurthy, herself an attacking batsman, shed light on Velocity's conservative approach to the chase in the post-match press conference.

"In the previous game, we made a lapse by losing heap of wickets because we were in a rush to close out the chase," said Krishnamurthy of Velocity's 5-for-0 collapse in pursuit of two runs that nearly cost them the game against Trailblazers on Wednesday.

"So our initial aim [on Thursday] was to qualify for the final because we had a certain target [117] to get. So, we were asked to play accordingly. And when we got close to that target is actually when we tried to go for our shots."

The experienced pair's cautious approach stuck out as a sore thumb in their defeat, for only two days ago, the fearless strokeplay of their 15-year-old uncapped team-mate Shafali Verma became an early highlight of their three-wicket win, and the tournament.

ALSO READ: Shafali, Harleen, Sushree - inspiring hope for India women

Krishnamurthy, however, reasoned that any other approach on their part would have exposed the "inexperienced" Velocity middle-order to a "pressure situation" and put their chances of qualification in jeopardy.

"If you look at it, we did get good runs in the Powerplay," said Krishnamurthy, "with Danni going about playing her natural game. It put us on the front-foot. It was just that we were being very calculative in how to get the game done.

"We wanted to get as close as possible, considering after me, it's a bit of an inexperienced middle order coming in, so we didn't want to put them under a pressure situation. We just wanted to get as close as we can so we have another game to come back and think about it."

South Africa seamer Masabata Klaas revelled in a maiden ODI hat-trick that helped her team draw level in their series against Pakistan, crediting "hard work" for both her and the team's success.

"It's all because of my team-mates and the hard work we've put in," Klaas said. "It's nice. It's a mixture of emotions. It's the first hat-trick of my career, so it feels nice."

Having been bowled out for 63 in the first ODI, South Africa bounced back with an eight-wicket win that was set up by a remarkable burst of seam bowling from Klaas. On a track that hadn't offered much to the quicks, her earlier spells gave no indication of the carnage that was to come, but Klaas' introduction in the 39th over brought an implosion in Pakistan's lower middle order.

After Aliya Riaz sliced a slog to mid on, Klaas found lift and shape outside the off stump to dismiss Umaima Sohail and Sidra Nawaz off the next two deliveries, both caught behind. When wicketkeeper Sinalo Jafta tumbled forward to cling on to a low, dipping chance that secured the hat-trick, Klaas charged down the wicket in celebration before she was mobbed by her team-mates. She became just the second South African to take a hat-trick in a women's ODIs, and Pakistan quickly collapsed from 146 for 5 to 147 all out.

Klaas picked up the game as an 11-year-old in her home town of Botshabelo, 50km east of Bloemfontein, playing against boys until she reached provincial age-group cricket. A debut against Sri Lanka in 2010 followed, but Klaas stepped away from international cricket in 2013 to look after her daughter who was born that year. For two years, she continued to play provincial cricket for Free State, finally forcing her way back into national colours against Pakistan in Sharjah in March 2015. She then earned a national contract and became a regular starter in the playing XI.

"She was actually feeling a bit under the weather this morning. But all of a sudden, after that hat-trick, she wasn't sick anymore." Laura Wolvaardt on Klaas

"I've been training hard," Klaas said. "I've been doing a lot of fitness and target bowling. I must say, at the end of the day hard work does pay off.

"It's a nice feeling. Before I came on this tour, I sat down and did my work. I said to myself, even if I get one Woman-of-the-Match trophy, that would be my goal. So, I achieved that, but there's still a lot of work to be done. To be honest, everyone went back to the drawing board and checked what we were lacking, and then everyone worked on where they needed to be. We played good cricket today. I can't wait for the next game. Everyone's in a good space."

Laura Wolvaardt, whose unbeaten 74 sealed South Africa's chase in the afternoon, revealed that Klaas had walked into the game feeling a bit unwell.

"That was so cool," Wolvaardt said. "She was actually feeling a bit under the weather this morning. But all of a sudden, after that hat-trick she wasn't sick anymore. She was sprinting around the field. So we laughed at her a bit for that.

"It's amazing to see her [take a hat-trick]. It's very well deserved. She's been bowling well for a long time and hasn't always got the rewards. I'm really proud of her. I'm really happy she got it."

Klaas' feat was all the more remarkable given that conditions at Senwes Park were actually not helpful for the seamers, with the ball coming on to the bat and a fast outfield providing value for shots.

"Seam was easier to face on this wicket, I felt, and our bowling attack was full of seamers, so they had to really hit their lengths," Wolvaardt said. "Because as soon as they missed their lengths, it was quite easy on this wicket, with a fast outfield as well. Kudos to our seamers, they must have hit their lengths very well to restrict them like that and bowl them out."

The result marked a successful comeback for South Africa, with the series now on the line in the third and final ODI on Sunday.

Maddinson rewarded in Victoria contracting

Published in Cricket
Thursday, 09 May 2019 23:24

Nic Maddinson's reinvention from enfant terrible in New South Wales to reliable first-class run-maker in Victoria has been rewarded with a full state contract for his adopted state, a year after he was unceremoniously dumped by the Blues and moved south to Melbourne with the promise only of a Big Bash League deal with the Melbourne Stars.

Though injury curtailed sizeable portions of his season, Maddinson still returned more runs (563) and centuries (three) from five matches for the Shield-winning Victorian side than in any of his previous eight seasons with NSW.

These performances made Maddinson, at 27, a clear choice for a state contract as part of the group chosen by Victoria for 2019-20, its confirmation arriving a day after the long-serving former captain Cameron White was publicly retired from the state.

Maddinson, who played Test cricket without success in 2016-17, will be hopeful that he can emulate the ex-West Australian Marcus Harris, another left-hander who ventured to Victoria in search of a fresh start and found fortune in the system overseen by the Victoria coach Andrew McDonald.

"Our results last season were outstanding and we saw the year as a real step forward in the evolution of the squad. We gave some younger guys opportunities, which they took, and we'll be looking to build on that this season," Victoria's cricket manager Shaun Graf said. "Nic Maddinson was one of the great stories from last season as was the performance of Andrew Fekete at key times and they both bring great experience to the list.

"We're also looking forward to watching the next stage of development in our younger players like Will Sutherland, Mackenzie Harvey and Tom O'Connell, who alongside Will Pucovski are developing strongly. Overall, we are very well placed to meet the demands of the many state and national commitments that will arise over the season."

The fast bowler Wes Agar, and spin bowler Sam Grimwade were the others not offered contracts for next season, while Andrew Fekete earned his first fully-fledged deal after moving north from Tasmania.

Victorian Men's 2019-20 squad Aaron Ayre, Scott Boland, Jackson Coleman, Xavier Crone, Travis Dean, Zak Evans, Andrew Fekete, Aaron Finch, Sebastian Gotch, Peter Handscomb, Sam Harper, Marcus Harris, Mackenzie Harvey, Jon Holland, Nic Maddinson, Glenn Maxwell, Tom O'Connell, James Pattinson, Will Pucovski, Jake Reed, Matthew Short, Peter Siddle, Will Sutherland, Chris Tremain, Eamonn Vines. Rookies: Sam Elliott, Jake Fraser-McGurk, Jonathan Merlo, Ed Newman, Mitchell Perry, Patrick Rowe

High-profile coach Avishka Gunawardene has become the latest ex-Sri Lanka cricketer to attract corruption charges, after he was slapped with two counts of breaching the Emirates Cricket Board's (ECB) Anti-Corruption code. He has been provisionally suspended under the ECB code pending the determination of the charges.

Gunawardene's charges relate to the T10 tournament played in the United Arab Emirates in 2017, in which he was the head coach of "Team Sri Lanka". Nuwan Zoysa, who was bowling coach on that trip, has also been charged with four counts of breaching the ECB's code.

Where Zoysa had already been charged with three counts of breaching the ICC's own code in October last year, Gunawardene is now embroiled in corruption allegations for the first time. And where Zoysa had been sent on compulsory leave by Sri Lanka Cricket when those charges were laid in October, Gunawardene has continued to work as the head coach of Sri Lanka's A team, and more recently, the Emerging Team.

The charges against Gunawardene are as follows:

  • Directly or indirectly soliciting, inducing, enticing, instructing, persuading, encouraging or intentionally facilitating any participant to breach [the anti-corruption] Code

  • Failing to disclose to the Anti-Corruption Unit (without unnecessary delay) full details of any incident, fact, or matter that comes to the attention of a participant that may evidence corrupt conduct under the Anti-Corruption Code by another participant.

The ECB's charges on Zoysa, meanwhile, largely map on to the charges the ICC had laid in October, with one additional charge now being brought. Originally, he stood accused of accused of:

  • Being involved in attempting to fix or otherwise influence improperly the result or other aspects of a match

  • Soliciting fellow professionals to do the same, and

  • Failing to disclose any approach by potential fixers to the ICC Anti-Corruption Unit

He has been essentially charged with all of the above by the ECB, as well as with failing or refusing, without compelling justification, to cooperate with any investigation carried out by the ACU in relation to possible corrupt conduct.

SLC's CEO Ashley de Silva said the board had not yet made a decision about how to react to the charges laid against Gunawardene, but that a decision would be made on Friday. Gunawardene was due to coach the Emerging Team on a tour of South Africa in June.

Both Gunawardene and Zoysa now have 14 days to respond to these charges.

In addition to these two men, Sanath Jayasuriya and Dilhara Lokuhettige had also been dealt with corruption-related charges as part of a broad ACU investigation in Sri Lanka. Jayasuriya is presently serving a two-year ban on all cricket-related activities for refusing to co-operate with investigations.

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