Wolves struck gold with Max Kilman

Wolves look to have unearthed a gem in Max Kilman, with the centre-back now a key part of Bruno Lage’s side and no doubt eyeing up a call-up to Gareth Southgate’s England squad.

The 25-year-old is a graduate of the youth academy at Wolves and was playing on loan at non-league Maidenhead United just four years ago, before returning to Molineux and establishing himself in the first team.

He has gone on to make 73 appearances for Wolves’ first team, contributing one goal and two assists, and he looks set to form a strong partnership with Nathan Collins at the heart of Lage’s defence.

Should the centre-back leave Molineux any time soon, Tim Spiers suggested that the Old Gold would reportedly demand a fee of up to £30m for the homegrown defender, which is no surprise when you consider his excellent performances in recent years.

Kilman has started each of Wolves’ Premier League games so far this season, averaging a strong 7.00 rating from WhoScored for his performances, which ranks him as the third-best player in Lage’s squad. Meanwhile, the defensive titan has won 3.2 headers per game, by far the most of anyone at Molineux so far in 2022/23.

It is rare to see Premier League sides hand youngsters regular first-team minutes but it has really paid off in Wolves’ case with Kilman, as at just 25 he could be a fixture in their first team for several years to come.

Conor Coady was full of praise for the defender in 2020 after a win against Fulham, saying: “I thought he was outstanding, but I would expect nothing else from him. He’s brilliant to have around and is a brilliant professional – he listens to the manager, he learns off the lads who’ve been playing there the last couple of years and I think you could see that today.

“But also in the games he played last season, so he’s got that experience now of playing a couple of games and you’ve seen that tonight, so I was absolutely over the moon for him.”

Therefore, considering his rise over the past few seasons from non-league to the top tier, Jeff Shi (chairman since 2017) and Wolves have definitely struck gold with Kilman when they recruited him for their academy for zero transfer cost just over four years ago.

Prophetic Archer predicted the entire World Cup

You could have scrolled through Jofra Archer’s Twitter feed from between 2013-2016 and you would have known everything about the tournament from there

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Jul-2019If you have lost fingernails worrying about results this World Cup, you needn’t have. You could have just scrolled through Jofra Archer’s Twitter feed from between 2013 and 2016 and you would have known everything about the tournament from there.Archer knew Ben Stokes would start the World Cup with an all-round performance.

He knew Andre Russell would amp up the pace, but that it might cost him his fitness.

He guessed that South Africa would struggle, and that there would be news that AB de Villiers had offered to return.

He knew two big talking points would be the bails not coming off and the rain.

Somehow, he even had early insights into David Warner’s plans to adopt a more steady approach.

He also wanted to let his captain know well in advance that record-breaking six-hitting against Afghanistan was something he dug.

We’re really not sure how he knew Liton Das was going to make a big impact in his first World Cup match all the way back in 2013, when Liton hadn’t even made his List A debut.

Of course he knew Carlos Brathwaite was going to make people remember his name again.

But how did he predict the emergence of Shaheen Afridi when the guy was just 15?

Moeen being left out for a few games, only to get a chance, play a really rash shot and then be sacrificed for a seamer again – a surprise to everyone? Not to Archer, who knew this in February 2014.

He probably should have done more to avoid England’s loss to Sri Lanka, though, since he knew it was going to happen.

And maybe he could have warned Stokes about that Mitchell Starc yorker

Never mind, he knew Jonny Bairstow was going to make everything all right in the last two games.

Did you not know about Nicholas Pooran?

Things started getting really spooky around the semis, as it emerged Archer had pretty much live tweeted these in his youth. Here’s a quick recap of the India-New Zealand game:

And he had the next semi-final all figured out too.

Abhimanyu Mithun's season of sustained aggression

An improved wrist position has made him more accurate, and yoga has enabled him to recover faster between long spells. Eight years since his breakthrough first season, Karnataka’s hit-the-deck enforcer is as quick as he has ever been

Akshay Gopalakrishnan in Kolkata17-Dec-2017There are traits in Abhimanyu Mithun that are almost impossible to miss. His physicality is one of them. When he saunters in for a chat, you can see heavy chunks of muscle on his six-foot-two-inch frame. He has just completed a training session at Eden Gardens, and as he sits down he feels his heavily strapped right thigh. “Groin niggle,” he says.Mithun is no stranger to injuries. He lost most of last season to it. But there is a visible change in him this year. Mithun has come back stronger and more intense than ever, and his pace has gone up several notches. It was visible on Sunday when he tore Vidarbha apart with figures of 5 for 45, his third five-wicket haul of the season.The source of the groin niggle he speaks of is from a year ago, when, at this same venue, against Delhi, Mithun tried out an experiment he now rues. Recommended to do so by a trainer, Mithun decided to remove his ankle braces for a session. The effects of the move were felt in Karnataka’s next match, against Assam. Mithun pulled up after bowling only 10 balls in the first innings and missed Karnataka’s next four games.”Speak to any physio, and they will advise against making changes during the season,” he tells ESPNcricinfo. “Because this is a long tournament. Your muscles adapt themselves to function a certain way and are used to doing the things you did before the season. They don’t respond too well to sudden changes. It’s tough, especially for a fast bowler.”That (removing the braces) affected a different muscle. I removed it for one session and that transferred the pressure to my groin.”Mithun is now cautious about subjecting his body to such surprises. He has introduced new elements to his training, but is consistent with them. Technically, he worked on setting right his wrist position, which hung back a little more than ideal. It was particularly troublesome when he tried bowling the inswinger.Now, his wrist is a lot straighter at delivery. It has given him more control with his lines and lengths. On Sunday, Mithun hardly strayed onto leg stump. His short balls were fired in at the middle-stump channel, cramping up the batsmen and giving them next to no time to react. Otherwise, he probed in the corridor outside off.But what has made Mithun most dangerous this season is his ability to steam in without losing intensity over the course of a day. Mithun has bent his back for long periods and his body has held up through the rigours. These were the very qualities that had impressed the selectors when they picked him in India’s Test squad to travel to Sri Lanka seven years ago.On Sunday, he was at his paciest after lunch and hit the deck particularly hard during his three-wicket burst late into an extended second session. He caught Delhi off-guard in similar manner in Alur, where he snuffed out a set Dhruv Shorey and had Nitish Rana put down off him in a fiery post-lunch spell on the third day.Changes in fitness regime have helped Mithun bowl with this sustained aggression. Always a lover of the weights room, Mithun now mixes it up with yoga. He is nimbler when he runs into the crease now and doesn’t go stiff.”Yoga has given me flexibility,” he says. “It has also sped up my recovery process. Obviously when you play a full season of 11 matches, it takes a toll on your body. But I now recover much faster even between my first and second spells.”Mithun’s love of physical fitness came to him early, partly from his father, a bodybuilder and gym instructor. Mithun was a discus-thrower before he became a fast bowler, and in his early years bowled a lot with the tennis ball. All of this gave him a solid base in terms of athleticism and power, but for someone who relies so heavily on his shoulder, it’s a fight against time as he ages.Mithun has taken inspiration from one of his mentors at Sunrisers Hyderabad when it comes to sustaining his fitness through his 30s.”As a fast bowler, when you get older, you need to be more flexible,” he says. “That’s how Ashish [Nehra] played till 39 years. Ashish has a very flexible spinal cord. If you are flexible, you are in for the long run.”

“Yoga has given me flexibility. It has also sped up my recovery process. Obviously when you play a full season of 11 matches, it takes a toll on your body. But I now recover much faster even between my first and second spells.”Abhimanyu Mithun

The work he has put in behind the scenes has made Mithun quicker than he has been in some time. He now bowls at the sort of pace that thrust him into first-class cricket a mere three years after he first bowled with a cricket ball. It is the sort of pace that fetched him 47 wickets in his maiden first-class season – 11 on debut – and earned him a maiden international appearance three months later. It is what caught the eye of the then Royal Challengers Bangalore coach Ray Jennings ahead of the 2009 IPL trials. Mithun was an out-and-out fast bowler at a time when India didn’t boast too many of them.He has since not been anywhere near the national reckoning. He has floated between IPL teams, going to Mumbai Indians in 2015 and Sunrisers in 2016, but hasn’t had a reasonable run to prove himself. But he has continued chipping away in domestic cricket, quietly becoming a prominent member of Karnataka’s celebrated pace attack. His contribution to their title wins in 2013-14 and 2014-15 was a staggering 80 wickets. With his captain Vinay Kumar, Mithun has formed one of the most prolific new-ball combinations in the Ranji Trophy.Mithun’s most immediate aim personally is to establish himself in an IPL side. In working towards that, he realises the value of the time he is getting to spend in the Karnataka side. Helping Karnataka do well means earning more opportunities to prove himself. “Obviously, it’s (IPL) become important. You need to do well there to take the next step. If we win the Ranji Trophy, we get to play the Irani Trophy.”Playing for Karnataka is a matter of pride. These are guys whom I’ve played with since my juniors. Guys like Manish [Pandey], Karun [Nair]. Doing well in front of them, when these guys tell me I’m bowling well, that’s the kind of thing that gives me satisfaction and motivation to perform. Winning matches for Karnataka makes me prouder.”

The Ashwin-Dhoni chicken v egg dilemma

Is India’s lead spinner not taking wickets because his captain is not giving him the chance to bowl a full quota, or is MS Dhoni not giving R Ashwin four overs because Ashwin is not taking wickets?

Arun Venugopal09-May-2016R Ashwin has gone without completing his quota of four overs in 10 of his last 20 Twenty20 matches, including five games for Rising Pune Supergiants in IPL 2016. On five of those occasions, he has bowled two overs or fewer. While Ashwin isn’t the only spinner being under-bowled in this year’s IPL, it has become a talking point because of how India’s lead spinner and perhaps India’s greatest captain haven’t been able to replicate their symbiotic partnership in a season where the Supergiants have struggled.MS Dhoni and Ashwin have fed off each other’s success over the last few years. In 2010, Ashwin’s career took off under Dhoni’s captaincy after he finished as the joint-second highest wicket-taker for Chennai Super Kings in their victorious IPL campaign and leading wicket-taker in their Champions League T20 title run in South Africa.Ashwin’s swift ascent, which coincided with Harbhajan Singh’s waning fortunes, helped Dhoni build his bowling strategy around him, especially at home. In T20s, Dhoni has won 11 of 12 games where Ashwin has picked up three wickets or more. Dhoni, who is accustomed to walking bowlers through their plans, even praised Ashwin’s ability to work out his own game plan.But Dhoni hasn’t seemed to trust Ashwin enough lately and is increasingly loath to deploy him when there are two right handers at the crease. In the World T20, Ashwin bowled his full quota only on two occasions and he was given only two overs in the semi-final against the West Indies. Dhoni cited dew as the reason but Ashwin’s counter was he didn’t get to bowl despite creating wicket-taking opportunities.There is statistical evidence to suggest the World T20 semi-final was only the tipping point of a longer period during which Ashwin has been under-bowled. Of the 33 T20 innings Ashwin has bowled during the last 12 months, he has completed four overs on only 20 occasions. In 2014 and 2015, he didn’t bowl his full quota for Super Kings in 11 out of 34 innings. Dhoni sought to play down the trend after Supergiants’ opening game against Mumbai Indians where Ashwin was given only one over. So far in the IPL, Ashwin has taken three wickets in 30 overs at an average of 72 and an economy rate of 7.2.”Ashwin has bailed me out in a lot of situations – whether bowling in the first six or in the slog phase,” Dhoni said. “Ashwin is a mature bowler. He can bowl at any point of time.” But things don’t seem to have changed much as Ashwin was introduced only in the 17th over in Supergiants’ last game against Royal Challengers Bangalore. Coach Stephen Fleming said such decisions were down to Dhoni and backed his judgment.”The thing with R Ashwin, with India as well, is an expectation that he should bowl four,” he said. “But if conditions don’t suit then you’ve seen the captain over a number of formats turn to other players. As far as cricketing decisions go in the middle then that’s purely MS’ decisions, and making his calls with the experience that he has and the relationship that he’s had with Ashwin over the years.”It is difficult to pinpoint the reasons for Ashwin’s diminished role in Dhoni’s bowling plans without surmising. It is possible the trust deficit could have begun in the aftermath of the drawn Johannesburg Test of December 2013 where Ashwin bowled 36 wicketless overs in the second innings and subsequently found himself out of the team for six Tests.Ashwin had then remarked ahead of the subsequent 2014 tour of England that he wasn’t comfortable with being used in a holding role. The ODI series in Australia late last year where Ashwin wasn’t particularly incisive in the two games he played might have had a role to play as well.But, to be fair to Dhoni, Ashwin isn’t the only spinner who has been under-bowled during this IPL. Even Amit Mishra, the most successful spinner in the tournament, has bowled only a little more than three overs per game – ditto with Axar Patel, Piyush Chawla and Ashwin’s namesake Murugan at Supergiants. Also, finger spinners have found the going tough with pitches offering very little assistance. In Ashwin’s defence, though, his economy rate has been lower than the names mentioned above.It’s not known if Dhoni and Fleming have sat Ashwin down to discuss where he figured in their plans. When asked how the team handled a situation where the strike bowler was possibly under-utilised, Fleming said such things shouldn’t be a “confidence shaker.” “We keep working on Ashwin’s variations. He’s a very clever bowler. So [it is about] making sure that when he gets the opportunity, he should be as good as he can be,” he said.”As a coach, all you can ask from your players is preparation. Once they go out on the field, it’s down to gamesmanship. But, I certainly believe that he’s one of the most talented spinners in the world and creating opportunities through training for him to show his skills.”

Fielding woes continue Sri Lankan distress

The downed catches are the cause of so much of their woe, but also, are a reflection of the confidence of a side, that has lost 12 out of 19 completed ODIs, plus two Tests, since mid-October

Andrew Fidel Fernando in Christchurch14-Feb-20151:26

Agarkar: SL will need big players to perform

No loss inspires as much regret as one conceived by spilled catches. No day feels so wasted as the one defined by a few sorry moments. For Sri Lanka, their time in New Zealand has been continually marred this heartbreak; a grim, empty eddy of “what ifs”.That a Brendon McCullum salvo might come off and that an off-colour new-ball pair would be crashed around is not so surprising, but couldn’t it have been so much better if Kane Williamson was snapped up for none? It was 57 runs that he scored today, after Kumar Sangakkara failed to cling to a sharp one, low to his right. It was 213 runs and a Test series, when Sri Lanka spurned the first of the four chances he gave them in Wellington, six weeks ago. Sri Lanka had a second shot at Williamson, on 27, but Angelo Mathews parried that one overhead.In the 37th over, Corey Anderson could probably have been held by substitute Dinesh Chandimal for 2. Instead, he made the chance seem tougher than it was and it flew over the rope. Those three at least were somewhat difficult opportunities. Jeevan Mendis circled under one, with Anderson on 43, and collected only fresh air as the ball descended, leather striking him somewhere near the groin on the way down, to add comical injury to insult.The downed catches are the cause of so much of their woe, but also, are a reflection of the confidence of a side, that has lost 12 out of 19 completed ODIs, plus two Tests, since mid-October. That there is quality in this squad is hard to deny. Eight of the 11 men who triumphed in last year’s World T20 final, were on the field on Saturday.

‘Happy opening the innings’ – Thirimanne

Lahiru Thirimanne, who top-scored for Sri Lanka with 65 off 60, said he was comfortable with being moved around the batting order. Sri Lanka have been unsure with how to use him in the past 18 months, often asking him to plug holes in the batting order, when other batsmen begin underperforming.
The selectors had hoped to bat him at No. 6 throughout the World Cup, but as woes at the top of the order persisted, he has now been returned to the opening position, where he has sporadically batted before.
“I’m happy opening the innings because that gives me time to settle down and score big innings,” he said. “Unfortunately I couldn’t make that 60 into a hundred. I’m very disappointed about that, but I’m happy about my role. I’ve been batting everywhere from opener to No. 8, so I’m used to being moved around.”

How much worse do they seem now, than they did a mere eight months ago? When Sri Lanka are surging, their modest shards of talent are fused together into a menacing point. Not only are the catches held, but even their rarer celestial events begin to run together. Fours begin pouring off Nuwan Kulasekara’s blade. Tillakaratne Dilshan makes big breakthroughs. Boundary riders execute manoeuvres no coach has ever taught them.When Sri Lanka are flagging, all their foibles come into sharp focus. In pursuit of a ball, Lasith Malinga’s belly wobbles more than his deliveries do off the seam. Rangana Herath lumbers like he is dragging the remains of his own broken body around. Mahela Jayawardene is in a perpetual frump because even the young men who can move quickly, only flail at the ball as it whooshes past them.The fielding has been poor for so long that it has now become self-parody. “Their guys get to the ball much faster than ours”, was a warning Dilshan audibly issued to his opening partner early in Sri Lanka’s innings. All through the first roaring eight months of 2014, Mathews had spoken of Sri Lanka playing for each other, “like a family”. Now, when losses have stacked up, the frayed edges that are a perpetual presence in any Sri Lanka outfit, begin to unspool.The innings’ top-scorer, Lahiru Thirimanne, approximated the cost of those spills. “It was a good wicket, but 280-290 would have been really chaseable in this ground,” he said. “But I thought we didn’t field well, so that cost us. As a team we have to put that extra effort because sometimes crucial catches might cost end of the game. As a team we have to put our heads down and do the extra work.”The fielding lapses compounded, and the street-smarts that get Sri Lanka deep into big tournaments, deserted them. Mathews saved one Rangana Herath over, as if for a rainy day, only for Anderson to hit them like a flash flood. In contrast, Daniel Vettori was through his full quota in the 35th over. McCullum had a chasing team on the run, of course, so he was under no great stress. But Sri Lanka and Mathews – a team and captain that pride themselves on their cool heads under duress – allowed their best bowler to have one over unforgivably unused.Mendis’ two wickets for five runs from two overs also jars in comparison with Malinga and Kulasekara’s combined 1 for 162, from 18 overs. Mendis’ bowling form over the past month has not suggested he should be entrusted a long spell, but when frontliners are going for plenty, the bowling plan could do with a little massaging. Isn’t that the nimbleness that has defined them in past campaigns, when they have ridden on the coattails of unlikely performers? Even leaving that aside, isn’t that the flexibility they build into their attack when they stack the team with allrounders?In the past, Sri Lanka have arrived at world tournaments unfancied, then taken the events by the collar. This time, when they have the most experienced top order in the world, the finest contemporary death bowler, and arguably the best spinner in the tournament, they are waiting for the World Cup to come to them, and shake them to life.

Starc begins with a car crash

ESPNcricinfo presents the plays of the day from the fourth day at Trent Bridge

George Dobell and Dan Brettig at Trent Bridge13-Jul-2013Slip of the day
There are many ways to start the day’s play. Mitchell Starc picked the car crash option. He delivered a head high full toss that almost killed his captain at first slip and cost his side five runs. If you looked at the day’s balls on Hawkeye, you’d assume they had a bug in the system for the first delivery. Eventually Hawk Eye gave up and the path ends as a shadow. Steve Harmison’s infamous ball in Brisbane might have been more high profile, but at least he hit the pitch and made it easy for his captain to handle catch it.Key moment of the day
The dismissal of Michael Clarke – caught behind off the thinnest of outside edges – might be one of the defining moments of this game. Aleem Dar checked the ball had carried to Matt Prior cleanly before giving Clarke out but, having confirmed that with the TV umpire, Clarke utilised Australia’s final review. Hot Spot showed the tinniest of marks. With Phil Hughes dismissed in the next over, after England used the DRS to show that more than half of the ball had, by a millimetre or two, pitched inside the line of leg stump. Australia could be justified in feeling that a series of marginal calls had gone against them in this game.Misfield of the day

Only if England had been rolled over by a steamroller could they have looked more flat than when Shane Watson and Chris Rogers were together. The bowlers looked unthreatening; well Finn would have, if he got a bowl. In the field they lacked their usual energy and hunger. At no stage was this better illustrated than when two fielders got in each other’s way, the ball was rebounded loose, and after a second or two they suddenly realised that there could actually be two runs there so for the first time they showed real intent.Let off of the day
Ed Cowan was on a pair when Steven Finn started to bowl at him. Not just that but Cowan has spent a considerable period of this game in his hotel bathroom due to illness and knew his position was under threat. He was as close to “there for the taking” as a No. 3 batsman gets in Test cricket. But Finn, bowling without pace or control, gifted the most delicious long-hop – wide and outside off stump – to allow Cowan to cut a boundary and release the pressure. An over of similar deliveries followed, forcing Alastair Cook to post a sweeper on the cover boundary which meant there was an easy single through point to allow Cowan and Chris Rogers any easy release stroke. It underlined the sense that Finn, whether due to form or fitness, is currently struggling to fulfil his holding role in this England bowling attack. But he did improve in his second spell.Celebration of the day
Ian Bell had scored Test centuries before – 17 times before – but the
jump for joy, the punch of the air and the sustained celebrations upon
reaching three figures betrayed his emotion on achieving this one.
Perhaps relief was the primary emotion: Bell’s form has not been great
of late – he has averaged 30 since the start of 2012 – and he knew the
murmurs about his place in the side and the old canard about him only
scoring “soft” runs were returning. But here, with an Ashes Test at
stake, his team in trouble and an Australian attack bowling well, he
had delivered the innings required.Umpiring error of the day
This has not been a game that either of these two well-respected
umpires will reflect on with a great deal of fondness. On the fourth
day it was the turn of Kumar Dharmasena to see one of his decisions
overturned: having adjudged Rogers caught behind to a delivery from
Graeme Swann, Australia utilised the review system and were rewarded
when replays showed no edge. Rogers took one look at the replay, and went straight back to his crease to mark his guard. He clearly has more faith in Marius Erasmus than most of us.Lapse of the day
In Joe Root’s first over as tea ticked near, Chris Rogers had a careful look at the part-time offspinner before late cutting the final ball to the boundary. In his second, Rogers clipped a single first ball to leave Ed Cowan facing up to the final over of the afternoon session. Like Rogers, Cowan was initially circumspect. But unlike Rogers, he was unable to contain himself until the end of the over. The fourth ball was tossed up and Cowan leaned out to drive through cover. Root had barely spun a ball in his previous nine, but this one gripped out of the rough and took the edge to slip. Cowan crouched, motionless, before departing. It was not the sort of lapse Australia, or Cowan, can afford.

Superb in overseas conditions

Rahul Dravid, who became the second batsman to reach 13000 runs, stands out because of his match-winning performances in Tests outside the subcontinent

Madhusudhan Ramakrishnan25-Nov-2011Rahul Dravid, in the course of what has been a amazing renaissance after a slump in form, passed yet another milestone when he became only the second batsman after Sachin Tendulkar to reach 13,000 runs in Tests. Dravid, playing his 160th Test, reached the landmark in 277 innings, which is 11 more than the number of innings taken by Tendulkar. His career looked in jeopardy when he uncharacteristically struggled for runs in 2007 and 2008. However, since he reached the 12,000-run mark during an otherwise forgettable South African tour, he has had an outstanding run, scoring 747 runs at an average of 74.70 with four centuries. During the disastrous England tour where India lost all four Tests, Dravid reigned supreme. While all other batsmen found it near impossible to cope with the bowler-friendly conditions, Dravid displayed superb concentration and technique to score 461 runs with three centuries in four Tests.Number of innings taken by Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar to reach each 1000-run mark. They took the same number of innings between 5000-6000 and 7000-8000 runs. Click here for an enlarged image.•ESPNcricinfo LtdTendulkar and Dravid have been the pillars of the Indian batting line-up for well over a decade and have been responsible for India’s ability to compete against the top Test teams. Dravid, who made his debut nearly seven years after Tendulkar, had a much better start to his career. He took only 23 innings to reach his first 1000 runs while Tendulkar took 29. Both players were far quicker to the 2000-run mark taking less than 20 innings each. Dravid, however, had a bad period in 1999-2000 when he scored only 93 runs in six innings in Australia. The poor form continued till he bounced back with 180 to rescue India from a hopeless position in Kolkata in 2001. In the next few years, Dravid became India’s most successful batsman in overseas Tests, scoring match-winning centuries in Headingley (148), Adelaide (233) and Rawalpindi (270). Remarkably, Dravid and Tendulkar took the same number of innings to go from the 5000 to 6000-run mark and from the 7000 to 8000-run mark.In the 2006 series in the West Indies, when he scored a stunning century on a difficult Jamaica pitch, Dravid’s average reached 58.75, moving him temporarily to fifth on the list of batsmen with the highest average in Tests. Tendulkar, who had just gone through a rough patch, reinvented himself spectacularly, taking just 16 innings between 9000 and 10,000 runs. Dravid, on the other hand, suffered a loss of form in 2008 and took 30 innings to score 1000 runs (8000-9000). The batting stats for both players across the last three 1000-run periods have been uncannily similar. While Tendulkar, who reached the 10,000-run mark in his 195th innings, took 71 innings more to get to 13,000 runs, Dravid has also taken the same number of innings to get to his latest landmark after getting to 10,000 runs.*

Comparison of Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar (career in 1000-run intervals) *
Runs Innings/avg (Dravid) 100/50 (Dravid) Innings/avg (Tendulkar) 100/50 (Tendulkar)
1000 23/51.95 1/8 29/39.96 4/4
– 2000 18/63.94 3/7 16/72.61 3/6
– 3000 27/43.08 3/2 23/50.66 3/5
– 4000 16/62.35 2/4 19/56.61 4/3
– 5000 24/49.31 3/6 16/59.60 4/2
– 6000 18/82.71 4/3 18/69.06 4/4
– 7000 15/57.38 1/3 16/75.21 4/4
– 8000 17/61.31 3/6 17/57.18 3/4
– 9000 18/74.71 3/7 26/54.82 3/5
– 10000 30/36.37 2/5 16/62.46 2/4
– 11000 29/37.29 2/6 28/38.07 3/3
– 12000 20/53.44 4/2 24/46.19 2/6
– 13000 22/55.84 5/3 19/65.87 5/4

India have been a dominant force in world cricket mainly due to a powerful batting line-up. Dravid, Tendulkar, Virender Sehwag and VVS Laxman figure in the top five on the list of India’s leading run-getters. However, a detailed comparison of their batting stats reveals some interesting differences. Tendulkar has the most number of centuries at home (22) and the second-best home average (56.82) among the five. Dravid, whose numbers at home are less flattering than the others, has been superb in away Tests. His tally of centuries in away Tests (21) is second only to that of Tendulkar (29) and his away average also is marginally lower than Tendulkar’s. Laxman and Sehwag have been far less successful in away Tests averaging 44.17 and 46.78 respectively.What sets Rahul Dravid apart from the rest is his superb display in wins outsidethe subcontinent. Dravid averages a stunning 70.93 in victories outside Asia (excluding Zimbabwe) with three centuries and six fifties in ten matches. India’s defensive approach in the earlier years coupled with a weak bowling attack meant that Sunil Gavaskar hardly figured in many wins home or way. Shockingly though, Virender Sehwag has been very ordinary in away wins (outside subcontinent) and averages just 24.66 in seven matches without a single half-century.

Home and away batting stats of top five Indian run-getters
Batsman Runs/avg (home) 100/50 (home) Runs/avg (away) 100/50 (away) Runs/avg (home wins) 100/50 (home wins) Runs/avg (away wins) 100/50 (away wins)
Sachin Tendulkar 6762/56.82 22/29 8418/55.74 29/34 3577/60.62 11/18 2017/80.48 9/4
Rahul Dravid 5565/51.52 15/27 7473/55.35 21/35 2838/63.06 8/14 2293/69.48 7/9
Sunil Gavaskar 5067/50.16 16/23 5055/52.11 18/22 915/39.78 3/4 756/50.40 3/3
VVS Laxman 3736/51.88 8/24 4859/44.17 9/31 1968/59.63 4/14 1442/51.50 3/9
Virender Sehwag 4188/58.16 12/18 3649/46.78 10/10 1958/61.18 4/13 1243/51.79 3/3

During his long career, Dravid has been a crucial factor in India’s batting exploits. This is primarily because of his ability to forge vital partnerships in the middle order. Dravid, who has been involved in the most century stands for any player (87), has shared prolific stands with Tendulkar and Laxman. The Dravid-Tendulkar partnership is the most successful in Test history and recently went past the legendary West Indian pairing of Gordon Greenidge and Desmond Haynes. Dravid has also had an extremely fruitful association with Laxman, with their most famous stand coming in the Kolkata Test in 2001. On that occasion, they put on 376 as India clawed back to win the Test despite following on. The pair was again involved in a triple-century stand in Adelaide in 2003 as India went on to win by four wickets. Dravid has also proved to be the perfect foil to the aggressive Sehwag and has partnered him in ten century stands, including a massive 410-run partnership in Lahore in 2006.

Dravid’s most prolific partnership associations
Batting partner Innings Runs Average 100/50 stands
Sachin Tendulkar 138 6742 51.07 19/29
VVS Laxman 84 4049 52.58 12/14
Sourav Ganguly 68 3294 53.12 10/12
Virender Sehwag 55 3151 59.45 10/8
Gautam Gambhir 43 2393 56.97 7/8

A comparison with the two others in the 12,000-run club throws up some interesting numbers too. Ricky Ponting, who showed glimpses of his top form during his 62 in the second Test in Johannesburg, has experienced both the best and worst phases of form in the last decade. He was the second-fastest to the 10,000-run mark in terms of innings (196) and averaged 58.72 at that point. When he reached 10,000 runs, Ponting had 35 centuries to Tendulkar’s 34. Dravid and Kallis were much slower to the mark, taking 206 and 217 innings respectively. Ponting also had the lowest percentage of single-figure dismissals at that stage (19.38) followed by Kallis (20.73).However, in the years after reaching the 10,000-run mark, Ponting’s form has fallen drastically. In 70 innings, he averages under 37.00 with just four centuries. His single-figure dismissal percentage in the period has also gone up to 34.28. After reaching the 10,000-run mark, Dravid has been consistent but well below his career average. He has scored 11 centuries since, including five in 2011. While Tendulkar has been brilliant after the 10,000-run mark with 17 centuries at an average of 53.71, Kallis is not too far behind. He has scored nearly 2000 runs at an average close to 75.00 with an extremely low single-figure dismissal percentage (15.62).*

Batting progress of top four run-getters in Tests after the 10000-run mark *
Batsman Innings to reach 10000 runs Average at 10000 runs 100/50 % of single-figure dismissals Innings after 10000 runs * Runs/Average 100/50 % of single-figure dismissals
Sachin Tendulkar 195 57.58 34/41 26.15 106 5103/53.71 17/22 16.03
Rahul Dravid 206 55.41 25/51 20.87 71 3030/47.34 11/11 25.35
Ricky Ponting 196 58.72 35/40 19.38 70 2515/36.98 4/17 34.28
Jacques Kallis 217 54.37 30/50 20.73 32 1945/74.80 10/5 15.62

Tendulkar evokes memories of 1992

The strokeplay was majestic and the approach worlds removed from the hesitancy that coloured Sachin Tendulkar’s innings at times over the past couple of years

Cricinfo staff29-Oct-2008
Sachin Tendulkar’s pick-up over midwicket off Cameron White was a damning verdict on the paucity of Australia’s slow-bowling resources in the post-Warne era © Getty Images
At times you could have fooled yourself into thinking that it was the irrepressible teenager of Perth 1992 vintage batting, and not the 35-year-old veteran who was supposed to be on his last legs. The strokeplay was majestic and the approach worlds removed from the hesitancy that coloured Sachin Tendulkar’s innings at times over the past couple of years.The situation when he walked in was hardly that in which to unleash a fusillade of shots. At 27 for 2, he might even have been reminded of the bad old days, when the batting rode on his shoulders, especially away from home at venues like the MCG and Edgbaston. These days though, the line-up around him is far more robust and the freedom he batted with today was that of a man determined to enjoy a final flourish in the game that he hasilluminated for so long. Even when India were under siege in the first session, there was safety in the thought that Mahendra Singh Dhoni, Man of the Match in Mohali a week ago, was pencilled in at No.7.Brett Lee had already been taken off by the time Tendulkar emerged to raucous cheers, but Mitchell Johnson was bowling just as quick in his place. One bouncer whizzed past his helmet at 151 km/hr but if that was meant to intimidate, it had little effect. A couple of balls later, he was on tiptoe and striking the ball through point, much as he had done at the WACA all those years ago.Johnson tried to tempt him into the sort of airy drive that Rahul Dravid had perished to, but the bait was never nibbled. For 20 balls, Tendulkar was in watchful mode, intent on seeing off the challenge of Australia’s premier fast bowlers. Only when Johnson started to err on the short side did he start to open up, first tucking one off the hips past square leg and then lashing one through the fielder at point.Lee was the culprit on that occasion, and Ricky Ponting turned to him a quarter of an hour before lunch. It was a crucial passage of play. Had Australia picked up a wicket then with the run-rate still well below three, the game might have turned. Instead, Lee was greeted with the most sumptuous of cover-drives. Lee continued to bowl quick and full, but Tendulkar either guided the ball into the off side, or played it straight back. There was no hint that the eyesight or reflexes have faded, no sign of a batsman on the wane.The contest within a contest continued right after lunch, with Lee charging in as he had to dismiss Virender Sehwag earlier in the morning. Earlier this year, in the CB Series in Australia, Tendulkar had decided to use Lee’s pace to bunt the ball over the slip cordon. It was a stroke he unfurled to telling effect in Bloemfontein in 2001, but this was Lee, the quickest bowler in the world, in the quintessential Test match battle of our times, Australia against India.Such labels clearly meant nothing to him because the third ball after lunch nearly went over third man for six. Once again, he had rocked back, arched his spine like a gymnast and twirled the wrists to devastating effect. The score was still modest, 71 for 2, but a massive statement had been made. The unerringly accurate Stuart Clark was then thumped behind point for four more, before Lee responded the way fast bowlers do. The straight, quick bouncer would have parted Tendulkar’s hair if he hadn’t been wearing a helmet, but all he did was drop the wrists and sway out of harm’s way.
Sachin Tendulkar’s innings ended with a false shot but not before the momentum had shifted inexorably in India’s favour © Getty Images
His riposte was far more damaging, a whiplash square of the wicket that got to the ball boys before anyone in the off side cordon had even moved a couple of feet. When Lee subsequently searched for the yorker, Tendulkar drove in classical fashion to the man at midwicket. More than Lee’s raw pace, it was Clark’s accuracy that troubled him most, with one superb leg-cutter almost kissing the outside edge on its way to Brad Haddin.There were still moments to drive the bowler to distraction though. There was little wrong with the delivery that Clark bowled to him when he was on 46, but Tendulkar merely waited on it as though it were a loopy leg break and then cut it fine for four. Soon after, the field changed to 7-2, but rather than be tempted into the shot across the line, he chose the path of discretion.Cameron White was initially viewed with similar suspicion, but once a gorgeous on-drive off Clark had loosened the shackles, Ponting’s first punt at spin was made to look foolish. When White tossed one up fairly wide, he pounced to drive it past extra-cover, and the pick-up over midwicket that followed was a damning verdict on the paucity of the slow-bowling resources in Australian cricket’s post-Warne era.After Johnson and Watson tied him down for a while, it all ended with a false stroke, but by then the momentum had shifted inexorably in India’s favour, with Gautam Gambhir trading circumspection for aggression. Tendulkar has scored nine hundreds against Australia, and as a result half-centuries don’t really linger too long in the memory. This little gem though should have a special place in the collection, right up alongside the one in Adelaide , when he launched into Glenn McGrath after the previous evening’s monastic denial, and the minor masterpiece in Mumbai , when he and Laxman batted sublimely on a minefield to transform a match that had been within Australia’s grasp. Even for the masters, centuries aren’t everything.

'Couldn’t let it pass me by' – Cristhian Mosquera reveals what he will bring to Arsenal after €20m transfer from Valencia is finally confirmed

New Arsenal signing Cristian Mosquera has revealed what the club's fans can expect from him following his €20 million move from Valencia.

Mosquera joins Arsenal Signed for €20m from ValenciaExplains his on-pitch qualitiesFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

After a lengthy pursuit of the defender, Mosquera was finally unveiled as an Arsenal player on Thursday in a deal worth up to €20m (£17m/$23m). Now the young Spaniard has admitted he couldn't let this opportunity "pass him by", while outlining what he can bring to Mikel Arteta's side for the upcoming season.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesWHAT MOSQUERA SAID

In his first interview with the club, he said: “It means a lot to me. There’s been a lot of hard work behind all of this. It’s an opportunity that came up and I couldn’t let it pass me by. I’m joining a historic, massive club. When you arrive here with your family, you really feel the greatness of this place. It’s true my career has moved faster than expected and I’ve had to mature fast. Coming here is a chance to keep learning and improving. I’ll be working with great players and a top-class coaching staff, so that will help me develop personally. I’m a player with a lot of energy. I’m young, so I still have plenty to give. I’m fully motivated and excited. Above all, I want to improve, which will create competition within the squad. I’m really happy."

THE BIGGER PICTURE

Arsenal are showing they mean business ahead of the new season following the acquisitions of winger Noni Madueke and midfielder Martin Zubimendi, and striker Viktor Gyokeres could come through the door soon, too. Mosquera is more of a player for the future but following the mutual termination of versatile defender Takehiro Tomiyasu's contract, the 6ft 3in defender is a good replacement for the Japanese.

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Getty/GOALWHAT NEXT?

Mosquera, who can play at centre-back and right-back, will hope to impress in some of Arsenal's upcoming pre-season games against Newcastle United, Tottenham, Villarreal and Athletic Club before the 2025-26 campaign begins.

Diogo Dalot admits Manchester United players lost 'opportunity' to 'show we deserve to be here' in shocking Carabao Cup exit

Manchester United star Diogo Dalot has torn into his team-mates over the disastrous performance which led to their shock defeat by Grimsby in the Carabao Cup.

Dalot bemoans Carabao Cup exitMan Utd embarrassed by Grimsby TownDefeat was a 'lost opportunity'Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Dalot has revealed a frank assessment of his team's dire performance against League Two side Grimsby, who dumped United out of the Carabao Cup on penalties. While showing deference to the Mariners, Dalot believes United squandered an opportunity to prove their doubters wrong by allowing the hosts to win too many key battles during the clash at Blundell Park.

AdvertisementTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Dalot's words reveal how much pressure United are under already after just three matches of the season. Following last term's woeful 15th-place finish in the league and a summer of high-profile new signings it had been expected that United would start strongly, but that has not been the case. The spotlight is firmly on boss Ruben Amorim and his ability to turn things round.

WHAT DALOT SAID

Dalot said: "I think we gave the game to them, clearly, straight away, exactly what they wanted. Win duels, second balls, set plays. We fought back, but I think that was the minimum that we could show to the fans that travelled for ourselves, for the club, but clearly not good enough. I don't want to go through the same sentence time and again. We just have to show (that) and we just lost one opportunity today to show that we deserve to be here."

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WHAT NEXT FOR MANCHESTER UNITED?

United performed well in the season curtain-raiser with Arsenal and, despite that defeat, the signs looked positive. But the tepid draw with Fulham followed by humiliation against Grimsby has really turned up the heat on Amorim. The board have backed him in the summer transfer window which means performances and results must improve – starting on Saturday with the visit of Burnley. 

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