Arsenal's striker problem solved?! Gunners open talks with RB Leipzig over Benjamin Sesko deal as Mikel Arteta desperately seeks more firepower after another trophyless campaign

Arsenal have reportedly opened talks with RB Leipzig over Benjamin Sesko as Mikel Arteta seeks more firepower after another trophyless campaign.

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Arsenal keen to sign a striker in the summerHave already got in touch with Leipzig officialsBundesliga team could demand €80m from the GunnersFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

According to Leipzig’s sporting director, Marcel Schafer, has initiated conversations with Andrea Berta—Arsenal’s recently appointed sporting director—to outline the framework for a possible deal. With Leipzig in need of income following their failure to qualify for next season’s Champions League, the Bundesliga side are expected to be open to selling their star forward.

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While Sesko’s contract includes a variable release clause, reports suggest the club is aiming for a transfer fee in excess of €80 million (£67m/$91m). The striker’s current deal runs until June 2029, putting Leipzig in a strong position to negotiate, but their need for revenue may prompt a quicker resolution.

Sesko has made 32 appearances in the Bundesliga, finding the back of the net 13 times and registering five assists. His combination of pace, aerial ability, and technical skill makes him an attractive prospect for Arteta, who wants to inject more dynamism into Arsenal’s frontline.

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While Sesko appears to be Arteta’s top priority, Arsenal remain active on multiple fronts as they assess potential forward reinforcements. The North London club continues to monitor Viktor Gyokeres of Sporting CP, as the Swedish forward should be available for around €60–70m (£50m/$68m-£59m/$80m).

Additionally, Juventus frontman Dusan Vlahovic remains on the radar. The Serbian striker has expressed a desire to move on from Turin and would reportedly jump at the chance to join Arsenal. Though he is valued at €50m (£42m/$57m), the 25-year-old could be available for a reduced fee given his contract expires in 2026 and Juventus’ own shifting priorities.

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Arsenal’s ambitions remain high, and bringing in a top-tier striker is a priority to help the club compete for major trophies next season. Whether it’s Sesko, Gyokeres, or Vlahovic, the Gunners are making moves to ensure they have a reliable goal scorer at the heart of their attack after enduring another trophyless campaign.

Huge boost for Man Utd as another Tottenham star is ruled out of Europa League final showdown after undergoing untimely surgery

Tottenham have been hit with a huge injury blow as Dejan Kulusevski has undergone surgery on his patella ahead of the Europa League final.

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  • Kulusevski suffers patella injury
  • Has surgery before UEL final
  • Blow for Spurs ahead of Man Utd game
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The Sweden international limped off in Tottenham's 2-0 loss to Crystal Palace last weekend and now Spurs have confirmed he is set for a spell on the sidelines. The club have not said how long he will be out for but he is certain to miss next week's Europa League final against Manchester United.

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    WHAT TOTTENHAM SAID

    The club tweeted: "We can confirm that Dejan Kulusevski suffered an injury to his right patella in our Premier League fixture against Crystal Palace last weekend. Following further specialist consultation, the midfielder has undergone surgery today and will commence his rehabilitation with our medical staff immediately. We're all with you, Deki."

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    The 25-year-old is a key player for Tottenham, scoring 10 goals and notching 11 assists in all competitions this season. Spurs have already lost James Maddison and Lucas Bergvall for the rest of the season due to injury, so this tough task of beating United in Bilbao just got even tougher as they seek to end their 17-year trophy drought.

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    WHAT NEXT?

    Before Tottenham take on United in the Europa League final on May 21, Ange Postecoglou's men travel to Aston Villa in the Premier League on Friday.

Sarah Glenn shows her quality with bat and ball as The Blaze outshine Sunrisers

Tammy Beaumont posts half-century in 72-run stand with legspinner

ECB Reporters Network29-Apr-2023

Sarah Glenn showed her class with bat and ball for The Blaze•PA Images via Getty Images

Tammy Beaumont and Sarah Glenn showed their international quality as The Blaze maintained their perfect start to the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy with a thrilling low-scoring three-wicket victory over Sunrisers.Legspinner Glenn bamboozled Sunrisers with a brilliant 4 for 22 before striking 30 in a 72-run partnership with Beaumont – who scored 64 on a tricky pitch.Sunrisers, who had finally broken their 20-game losing streak in the competition last week, set The Blaze 160 and had them 22 for 4 after Kate Coppack’s devilish new-ball spell.But Beaumont and Glenn secured the wobble before Sophie Munro and Nadine de Klerk finished the job with 14.4 overs to spare.Grace Scrivens and Cordelia Griffith carefully navigated the new ball by putting on 66 for the first wicket, after Sunrisers had chosen to bat.At the time it had felt like a scratchy partnership, especially after Scrivens’ high-quality 67 last week, but it would soon prove much-needed grit. Scrivens’ departure, for 39, began a slide to 159 all out, which proved Glenn’s incredible talent as much the difficulty of the pitch to score runs quickly.Glenn waited until her third over before she had Scrivens stumped before 18-year-old Jodi Grewcock was bowled attempting to sweep.Mady Villiers was next as the tennis ball bounce didn’t allow her to get over a delivery and looped to mid-wicket before Griffith – who had been excellent in her 43 – was leg before.With Sunrisers now 100 for 4, The Blaze turned to Kirstie Gordon to replace Glenn – and she had Amara Carr stumped and Kelly Castle caught behind to continue the right-to-left-spin bonanza from the River End. Gordon returned 2 for 24.Meanwhile from the Hayes Close End, Munro’s pace had the enterprising Saskia Horley caught off a full toss and Jo Gardner pinned in front.Coppack and Abtaha Maqsood frustrated The Blaze with 20 for the last wicket – the second-highest stand of the innings – with Katherine Bryce grabbing the last two scalps.The 160 to win, didn’t look hugely challenging, but Coppack’s stunning opening spell saw The Blaze slide to 22 for 4.The fast bowler, who is a lawyer during the week, had Marie Kelly caught after a steepling leading edge, the opening batter’s second two-ball duck of the competition.Eva Gray found Georgie Boyce nibbling outside off stump before Coppack pocketed the Bryce sisters in successive overs – firstly Katherine edged a wide one behind and then Sarah sliced a full toss to point.Beaumont, who had been dropped herself, had been watching helpless from the other end but finally found an accomplice in Glenn, as the duo made the batting conditions look much easier. The pair used power to find gaps, with Beaumont adding flicky trickery, in a 72-run stand in just 64 balls, before Glenn picked out deep square leg.South African De Klerk helped add 25 as Beaumont reached her classy half-century in 56 deliveriesr. Then Beaumont was stumped off Castle and Lucy Higham was leg before to Gardner in back-to-back overs to threaten to turn the game again.But De Klerk and Munro knocked off the remaining 38 runs with little fuss to take The Blaze two from two.

Robin Uthappa 88*, Gautam Gambhir 61* lead India Maharajas to first win of the tournament

India Maharajas openers Robin Uthappa and Gautam Gambhir put on a spectacular display of boundary-hitting to help their side cruise to a ten-wicket win against Asia Lions on Tuesday. Chasing 158, Uthappa crashed 88 from only 39 balls, and Gambhir smashed 61 off 36 deliveries – his third successive fifty of the tournament – as they helped Maharajas to their first win in three games.Uthappa and Gambhir played beautifully from the outset of the chase. Former Pakistan bowler Mohammad Amir, until recently competing in the PSL, was hit for two boundaries by Uthappa in the second over, while Gambhir smashed Sohail Tanvir for three consecutive fours in the third. Gambhir, the leading run-scorer in the tournament, punched the first of those fours through cover. He then lofted one over mid-off, and later punished the third ball outside off with a drive through extra cover.There was no respite for the power-packed Lions bowling line-up. Shoaib Akhtar tried to take pace off the ball, but Uthappa latched on with four through square leg. Later, Gambhir sliced the final delivery of Akhtar’s only over towards backward point to collect another boundary.The former Kolkata Knight Riders opening partners made the game so difficult for Lions that captain Misbah-ul-Haq had to call for Isuru Udana as the Impact Player; but Udana too was struck for 26 runs in his two overs. Eventually, Maharajas cruised to the win with 45 balls to spare.Earlier, Lions’ openers Upul Tharanga and Tillakaratne Dilshan had laid the foundation for their side with a solid opening partnership of 73 in 52 balls. On a hard pitch in Doha, the duo paced their innings cautiously while only occasionally finding the boundary. Dilshan struggled to execute his traditional Dilscoop too, surviving two close calls early.Maharajas medium-pacer Stuart Binny was targeted by both batters. In the fifth over, Tharanga dispatched a short ball for four while Dilshan found the gap through square leg off the final ball of the over. Their partnership climbed to 56 after the powerplay.Binny eventually dismissed Dilshan as he picked out Irfan Pathan at short third, where Pathan took a sharp low catch. While Tharanga struggled for timing, he kept the score moving along with a spirited 69, which included seven fours and two sixes.Abdul Razzaq helped bring some late impetus to the innings with 27 from 17 balls that included two fours and sixes each, carrying Lions to 157, but that proved to be significantly short in the end.

Alyssa Healy nervous but excited for 'most hyped Women's Ashes'

Test selection will come down to “a couple of calls here and there”, says Australia captain

Valkerie Baynes21-Jun-2023

Alyssa Healy walks out to Australia middle practice at Trent Bridge•PA Images via Getty Images

Alyssa Healy isn’t afraid to admit to a smattering of nerves before she leads Australia out in the Women’s Ashes Test, but her overwhelming emotion on the eve of the match was excitement.Australia enjoyed a fairly thorough training session outdoors at Trent Bridge on Wednesday, having been forced indoors by rain the previous day, which Healy said had set back their decision on a final playing XI. Phoebe Litchfield is expected to open with Beth Mooney as Healy slides down the batting order to manage wicketkeeping duties over the five-day match and captaining in Meg Lanning’s absence, but she was relishing the prospect.”A sense of nervousness but I think at the same time it’s mainly excitement,” Healy said. “This is probably one of the most hyped Women’s Ashes series that I’ve been a part of over here and especially off the back of yesterday [Australia Men’s Test victory at Edgbaston] it’s a really exciting time to be out here to play cricket. From that sense, me and the whole entire group are just ready to get out and get underway and see what’s going to unfold.”Related

Mooney locks in Test opening role with warm-up century

Sutherland century helps Australia to draw with England A

Litchfield still pinching herself at Ashes prospects

Ladies who Switch: Women's Ashes ramps up – Dunkley interview

Litchfield, 20 and uncapped in Tests, scored 68 and Annabel Sutherland 116 for Australia in their three-day warm-up match against England A at Leicester last week, and Healy pointed out that Australia have two legspinners – Georgia Wareham and Alana King – in the squad, which was presenting the biggest selection conundrum.Kim Garth, who played 85 white-ball matches for Ireland before moving to Australia in 2019, could make her Test debut and lead the pace attack with Darcie Brown, having been the pick of Australia’s bowlers in the Leicester warm-up. Meanwhile, left-arm spinner Jess Jonassen scored an unbeaten 173 for Australia A in their warm-up against England in Derby. A closer examination than the weather allowed on Tuesday of a pitch bearing patches of green grass was set to inform the decision, but Healy was full of praise for Litchfield in the meantime.”She did a fantastic job for us, she looked the goods that’s for sure in the three-day match against England A,” Healy said. “She’s a great option for us at the top. There’s been a lot spoken about the opportunities up there and she looks like a brilliant international cricketer for Australia and I can’t wait to see what she can do.”If you look at the make-up of our squad, we’ve got two legspinners so naturally, looking at the balance of our side and potentially the conditions out there is probably going to dictate where we lean on that. But other than that, I think we’re pretty much settled, it’s just a couple of calls here and there and what it probably what it looks like from a line-up perspective as well.”England revealed their team the day before the match with Danni Wyatt, one of the most attacking batters in the women’s game, to make her Test debut after 245 white-ball games for her country. She joins the likes of Nat Sciver-Brunt, Sophia Dunkley and Amy Jones in an aggressive middle order.England also named uncapped quick Lauren Filer alongside seamers Lauren Bell, who made her international debut a year ago, and the experienced Kate Cross with one frontline spinner, left-armer Sophie Ecclestone as they set out to win the Women’s Ashes for the first time since 2013-14 by taking the four points on offer for a Test victory in the multi-format series.”I think for the first time there’s probably a sense of unknown about both sides,” Healy said. “It’s sort of like a next gen are banging on the door and giving us a glimpse into what the Ashes series could look like for the next 10 years moving forward, which is really exciting.”It looked like Filer bowled really well in that three-day game and Jess Jonassen in our squad gave us some good insight into that regard. But she sounds like a really exciting prospect for the future and we’re excited to face that challenge of that bowling attack but also having to counteract the aggressive nature of that top six in particular.”As of Tuesday, 14,500 tickets had sold for the Test, played over five days for only the second time in women’s cricket history and the first time on English soil.”Five days ultimately could present a result but there’s draws in five-day men’s games as well,” Healy said. “I think over time, if women’s Test cricket does become more popular in the calendar, there’s certain nuances to our game that are slightly different from the men and how you prepare a wicket for a women’s Test match might be a little bit different and that will probably become clearer, with more and more cricket on the calendar as to how that might look to potentially get a result.”We’re obviously not as big as the blokes, we don’t make as many marks in the wicket so we might just have a little creative think about how we can make that happen. But five days here could be really interesting. It’s probably just a mental battle and there could be a bit of trench warfare at times but I think we’re willing to see how that goes.”

Healy toasts dominant Australia on successful tour: 'We had just two and a half days of bad cricket'

Two moments at the DY Patil Stadium on Tuesday summed up the women’s white-ball series between India and Australia.The first in the tenth over of the Indian innings. Alyssa Healy waited for Harmanpreet Kaur, on 3 off 5, to look up before ringing in the field changes. Ellyse Perry was moved to her right to deep backward square leg. Ashleigh Gardner was pushed back from the ring to deep midwicket. Harmanpreet had just faced a couple of dot balls – the first on a shortish length, pushed towards backward point, and the second on a good length outside off that she defended towards the off side.Annabel Sutherland then slipped in a full ball on the fourth-stump line. Harmanpreet anticipated another short-length ball and moved back and across early, and ended up chopping it onto her stumps. the result – her sixth single-digit score across formats in the series against Australia.Related

  • Alyssa Healy, Annabel Sutherland lead clinical Australia to another series win

  • Harmanpreet and Healy – different methods, same ambition

And then the second moment, in the 17th over of Australia’s chase. Phoebe Litchfield, in after a double-strike from Pooja Vastrakar, was to face Shreyanka Patil for only her fourth ball. Spooked by her abilities to hit behind the stumps, the four fielders India had on the boundary were cover-point third, backward square leg and midwicket. It took no time for Litchfield to shimmy down and loft one over mid-off, and then again to find the gap between mid-off and cover. Eventually, Australia got to their 148-run target with eight balls unused.After completing their 2-1 T20I series win against India, Australia’s captain Healy lavished praise on Litchfield, who finished the white-ball leg with 344 runs at an average of 86.”I was joking sitting on the bench that I remember when I was that fearless when you come out and you have lost two wickets in an over and play a ramp over the keeper for four,” Healy said. “Unbelievable talent but at the same time she has got a good head on her shoulders and has fitted in beautifully in our squad and will play a key role for us in the Bangladesh [T20] World Cup [2024] and the ODI World Cup [2025] in these conditions in the next 18 months. She is great to watch and hopefully she is going to have a long and successful career for Australia.”Healy also threw her weight behind Harmanpreet, after India head coach Amol Muzumdar had brushed off concerns surrounding the captain’s form by saying a form slump “happens to every cricketer”.Harmanpreet began the T20Is against England with 26 off 21 before two single-digit scores including an unbeaten 6 in the third T20I win. She then scored 49 and 44 not out in the one-off Test against the same opposition before returning single digits in each outing with the bat against Australia.”She got out playing the sweep shot quite a lot, which she traditionally plays quite well,” Healy said. “It might be down to some form. She has had probably had two hard series on the trot and this series has been a long one. [We had] no specific plans in place, but we know we need to be switched on when she walks out to the crease and our bowlers did a great job at keeping her quiet.”Despite Pooja Vastrakar’s blows, it was not an evening to remember for Harmanpreet Kaur’s side•Getty Images

Healy and Harmanpreet had contrasting build-ups to the series and Healy, in her first tour as full-time captain, alluded to the different attitudes they have.”[Harmanpreet and I] are two competitive cricketers going out there doing their job. We approach it differently and that is no disrespect to her, and that’s over to her to deal with that. From my point of view there is no animosity there. If I need to be given a send-off, so be it. I am all for it, because at the end of the day, I am chirpy behind the stumps. If you are willing to dish it out, you have got to be able to cop it.”While India won the one-off Test against Australia, they lost the ODI and T20I series comprehensively. Despite the result, Muzumdar said that the Indian dressing room “a happy space” and was “proud” of the way they played.”Irrespective of the result, we should be proud the way we played all the games,” he said. “Apart from the third ODI, all the other games have been close, so they should be proud of what they have done. The biggest positive is the girls have responded nicely in all the formats, whether it was Test cricket – we played after nine years in India. Not many had played red-ball cricket till then. In white-ball cricket we really need to focus on our fielding and our fitness.”At the moment it is a happy dressing room. I know we have not gotten the results we would have wanted this series, but they are in a happy space in the dressing room. That is how it should be and that is how I intend it to be till the World Cup.”Healy was also happy with the learnings from the series and said Australia played only “two and a half days” of poor cricket on their part.”I am just really, really proud of this group of people. We are here in India over a month that we are traditionally at home spending time with our families, and it is the first time we are away this time of the year.”The month that we have been here, we have played two and a half bad days of cricket – one and a half days in the Test match and one T20 – and I am really proud of the group. Hopefully we can have a really successful 2024 on the back of it.”

Robinson in spotlight again after McCullum reveals Ranchi fitness issue

England coach gives qualified backing to seamer following below-par return to Test whites

Vithushan Ehantharajah27-Feb-2024As England nursed the collective disappointment of their series defeat, head coach Brendon McCullum defended Ollie Robinson after a tough first outing in India. But Robinson finds himself at another juncture in a Test career only in its third year, with questions remaining about his robustness.Robinson had been primed for a pivotal role during the backend of this five-match series, and England pulled the cord for the fourth Test in Ranchi after impressive showings in the nets. The selection did not pay off.Despite starting the match with a maiden Test fifty, which helped propel England to a first innings of 353, Robinson disappointed with the ball. His average speed was in the late 70s mph – at one point, he dipped into the 60s – and there was nowhere near the level of incisiveness that 76 Test wickets at 22.92 show he can provide. He also bowled six no-balls, continuing a difficult relationship with that front line.Related

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Robinson sent down just 13 overs in the match, all of them in the first innings, before dropping Dhruv Jurel on 59, which allowed India an extra 41 runs in their reply. He was subsequently hidden in the field, and went unused in the second innings as England tried in vain to defend a target of 192. It was a chastening return to action after almost eight months.Speaking after the match, Ben Stokes said Robinson was fit to bowl and that a spinning track was the reason he was not utilised. But considering he has previously shown excellence on a variety of surfaces, along with his self-stated desire for the heat of the battle, it felt like a loss of faith from the England captain towards a player he had seemingly coaxed out of a funk in his first summer as Test captain.McCullum, however, revealed Robinson was carrying an injury he picked up while batting, which explains his listless spell with the ball: “He actually twinged his back while batting in the first innings, which is why in those initial couple of spells, he was down on pace. We saw the following day when his back improved a little bit his pace got up to where it normally is.”The head coach went on to vouch for Robinson, whose last competitive match was the summer’s third Ashes Test at Headingley – where his involvement was curtailed by a back spasm – but seemed at a loss to explain how such a well-planned selection had backfired.”I don’t think it was too soon, it was seven months since his last Test so if anything, it’s probably too long between,” McCullum said. “Everything he did leading into the Test match suggested we’d see not just the Ollie Robinson we’d seen previously but a better version of it.”For one reason or another it didn’t quite work out for him and obviously he’s not just as disappointed as everyone else, he’s the most disappointed out of everyone. Our job is to make sure we get around him and make sure we give him as much support and confidence to be able to go again when the next time arises. It’s just sport right? You have great expectations and sometimes you’re not quite able to deliver.”The player himself seemed primed for a big impact in India, arriving fitter and raring to make amends for a disappointing three Tests against Australia last summer. He has trained well throughout but there remains a sense he could give more.Ollie Robinson suffered a back strain while batting in Ranchi•Getty Images

Amid a sea of multi-year central contracts, Robinson’s 12-month deal was aimed at motivating him to show he was worthy of a longer-term investment in the next cycle. Now a player who was supposed to replace Stuart Broad – even usurping Broad at points during his first 18 months as a Test cricketer – may find himself further down the pecking order, though McCullum suggested he retains his faith.”It’s a tough game for him no doubt and he’s hurting a lot. We’ve all seen Robbo bowl better than what he did and he’ll be the first to admit that. We’ve just got to get around him and make sure he chisels out a few of those things that didn’t work well this week. We know he’s a very good bowler. His record suggests he’s got talent and it’s just making sure that we can release the talent so he can get to the levels he wants to get to.”We know how skilled he is and we know his high release point and ability to move the ball off the seam and the skills he possesses are good enough for this level. We’ve just got to make sure we find a way to get the best out of him.”England are not blameless. They know he is a bowler who needs overs to be fighting fit, especially considering the lengthy gap between appearances.The tourists opted against warm-ups and engaged in what was a hugely positive pre-season camp in Abu Dhabi. But in hindsight, it would have been beneficial to get Robinson time in the middle, which could have come with England Lions. Their third match against India A in Ahmedabad started the day before the second Test in which James Anderson played as the lone quick in a spin-heavy attack.The management were also blindsided ahead of the tour when Robinson announced a new podcast with his partner, Mia Baker, a golf influencer. The pair have recorded episodes throughout the tour and, while largely innocuous, England, who exercise a degree of creative control over the extra-curricular activities of their contracted players, have been irked by some of the content, particularly when Robinson mentioned the ECB had initially made an error with his visa application. The revelation came at a time when the governing body was scrabbling around to sort Shoaib Bashir’s visa issue, which resulted in the Somerset offspinner arriving a week late, missing the first Test.The sixth episode, released this week, in which Robinson discussed the team’s mid-series break in Abu Dhabi, has subsequently been removed.Robinson’s previous Test appearance came during the Ashes in July•AFP/Getty Images

Whether Robinson plays the fifth Test in Dharamsala remains to be seen. Conditions more amenable to seam suggest he could get a shot at redemption, though it seems likely England will stick with Shoaib Bashir and Tom Hartley along with Anderson, who is two away from 700 career wickets.One guarantee McCullum did offer was Jonny Bairstow will earn his 100th Test cap. It has been a challenging series for the 34-year-old, but scores of 38 and 30 on a tough pitch in the last Test has McCullum believing Bairstow will mark the occasion in style.”Yes he’ll be playing his hundredth Test. We expect a good Jonny. Jonny loves a milestone too. He won’t shy away from that. He’ll play. It’ll be really emotional for him.”Everyone knows Jonny’s story and as you guys will know he is quite an emotional character at times and big milestones like that do mean a lot to him. It’ll be a really emotional time for him and we look forward to sharing it with him.”The majority of the squad headed to Bangalore on Tuesday morning to get their golf fix. A smaller group – including Stokes – will make their way to a resort in Chandigarh on Wednesday, with the only concrete plan a trip to the cinema to watch . They will meet back up together in the foothills of the Himalayas next Monday, ahead of the start of the concluding Test on March 7.While England will look to take a creditable 3-2 scoreline home, McCullum hopes it will be the start of a new, more ruthless chapter for his charges. Having spurned opportunities in the Ashes and now again here, the time has come to learn from those mistakes.”We weren’t quite good enough when it mattered – or they were better, to be honest, than us being not quite good enough. Against Australia, we had our chances and weren’t quite able to get across the line. This team is still developing as a team. We’re a good cricket team. I think we’ve got the opportunity to be a really good cricket team.”There’s times in games where we haven’t quite screwed down on our method just yet. I still think sometimes we get outside the element of what needs to be done in the moment… or we have too much noise in our mind, so we need to find a way to be really totally present when those times arrive, identify that this is a crucial moment in the game, and try and strip away all the external stuff and just make a decision, and make it work.”If we do that, I think we’ll see this team go to the next level. We’re going good. We’ve lost this series and we didn’t win the Ashes – but we’re a better cricket team than we were 18 months ago. And we’ve got the opportunity in the next 18 months to do some pretty special shit.”

BPL 2024: Shoaib Malik to rejoin Fortune Barishal on February 2

He will be available for the team’s last game of the Sylhet leg, against Khulna Tigers on February 3

ESPNcricinfo staff31-Jan-2024Shoaib Malik will rejoin the Fortune Barishal squad on February 2, after leaving the BPL abruptly last week. He will be available for the team’s last game of the Sylhet leg, against Khulna Tigers on February 3.It was not clear initially why Malik had left. Later, he tweeted: “I would like to address and dismiss the recent rumours circulating about my playing position with Fortune Barishal. I had a thorough discussion with our captain, Tamim Iqbal, and we mutually planned the way forward. I had to leave Bangladesh for a pre-committed media engagement in Dubai.”In his three outings for Barishal so far, Malik batted at No. 6 and scored 7, 5* and 17*. He bowled one over in each of the first two games but didn’t get to bowl in the third.There was a storm around Malik on social media during the second game, against Khulna Tigers in Mirpur. Bowling the fourth over of the innings, he overstepped three times and leaked 18 runs as Fortune Barishal failed to defend 187.Malik is the only spinner to overstep three times in an over in men’s T20s (where data is available with ESPNcricinfo). Only Miguel Cummins bowled more front-foot no-balls in an over, when he overstepped five times in a CPL 2014 match.Barishal are currently fifth on the points table with two wins from five games.

Ann-Katrin Berger: Two-time cancer survivor is Germany's new football icon – but can heroic goalkeeper keep out Spain's superstars in Euros semi-final?

After becoming well-known in England during her time with Chelsea, more chapters in the shot-stopper's incredible story are being written at Euro 2025

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  • Location: Switzerland
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  • Date: July 2 – 27
  • Final: July 27, St. Jakob Park

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Germany are going to be up against it on Wednesday as they take on Spain for a place in the 2025 European Championship final. Not only did Saturday's quarter-final win over France take it out of them from a fatigue perspective, with the eight-time winners somehow getting through 120 gruelling minutes with just 10 players before winning the shootout, it also depleted them numerically, with Kathrin Hendrich suspended after her brainless red card, Sjoeke Nusken picking up a yellow that also rules her out and Sarai Linder joining Giulia Gwinn on the injury list. Germany will have only 19 players available, three of them goalkeepers.

Perhaps no one is more important to Christian Wuck and his team, though, than one of those 'keepers. As Germany defied the odds to progress on Saturday night, it was Ann-Katrin Berger who stole the show, first with a truly outstanding save to prevent an own goal from Janina Minge and then with her penalty shootout heroics, as she saved two either side of her own thumping finish to book her nation's place in the last four.

"We knew that we could only survive with mentality, fighting spirit and solidarity," Wuck said afterwards. No one embodies those values better than Berger, whose status as one of the best goalkeepers in the world is made all the more incredible by the two battles with cancer she has endured during her time at the very top of the game.

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    Success abroad

    For fans of the women's game in England, Berger is extremely well-known. It was in the Women's Super League that the goalkeeper first properly asserted herself as a top-quality player, having struggled to make her mark in the Bundesliga or, after joining Paris Saint-Germain as a 24-year-old, the Premiere Ligue.

    She joined Birmingham City in 2016 and, after earning the first of her four PFA Team of the Year nominations in the Midlands, would spend the majority of her nine years in England with Chelsea, becoming a vital cog in a team she lifted 10 major honours with.

    Berger became renowned for her incredible reflexes, the world-class saves she could produce in the biggest games and – as so many more now know – her knack for saving penalties.

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    Inspiring comebacks

    But she was also well-known because of her incredible story. The word 'inspiring' is thrown around a lot nowadays, but it well and truly applies to Berger, who was first diagnosed with thyroid cancer back in late 2017. One only has to look at how the next year or so panned out to learn a lot about the German's character: She returned to the pitch in February 2018, was named to the PFA Team of the Year in April, and in January of the following year, signed for Chelsea.

    Almost five years after that first diagnosis, Berger revealed that there had been a recurrence in her thyroid. It didn't slow her down for long, though. A month later, she was back, stealing the show in a 2-0 win over title rivals Manchester City.

    "I just want to tell my story to help people out there," she told during those battles. "I [fought] it and I'm a normal person. So why can't other people do it?"

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    Shaping her character

    It's not something Berger dwells on too much today. “I feel like I’m not really an emotional person but I’m glad that I’m here and I’m glad that I have the team-mates I have,” she said after Saturday's win, asked to reflect on her journey from cancer diagnosis to this point. “What happened here makes me proud to be here. Whatever happened in 2022, I’m looking forward now to the future. Now I live my best life and I’m in the semi-final.”

    However, it's something that has clearly impacted and shaped her as a person and, in the context of this Germany team, a leader. "She is a player who has had extreme experiences," Wuck said. "That is a very important character trait. I think her faith and pathway in life has made sure she is patient, and the patience and calmness she brings to the team she proved today. It's just incredibly important that you have such personalities in the team, that you have a goalkeeper in the team who radiates calm."

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    Patience is a virtue

    Patience is something Berger has needed during her time in the national team set-up, too. Despite being a star in England for so long, the shot-stopper found international opportunities tough to come by. It wasn't until two years after her first call-up that she made her Germany debut, back in 2020, and she didn't make a single appearance at Euro 2022 or the 2023 Women's World Cup.

    That was despite being voted to the PFA Team of the Year in England in 2020, 2021 and 2022, and finishing third in voting for The Best FIFA Goalkeeper in 2021 and 2022. Berger had established herself as one of the best in the world in her position, and yet if you turned on the summer's big international tournament, you wouldn't see her.

Shami set to miss IPL 2024 after undergoing ankle surgery

He is also unlikely to play the 2024 T20 World Cup in the Caribbean and USA

Shashank Kishore27-Feb-2024Mohammed Shami is looking to “get back on my feet soon” after undergoing surgery in his right Achilles tendon in London on Monday. This all but rules him out of IPL 2024, which will be played from March 22 to May 26.Shami hasn’t played any cricket since India’s ODI World Cup campaign, where he played a key part in India’s run to the final, finishing as the leading wicket-taker in the competition with 24 wickets in seven matches at an average of 10.70 and strike rate of 12.20.He played through pain during the tournament, taking injections to treat his ankle, and has been away from cricket since.

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The injury will come as a massive blow for the Shubman Gill-led Gujarat Titans, who also traded Hardik Pandya to Mumbai Indians in an all-cash deal – Shami was the side’s highest wicket-taker during their second-place finish in IPL 2023.In January, Shami had revealed he was experience “some stiffness” in his ankle but was confident at being able to recover in time for the England Tests. However, that possibility was ruled out later in the month after he checked in to the BCCI’s National Cricket Academy (NCA) for a reassessment.Prior to that, Shami had been included in India’s squad for the South Africa Tests but was withdrawn after the ankle pain that ruled him out of the white-ball leg of the tour didn’t subside.In Shami’s absence, India have handed Test caps to Mukesh Kumar (in the Caribbean) and Akash Deep (in Ranchi against England) during the ongoing WTC cycle where he hasn’t featured in a single game. Shami’s last Test was the WTC final against Australia at The Oval last June.The injury is also expected to rule him out of the upcoming T20 World Cup, which begins in the Caribbean and USA five days after the conclusion of the IPL.

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