No Torneo di Viarregio, Sport enfrenta equipe italiana nas oitavas de final

MatériaMais Notícias

Na próxima terça-feira (28), às 10h (de Brasília), no Campo Desportivo “Cavanis”, o Sport enfrenta o Empoli em jogo válido pelas oitavas de final do Torneo Di Viareggio, competição internacional de base disputada na Itália. Em jogo único, a equipe rubro-negra precisa da vitória para seguir na competição. Caso conquiste a classificação, o Leão volta a campo na quinta-feira (30).

Além da participação no Torneo Di Viareggio, a gestão do presidente Yuri Romão já fechou acordo para a presença do clube recifense em outras competições internacionais da modalidade. O mandatário busca dar visibilidade e oferecer oportunidades para que as joias se desenvolvam.

RelacionadasFluminenseFluminense tem dois jogadores convocados para Seleção Brasileira sub-15Fluminense27/03/2023FlamengoGrupo definido: Flamengo tem prazo curto para ter reforços na LibertadoresFlamengo27/03/2023SantosOdair adota postura firme por permanência de Lucas Braga no SantosSantos27/03/2023

>Andreas Pereira registra encontro com Neymar e aumenta rumores sobre transferência

– O Sport volta a jogar um campeonato internacional nas categorias de base depois de 30 anos e acreditamos que seja uma maneira positiva de mostrar a qualidade dos nossos jogadores da modalidade. Desde que assumimos o clube, sempre nos empenhamos em valorizar e dar prioridade para o amadurecimento dos garotos – afirmou o mandatário.

Após perder na estreia, o Leão venceu o Rappresentativa por 3 a 1 e empatou com o Imolese no último duelo da primeira fase. Com quatro pontos conquistados, o rubro-negro ficou na segunda colocação do Grupo H e está entre os 16 melhores times do certame.

Após gol pelo Santos, Lucas Lima encerra jejum de mais de 500 dias sem marcar

MatériaMais Notícias

Na vitória do Santos por 2 a 0 contra o Botafogo-SP, Lucas Lima pôde celebrar mais que a vantagem para o jogo de volta. Autor do primeiro gol Alvinegro na partida, o meia-atacante encerrou a marca incômoda de 534 dias sem balançar as redes.

Antes de anotar no jogo da terceira fase da Copa do Brasil, o último gol marcado por Lucas foi feito durante sua passagem pelo Fortaleza, no dia 23 de outubro de 2021.

+ Confira uma lista de produtos do Santos com descontos de até 70% OFF na Centauro

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasSantosOdair Hellmann confirma chegada de reforços ao Santos e revela se estarão disponíveis na estreia do BrasileirãoSantos11/04/2023SantosATUAÇÕES: Lucas Lima marca primeiro gol em retorno e abre caminho para vitória do SantosSantos11/04/2023SantosVÍDEO: assista aos melhores momentos da vitória do Santos contra o Botafogo-SP na Copa do BrasilSantos11/04/2023

+ATUAÇÕES: Lucas Lima marca primeiro gol em retorno e abre caminho para vitória do Santos

– Muito feliz (pelo gol). Sem comentários esse momento. Sempre gosto de dar assistência. Mas vim para o jogo querendo fazer um gol e Deus me abençoou – declarou o jogador após quebrar o jejum.

Desde seu retorno ao Santos, o meia-atacante deu quatro assistências. Somando com o gol anotado e dividindo pelo número de jogos realizados, Lucas Lima tem uma média de 0,625 participações em gols pelo clube da Vila Belmiro.

Palmeiras x Água Santa: saiba onde assistir à final do Paulistão

MatériaMais Notícias

O Palmeiras enfrenta o Água Santa neste domingo (09), às 16h (de Brasília), no Allianz Parque, pela partida de volta da final do Campeonato Paulista.Na ida, no último domingo (02), o Verdão foi derrotado por 2 a 1 pelo time de Diadema, na Arena Barueri.

> Palmeiras inverteu desvantagem poucas vezes em finais do Paulistão; veja o histórico

A decisão será transmitida pela Record (TV aberta), Paulistão Play (streaming), Youtube (internet), Premiere (pay per view), e HBO Max (TV fechada).

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasPalmeirasPalmeiras x Santos: saiba onde assistir ao clássico pelo Brasileirão sub-20Palmeiras07/04/2023PalmeirasPalmeiras x Água Santa: mais de 40 mil ingressos vendidos para a final do PaulistãoPalmeiras07/04/2023PalmeirasPalmeiras tem mudanças de convocados para a Seleção Brasileira sub-20; veja as trocasPalmeiras07/04/2023

Além dos meios citados, os torcedores de Palmeiras e Água Santa poderão acompanhar o confronto por meio do tempo real do LANCE!.

A equipe comandada pelo técnico Abel Ferreira quer virar a chave após derrota na estreia da Libertadores na última quarta (05). O Alviverde precisa vencer por um gol de diferença para levar a disputa para os pênaltis ou por dois para se consagrar bicampeão estadual, evitando as penalidades. O time de Diadema tem a vantagem do empate.

>Guia Palmeiras: veja análise dos adversários, onde assistir e tudo sobre o Verdão na Libertadores

Veja mais informações sobre o jogo:

PALMEIRAS x ÁGUA SANTA

Local: Allianz Parque, em São Paulo (SP)
Data e hora:9/4/2023, às 16h (de Brasília)
Árbitro:Raphael Claus
Assistentes:Danilo Ricardo Simon Manis e Mauro André de Freitas
VAR: Marcio Henrique de Gois
Onde assistir:Record, Paulistão Play, Youtube, Premiere, HBO Max em tempo real no LANCE!

Internet se declara para Romero, do Corinthians: 'Eu te amo'

MatériaMais Notícias

Autor de dois gols no duelo diante do Botafogo-SP, Ángel Romero é o principal destaque do Corinthians na partida válida pela oitava rodada do Campeonato Paulista.

continua após a publicidade

Oportunista, o paraguaio aproveitou o rebote após defesa de pênalti de João Carlos e empurrou para o fundo da rede. Na segunda etapa, o atacante sobrou sozinho na pequena área e marcou o segundo do Timão na partida.

➡️ Tudo sobre o Timão agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso novo canal Lance! Corinthians

Nas redes sociais, torcedores do Corinthians reagiram e elogiaram a atuação de Romero. Confira alguns comentários da web.

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CorinthiansRomero

Moreeng believes van Niekerk 'will be ready' for T20 World Cup

Having recovered from a long-term ankle injury, she has met all of CSA’s fitness requirements except the 2km time trial

Firdose Moonda18-Jan-2023

Dane van Niekerk has not played international cricket since last January as she works to meet the fitness standard set by CSA•Getty Images

Dane van Niekerk remains in contention for South Africa’s T20 World Cup squad and will undergo a final fitness test on January 27 in a bid to prove her eligibility for selection.Since recovering from the broken ankle she sustained last January, which kept her out of the 50-over World Cup and the Commonwealth Games, van Niekerk has played at the Hundred and the WBBL, but has not played international cricket as she works to meet the fitness standard set by Cricket South Africa (CSA). She has been left out of the squad for the tri-series against India and West Indies, which starts on Thursday, but coach Hilton Moreeng is optimistic she will lead the team at the World Cup next month.Related

Lee: 'You're dropping me because of the way I look'

Dane van Niekerk left out of SA tri-series squad

“We believe she’ll be ready,” Moreeng said. “That’s why she has been given all the opportunity to make sure she is ready, so she can get through the fitness test and make sure she is part of the group. She was part of the camp and she trained with us. She is working hard to make sure she is in that squad.”ESPNcricinfo understands that van Niekerk’s fitness has improved drastically from where it was even before the injury, with one insider saying she is “the fittest she has been in five years.” She has lost 10kg since last year’s Hundred and has met all her markers except the 2km time trial. Female cricketers in South Africa are required to complete the run in 9 minutes and 30 seconds, while male cricketers must complete the distance in 8 minutes and 30 seconds. All players who hope to play for the national side must now meet this criteria, as well as pass a body composition test, although this is a rule that was only implemented in the last few years as CSA sought to be stricter on fitness.Last year, van Niekerk’s team-mate Lizelle Lee was dropped from the national team for failing her body composition test after her weight was deemed over the standard set for her. Lee retired in the aftermath and explained how she felt victimised and body-shamed at the time, as well as questioned why the standard was not more individualised.Sisanda Magala, the men’s white-ball bowler, asked the same question when he was left out of the national squad for failing to make his running times. He told The Cricket Monthly that he hoped his performances, as the leading bowler in the domestic one-day competition made up for the 12 seconds he fell short by on the running trial, but they did not. He has since passed the test and was, on Tuesday, named in South Africa’s ODI squad to play England later this month.Van Niekerk has lost 10kg since last year’s Hundred and has met all her markers except the 2km time trial•ICC via Getty

Considering Lee and Magala’s cases, Moreeng was asked if the rigid application of the standards was fair, and said he believed their uniformity made them so. “We believe they are fair. Every member of the squad knows what is required, even at the domestic level. It’s where we are as a team and as a country, it’s the direction we are moving to. It’s to make sure each and every player, as far as the minimum standards are concerned, meets them,” he said. “It’s criteria that have been designed and given to players all around the country. It’s one of those that tests your strength and aerobic side of things to make sure players will be able to deal with whatever demands the game gives them on a daily basis. It’s all to make sure the player has the best possible time to perform.”But Moreeng conceded that even without passing the running test, van Niekerk remained crucial to South Africa’s chances of success. “She is a quality cricketer,” he said. “Any environment will be blessed to have her.”And those close to van Niekerk say she is fully committed to doing everything she can to ensure she passes the test and is in South Africa’s squad and sees playing at this World Cup as the fulfillment of a dream.South Africa have set themselves a goal of qualifying for the final of their home World Cup, after reaching the semi-finals in 2014 and 2020.

Southee, Tickner wrap up innings victory as New Zealand sweep series 2-0

Rajitha’s lower-order resistance not enough for Sri Lanka to make New Zealand bat again

Madushka Balasuriya20-Mar-2023

Tim Southee led New Zealand to a 2-0 series win•Getty Images

It took until the final thirty minutes of the final session on the fourth day, and a marathon 142 overs in the field – over 200 if you count the overs in the first innings Sri Lanka followed on from – but New Zealand eventually broke through Sri Lanka’s defiant rearguard to secure an innings-and-58-run victory in the second Test at Wellington, and with it a deserved 2-0 series win.Henry Nicholls was Player of the Match for his unbeaten double-hundred, while Kane Williamson was named the Player of the Series for his match-winning century in the first Test and then his game-defining double-ton in the second. And if you ever needed a marker for New Zealand’s dominance in Wellington, just take in the fact that Sri Lanka’s total of 358 in their second innings was still five runs short of the mammoth 363-run stand between Williamson and Nicholls.But shifting from the exemplary to the inexplicable, the final day of this hard-fought series was marked by batting of a much poorer variety. Indeed, if day three consisted of rookie mistakes, then day four could only be categorised as an extended amateur hour, with it eventually left to Kasun Rajitha and his fellow tailenders to attempt to drag the game to an improbable day five.Rajitha, who was the last man dismissed, eventually lasted 148 minutes out in the middle, during which he faced a 110 deliveries – longer than any of Sri Lanka’s other batters had fared barring Dhananjaya de Silva.Now this is not necessarily to say that Sri Lanka batted poorly, in fact for large segments of the day some of the strokeplay on display was some of the best seen across this Test, however rarely if ever would a string of such similarly soft dismissals have ever been seen across a single innings.Of the nine wickets to fall in the day, five fell to the short ball – that number rises to six if you count Dimuth Karunaratne the previous evening. Of those, only Prabath Jayasuriya, a certified tailender, could probably be excused for this indiscretion, top-edging a long hop from Michael Bracewell.Kusal Mendis, who had started the day unbeaten on 50, and had perhaps been harbouring hopes of another miracle at the Basin Reserve alongside his partner Angelo Mathews, was the first to go falling in the first over of the day. A short ball, sitting up, slapped straight to midwicket.Dhananjaya de Silva fell agonisingly short of a first Test century in New Zealand•Getty Images

Two overs later, Mathews would follow his partner’s cue, this pull shot even more egregiously ill-judged. With New Zealand having lined up three men – at short leg, square leg, and deep square leg – just for the short ball that Blair Tickner would deliver tirelessly over the day, Mathews would conspire to pull it straight to the second of those men.At 116 for 4, and just three recognised batters left, Sri Lanka and those watching on at the stadium and at home were likely fearing the worst. And New Zealand were probably eyeing an early lunch, or at the very least an extended tea break.Unsurprisingly, having succeeded twice with the short ball, New Zealand would continue to pepper the pair of Dinesh Chandimal and Dhananjaya with similar. But if you thought the lack of success in pulling thus far would have put these two off the notion, think again.That said, the most incredible aspect of this period was that this actually worked in Sri Lanka’s favour. With the wicket flattening out, anything fuller in length was driven straight and through the covers with little fuss. And so it was left to Tickner and co. to continuously try Sri Lanka’s patience with the shorter stuff. Over the course of their 126-run stand, the pair would utilise it liberally – sometimes crunching it in front of square, other times getting it away fine, less controlled but safe.Of the two, Dhananjaya had looked the more susceptible to the short ball, which was what made it even more jarring when Chandimal top-edged a short one to fine leg just two minutes before lunch.It was a body blow that Sri Lanka seemed ill-equipped to recover from, however after the break Nishan Madushka and Dhananjaya defied expectations. With the New Zealand bowlers gradually tiring and the wind picking up in force, the pair were able navigate the short stuff, punish anything full and generally turn over the strike with relative ease.Sure, there was the odd ball that beat the edge, but for the most part theirs was an untroubled partnership – right up until it wasn’t that is, as Madushka became the latest to succumb to a short ball, this one dragged from outside off straight to a catching midwicket, a fielder that had been a mainstay for most of the day. And that too, on the stroke of tea.Dhananjaya was then left to bat with the tail, but he wouldn’t manage that for long, toe-ending a premeditated scoop to short leg off Michael Bracewell, to fall an agonising two runs short a first Test century in New Zealand.The writing was on the wall at that point, or so the hosts would have hoped, but alongside Rajitha, Sri Lanka’s tail would hold on for longer than anyone expected. While they would burn through three reviews in the process, such was their desperation, it was always a tall ask for such a long tail to hang about for as long as it did. Though their efforts are certainly something the rest of Sri Lanka’s batters would do well to take note of.

Chris Jordan joins Mumbai Indians for remainder of IPL 2023

England seamer has previous IPL experience with CSK, RCB, SRH and KXIP

ESPNcricinfo staff30-Apr-2023 • Updated on 09-May-2023

Chris Jordan remained unsold at the IPL 2023 auction held in December last year•Getty Images

England fast bowler Chris Jordan has joined Mumbai Indians as a replacement player for the remainder of IPL 2023.Jordan went unsold at a base price of INR 2 crore at the auction that was held in December last year, but has previous IPL experience with Royal Challengers Bangalore, Sunrisers Hyderabad, Punjab Kings and Chennai Super Kings.Related

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Riley Meredith replaces injured Jhye Richardson at Mumbai Indians

Jhye Richardson out of IPL 2023, likely to miss Ashes too

Archer left IPL to visit elbow specialist in Belgium

The 34-year-old has picked up 27 IPL wickets in 28 innings at an average of 30.85 and an economy of 9.32. Jordan last played in the IPL in 2022 for Super Kings, where he managed two wickets in four outings.Mumbai have struggled with their international fast bowlers this season with Jasprit Bumrah unavailable, Jhye Richardson ruled out and Jofra Archer recently returning from Belgium after meeting an elbow specialist. While Riley Meredith replaced Richardson, it is not yet known who Jordan has replaced in the Mumbai camp.*Jordan has recent T20 experience with a season with eventual champions Gulf Giants at the ILT20 tournament in February. He finished the tournament as the leading wicket-taker, picking 20 wickets in ten innings, averaging 13.80. He also played three T20Is against Bangladesh last month.Archer is expected to play for Mumbai on Sunday evening against Rajasthan Royals, with the side hoping to move up from ninth on the IPL points table.*

McCullum: Bairstow dismissal will 'galvanise' England in Ashes comeback bid

England coach says controversial stumping call will affect spirit series is played in

Vithushan Ehantharajah03-Jul-20232:08

Has the Bairstow dismissal been blown out of proportion?

Brendon McCullum has warned Australia that Alex Carey’s controversial stumping of Jonny Bairstow at Lords will see the remainder of the series play out less amicably against a galvanised England team.The incident has dominated the news cycle following Australia’s 43-run victory in the second Test at Lord’s, which gave them a 2-0 lead over England. With the third Test starting on Thursday, captain Ben Stokes said he expected the ill-feeling to spill over into Headingley, a ground famed for its febrile atmosphere.It was here Stokes produced his second epic of the 2019 summer, drawing England level against Australia with 135 not out. It was an innings he almost replicated at Lord’s when he channelled the controversy to strike 155, with nine sixes and as many fours.Related

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Cummins: England should focus on themselves, and not spirit of cricket

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Ollie Pope ruled out for rest of Ashes following shoulder dislocation

James Anderson: Don't blame my age for off-colour Ashes display

What was originally pegged as an amicable series between the two teams has now developed an edge. On Monday, UK prime minister Rishi Sunak stepped in, adding his voice to those admonishing the tourists for not abiding by the spirit of cricket.While those not involved have made the loudest noises away from the field, McCullum stated the rift between English and Australian players would lead to a spikier series. He also reiterated Stokes’ view that England would have withdrawn the appeal if the shoe were on the other foot.”I imagine it will affect it, I think it has to,” said McCullum of the spirt in which the remaining three Tests will be played . “In the end, they made a play, they’ve got to live with that. We would have made a different play, but that’s life.”From our point of view, we believe that we can still come back in this series, and that’s where our focus has got to be. What I will say is it’s a galvanised unit up there [the England dressing-room] and we saw the fight from the skipper, Broady [Stuart Broad] and the boys at the end there as well, which shows how much this means to the side. We’ll lick our wounds and try and come back and rectify things.”In the end, Australia won the Test match and fair play to them. It’s just a shame that when you’ve got millions of people all around the world, and you’ve got a full house at Lord’s, and you’ve everyone’s eyeballs on this series, that for the next couple of days probably the most talked about aspect is going to be that [the dismissal] and that’s disappointing.”McCullum acknowledged his own history with acts not too dissimilar to Carey’s. Back in 2006, during the second innings of the first Test against Sri Lanka, the former New Zealand wicketkeeper ran out Muttiah Muaralitharan after he had left his crease to celebrate team-mate Kumar Sangakkara’s hundred after completing a single. McCullum addressed the incident in a 2016 Cowdrey Lecture at Lord’s, stating he would not have affected the dismissal if he could “turn back time”. He anticipates it will have an effect on Australia.Brendon McCullum said Australia’s dismissal of Jonny Bairstow would colour the rest of the series•PA Images via Getty Images

“Obviously I’ve made an apology to Murali in my Cowdrey Lecture,” McCullum said. “When I was a younger man, I didn’t quite understand the significance of what the game and the spirit of the game means to the game. It’s what the defining point of the game is compared to others, and it’s only with the benefit of time and experience that we’re able to learn that and cherish it. In time, we’ll see, but I get the feeling that it might have an effect on them.”Not since Don Bradman’s Australia in the 1936-37 series has a team overturned a 2-0 deficit and go on to win the Ashes. England can take heart from how close the two matches have been, particularly the opener at Edgbaston, which Australia won by two wickets. Should the hosts turn the tables, it would undoubtedly be their most memorable win of this rivalry.Naturally, McCullum has faith in his charges to do the remarkable, provided they learn from mistakes in pressure situations. The mood among the players remains positive, along with a palpable optimism they can do something spectacular.”3-2 has a nice ring to it,” McCullum said. “We’ve got to polish up a couple of the areas where the game has sat on a knife-edge and we haven’t been able to grab it. We knew coming into this series it was going to be tight and there was going to be those moments. If we can do that, there’s no reason why we can’t bounce back. Morale is high and we’ve played some good cricket amongst things as well, and we look forward to the opportunity.”We always say that if we are winning and things are going great, you don’t want to get too high, and if we are losing you don’t want to get too low either. We are on a path to where we want to get to and want to stick to that. Because a) it’s fun, and b) I think it gives us our best chance. Albeit we are 2-0 down at the moment, I think it gives us our best chance of winning the series.”

Vishwa, Kamindu, de Silva leave Sri Lanka on brink of big win

Bangladesh’s top-order imploded late in the day when beginning their chase of 511

Andrew Fidel Fernando24-Mar-2024

Vishwa Fernando took three wickets in the last hour•AFP/Getty Images

Bangladesh 188 and 43 for 5 (Vishwa 3-13) need another 464 runs to beat Sri Lanka 280 and 418 (Kamindu 164, de Silva 108, Miraz 4-74)Bangladesh nosedived in the dying moments of day three in Sylhet, losing five wickets for 43 runs in 13 overs before stumps. The slump though came when Bangladesh were anyway in a dire situation. Earlier in the day, Kamindu Mendis had struck 164 and Dhananjaya de Silva had also completed his second hundred of the match, leaving the hosts with an improbable 511 target to chase.Still, their dramatic collapse has left Sri Lanka needing just five wickets in two scheduled days of play. There is some rain forecast for Monday afternoon, but Sylhet’s weather otherwise looks conducive for cricket. Sri Lanka will feel they are on the brink of a rollicking victory.Sri Lanka’s quicks delivered testing lines on a pitch that still rewarded high-quality seam bowling. Vishwa Fernando got movement through the air, and Lahiru Kumara and Kasun Rajitha gained zip off the surface. Vishwa bowled some especially good balls, particularly to Mahmudul Hasan Joy, whom he trapped in front in the first over with a ball that swung late, straightened, and would have hit leg stump, as well as to Shahadat Hossain, who played and missed his first two balls and edged the third one behind.All up, Vishwa’s take for the day was 3 for 13 from his seven overs. Rajitha and Kumara took a wicket apiece.But there was indiscipline from Bangladesh too. Captain Najmul Hossain Shanto was out fifth ball, throwing his bat at a full delivery that had pitched more than half-a-metre wide of off stump. Then, the last wicket to fall was that of Litton Das, who having kept wicket all day, ran down the track first ball he faced, and played a giant hoick across the line to Kumara. Predictably, he top-edged it, and was caught metres from the pitch by the incoming cover fielder.Before Bangladesh’s batting imploded, however, Sri Lanka’s lower middle order had thrived yet again. De Silva and Kamindu had rescued Sri Lanka from 57 for 5 in the first innings with a 202-run stand. Though the team was better-placed on this occasion – 222 runs ahead with four wickets in hand – their 173-run partnership on Sunday nevertheless transformed the game’s outlook, turning Sri Lanka’s good position into an utterly dominant one.Although Kamindu was somewhat circumspect to begin with, scoring just five off his first 20 balls, both batters progressed smoothly, after coming together in the third over of the day (Khaled Ahmed had removed nightwatcher Vishwa with a sharp bouncer). With the ball almost 40 overs old, Bangladesh’s quicks were not getting much lateral movement. And the spinners were not getting purchase off the wicket.Although the pitch had plenty of pace and bounce still, it had eased to some extent, and both de Silva and Kamindu were quick to spot the length, and played the pull with particular ease. Their scoring areas were mostly square of the wicket with only the occasional boundary coming down the ground.They attacked in bursts too, to really impose themselves on the opposition, In an eight-over period starting with the 47th of the innings, the pair clattered 56 runs. Through that passage, Kamindu collected consecutive boundaries off Nahid Rana, before de Silva flat-batted the same bowler past mid on two balls later. Then, next over, de Silva clobbered Mehidy Hasan’s offspin for two slog-swept sixes. Bangladesh’s attack had been rendered flat, and they never really recovered.The second and third sessions saw Sri Lanka picking their way through milestones. De Silva got to his 12th career century off the 164th ball he faced, though he was out soon after for 108. Kamindu completed his second Test ton off the 171st ball, then later brought up 150 with a slogged six over long on off the bowling of Taijul Islam. He was the last Sri Lanka batter to fall, with de Silva not willing to declare, perhaps because there was so much time left in the game. By the time he holed out, Kamindu had struck six sixes.Bangladesh had had some chances, but these came fairly late in these batters’ innings. De Silva should have been out on 94 when he played at a Mehidy delivery that ended up in the hands of the wicketkeeper Litton. But neither keeper nor bowler spotted that de Silva had gloved the ball, and failed to appeal. Kamindu was also dropped by Litton (a tough chance), off Mehidy, on 133. The easiest chance was shelled by Rana running back from midwicket, when de Silva had top-edged a pull off Shoriful Islam.Of Bangladesh’s bowlers, Rana was by far the most expensive, having struggled for line throughout the day. He leaked 128 off his 20 overs. Mehidy was the most successful, claiming 4 for 74 from his 29 overs.

Gillespie appointed Pakistan men's Test coach, Kirsten named white-ball coach

Azhar Mahmood, who had been appointed on a temporary basis for the New Zealand series, will continue as the assistant coach in all formats

Danyal Rasool28-Apr-2024

Gary Kirsten is Pakistan’s new white-ball coach•Hindustan Times/Getty Images

Jason Gillespie, the former Australian fast bowler, has been announced as Pakistan’s new Test coach, while former South African batter Gary Kirsten has been named their white-ball coach. Azhar Mahmood, who had been appointed on a temporary basis for the New Zealand series, will continue as the assistant coach in all formats.The three coaches have been appointed on two-year contracts following a recruitment process.The position of the head coach had been vacant since Grant Bradburn, who took over from Saqlain Mushtaq last year, quit in January to join Glamorgan as head coach. The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) had approached other high-profile names, including Shane Watson, who ultimately pulled out of the race.Kirsten is expected to take over from the England tour, which will feature a four-match T20I series starting on May 22 in Leeds. The last game of the series will be on May 30 before the team will fly out to the USA and the Caribbean for the T20 World Cup. Gillespie’s first assignment will be the Bangladesh series in August, a two-Test series.The announcements were made by PCB chairman Mohsin Naqvi at a press conference in Lahore.”Their stellar track records precede them, and I warmly welcome them to the Pakistan cricket family,” Naqvi said of Kirsten and Gillespie.”Jason’s coaching career has been marked by success both at the domestic and international levels, with a focus on player development and achieving excellence in team performance. Gary’s coaching career has been marked by his ability to instill a winning mentality, develop young talent, and achieve success at the highest levels of the game, making him one of the most respected and sought-after coaches in cricket.”In this background, I have every confidence that their expertise will guide our players to reach new heights, aligning with their inherent talent and the expectations of our passionate fans. These high-quality appointments also present a remarkable opportunity for our players to glean insights from these seasoned professionals, refining their skills and fortifying their cricketing acumen.”The PCB is unwavering in its commitment to furnish the national team with top-tier resources and facilities, fostering an environment conducive to unlocking their full potential and consistently delivering stellar performances.”Gillespie has held various coaching roles around the world, though he has never been head coach of an international Test side. He enjoyed considerable success as head coach of Yorkshire, where they were promoted from Division Two in his first season and went on to win titles in 2014 and 2015. He has also taken up T20 coaching roles with Kings XI Punjab and Adelaide Strikers, as well as Sussex and South Australia.Kirsten’s most famous coaching achievement came as head coach of India, where he worked from 2008-11, and won the 2011 ODI World Cup. He was head coach of South Africa for the two years that followed, and is currently Gujarat Titans’ batting coach.Crucially, Naqvi said that Kirsten and Gillespie will be with the Pakistan side for the entire length of their contracts instead of flying in for specific tours and series. In the past, this has been a sticking point for overseas coaches, with PCB’s negotiations with Watson thought to include clauses that permitted him to be away from Pakistan when the white-ball side wasn’t in action. Naqvi also said he hoped to have Gillespie involved with domestic red-ball cricket, instead of focusing solely on the Test side.That the PCB have eventually managed to land two of the highest profile coaching names – the first time Pakistan have appointed split coaches for different formats – has internally been viewed as a significant win for the board at a time of considerable tumult. While the PCB did not declare the details of their financial agreements, it is believed Gillespie and Kirsten’s recompense will be higher than head coaches have ever been paid in Pakistan cricket before. This is both a reflection of the challenges of attracting bigger names to commit full-time to Pakistan cricket, as well as the bolstered financial strength of the PCB thanks to ICC revenue, which rose from an $16 million to $34 million in the current rights cycle.

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