Newcastle set to sign Jordan Hackett

A big claim has emerged regarding Newcastle United’s pursuit of Jordan Hackett in the summer transfer window… 

What’s the talk?

Daily Mail reporter Craig Hope has revealed that the Magpies are set to sign the young defender on a permanent basis this week. The full-back left fellow Premier League side Tottenham, and Dan Ashworth has now moved swiftly to bring him over to Tyneside.

Hope tweeted: “Newcastle will sign Jordan Hackett from Spurs on July 1. The 18-year-old left-back has represented England at youth level.”

Scott Wilson added to this by stating that “he’ll be part of the academy group and go into the club’s Under-21s team…”

Eddie Howe will be delighted

The Toon head coach will surely be delighted by this news, as it represents another step towards building a youth team which can thrive at senior level in the future.

In their report on the deal, The Sun have stated that the full-back is ‘highly-rated’ and that he has impressed whilst playing for England at various youth levels in recent years. He played 34 times for Tottenham at under-18 level and has been called up by his country for the under-15s, 16s, 17s and 18s.

The evidence indicates that he is a promising young player with the potential to make it as a professional in the future. Newcastle are attempting to bolster their academy setup by snapping up youngsters, as it can save them millions in the years to come.

One youth team player breaking through into the first-team stops the Magpies from needing to splash out eight-figure transfer fees on a player in that position, which is why bringing in these starlets is a worthwhile gamble to take.

Howe will be delighted by the prospect of developing young gems and helping them grow into being stars in the Premier League in the years to come.

Whilst he will want ready-made players, as illustrated by the signings of Nick Pope, Matt Targett and Sven Botman, he will also be keen to show off his coaching ability by offering academy prospects a pathway into his starting XI, helping them to fulfill their potential.

Hackett is a player who seemingly has the potential to make that step in the future, and that is why Howe will be buzzing with the club’s move to sign him this week.

AND in other news, Howe can finally axe £100k-p/w NUFC flop by signing 147-goal gem who “has everything”…

Everton: Moshiri plotting move for Cisse

Everton have been linked with a number of players already this summer and now a transfer target from the past has resurfaced as a potential signing that the club will explore again.

What’s the latest?

Greek football journalist Giannis Chorianopoulos has claimed that Everton are interested in signing Pape Abou Cisse this summer.

Chorianopoulos simply tweeted: “Everton are interested in Olympiacos CB Pape Abou Cissé.”

Everton were previously linked to the Olympiacos defender in January.

Lampard needs him badly

There is no doubt that Frank Lampard desperately needs to improve the back-line at Everton following a disappointing season for the Toffees that left the side in a relegation scrap until the penultimate game of the season.

The defenders collectively earned a lot of criticism for their performances in the Premier League with Jamie Carragher branding them a “Championship back four” after their humiliating 5-0 defeat to Tottenham Hotspur last season.

With that being said, signing new defenders to bolster and add quality to the back four will be a priority with James Tarkowski expected to be announced when his contract expires at Burnley next week.

Cisse has impressed over 132 appearances for Olympiacos, scoring sixteen goals and bagging two assists over the last five years from centre-back, as well as showing off his talent in Ligue One whilst on a six-month loan at Saint-Etienne.

Over 14 appearances for the French side, the six-foot-six monster made an average of 1.1 tackles, 1.9 interceptions and an astonishing 6.1 clearances per game, as well as winning the large majority of his duels combined (72%) – proving that he has a number of phenomenal defensive attributes.

Lampard could form a brick wall duo if he can complete the signing of the Senegalese defender to join the Tarkowski in his new-look back four next season and the partnership between the pair could seriously improve the fortunes of the Toffees in the Premier League.

Ultimately, Moshiri could secure a great piece of business if he can get a deal over the line for Cisse this summer alongside the signing of Tarkowski, as it would add considerable depth to the defence in the squad giving Lampard quality options to deploy in his team.

AND in other news: Contact made: Everton plot move for “quick” £15m “special talent”, Frank will love him

Leeds can land the new Tevez in Castellanos

According to a number of recent reports, Leeds United are interested in a deal to bring New York City FC centre-forward, Valentin Castellanos, to Elland Road in the summer transfer window.

Indeed, 90min reported last week that Leeds officials – including Victor Orta and Angus Kinnear – were spotted in the United States, with the Whites believed to be in talks with the Major League Soccer side regarding a deal for the 23-year-old striker.

However, further reports have claimed that West Ham United are also extremely interested in the former Argentina U23 international, with the Hammers believed to be willing to meet the forward’s £12.8m asking price this summer.

The next Carlos Tevez

Considering how exciting a talent Castellanos evidently is, in addition to the signing of a new centre-forward reported to be one of Leeds’ priorities in the summer transfer window, it is easy to see why the Kinnear would be keen on a move for the NYCFC starlet.

Indeed, over his 35 MLS appearances last season, the £10.8m-rated forward was in breathtaking form for Ronny Deila’s side, scoring 22 goals, registering eight assists and creating eight big chances for his teammates, as well as taking an average of 4.1 shots, making 1.1 key passes and completing 0.9 dribbles per game.

These returns saw the 23-year-old who Conor McGilligan dubbed both “exceptional” and an “absolutely perfect” fit for Jesse Marsch earn a quite remarkable seasonal SofaScore match rating of 7.28, ranking him not only as his club’s second-best performer in the league but also as the 21st-best player in the division as a whole.

[snack-amp-story url= “https://www.footballfancast.com/web-stories/read-the-latest-leeds-united-news-transfer-rumours-gossip-and-much-more-2″ title=”Read the latest Leeds news, transfer rumours and more!”]

It has been a similar story over his 11 league outings in 2022, with the £3.5k-per-week striker having already bagged seven goals, registered one assist and created four big chances, with these metrics seeing the youngster average an even more astonishing SofaScore match rating of 7.43.

As such, considering his clear eye for goal, his ability to create and the fact he hails from Argentina, it is easy to see why Castellanos has been compared to Carlos Tevez – the 38-year-old forward who scored 84 goals and provided 41 assists over 202 Premier League appearances for West Ham, Manchester City and Manchester United.

Indeed, should Kinnear manage to be able to tie up a deal for the NYCFC sensation this summer, and the former Montevideo starlet goes on to continue his remarkable rise at Elland Road, the Whites’ managing director could very well have unearthed the next Tevez – something that is sure to be an extremely exciting prospect for both Marsch and Leeds supporters alike.

AND in other news: “Final details…”: Romano drops huge transfer update, Leeds supporters will be gutted

Rangers: Aaron Ramsey drops transfer teaser

A teasing Rangers transfer claim has emerged ahead of the summer transfer window at Ibrox…

What’s the talk?

Gers midfielder Aaron Ramsey has confirmed that talks will take place later this month to determine what he will be doing next season.

He is currently on loan to the Ibrox giants and has two more games left to play – in the Europa League and Scottish Cup finals – before that loan spell comes to an end.

As quoted by Rangers Review, when asked about a permanent move to Glasgow, Ramsey said: “That’s to be decided at the end of the season, there is no update on that yet.

“I’m just looking forward to the final few weeks here and hopefully making it a very memorable experience for me.

“I’m sure there will be conversations to be had after the season is finished but right now I’m just focused on trying to win these two competitions with Rangers.”

Gio van Bronckhorst will love it

The Gers head coach will surely love this tease from Ramsey, as the prospect of signing him permanently is an exciting one for the Dutch head coach.

Upon the Welshsman’s arrival at Ibrox in January, sporting director Ross Wilson outlined why it was an excellent signing for the club, saying: “This is a really exciting signing for both Rangers and Aaron. As soon as I was made aware of the opportunity we had to bring Aaron to Rangers around a week ago, we have worked really hard to secure his signature.

“Not only is Aaron a world-class player who will play a key role in our team, his level of ability and professional standards will be an inspiration to our existing players.”

When fit, the 31-year-old has showcased his quality in the Premiership in recent months as he averaged a SofaScore rating of 6.93. The Welshman provided two goals and one assist in seven league outings as he showed glimpses of the attacking threat that he can offer from out wide and in the middle of the park.

Ramsey would also be a hugely important member of the squad at Ibrox next season if the club win the Europa League this Wednesday.

They would automatically qualify for the Champions League with victory in Seville, and the ex-Arsenal man has plenty of experience in that competition, playing in it for both the Gunners and Juventus throughout his career as he has racked up 57 appearances in Europe’s premier club tournament.

Ramsey’s knowledge of the Champions League and the quality he has shown in the Premiership are two reasons why Van Bronckhorst will be excited and delighted by the prospect of bringing him back for a second spell at Rangers next season.

AND in other news, Van Bronckhorst must finally unleash “powerful” 19 y/o Rangers gem who “took his chance” in 2022…

Lucas Digne could be an Aston Villa mistake

Aston Villa have been keen on splashing the cash in recent years, allowing Dean Smith and now Steven Gerrard to stamp their mark on the side in an attempt to push for European football.

Whilst it is still early days in the latter’s managerial career, it seems like he has already dropped the ball when he swooped for wantaway full-back Lucas Digne.

Signing him from Everton, a club in disarray at the time, it seemed like they had pulled off a massive coup on one of the league’s most creative defenders.

During the 2018/19 season, he created more chances (71) than any other defender in the Premier League.

It, therefore, makes his start to life at Villa Park all the more underwhelming, as his six-month stint last season disappointed almost as much as his start to this campaign.

Purchased for £25m too and handed astronomical wages of £163k-per-week for a 29-year-old, it was a risk Gerrard was clearly willing to take to acquire a forward-thinking left-back to further implement his system.

All in all, given his £8.5m per year salary, after this season he will have cost NSWE a total of £36.75m

During his eight-month (35 week) period at the club so far, he has just one goal and four assists in 24 games.

Compared with his last full season with the Toffees, during the 2020/21 season, he assisted seven times in 30 games, a far better return.

His average SofaScore rating of 6.81 this season is also indicative of an underperforming player, who offers little defensively if he is not going forward.

With zero assists this season in their opening seven league fixtures, the Frenchman is dribbled past 0.9 times per game whilst only winning possession 0.6 times.

His defensive deficiencies could be overlooked at Goodison Park due to his fantastic offensive output, but with that having dried up for Aston Villa, they are left with a shell of the player they intended to buy.

There is still time for him to come good for Gerrard, but his side’s faltering start to the season means it might be harder than just flipping a switch. It will take hard work and some tough words, which is similar to what Rafa Benitez used to drive him out of Merseyside.

Australia find Ashes gold at end of pace rainbow

How did Josh Hazlewood, James Pattinson and Pat Cummins bowl together for the first time on the most important day of the 2019 Ashes series?

Daniel Brettig in Leeds23-Aug-2019How did Josh Hazlewood, James Pattinson and Pat Cummins bowl together for the first time on the most important day of the 2019 Ashes series? How did they put together the collection of spells that razed England for 67 and in doing so put one Australian hand on the urn in this part of the world for the first time in 18 years?Hazlewood debuted for Australia first, in June 2010. It was an ODI against England in Southampton, and the home side won. ESPNcricinfo’s commentary recorded the moment: “Ah, time for a bowling change and it’s Australia’s new Glenn McGrath, apparently – Josh Hazlewood.” His first over drew two boundaries, but he soon had a first international wicket, Craig Kieswetter. In a manner that will not surprise anyone who saw him at Headingley nine year later, it came through a tight line, a bit of seam movement and a gap between bat and pad.Pattinson debuted for Australia next, in April 2011. He had already toured once, to India the previous year, and was to be called in as part of the bowling attack for an ODI tour of Bangladesh that served as the start of Michael Clarke’s captaincy. Fast and straight, he had a similar start to Hazlewood, bowling seven overs and claiming one wicket. In a manner that will not surprise anyone who saw him at Headingley eight years later, it came with speed, bounce, a full length tempting a drive, and an edge behind the stumps.Cummins debuted for Australia last, in October 2011. Only 18 at the time, he had been rushed in on the strength of half a season of Sheffield Shield cricket for New South Wales and the undeniable speed and intelligence of his bowling even as a teenager. Unlike the other two, Cummins was thrust straight into a Test match on his first tour, and rewarded the selectors by proving the match-winner against South Africa at the Wanderers. In a manner that will not surprise anyone who saw him at Headingley eight years later, it came through speed, bounce and an edge into the Australian slips cordon.Back then, it did not seem as though much time would pass until all three of Hazlewood, Pattinson and Cummins would bowl together for Australia. Injuries would happen, sure, and so would the whims of selectors, coaches and national captains, but they looked young, strong and keen. In fact, the aforementioned injuries, and Cricket Australia’s attempts to manage them, would serve to keep the trio away from each other right up until the selection of this Ashes squad.Pat Cummins is mobbed by his team-mates after taking his maiden Test wicket•Getty ImagesEven then, their selection together was delayed until Leeds by the sort of careful management of resources that has characterised this Ashes campaign. All had to go through plenty of individual battles to get their bodies ready for the rigours of Test matches, and playing more than a couple of them at a time between major back, side or foot injuries.Hazlewood waited nearly five years between his international debut in 2010 and his first Test in 2014. Pattinson played four in a row in 2011-12 but then suffered a litany of back problems in particular that very nearly ended his career. Certainly the New Zealand surgeon Grahame Inglis, who had worked wonders for the likes of Shane Bond and Matt Henry with spinal surgery, initially thought Pattinson’s back was too far gone for his remedial work. As for Cummins, he spent six years between his first Test and his second, at times leaving his Johannesburg debut to feel more mythical than real.”It is the first time Cummins, Pattinson and myself have played in the same team so it was pretty exciting in the morning,” Hazlewood said. “It’s been in the pipeline for quite a while but never actually happened. That added an element to it this morning as well and we all did our roles. It’s quite a good mix.”We have played against each other at certain times, but Patty is a bit younger. I have played against Patto Under-17s Under-19s but that was the first time. The way Cummins is bowling is pretty special at the moment. He is taking wickets with the new and old ball, doesn’t matter about the wicket. He is doing his business up front or later in the innings. Jimmy is always at the batsmen, he can take wickets in clumps, he is awesome to have in your team, and brings that energy to the team. I felt pretty happy with them bowling up the other end.”So much has happened in the time it took for the three to play a Test together. Australia has had Ricky Ponting, Michael Clarke, Shane Watson, Steven Smith and Tim Paine as Test captains, major reviews of team performance and Cricket Australia’s culture, major scandals in India and South Africa, the shattering loss of Phillip Hughes in November 2014, a World Cup win at home, and three barren Ashes series in 2010-11, 2013 and 2015 in between home triumphs in 2013-14 and 2017-18.But there was always a hope, and a plan, for them to be united in England for the Ashes this year. Ever since a stronger Australian side got their plans and attitudes hopelessly wrong in 2015 to lose 3-2, the intention was to bring a group of bowlers together with the methods and the physical stamina to do rather better. Hazlewood had been part of that campaign on the field and so knew what needed to change. Namely, he had to concentrate on seam and accuracy, not swing out of the hand on a floating length, while also being in the peak of physical condition.

A blueprint devised to succeed overseas had its culmination in conditions so oddly familiar

Cummins had been running drinks on that tour, having been called in as a replacement for the injury-enforced retirement of Ryan Harris. He was duly given a glimpse of Ashes combat in England, and was typically attentive to its lessons. When Cummins did return to Tests in India and Bangladesh in 2017, he quickly demonstrated the fact he had added physical maturity and unstinting accuracy to his natural pace and trajectory. He was no longer, in the words of one of his many handlers, a “Ferrari engine in a Toyota chassis”.Pattinson toured England as far back as 2012 and 2013, taking from these experiences plenty of knowledge about his own body as much as the prevailing conditions. Ever eager to play for Australia at every opportunity back then, he gradually grew a sense of understanding and self-knowledge that gave him the strength to not only decline that 2017 tour of India that Cummins went on, but also to speak firmly with the coach Justin Langer on this tour about needing to be carefully managed. In doing so, he brought Victorian independence of mind, not infrequently a source of annoyance for CA centralists, to timely use.That, of course, is the other part of the story. The time that Hazlewood, Pattinson and Cummins took to bowl together in a Test match was also the time of CA’s endless debate about fast-bowler management. Whatever the whys and wherefores, this conversation helped to bring Australia’s leading cricketers to a point where the careful consideration of physical condition and bowling combinations could be more advanced than simply, “are you in our best four bowlers and are you fit to play?”Paine has spoken of this as a process of selling the concept to the bowlers, not least Mitchell Starc, who is as much a part of this bowling crop as Cummins, Pattinson and Hazlewood but has found himself restricted to net bowling because of the prevailing conditions. It’s the same conversation that brought one final, fleeting delay to the union seen at Headingley, as Hazlewood missed the first Test because he was still building up his workload and then Pattinson the second because he was still a little stiff and sore from Edgbaston.James Pattinson was fired up after dismissing Ben Stokes•Getty ImagesAt the end of day one, England having pushed past the Australians for 179 thanks to more of the singular brilliance of Jofra Archer, this whole long saga looked momentarily as though it might have come to nought. One of history’s many lessons is that nothing is ever guaranteed, no matter how much effort has gone into the planning. But in the course of 27.5 overs, 26.5 of them bowled by Hazlewood, Pattinson and Cummins, the fruits of near enough to a decade were seen in vivid definition.The precision of Hazlewood, drawing edges out of Jason Roy, Joe Root and Jonny Bairstow. The hostility of Cummins, hitting Rory Burns on the body and then bouncing him out, then doing similar to Chris Woakes and Archer. And the speed and aggression of Pattinson – has any team ever boasted a better third seamer? – provoking edges from Ben Stokes and Joe Denly after they had been probed and tested by the other members of the trio. It was brutal, it was gripping, it was far, far too much for England.There was some happenstance about it all, namely in the state of the Headingley pitch. Having worked so hard to groove their games and adapt to English seaming conditions, the Australians were delighted to find bounce and carry that was more Queensland than Kirkstall. Nothing underlined this more than David Warner’s four catches, excellent takes in which he got far better sight of the ball than he had done when dropping them at Lord’s. Not unlike Nagpur in 2004, a blueprint devised to succeed overseas had its culmination in conditions so oddly familiar.How did Josh Hazlewood, James Pattinson and Pat Cummins bowl together for the first time on the most important day of the 2019 Ashes series? Not quite by intelligent design, but not completely by natural selection either.

West Indies' heaviest thrashings, and the man who got out so he could eat

Also, has any team lost all 20 wickets on the same day?

Steven Lynch22-Aug-2017Where does West Indies’ collapse at Edgbaston rank in their heaviest Test defeats? asked Stephen Drury from England

West Indies have suffered only five heavier defeats than their innings-and-209-run shellacking by England in the day-night Test at Edgbaston. Heaviest of all was England’s win by an innings and 283 runs at Headingley in 2007, while England won by an innings and 237 at The Oval in 1957. South Africa beat West Indies by an innings and 220 runs in Centurion in 2014-15, while Australia won by an innings and 217 runs in Brisbane in 1930-31, and an innings and 212 in Hobart in 2015-16. West Indies’ heaviest defeat by runs came in Sydney in 1968-69, when Australia won by 382.West Indies lost 19 wickets on the third day at Edgbaston. Has any team ever lost all 20 on the same day? asked Surinder Naik from India

There have been three instances of a team losing all 20 wickets on the same day of a Test match. India subsided twice against England at Old Trafford in 1952, while Zimbabwe collapsed against New Zealand in Harare in August 2005, and again in Napier in 2011-12. There have also been three previous occasions when a team lost 19 wickets in a single day’s play, all of them inflicted by England: against South Africa in Cape Town in 1888-89, and again at Old Trafford in 1912, and against Zimbabwe at Lord’s in 2003. West Indies’ previous worst day came at The Oval in 1933, when they lost 18 wickets, 11 of them to the Kent legspinner Charles “Father” Marriott, who was playing in his only Test.Was Hardik Pandya the first Indian to hit seven sixes in a Test innings? asked Ricky Dooley from South Africa

Hardik Pandya’s rapid maiden century against Sri Lanka in Pallekele last week did contain seven sixes, matching the efforts of Virender Sehwag during his 293 against Sri Lanka in Mumbai in 2009-10, and Harbhajan Singh (111 not out) against New Zealand in Hyderabad in 2010-11. But there has been one Indian Test innings with even more sixes: Navjot Singh Sidhu clouted eight in the course of his 124 against Sri Lanka in Lucknow in 1993-94. The overall Test record remains 12 sixes, by Wasim Akram during his unbeaten 257 for Pakistan against Zimbabwe in Sheikhupura in 1996-97.I remember hearing a story about an English batsman who got out deliberately in a match as the interval times had changed and he wanted to eat. Who was this, and was it true? asked Gordon Armstrong from England

The batsman usually associated with this story is George Gunn, the Nottinghamshire opener who had a long career either side of the First World War. In his day, play usually started at 11.30, and the players stopped for lunch at 1.30. But the odd match started at 12, with lunch at 2.00. The story goes that in one of these games, surprised that play was still going on, Gunn got out deliberately, tucked his bat under his arm, and announced that “George Gunn lunches at 1.30.” I don’t know whether the story has ever been tied down to a particular match, but it’s such a persistent tale that I expect it really did happen!Colin Cowdrey: first to a hundred Tests•PA PhotosGunn had a peculiar England career, which started when he scored a century in his first Test, in Sydney in 1907-08. He wasn’t part of the original squad, but was spending the winter in Australia for health reasons and got a late call. He was an official member of the next touring team down under, in 1911-12, but after that his Test career seemed to be over: another story about him has it that he missed a third Ashes tour because he never opened the invitation letter – he put his Notts blazer on for a new season and discovered the envelope in the pocket. But, early in 1930, Gunn did win four more Test caps, during England’s first official tour of the West Indies, even though he was 50 by then (and he wasn’t even the oldest member of the team: Wilfred Rhodes was 52). He played on for so long that he appeared in county cricket alongside his son – also George – and they once scored centuries in the same innings.Picking up from last week’s question about the first man to play 100 ODIs, who was the first to appear in 50 Tests? And 75, and 100, and so on? asked Michael Dixon from England

The first man to chalk up a half-century of Test appearances was the Australian Syd Gregory, who made his debut in 1890 and reached 50 caps in 1909, at which point his countrymen Monty Noble had played 41 Tests and Clem Hill 39. The first to 75 was England’s Wally Hammond, in 1939; Frank Woolley was second at the time, with 64.Colin Cowdrey was famously the first man to reach 100 Test caps, celebrating with a century for England against Australia at Edgbaston in 1968; his Kent team-mate Godfrey Evans was next at the time, with 91 (the top 11 at that time were all from England, the sole interloper being Neil Harvey, with 79 for Australia).Sunil Gavaskar passed Cowdrey in July 1986, and in March the following year was the first to 125; Allan Border stretched the record to 150 in December 1993. Sachin Tendulkar reached 175 in December 2010, and became the first – and only – man to play in 200 Test matches in his final game, against West Indies in Mumbai in November 2013. In joint second place – then and now – are the Australian pair of Steve Waugh and Ricky Ponting, who both won 168 caps.Leave your questions in the comments section

Mithun's misjudgement and Mustafa's pick-up

Plays of the day from the third match of the Asia Cup, between Bangladesh and United Arab Emirates

Mohammad Isam26-Feb-2016The brain freezeMohammad Mithun tried to work a ball from Rohan Mustafa past point for a single, but the delivery had turned sharply and taken his inside edge. However, the ball trickled to the wicketkeeper Swapnil Patil as Mithun ran out of the crease. Patil quickly broke the stumps but he must have been bemused too. Mithun didn’t follow the ball and was left ruing a sure-shot fifty.The confirmation catchMustafizur Rahman had a catch denied, although replays were inconclusive whether he had complete control over the ball after he had landed on his right hand. When he foxed Mohammad Shahzad in the first ball of his next over with an offcutter, he completed the simple return catch and threw the ball up. Just to be sure, Nasir and then Mustafizur looked up and caught the falling ball.The momentary misjudgementAs Soumya Sarkar swung wildly at Amjad Javed, the top edge lobbed up towards third man where Saqlain Haider made a critical mistake of taking a backward step. That cost him the wicket in the fifth over, as he dived inches short of the ball. Javed wasn’t pleased, this was the second catch in three balls that didn’t go to hand.The better pick-up shotSoumya Sarkar and Mohammad Mithun had struck sixes with pick-up shots but it was Rohan Mustafa’s that looked the most effortless. At the end of the third over, he moved towards the leg stump to pick a full-length Taskin Ahmed delivery for six over backward square leg. It was the best of the three, a small consolation for UAE.

Van Zyl's nervy night and dream day

Stiaan van Zyl waited a whole day for his turn to bat, survived a few scary moments early on and methodically pushed past them to become the fifth South African to score a century on Test debut

Firdose Moonda in Centurion18-Dec-2014In any match that he plays, Stiaan van Zyl is usually padded up when the first ball is bowled. As a No.3 he needs to be. But on Test debut, he did not. Pencilled in at No.6, van Zyl was ready for a morning off when West Indies put South Africa in. But an hour later, the top-order tumbled and van Zyl found himself on the verge of an early entrance onto the international stage. He sat down to wait. And wait. And wait. And wait.”Sitting there all day was quite mentally draining,” he said. “I walked around a bit to focus on other stuff.”By tea, the pad rash was no longer a concern. Russell Domingo, South Africa’s coach, said van Zyl had joked that he was happy to keep waiting when Hashim Amla and AB de Villiers returned at the interval.He may not have expected to be waiting overnight but when he was, the anxiety kept him up. “I woke up at 1 and then 2:30 and 3:30 but then I had a decent sleep after that,” van Zyl said. “By the morning I was good to go.” And good to wait, luckily not for that long.Little over half-an-hour into the second day, de Villiers was dismissed and van Zyl’s big moment had arrived. His mom, dad and two of his friends from the Cape who had made the trip for the full five days had reason to sit up straighter and look a little closer. What they saw would have stressed them.The first ball van Zyl faced was from Sulieman Benn. There was not much menacing about it, perhaps a tinge of extra bounce and he almost played it to leg gully.”I was very nervous. Before I faced my first ball, my gloves were wet and I was shaking,” van Zyl said.Van Zyl kept his posse waiting for 10 deliveries before he finally managed to clip Benn away for his first international run. However, he had just barely avoided the short leg fielder.”It’s the best run I’ve got in my career. Just to get off that zero, it’s a different feeling, it’s like a house of bricks off your back,” he said. His captain could see the importance of the moment and celebrated the run with his debutant. “I said something like ‘I know it’s just one run but really well done,’ Amla said.Those well-wishes may have seemed premature when 14 balls later, van Zyl’s debut could have ended forgetfully. He turned Benn to leg gully, but Kraigg Brathwaite could not hold on. The let-off shook van Zyl, who realised the magnitude of the challenge he was facing, literally.”Benn is a bit taller than the normal spinners that I face in South Africa. There was a bit of bounce and bit of turn,” he said. “But as the innings went on, it became easier. It’s on the big stage but it’s still a cricket ball that comes to me and I actually just said to myself, if get past 10, I can take it from there and feel my way in.”A few short balls, some width, an invitation to bring out van Zyl’s cover drive and the introduction of Jermaine Blackwood all took him to a half-century before tea and that was when van Zyl began believing. “When I got to fifty, I realised maybe a hundred is on the cards. We chatted at lunch and the guys said we’re looking to bat a certain amount of overs.”Van Zyl had the motivation to score quickly and the right man at the other end – an aggressive South Africa captain with his eye on the big picture – to usher him through. His second fifty came off only 55 balls, as West Indies’ bowlers ran out of ideas and energy. Lethargic fielding even made rotating strike easy.Van Zyl still felt the novelty of seeing numbers change on the scoreboard and admitted that when his partnership with his captain began to blossom, he only cherished it more. “When I saw it get to 150, I wanted to take it to 200,” he said. “We recognise that stuff and it inspires me to go on.”The fifth-wicket stand did not grow to 200, but South Africa’s total scaled 550 and van Zyl became only the fifth person to score a century on debut for this team. He joins Andrew Hudson, Jacques Rudolph, Faf du Plessis and the man he may replace at the top of the order, Alviro Petersen, in that club and he hopes it is the start of something specialBut he knows his chances may be limited in future. “Scoring 100 on debut is a perfect start, a dream,” he said. “If there are changes to be made in the next few matches, maybe I’ve got to be the one that sits out. But if I get opportunity again, I’ll try my best.”

The wonder and heartbreak of being a Pakistan fan

For us Pakistan fans, abnormal is normal. The love that one has for their favourite sports team is different to any other kind of love. It’s not bigger. It’s just different, and probably brings with it a lot more sorrow than any other kind of love

Gul Baz Khan25-Feb-2013My phone beeped, it was an SMS from a friend who had grown skeptical of the Pakistan cricket team since the 1999 World Cup final debacle. “So are your chuckers gonna win?” It was the eve of the 2009 World Twenty20 final. And though he knew that the response he would get would be oozing with positive energy, hope and an incomprehensible delight for one of the most unpredictable teams across sports throughout history, he still wanted to know.You see, after a long time, this team was showing some spine. It was re-generating interest even in the sceptics who had turned away.Please understand, I would never doubt the love Pakistan fans have for their cricket team. Apart from the heartbreaks caused by genuine losses, they have suffered through the years courtesy match-fixing, ball-tampering allegations, a whole year without any Test matches, infighting within the team, politics within politics, questionable board chiefs, coups against captains, no cricket at home for three years, and even an investigation around the death of their coach.For us Pakistan fans, abnormal is normal. The love that one has for their favourite sports team is different to any other kind of love. It’s not bigger. It’s just different, and probably brings with it a lot more sorrow than any other kind of love.The beef that I have with most Pakistan cricket fans is their fickle belief in their team. One loss and it’s all about how we should throw the whole team out because they sold out. One loss and half the team should retire. One loss and #BlameMisbah hash tags appear all across the Twitter world (Misbah has to hold the record for the most unappreciated, yet very successful, captain).But then, with the rich history of betrayal that Pakistan cricket fans have witnessed, it’s difficult to blame them for being so trigger-happy. On the flip side, that’s where true love comes in and fickleness goes out.I am a huge Lakers fan in basketball. The first game that I ever saw in the NBA was Game 4 of the NBA Finals in 1989, between Los Angeles Lakers and Detroit Pistons, with Lakers being down 3-0 in the best of seven series. I was 11 years old then and we were based in Singapore at the time. I had recently started playing basketball myself and upon seeing that match, I was completely hooked.Needless to say, it was the worst match to begin following the Lakers. Magic Johnson was out injured and the great Kareem Abdul Jabbar was a shadow of his former self at the ripe old age of 41. This was to be Kareem’s last game ever as well. So they lost, and I hadn’t even seen Magic play yet, but I was already a fan of the game.The bottom line is when you love a sports team, you love it with all the baggage it comes with•AFPAnd so it went. I have seen the worst of times with the Lakers, when after the 1991 emergence of Michael Jordan and the retirement of Magic due to HIV, Lakers went on a downward spiral, even missing the playoffs in 1994. It would be nine years till they return to the Finals under the Zenmaster.The bottom line is when you love a sports team, you love it with all the baggage it comes with. You don’t just wait for them to lift the Cup. That is not the defining moment. The defining moments are spread out across time, when you go to sleep thinking what combination would have worked out best, when you try and find all the faults the referee made in the match your team lost, when you can’t wait for the match to start, when you are willing to start an argument with every Tom, Dick and Harry who dares challenge your team’s chances. Those are the moments that define you as a sports fan.As my favourite sports writer, Bill Simmons, says, your love for your sports team is full of heartbreak, but what would love be without heartbreak. Your wife accuses you of not attaching any importance to anything else when “the match” comes on, your mood at dinner with guests after a big match will depend on the result, your friends curse you for spoiling an otherwise good plan because you don’t want to leave the house, and the same friends all start supporting the opposing team when they are stuck watching the game with you, just to piss you off; that’s when you know you are a goner.The Pakistan cricket team presents the most confusing paradox for any sports fan. It’s not a club team that you can choose to “unfollow” if they were as unfaithful as our team has been over the years. It’s your national side. You just cannot ignore it. You want them to do well. You need them to do well. There is already so much despair and negativity around, that it’s this bit of happiness that drives a nation wild.We are a very unforgiving lot – sports fans not Pakistanis. Well, maybe both. We cannot accept defeat. We will never look for the silver lining. And that is what makes my job as that unrelenting fan that much more difficult. Because there is only so much you can argue about with the many people around you. You can’t force others to be empathetic. You have to listen to all the know-it-alls who personally know the bookie who paid off some cricketer. You have to listen to the ‘experts’ who tell you how every move in the match was pre-planned. You fail miserably and continuously in explaining a particular innings or a certain bowling performance. (I mean, just the fact that I had to defend Saeed Ajmal’s class as a bowler after the time Hussey took him to the cleaners in the semi-final of the 2010 World Twenty20 angered me). Through all of that you still have to find that passion that allows you to stand by the team you love.The only unfortunate thing is that we live in a world of wicked needs and loose morals. Yet, when you see the team fight its way to a Twenty20 victory when defending 122 at the opponents home ground, when you see one of the greatest innings played by Inzamam-ul-Haq and yet have the team fall short by five runs when chasing 350, when you see this good-for-nothing team “brown-wash” the No. 1 Test team in the world, when you see the fight in the eyes of a Saeed Ajmal, the passion of a Younis Khan and the unrelenting charisma of a Shahid Afridi, your heart soars.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus