Pochettino’s failure to change the game draws comparisons with Arsene Wenger

Although the move to Wembley stadium might suffocate their momentum this season, in the context of their recent history, Tottenham Hotspur are still very much a club on the rise. Mauricio Pochettino has been the defining catalyst behind the Lilywhites’ transition from Champions League qualification hopefuls to Premier League title chasers; he’s championed the belief in youth that has seen Dele Alli and Harry Kane become key players for club and country, and his philosophy of energetic high-pressing has diminished age-old accusations of a soft underbelly. Sir Alex Ferguson’s fabled three-word team-talk – ‘Lads, it’s Tottenham’ – wouldn’t apply these days.

But as the architect of Tottenham’s rise, the ultimate question after an underwhelming start to the season is quite simple – what level can Pochettino take north London club to? Will they become English football’s greatest force, or another also-ran institution like their local rivals? Of course, there are more factors at play than the talent of one individual – the level of investment in the squad, the quality of players coming in and out, the improvements or declines of the teams around them – but Pochettino remains the most significant as the man in the driving seat.

While it’s hard to fault the work the Argentine has done so far – when he arrived at White Hart Lane, they’d finished 17 points off the top of the table and 10 away from a Champions League spot in sixth place – his limitations are becoming more obvious, and the draw with Swansea City on Saturday represented a prime example. Although Pochettino has proved himself adept at creating a defining philosophy and developing promising young talent into top-class stars, the failure to successfully manage single games does let him down.

That’s evident enough from Tottenham’s limited progress in the cup competitions, where tactics, selections and substitutions particularly come under the microscope. His win rate in Europe for Spurs is just 45% – hardly high enough to successfully maraud through the many double-legged knockout stages.

Perhaps the continent is still a relatively new experience for Pochettino, his players and Tottenham throughout Daniel Levy’s tutelage, one that may require a few more seasons to truly appreciate the demands of. But even domestically, barring a League Cup final during his first season, Pochettino has lead Spurs past the fifth round of either competition just once – the FA Cup semi-final with Chelsea last term.

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That was a telling moment as Pochettino stacked up against a slightly more senior, slightly more experienced and slightly more successful counterpart in Antonio Conte. Tottenham produced a good performance at Wembley that required Chelsea to find the pinnacle of their cutting edge in a clinical 4-2, but the difference was how well Conte managed his resources. Eden Hazard and Diego Costa, usually the first names on the team-sheet, came on as substitutes and changed the game. Pochettino, in contrast, had already ran out of surprises to spring on the champions in waiting and the Blues consequentially pulled away.

At the time, Tottenham’s squad depth was questioned more than Pochettino’s decisions and justifiably so. Having only a defender in Kyle Walker and a youngster in Georges-Kevin N’Koudou to bring on during arguably the biggest match of Spurs’ season at that point, also on the backdrop of a title race with Chelsea, told its own story.

But that same excuse won’t work this season. Spurs’ squad may still be a little light compared to the two Manchester clubs, but the summer arrivals of Davinson Sanchez, Serge Aurier and Fernando Llorente have given Pochettino more depth and options, especially alongside Harry Winks and Marcus Edwards who represent some of the most exciting young Englishmen around at the moment. It’s still slimmer pickings than some of his counter-parts, but enough to change games with if utilised in the right way and at the right times.

The scoreless draw with Swansea on Saturday raised the most significant doubts yet over Pochettino’s ability to do so. Wembley may still be a factor – Tottenham have picked up just two points there in the Premier League this season with all three opponents looking to spoil the match rather than take the game to the Lilywhites – but from the early exchanges, it was obvious Paul Clement had set up his side to nullify Tottenham; a 3-5-2 lining up against a 3-4-3 to suffocate the midfield, much like Chelsea back in August.

Yet, Pochettino didn’t make any changes until after the hour-mark, when he moved Son Heung-Min further forward, strangely switched Kieran Trippier to left wing-back and brought on Moussa Sissoko. Striker Fernando Llorente didn’t enter the fray for another 15 minutes and after that, Pochettino elected not to use his third substitute. Spurs therefore finished the match with three centre-backs and a holding midfielder against a side who had just four efforts at goal and just one after half-time.

Accordingly, Pochettino’s tactical nous must come into question, as must his loyalty to certain individuals. Should Trippier have started over Aurier? Were Dier and Sanchez really needed? Why was Son utilised as a wing-back? And most crucially, why did it take so long for Pochettino to acknowledge the need to change the dynamics of the game? A young Jose Mourinho famously made a triple substitution at half-time during his first season at Chelsea and even during his catastrophic final few months, he took the audacious step of subbing off Nemanja Matic after bringing him on from the bench – because it was what the game needed.

If Pochettino is to make Tottenham a true top-end Premier League force that can compete with Chelsea, City and United, that kind of ruthlessness is essential. And the Lilywhites boss need only look to the other side of north London to consider a future where belief in philosophies and individuals isn’t matched by shrewd and clinical tactical calls.

Arsenal are a house built on Arsene Wenger’s ideals, but the stubbornness with which he’s stuck to them and the softness with which he’s made selection decisions has pushed the club into the dormant state it’s currently stuck in. Wenger too, has always struggled when it comes to tactical double-leggers in Europe, while 20 years at the helm have never seen him lift the League Cup.

Pochettino is a young manager who is still learning the finer ins and outs of his trade, but currently, Tottenham are on the edge of following a similar path to their London neighbours. If the Argentine wants Tottenham to win trophies and titles rather than becoming simply the next serial also-rans, he needs a dash more of Mourinho and a few dashes less of Wenger.

Huge doubt over Lukaku’s Everton future, fans react

A massive development in the saga involving Everton striker Romelu Lukaku has got plenty of fans talking on social media.

The Telegraph are among a number of mainstream publications to report that the Belgium international has informed the Merseyside club that he will not be signing a new £140,000-a-week contract.

The striker’s agent Mino Raiola mentioned numerous times over the past few weeks that his client was on the verge of penning a long-term deal, but it does not seem as though the pair are on the same page.

This latest bit of news throws up suggestions that a handful of clubs will be in the running for Lukaku when the transfer window reopens in the summer.

It is important to note, though, that the 23-year-old still has two years left on his contract at Goodison Park, which puts the Toffees in a relatively secure negotiating position.

As expected, Everton fans have taken to Twitter to give their thoughts on the news, with many disappointed in Lukaku’s conduct, while others believe that he will sign a new deal.

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This Spurs man is way ahead of his time and has earned praise

Daniel Levy has long been a figure that divides opinion at Tottenham, but he is finally winning in the popularity stakes – and with good reason.

Balanced books, Champions League football and the new stadium are all on the current chairman’s watch, as well as making top-five finishes the rule, rather than the exception.

Levy’s haters, slaters and berators are now well in the minority. I should know, I was one of them. However, I never went quite as far as the angry few who paraded outside White Hart Lane with ‘Levy Out’ placards in May 2014.

Tim Sherwood was about to get the boot and, despite fortunes on the pitch gradually improving, fans were getting fed up with the continued upheaval, as managers were turned over with alarming regularity and our best players often sold.

But one look at the mess made by investors at other clubs like Newcastle, Aston Villa, Leeds and Blackburn showed that the grass is not always greener.

We at least we had a Tottenham fan at the helm who may have taken some business limelight now and again but, when all was said and done, things were pretty good.

The main beef with Levy was his insistence on a tiered management structure. And no matter how many times it blew up in his face, he was always willing to tear everything up and try it all again.

English football at the time was used to a traditional manager, who dealt with everything from formations and training to scouting and transfers – sometimes even marketing and finances.

The ‘European model’ used by Real Madrid, Barcelona, Juventus etc featured a head coach, dealing solely with first-team tactics and motivation, working below a general manager who controlled scouting, transfers, contracts etc.

In theory, it gives the scope to change the coach without wholesale player and staff changes destabilising a club.

But Levy went through general managers, or directors of football, almost as often as head coaches as different incarnations of the system continually collapsed around him.

The three-headed monster of Frank Arnesen, Jacques Santini and Martin Jol lasted 13 games in 2004, before Santini jumped ship, and Jol became a raging success.

Not deterred, in came Damien Comolli and Juande Ramos, who spent a fortune in summer 2008, but left us in October staring relegation in the face.

Harry Redknapp rode in as a good old-fashioned manager, saved our skin then took us to fourth spot and into the Champions League.

That was surely it, the final nail for Levy’s tiered dream? Think again. Andre Villas-Boas joined technical director Franco Baldini – an arrangement which imploded after 18 months.

Yet after 10 years of apparent board level chaos, it was only when Sherwood stepped up from the academy with all the cut and thrust of a young boxer – naively waiting for that first jawbreaker to put him on the canvas – that people finally began to understand just why Levy was so intent on the head coach strategy.

Top football teams are no longer family businesses or one person’s labour of love, they are corporate juggernauts with thousands of staff doing millions of tasks. No one person can run the club alone.

Similarly, where player transfers of days gone by involved two blokes, a motorway service station and a handshake, they now involve agents, sponsors, image rights, insurance and massive, massive price tags.

One person alone simply cannot be trusted with that level of business, money and consequence – especially when they are already running the first team.

David Moyes arrived as Manchester United boss in 2013 presuming he could apply the same methods that served him so well at Everton – despite the fact he was leaving HMS Belfast for the QE2.

Sir Alex Ferguson had basically been a figurehead in his twilight Old Trafford years – a captain on the bridge, delegating jobs to a highly qualified crew that knew how to steer the ship.

Moyes sacked the backroom staff and brought in his own, who set about sailing into the nearest iceberg.

Meanwhile, Tottenham finally seem to have found the right fit in Mauricio Pochettino, with the Argentine’s contract now extended to 2021. And, as is always the case with Levy, the business side of the club continues to thrive.

Baldini left the club in September 2015 and Pochettino’s new contract now coins him as the ‘manager’ rather than the head coach. Although Spurs still use head of recruitment Paul Mitchell, formerly of Southampton and MK Dons, to help analyse potential targets.

More and more clubs, however, are now using the head coach role. The biggest example is Manchester City, with Pep Guardiola set to reunite with former Barcelona directors Txiki Begiristain and Ferran Soriano.

And Watford have just had the most successful Premier League season in their history after a run of six bosses in four years since the Italian Pozzo family took charge of the club.

It is now clear that the Spurs chairman’s route was not necessarily the European method at all – but the modern method.

Levy, it must be admitted, was way ahead of his time. If he continues like that, his popularity will only increase.

This article was submitted via our new Write For Us feature. Think you can do better? Submit your own article via the link below, and make sure you follow @FFC_WFU on Twitter for #RealOpinions…

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Lionesses World Cup stars Mary Earps & Chloe Kelly join Leah Williamson, Gary Lineker and Paul Mullin at glitzy GQ Men of the Year Awards

Leah Williamson, Mary Earps and Chloe Kelly are among the England Lionesses to have joined the likes of Paul Mullin and Gary Lineker at the GQ Awards.

Article continues below

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England internationals grace the red carpetGoalkeeper among those to pick up a prizeWrexham frontman also gets suited upWHAT HAPPENED?

The glitzy Men of the Year ceremony for 2023 took place at the Royal Opera House in London on Wednesday evening. Famous names from the worlds of television, music and sport graced the red carpet ahead of the annual event staged by the fashion and culture magazine.

AdvertisementGettyTHE GOSSIP

England and Arsenal captain Williamson, who missed the 2023 Women’s World Cup through injury, dazzled onlookers at the star-studded event – with international colleagues Earps and Kelly joining her, along with former Lionesses hero Alex Scott.

DID YOU KNOW?

Spanish World Cup winner Jenni Hermoso was also on the guest list, with an iconic venue in the English capital swapping songs for gongs. Manchester United goalkeeper Earps was among the 20 honourees to pick up a prize on the night.

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GettyWHAT NEXT?

Ex-England striker Lineker – who now hosts Match of the Day on the BBC – and prolific Wrexham frontman Paul Mullin suited up for the evening, while Everton forward Dominic Calvert-Lewin brought his unique sense of style to the most glamorous of occasions.

England U21s player ratings vs Czech Republic: Noni Madueke thrills before Jacob Ramsey and Emile Smith Rowe secure victory in Euros opener

The Chelsea winger starred as Lee Carsley's team got the victory they needed to ensure a perfect start to the tournament in Georgia

England Under-21s made the perfect start to the European Championship as Jacob Ramsey's goal early in the second half proved to be the difference in their 2-0 win over the Czech Republic in their tournament opener.

Lee Carsley's side dominated possession from the off, and Chelsea winger Noni Madueke should have opened the scoring before half-time, the closest of his three efforts clipping the crossbar on its way over. The Young Lions were, though, indebted to goalkeeper James Trafford, as the Manchester City shot-stopper made two fine saves to deny Vasil Kusej before the break, while the Czech forward also fired wide when well placed.

England eventually took the lead two minutes after half-time, as Aston Villa youngster Ramsey broke from midfield, traded a one-two with Anthony Gordon and slotted a fine finish into the bottom corner. And though England had a couple of scares, the win was thoroughly well deserved given their dominance, though they had to wait until stoppage-time to seal it, as Cameron Archer squared for fellow substitute Emile Smith Rowe to tap into an empty net.

GOAL rates England's players from the Batumi Arena in Georgia…

Getty ImagesGoalkeeper & Defence

James Trafford (7/10):

Made three fine saves and very comfortable when in possession as England built from the back.

James Garner (7/10):

Played out of position at right-back but you'd barely have known. Combined brilliantly with Madueke going forward.

Taylor Harwood-Bellis (6/10):

Dominant in the air but looked nervy when defending one-on-one.

Levi Colwill (7/10):

Cruised through the game for the most part. Does not lack for confidence.

Max Aarons (6/10):

Looked to get forward from left-back but most England attacks went down the opposite flank.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesMidfield

Angel Gomes (7/10):

Dictated the tempo as he showed off his fine passing ability as England's deepest-lying midfielder.

Curtis Jones (6/10):

Struggled to have too much of an impact as half of the double pivot as most England moves went through Gomes instead.

Noni Madueke (8/10):

England's outstanding player in the first half and a constant thorn in the Czech defence down the right. Better finishing would have seen him end the game with a couple of goals.

Morgan Gibbs-White (6/10):

Looked to be incisive with his passing from the No.10 position, but not as much came off as he would have liked.

Jacob Ramsey (7/10):

Quiet in the first half but came to life immediately after the break as his thrusting run and finish broke the deadlock.

Getty ImagesAttack

Anthony Gordon (6/10):

A more natural finisher might have grabbed a goal or two, but did some good things when drifting either wider or deeper, as illustrated by his neat assist for Ramsey's goal.

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Getty ImagesSubs & Manager

Oliver Skipp (6/10):

Kept England ticking over for the final 15 minutes.

Cameron Archer (6/10):

Showed good awareness to lay on Smith Rowe's goal.

Emile Smith Rowe (6/10):

Saw little of the ball before tapping in the goal that sealed victory in stoppage time.

Harvey Elliott (N/A):

Only introduced for the final two minutes.

Ben Johnson (N/A):

On for Aarons at the death.

Lee Carsley (7/10):

Put some square pegs in round holes to mixed success, but overall display and result were good. May need to tighten up midfield when facing better opposition.

Tiago Nunes abre o jogo e fala sobre a sua saída do Athletico

MatériaMais Notícias

Na noite da última segunda-feira, o técnico Tiago Nunes compareceu ao programa ‘Bem, Amigos’, do canal SporTV e entre tantos assuntos comentou sobre a sua saída do Athletico, clube o qual ganhou projeção nacional.

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Questionado pelo apresentador Galvão Bueno se havia errado na forma que saiu do Furacão, o comandante não fugiu da resposta e admitiu a forma que lidou com a despedida do clube.

‘No momento em que começo a receber muitas sondagens, falei de maneira franca que não havia recebido nenhuma proposta. Só que talvez pensando em proteger o próprio clube e minha imagem criada com o torcedor. Eu e Petraglia (presidente) somos duas personalidades duras. Foi um aprendizado. O que eu lamento foi que os interlocutores que construíram nossa conversa não souberam filtrar as informações. Ofereceu proposta abaixo e falei que não queria ficar. Eu disse que queria ficar até o fim do ano e ele fala que não. Como eu não tinha multa rescisória… Era uma oferta de dois anos sem multa. As coisas não fluíram naquele momento. Me tornei torcedor de coração pela sinergia. Errei no sentido de tentar não abordar o assunto, fugir um pouco dele’, afirmou o comandante antes de completar:

‘O clube que eu iria não era o Corinthians. Naqueles três dias, Corinthians desligou o Fábio e vieram pelo meu agente sondar. Gerou toda aquela especulação, chegaram informações para o Athletico. Batemos de frente’.

Lembrando que, antes de o Timão aparecer na disputa pelo seu trabalho, Internacional e Atlético-MG sondavam o comandante que faturou a Copa do Brasil pelo Athletico.

Rodrigo Moledo rebate críticas sobre 'falta de entrega' em Gre-Nal

MatériaMais Notícias

O clima pesou de vez no Internacional após a derrota para o Grêmio no fim de semana. Na luta por uma vaga na Libertadores, o grande temor é que o novo revés diante do maior rival possa prejudicar a equipe na briga pelo G6.

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Escolhido para conversar com a imprensa nesta terça-feira, o zagueiro Rodrigo Moledo garante que o Gre-Nal é passado dentro do elenco e o animo esta renovado para o jogo contra o Ceará, na quinta-feira.

‘A gente conversou, treinamos e sabemos o que temos que fazer para melhorar. O treino foi fechado, então, tudo isso fica internamente. Contra o Ceará vamos fazer outro jogo’, defensor.

Questionado sobre a falta de entrega no clássico do fim de semana, o defensor relembrou o desempenho com o técnico Zé Ricardo nos últimos três jogos.

‘Não está faltando entrega. Estamos trabalhando, focados e tentando buscar os resultados. Nos últimos três jogos, conquistamos uma vitória, um empate e, infelizmente, no último jogo não conseguimos jogar. Agora, entrega e empenho não faltam. Então, vamos seguir em frente e pensar no próximo jogo’, completou.

West Indies begin new era after Chanderpaul

Match facts

June 3-7, 2015
Start time 10am local (1400 GMT)

Big Picture

In the cricket world, March 1994 seems like an epoch ago. Cricinfo was only a year old. Cigarette sponsorship was still a thing. West Indies remained a dominant force, with Desmond Haynes, Curtly Ambrose, Courtney Walsh, Richie Richardson and Brian Lara all in the line-up. It was the month of Allan Border’s last Test, and of Kapil Dev’s as well.Three players made their Test debuts in March 1994, all left-handers who would enjoy long and decorated careers: Matthew Hayden, Stephen Fleming and Shivnarine Chanderpaul. Fleming lasted until 2008, Hayden until 2009. Chanderpaul kept going, and going, and going. And now he’s gone, dumped by the selectors at the age of 40. For the first time in in 21 years, West Indian fans must consider a Chanderpaul-less future.And their first engagement of that future is against Australia, a team West Indies have not beaten in a Test for 12 years, and in a series for 23 years. Since then, the Frank Worrell Trophy has been tightly held by Mark Taylor, Steve Waugh, Ricky Ponting and Michael Clarke, and Clarke will expect his men to be able to retain it during their two-Test battle in Dominica and Jamaica.Australia will certainly be glad to see a Shiv-shaped hole in their opponents’ batting order: in nine home Tests against Australia, Chanderpaul made five centuries and averaged 80.38. But, as Kraigg Brathwaite and Jermaine Blackwood showed in the recent series against England, there are things to like about the young West Indies batsmen coming through.Australia will hope not to be too rusty after a couple of months away from international cricket, and having not played a Test since January. They will be without Chris Rogers, who will be rested after being struck on the helmet at training, and that will necessitate some juggling of the batting order. There is also a question over the make-up of their attack, with Fawad Ahmed a chance of making his debut if the pitch looks like it will suit two spinners.

Form guide

(last five matches, most recent first)
West Indies WLDLD
Australia DDWWL

In the spotlight

The leading West Indian run scorer in their recent series against England, Jermaine Blackwood will hope to continue his form against the Australians. A talented middle-order batsman who was key to West Indies winning the Barbados Test and thus drawing the England series, Blackwood faces the challenge of being the go-to man in a lower middle order now without the experience of Chanderpaul.Australia will likely have one debutant in this Test, and after training on Tuesday it looked certain to be Adam Voges. His is the story of an interminable but ultimately fruitful wait for the opportunity, after he was first called into a Test squad during the 2006-07 Ashes in Australia. Now 35 years old, his time is now.

Team news

West Indies have a middle-order place to fill. Shane Dowrich impressed with half-centuries in each innings of the tour match against Australia, and could come in for his debut. They also have the option of two spinners, with Devendra Bishoo in the squad alongside Veerasammy Permaul.West Indies (possible) 1 Kraigg Brathwaite, 2 Shai Hope, 3 Darren Bravo, 4 Marlon Samuels, 5 Jermaine Blackwood, 6 Shane Dowrich, 7 Denesh Ramdin (capt & wk), 8 Jason Holder, 9 Jerome Taylor, 10 Shannon Gabriel, 11 Veerasammy PermaulAdam Voges shook hands with selectors Mark Waugh and Darren Lehmann at Australia’s final training session and appears sure to debut. Steven Smith has been given the job as Australia’s latest No.3 batsman, while Shaun Marsh will open with David Warner. Mitchell Starc seems likely to be preferred as third quick ahead of a second spinner in Fawad Ahmed.Australia (possible) 1 David Warner, 2 Shaun Marsh, 3 Steven Smith, 4 Michael Clarke (capt), 5 Adam Voges, 6 Shane Watson, 7 Brad Haddin (wk), 8 Mitchell Johnson, 9 Nathan Lyon, 10 Mitchell Starc, 11 Josh Hazlewood

Pitch and conditions

“It feels like raging turner or green seamer. So, we’ll wait and see what they give us in the middle and then we’ll make a plan from there,” Michael Clarke said two days out from the match. The weather is expected to be fine throughout most of the Test.

Stats and trivia

  • Since January 1, 2000, West Indies have played 25 Tests without Shivnarine Chanderpaul. They have won just one of them, against Sri Lanka in Kingston in 2003
  • That was also the same year – 2003 – that West Indies last beat Australia in a Test, with their world-record chase of 418 in Antigua
  • Steven Smith will be the 13th player to bat at No. 3 for Australia in a Test – including nightwatchmen – since Ricky Ponting last did so in 2011

Quotes

“We played well in the three Test matches [against England]. We need to improve because it’s Australia – no disrespect to England – and we’re trying to do that as much as possible.””

Plans fall in place for Australia's <i>A-Team</i>

Mitchell Starc and James Faulkner have revealed how their carefully laid plans to dismantle New Zealand’s batsmen came to fruition

Brydon Coverdale at the MCG29-Mar-2015Mitchell Starc and bowling coach Craig McDermott might have been quoting from the during the innings break of the World Cup final. “I love it when a plan comes together”. The Australians emerged from their loss to New Zealand in Auckland four weeks ago with a few questions, none more so than how to keep Brendon McCullum quiet.At Eden Park, McCullum had faced Starc’s first over of New Zealand’s small chase, and smashed him for 14 runs. In all, he plundered 50 off 24 deliveries to set New Zealand on the path to victory, albeit a path that nearly stopped short of the destination. The prospect of facing New Zealand in a knockout further along in the tournament set Starc and McDermott thinking.Their plans came together when McCullum chose to bat first in the final at the MCG. In the first over, Starc’s 149kph inswinging yorker missed McCullum’s bat and barely the off stump as well. Second ball: McCullum charged Starc, who followed him and again bat was not laid on ball. The third delivery was like the second, only it rattled McCullum’s stumps. The crowd erupted at a defining moment.”We’ve watched him a fair bit through the tournament be pretty destructive,” Starc said. “He’s been a key player for them right from the beginning. He’s been fantastic for the Kiwis to get them off to great starts. I think after that game in New Zealand we had to assess him as we went, because he’s very unpredictable.”Personally, I had a bit of a plan going with Craig McDermott about bowling a decent yorker to him first up. I’m not sure how that first one missed, but lucky that third one hit. There’s a lot of luck involved but just lucky to see that plan came off.”Starc was not surprisingly named Player of the Tournament for his 22 wickets at 10.18 and a remarkable economy rate of 3.50. His form continued in the decider when he collected 2 for 20 from his eight overs after adding Luke Ronchi’s wicket, and McCullum said he had no answers for Starc in the first over of the match.”He was a bit too good for me today, that’s for sure,” McCullum said. “He deserves the Man of the Tournament. He was outstanding bowling at good pace, he swung the ball late, he was incredibly accurate all the way along as well. Sometimes in this game you go in with the best-laid plans and your ideal scenario of how you see the game panning out, but sometimes a guy is just too good for you.”If Starc was too good early, the Player of the Match, James Faulkner was too good late. The other key moment of the match came when the Powerplay began in the 36th over and Faulkner used the first ball of it to catch Ross Taylor’s edge with a slower delivery that ended the 111-run partnership between Taylor and Grant Elliott which had threatened to set up a challenging total. Faulkner struck again two balls later.”I thought at times New Zealand looked like they were going to get away from us,” Faulkner said. “I thought Ross Taylor and Grant Elliot had an exceptional partnership considering what happened at the start, to pull things back for them, but at the end of the day, to bowl them out for 183 was fantastic.”I use [the slower ball] as a change of pace so the batters don’t get set. I bowl in the Powerplays and at the death. If you’re bowling the same ball there’s more chance of you getting hit out of the park. It’s the change-up I use to take wickets and also to change the batters’ swing when they’re trying to hit me to parts of the ground. Sometimes it doesn’t come out as good as what I wanted but today it came out okay and I used it half a dozen times.”It was that kind of day for Australia, a day when all their plans came together.

Mitchell Marsh not to bowl till World Cup eve

Mitchell Marsh, returning to the Australian side after hamstring troubles, will only bowl in the latter stages of the triangular series that serves as a prelude to next month’s World Cup

Daniel Brettig13-Jan-2015Mitchell Marsh, returning to the Australian side after hamstring troubles, will only bowl in the latter stages of the triangular series that serves as a prelude to next month’s World Cup. Marsh will play the first part of the tri-series as a pure batsman, and could potentially bat up the order until he is fit enough to bowl his swinging fast-medium.Australia will play matches against England in Sydney and India in Melbourne before Marsh is seriously considered for selection, with the third match against Eoin Morgan’s men in Hobart marked down as the return date. He may not bowl until the tournament final in Perth, provided Australia qualify.”The plan is for me to be available for selection for the Hobart game but obviously I have got a few things to get past first,” he said. “At this stage I will be playing the first few games as a batter while I build my workloads up and go from there, hopefully if it all goes to plan I can start playing as an allrounder at the back half of this series.”Over the last 12 months I have got my body to a stage where I feel comfortable and strong going out to play. I have gained great confidence in my body that has given me the ability to go out there and play with freedom and that’s what the Australian team is all about.”This is a minor setback for me, and if we didn’t have the World Cup I probably wouldn’t be out for this long. We all had our eye on the big picture and the hammy’s feeling great. The last six months has given me great confidence, and hopefully I can keep building.”Marsh’s career was drifting along and not achieving much beyond fat Twenty20 paycheques when he decided – in concert with his father Geoff Marsh, state coach Justin Langer and mentor Tom Moody – that he would shelve his T20 plans in order to focus upon the longer forms of the game. While he was unable to secure a place with an English county team in the winter of 2014, the change in mindset bore fruit for Australia A against India, and national call-ups duly followed.”I didn’t go to the IPL and I really wanted to go to England last year to play some four-day cricket because that’s really the most challenging format for me,” Marsh said. “I didn’t go but that was really a point in time where I had some time off and got stuck into the gym. I started off really well in the A series and that’s where it started to happen for me. Last year I really made that decision to concentrate on my goal of playing Test cricket.”I had a few things I needed to work on technically and mentally as a young player, and I certainly think I’m learning every day with those sorts of things. My batting mentor and coach is Tom Moody and he’s someone who’s been unbelievable for me not only as a cricketer but as a person as well. I’ve learned so much off him the last 18 months and he’s been massive for me.”Marsh was one of few players to emerge with great credit from the triangular series in Zimbabwe, where the Australians lost to the hosts for the first time since 1993 and were beaten again by South Africa in the final. Marsh played several innings of note, most memorably taking to the high-class offerings of Dale Steyn and also trialling at No. 3 in the batting order.”That Zimbabwe trip gave me a lot of confidence. It was a bit of a breakout tour for me and has given me great hunger to stay around this group, it was a turning point for me,” Marsh said. “I did have a bit of a taste and I did enjoy batting up there, but I think this one-day team’s pretty settled with our top order and I’m happy to slot in anywhere.”Moody was part of no fewer than three World Cup campaigns for Australia, and also coached Sri Lanka on their way to the 2007 final. His insights as a former allrounder but also a team leader may well prove valuable for Marsh as he works towards a peak of fitness and focus for the major 50-over tournament, aware that it will be a tight squeeze for spots alongside his fellow allrounders Shane Watson, James Faulkner and Glenn Maxwell.”There probably is [competition for spots], there’s no beating around the bush there, but I think the balance in this squad with so many allrounders gives us great depth and if we get an opportunity we’ll all be putting our hands up,” Marsh said. “If you’re making enough runs or taking wickets you’re going to be picked anyway, but my bowling hopefully adds something to our team.”It’s something I really need to focus on and hopefully I can play a role as a batter and a bowler in this team.”

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