Fewer touches than Vicario: Frank must instantly drop Spurs' 4/10 UCL flop

Tottenham Hotspur maintained their unbeaten record in the Champions League this season after securing a 0-0 draw against Monaco in France last night.

Thomas Frank’s side failed to capitalise on any of the chances that fell their way within the final third, subsequently only registering two shots on target within the 90 minutes.

However, they may have been lucky to walk away with just a point, as the hosts racked up a total of 23 shots, with eight of the attempts being placed on Guglielmo Vicario’s goal.

The Lilywhites’ display will no doubt have disappointed the manager, with his side showing no real bounce back after Sunday’s defeat against Aston Villa.

After such a showing, there’s no disputing that the Dane desperately needs to make changes to his squad ahead of the weekend’s clash against David Moyes’ Everton.

Spurs’ poor performers against Monaco last night

Rodrigo Bentancur was kept within the Spurs midfield last night, but such a decision proved to be the wrong one, given his lack of impact in the South of France.

The Uruguayan international failed to win a single tackle against the Ligue 1 outfit, whilst also losing 100% of the ground duels he entered – showcasing he was often dominated by the opposition.

Other stats, such as one foul committed and seven times possession lost, further highlight his inability to make a positive impact on the European encounter.

However, he wasn’t alone in being disappointing against Sebastien Pogognoli’s men, with Lucas Bergvall also producing a rare disappointing performance.

The Swede was subsequently replaced after an hour, after completing just six passes – subsequently finding a teammate just once every ten minutes.

He also failed to win a single tackle and was even dribbled past twice, with the Lilywhites’ midfield often being overran and leading to their inability to claim all three points.

Despite the showing of the aforementioned duo, one other player once again struggled to prove why the manager has stuck by him throughout the 2025/26 campaign.

The Spurs player who needs to be dropped after Monaco

Even though Spurs have only lost two games across all competitions since Frank’s arrival, they have struggled to impose themselves in numerous outings.

Last night’s showing was another one to forget for the Lilywhites, leaving the side with five points from a possible nine in this season’s edition of the Champions League.

Whilst the side have kept two clean sheets in their three matches, the frontline has massively disappointed – scoring just three goals, two of which were own goals.

Micky van de Ven is currently the only Lilywhites player to find the back of the net in Europe – further showcasing the issue Frank currently has in that department.

One of the players in that area of the pitch that has massively struggled is centre-forward Richarlison, with the Brazilian unable to match his early-season form.

The 28-year-old has now gone six games without a goal across all competitions, with his last effort coming in the draw with Brighton & Hove Albion over a month ago.

His showing against Monaco last night was yet another to forget for the £60m addition, subsequently putting his starting role into serious question.

Minutes played

70

Touches

20

Passes completed

6

Shots taken

1

Dribbles completed

0

Possession lost

8x

Duels lost

4

Fouls committed

1

Richarlison featured for 70 minutes last night, but like Bergvall, he only completed a total of six passes and registered a solitary effort on the opposition goal.

He only managed a total of 20 touches during his performance – a tally fewer than goalkeeper Vicario, who notched 49 – whilst also failing to complete any of his attempted dribbles.

The Brazilian subsequently gifted possession back to the hosts on eight separate occasions, leading to one analyst labelling his showing against the Ligue 1 side as “shocking”.

As a result of his showing, the striker was handed a measly 4/10 match rating by The Standard’s Matt Verri – further showcasing his lack of positive impact against the French outfit.

Frank has been lenient with his centre-forward over the last couple of weeks, but it’s desperately clear the 28-year-old needs to be dropped from the starting eleven.

Richarlison has constantly struggled to match the expectations placed upon him over the last couple of months, with Mathys Tel deserving of a recall against Everton this weekend.

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Rafael Devers Had Announcers in Awe With His Monster Home Run vs. Mets

Rafael Devers is trying to break the San Francisco Giants out of their frustrating, months-long slump, and took his team's collective frustration out on a baseball Sunday afternoon.

During the top of the third inning of the Giants' matchup with the New York Mets at Citi Field, Devers turned around a 94-mph fastball from Frankie Montas and launched it into the upper deck. It had the team's announcers in awe.

Video is below.

Officially, the ball came off the bat at 105.9 mph and went 403 feet, but that looks much farther than the official tally shows.

Since acquiring Devers from the Boston Red Sox on June 15, the Giants have the worst record in baseball at 14-26. The All-Star slugger has struggled to fit in with his new team. Entering Sunday, he had played 39 games with the Giants and was slashing .219/.322/.363 with four home runs and 15 RBIs. His fifth home run with the team sure was memorable.

Devers and the Giants are currently punishing the Mets 7-1, so maybe a breakout is on the horizon.

The Tragic Story of Phillies Hall of Famer Ed Delahanty

Back on Aug. 28, Phillies designated hitter Kyle Schwarber slammed four home runs in a 19–4 win over the Braves. He became the fourth Philadelphia player ever to do so, joining a trio of Hall of Famers.

One—third baseman Mike Schmidt—played within living memory of a probable majority of Phillies fans. Though his career ended during World War II, it's not inconceivable that some elderly Philadelphia backers remember outfielder Chuck Klein.

And then there's Ed Delahanty. Delahanty, who hit four home runs in a game against the Chicago Colts (today's Cubs) in 1896, played for the Phillies and two other teams from 1888 to 1903. Today, he is known primarily for the bizarre, sad circumstances of his death—you'll see his story pop up on social media from time to time, the deep-historical fodder of YouTube rabbit holes.

What happened to Delahanty, and how good was he? As Schwarber and Philadelphia eye history this postseason, let's go back in time and examine one of baseball's most fascinating players.

Who was Ed Delahanty?

In the 1880s, as in our own time, Major League Baseball was filled with first- and second-generation immigrants looking to make a name for themselves in the United States. That was the case for Delahanty and his brothers, born to Irish parents in Cleveland in 1867. In total, five Delahantys would play in MLB: Ed, Frank (six years for four teams, primarily the Yankees), Jim (13 years for eight teams, primarily the Tigers), Joe (three years, all with the Cardinals), and Tom (three years for four teams, primarily the Cleveland Spiders).

Per John Saccoman's indispensable SABR bio, Ed played for two teams in the then-anarchic minor leagues: Mansfield in the Ohio State League in 1887 and the Wheeling National Citys in the Tri-State League in '88. From these Midwestern leagues the Phillies plucked Ed in '88; it took awhile for the avid drinker to marshal his considerable talents, but once he did, Philadelphia had a star on its hands.

How good was Ed Delahanty?

In , a famous baseball book written around the turn of this century, James cites a comparison made in the 1930s between Ed and Yankees center fielder Joe DiMaggio. That's how good he's reputed to have been—a consummate five-tool player in an era filled with them. Over the course of his career, Ed led his league in batting average twice, home runs twice, RBIs three times, steals once, on-base percentage twice, slugging percentage five times, and bWAR three times.

His best offensive season was probably 1899, when he led the National League in bWAR with 8.0. That year, he slashed .410/.464/.582 with nine home runs, 137 RBIs, and 55 doubles. However, one could plausibly argue he was better in '96 (when he had a career-best 190 OPS+), or 1893 (when he clubbed an outrageous 19 home runs and drove in 146 runs), or 1895 (when he got on base half the time; his on-base percentage was .500 on the dot), or even 1902 (when he led the then-new American League in every slash category).

How did Ed Delahanty die?

In 1903, Ed was in his second season with the Washington Senators, to whom he had jumped in the early years of the American League. He was in atrocious financial straits, having ostensibly signed a $4,500 contract with the Senators for the '03 season while also staring down the consequences of making an under-the-table agreement with the Giants (he was legally obligated to pay back a $4,000 advance). By late June, his mental health had deteriorated so significantly that he insured his life and began giving away his valuables; by the time he broke with Washington his teammates were regularly monitoring his welfare.

A family intervention in Detroit went nowhere, and in early July he boarded an overnight train from Michigan to New York. Quickly becoming inebriated, Ed was ejected from the train by an irate conductor near the border between Ontario and New York. Whether he jumped or fell from the International Railway Bridge into the Niagara River is unknown, but the 35-year-old's body was found on the Canadian side of Niagara Falls a week later.

What is Ed Delahanty's legacy?

"Big Ed," as he was nicknamed, can still be found all over the Phillies' and MLB's record book. Only Schmidt, Robin Roberts, Steve Carlton and Chase Utley accumulated more WAR. His .348 batting average for the team trails only teammate Billy Hamilton (and his .346 lifetime clip ranks eighth). He's second in franchise history in runs, fourth in hits, second in doubles, and third in triples. You don't have to look far; in May, Philadelphia acknowledged as such by retiring his "number."

More than numbers, however, he stands as a symbol in several respects. He was one of Philadelphia's first sports stars, helping begin the city's love affairs with big personalities unafraid to color outside the lines. His humble origins, outsized life, and tragic death made him an avatar of the early Irish American crop of athletes as they coped with a xenophobic society. Most of all, perhaps, Ed represents the enduring allure in the Information Age of the early days of baseball—a brutish, mysterious era whose impact on our own is easy to see but difficult to truly grasp.

Torcedores do Corinthians se revoltam com falhas de Cássio: 'Não dá mais'

MatériaMais Notícias

A torcida do Corinthians detonou a atuação de Cássio contra o Juventude, pela segunda rodada do Brasilierão. O goleiro falhou nos dois gols sofridos pelo Timão no Alfredo Jaconi, e a Fiel ficou na bronca com o capitão da equipe.

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➡️ Siga o Lance! Corinthians no WhatsApp e acompanhe todas as notícias do Timão

O Juventude abriu o placar contra o Corinthians após chute de longa distância de Jean Carlos, que soltou uma bomba no canto de Cássio. O capitão do Timão não conseguiu chegar na bola.

➡️A boa do Lance! Betting: vamos dobrar seu primeiro depósito, até R$200! Basta abrir sua conta!

Seis minutos depois, Cássio  Cássio errou na saída de bola para Félix Torres, Jean Carlos recuperou na grande área e tocou para Lucas Barbosa ampliar a vantagem do Jaconero sobre o Corinthians.

continua após a publicidade

O Timão volta a campo no próximo sábado (20), às 18h30, contra o Red Bull Bragantino, pela terceira rodada do Brasileirão. António Oliveira, que cumpriu suspensão diante do Juventude, estará de volta ao comando do Corinthians em Bragança Paulista.

➡️ Veja tabela com datas e horários dos jogos do Brasileirão

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Cássio Roberto RamosCorinthians

رود خوليت: فوز ليفربول ليس خبراً جيدًا لـ محمد صلاح.. ووضعه يشبه فينيسيوس

يرى النجم الهولندي السابق رود خوليت، أن فوز ليفربول على إنتر ميلان في منافسات بطولة دوري أبطال أوروبا، ليس بمثابة خبر جيد للنجم المصري محمد صلاح، في أعقاب أزمته مع الريدز والمدرب آرني سلوت.

وتغلب ليفربول على إنتر ميلان بهدف دون رد، من ضربة جزاء سجلها دومينيك سوبوسلاي في الدقيقة 88 من عمر اللقاء، وذلك ضمن مباريات الجولة السادسة لمرحلة الدوري في دوري أبطال أوروبا، على ملعب “جوزيبي مياتزا” معقل الفريق الإيطالي.

وغاب محمد صلاح عن فريقه ليفربول في المباراة أمام إنتر ميلان، حيث تم استبعاده من قائمة الفريق بقرار من المدرب سلوت، بعد التصريحات التي أدلى بها، حين أشار إلى شعوره بأن النادي يتخلى عنه ولانقطاع علاقته بالمدرب الهولندي، بعد استمرار جلوسه بديلاً لثلاث مباريات متتالية في البريميرليج.

اقرأ أيضًا | رجل مباراة ليفربول وإنتر ميلان في دوري أبطال أوروبا

وقال رود خوليت خلال حديثه في شبكة “بي إن سبورتس”: “ليفربول كان تحت ضغط أكبر من إنتر ميلان في المباراة، وكان بحاجة إلى الفوز وحصل عليه”.

وتابع: “هذا ليس خبراً جيدًا لـ محمد صلاح، لأنه اذا فاز الفريق مرة أخرى وهو بعيد عن المجموعة وسيذهب إلى منتخب بلاده، وإذا واصل الفريق الفوز فعندها ربما سيواجه صعوبات مع كل ما حدث”.

وأضاف: “أتمني أن يجدوا حلا بين اللاعب وناديه، من الجيد إذا تحدث صلاح مع المدرب والمسؤولين والإدارة في ليفربول لكي يكون هناك بعض الهدوء والطمأنينة”.

وأشار: “هناك مواجهة ريال مدريد ومانشستر سيتي والريال في وضعية معقدة ربما، ما حدث ما صلاح يشبه ما حدث فينيسوس جونيور الذي لديه بعض الصعوبات مع ألونسو”.

وأتم: “ألونسو كذلك لديه بعض التعقيدات، ولكن فينيسيوس لم يتحدث عن أي شيء، هناك إشاعة أكثر من أي وقت آخر، لا ـحد يقول أي شيء .. ولكن رغم هذا هناك بعض التوتر وفترة صعبة مع ريال مدريد”.

Amorim can forget Sesko by unleashing Man Utd's "homegrown Osimhen"

Manchester United drew 2-2 away to Tottenham Hotspur on Saturday lunchtime. It took a late Matthijs de Ligt goal to secure a point, after being 1-0 up at half-time. Not only did United let the three points slip out of their grasp, but striker Benjamin Sesko picked up an injury.

The Slovenian didn’t start the game in North London, coming on in the second half. He suffered a knee problem late in the clash after a tackle by Mickey van de Ven prevented him from getting a shot off.

Ruben Amorim said after the game that he is “concerned” about the striker’s issue.

It is currently unclear how long the 22-year-old will be out injured for, but Amorim has three different options to replace him.

1

The logical option

There is only one other number 9 in the United squad: Joshua Zirkzee. The Dutchman is a superb technical player who is brilliant at bringing his teammates into the game with holdup play and silky footwork.

He ended his debut campaign at United strongly, with ten goals and assists, including a crucial header in the Europa League away from home against Lyon. However, he’s fallen out of favour under the Portuguese manager this term.

It certainly hasn’t been easy for the Dutchman in 2025/26. He’s only made five appearances across all competitions, playing 90 minutes in total and not starting a game. He hasn’t even had a chance to prove himself this term.

However, with his ability to link play together and facilitate the likes of Bryan Mbeumo, the 24-year-old could be a game-changer for United. He’s their only other senior number striker and has shown great promise when given a chance.

2

The wildcard option

The suggested wildcard shout is, ironically, something Amorim has done more often this season than the logical option. That consists of bringing Mason Mount into the starting lineup and playing a flexible front three consisting of the Englishman, Mbeumo and Matheus Cunha.

Although he has been struck down with injury a lot for United, the 26-year-old clearly has an abundance of quality. When fit, he has been a trusted lieutenant under Amorim, playing 29 games for the Red Devils boss, scoring four times and assisting one.

In fact, those strikes certainly highlight the quality the number seven brings to United’s side. Look at his finish against Athletic Club in the Europa League last season, taking the ball on the half turn and curling his effort home. That is classic Mount.

This solution would offer Amorim lots of energy up front, with all three players excellent pressers. United fans would also witness fluid rotations in possession, although the lack of a natural number 9 might make them less of a threat in the box.

3

The academy option

Using players from the academy has always been a huge part of the DNA at Old Trafford. Well, in light of Sesko’s injury, Amorim could turn to 17-year-old Chido Obi to help fill the void left at centre-forward.

The former Arsenal youngster has played first-team football in the red of United since his move to Manchester last summer. He’s featured eight times under Amorim, even starting away to Brentford in the Premier League.

It is at academy level that the former Gunners star has made a real impression. Obi has scored six goals for United’s U21 side and has bagged 12 times in ten games for the U18s. It is no surprise that Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta previously described him as a “massive goal threat.” Gunners podcaster Will Balsam once even described the prodigy as a “homegrown Osimhen”.

Obi has played against senior sides in the EFL Trophy this season and has made a real impression, grabbing three goal involvements in as many games. Against Barnsley, he got a goal and an assist, having two shots on target, creating one chance and winning three duels.

Obi stats vs. Barnsley

Stat

Number

Touches

20

Shots

3

Shots on target

2

Ground duels won

3

Key passes

1

Goals

1

Assists

1

Stats from Sofascore

Picking the Denmark U20 striker to replace Sesko could be seen as a risk from Amorim. Yet, the Red Devils boss clearly trusts and rates the striker, having given him regular minutes in the top flight last season.

There are a few options for the United boss, and it will be fascinating to see which route he takes if Sesko is sidelined for a long period.

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Nancy must unleash Celtic's most frustrating player since Engels

Celtic are reportedly closing in on the appointment of Columbus Crew head coach Wilfried Nancy as their next permanent manager to replace Brendan Rodgers.

The French tactician is in ‘advanced talks’ to join the Scottish giants, but it remains to be seen exactly when he will be in post to start the job, with Martin O’Neill currently in interim charge.

Once Nancy is in the job and looking at what his priorities need to be, the new Celtic boss must find a way to get more out of central midfielder Arne Engels in the coming weeks and months.

Why Wilfried Nancy must revive Arne Engels for Celtic

The Scottish Premiership champions smashed their club record transfer fee to sign the Belgium international from Augsburg for a fee of £11m in the summer of 2024, and he showed plenty of promising signs in his first year at the club.

Engels delivered a return of ten goals and 13 assists in 52 appearances in all competitions for the Hoops, per Transfermarkt, which shows that he offered a decent threat as both a scorer and a creator of goals.

Unfortunately, the 22-year-old star has been frustrating to watch this season because he has only produced one goal and four assists in 20 outings in the 2025/26 campaign.

This is why Nancy must make getting the best out of Engels one of his top priorities, because he is evidently capable of contributing far more than he currently is.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

Along with the Belgian starlet, the French boss must also unleash summer signing Benjamin Nygren, who has become Celtic’s most frustrating player since Engels.

Why Benjamin Nygren is a frustrating player for Celtic

Like the £11m club-record signing, the Sweden international is an incredibly frustrating player for the Hoops because you can see that the talent is there, but it does not always work out for him.

The left-footed central midfielder has scored six goals and provided three assists in 18 appearances for the club this season, per Sofascore, yet he has found himself on the bench for the last two league games under O’Neill.

Nygren is such a frustrating player because he can do the hard bits, scoring and creating goals, but he lets himself down at times with some of the simpler parts of the game in the middle of the park.

xG

4.76

Top 1%

Goals

5

Top 1%

xA

2.77

Top 5%

Assists

2

Top 14%

Dribble success rate

29.4%

Bottom 17%

Duel success rate

49.5%

Bottom 44%

Dribbled past

6x

Bottom 35%

As you can see in the table above, he is exceptional at making an impact in the final third, yet is among the worst of his positional peers when it comes to competing in physical duels on and off the ball.

This explains why O’Neill has dropped him from the starting line-up in recent matches, because the midfield star has not proven that he can be reliable enough out of possession to go along with his attacking qualities.

The 24-year-old gem’s attacking output, though, suggests that he is a player who has a lot to offer to Nancy once he is in the building, as is also the case for Engels, which is why he must unleash the Swedish whiz from the start.

It will then be down to Nygren and Nancy to work together on the training pitch to either minimise the effects of his physical struggles, or to improve his work off the ball, to make him as effective as possible.

£1.5m Celtic flop has been an even bigger waste of time than Balikwisha

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Brewers’ Grand Slam Robbery Turns Into Confusing, Never-Before-Seen Double Play

The Brewers escaped a bases loaded jam in the fourth inning in unbelievable fashion in Game 1 of the National League Championship Series against the Dodgers on Monday night.

Los Angeles third baseman Max Muncy stepped up to the plate to blast open the scoreless game, and nearly did it, sending a ball deep to center field.

Milwaukee center fielder Sal Frelick made an unbelievable play on the ball, robbing a grand slam by keeping the ball from clearing the fence with his glove. He wasn’t able to complete the catch, however, as the ball bounced out of his glove, off of the wall, and then back into his glove, making it a live ball.

This somehow worked out for the Brewers, as in the confusion, the Dodgers that were running the bases believed Frelick had caught the ball, and retreated to their original bases to tag up. Frelick fired the ball to the infield, where shortstop Joey Ortiz relayed it home to catcher William Contreras. Contreras didn’t apply a tag, but because the ball was live, he didn’t need to—he had a force out at home plate.

Meanwhile, the Dodgers were still confused, and Contreras was able jog over to third and tag the bag to secure another force out to end the inning. Just your typical grand slam turned into an 8-6-2 double play.

Hilariously, the scorecards will read that Muncy “grounded” into the double play, which while technically correct, feels like a vast underestimation of the situation.

Such a double play can only happen with the help of a bit of confusion on the base paths. The only other 8-6-2 double play baseball fans might remember off the top of their head came courtesy of White Sox catcher Carlton Fisk in 1985, when he tagged two Yankees out as they careened home on top of each other.

Per Stathead, it’s the first 8-6-2 double play in MLB postseason history.

Between Frelick’s dramatic play at the wall and Contreras’s quick analysis of the situation from home plate, the Brewers were able to escape the inning unscathed. Should they go on to win the game and this series, it’s a play that will live in Milwaukee baseball lore for years to come.

Dodgers Sign Edwin Díaz in Bid to Shore Up Bullpen

For the Los Angeles Dodgers, weaknesses do not stay weakness for very long.

The Dodgers are signing pitcher Edwin Díaz away from the Mets in an apparent bid to boost their bullpen, according to a Tuesday morning report from Will Sammon of . The deal is, per Ken Rosenthal, ESPN's Jeff Passan and Sammon, reportedly a three-year pact that will pay Diaz $69 million.

Díaz, 31, has spent six seasons with New York (excluding a 2023 lost to injury). Over the course of his tenure, he saved 144 games for the Mets—third in team history—after saving 109 in three years for the Mariners.

He was particularly effective in 2022, when he finished ninth in the National League Cy Young voting and 16th in the NL MVP voting (additionally, he helped turn his entrance music into a minor electronic hit). He also made the NL All-Star team in 2025.

Los Angeles' relievers lost 33 games last year—four above the league average—but the Dodgers won their second straight World Series title anyway.

The tough, uncertain life of an assistant coach in T20

Never-ending travel, no job security, late payments, and lots of competition – it’s no picnic working as support staff in leagues across the world

Jarrod Kimber05-Apr-2020Former England keeper James Foster played his last first-class match in May 2018. In the 20 months since, he has had 17 coaching gigs. He is also a consultant with the Netherlands national side and a coach at Forest School in Walthamstow, London. When he isn’t travelling, he spends some time with his three daughters, under seven years old, at home.Foster’s schedule is draining but it illustrates well the work required to launch yourself as a T20 coach right now. The franchise coaching system is a mix of decently paid gigs and lengthy periods of unemployment. It’s like a former-player version of the lottery.James Foster’s non-stop calendar

June-July 2018 Vancouver Knights, Global T20, assistant coach
September 2018 England (5th Test v India)
October 2018 Boost Defenders, Shpageeza Cricket League, head coach
December 2018 Sindhis, T10, assistant coach
December 2018 New Zealand Test team
December 2018 Sydney Thunder, BBL, assistant coach
January 2019 Khulna Titans, BPL, assistant coach
February 2019 Peshawar Zalmi, PSL, assistant coach
March-September 2019 ECB scout
March 2019 Worcestershire, keeping coach
July 2019 Edmonton Royals, GT20, assistant coach
July-August 2019 Glamorgan, Blast, T20 consultant
August 2019 St Lucia Zouks CPL, head coach
November 2019 Team Abu Dhabi, T10, assistant coach
December 2019 Khulna Tigers, BPL, head coach
February 2020 Peshawar Zalmi, PSL, assistant coach
March 2020 KKR fielding coach, IPL (postponed)

The best outcomes go to only a few cool-kid coaches. Foster is one. At one stage it felt as if Daniel Vettori had more jobs than there were leagues. Andy Flower has, in the last few months, picked up positions at the PSL, IPL and CPL. And as is now the law, Andrew McDonald is to be mentioned in all pieces about T20 coaching.With many coaches picking up multiple jobs, it can be hard for the rest because there are so few positions out there. At last count, the Federation of International Cricketers’ Associations (FICA) had 3162 men’s professional cricketers. If we assume that for every 20 top-level players there are around four coaches, then there are probably over 600 top-level coaching positions in the world.Players have shorter careers than coaches. Steve Rixon’s first-class playing career lasted 14 years and finished in 1988. He began working as a coach in 1989 and he’s still working as a coach at 66. John Wright, 65, was in charge of Derbyshire’s T20 team in 2018 and is a Mumbai Indians scout.When you picture a coach in your mind, it’s most likely a head coach. But most coaches are actually assistants or specialist coaches. Many chase the dream of being in charge: head coaches around the world can earn between US$200,000-500,000 per year. But those roles are rare, and cricket isn’t like football – people stay in the comfy jobs for quite a while.ALSO READ: ‘With a national team, I have three years to develop a player. Here I have five weeks’ – Ottis GibsonThere are supporting-coach roles in T20 leagues that only pay US$4000 per season, with no real assurance of those jobs being there next year or of them leading to any other opportunities. And those payments can come 12 months later, or – at times – not at all. FICA is only now looking to put pressure on the ICC to ensure all leagues pay on time. But as it stands, non-payment or late payment is a massive issue, and a normal feature of working in T20 cricket.”I think numerous players and coaches always seem to have these underlying issues with remuneration,” says former South Africa spinner Robin Peterson, who has worked for a few franchises. “There were issues for me. It is the risk you take, and it’s a little bit unfair when you give up your time and skill and you don’t get paid. That is the dark side of it.”We call these T20 teams “franchises”, but the vast portion of the landscape is still not a year-round business like in the US. For a number of the newer leagues, beneath the more established ones, when we say franchises, we mean pop-ups because they are not robust financially. They wheel out salmon-and-eggplant flavoured milkshakes at one location and if they don’t hit it big, the truck leaves, rebrands and sells French Polynesian smoked-breadfruit sandwiches in a whole new locale. There’s little structure or consistency in a T20 franchise.Working in this environment means you need a back-up option, which Foster has with his school coaching job. Steffan Jones, a former county pro and now an innovative fast-bowling coach (with his own company, Pace Lab) coached the Hobart Hurricanes and is now with the Rajasthan Royals, but he is also director of sport at Wellington School in Berkshire. Darren Berry won titles as an assistant coach at Rajasthan and Islamabad United, but he works at Xavier College in Melbourne as 1st XI coach. The various gigs means time spent at the school actually coaching may often be limited, especially for someone like Foster, but for the school to be able to say their coach is not only a former player but a current T20 coach is a big selling point.No time to rest: former England keeper James Foster has clocked up lots of air miles with all the coaching gigs he has taken around the world•Getty Images”Definitely you have to have a back-up position,” says Jones, and he means it for more than just financial assurance. “It will allow you the freedom to express yourself as a coach. You’re not worried about getting things wrong.”One thing coaches don’t have is a figure like Heath Mills, CEO of the New Zealand Cricket Players’ Association, to rely on. Players and umpires have unions but there is no coaching union anywhere in the world. Most coaches are former players and many therefore had access to a union, but as coaches nobody has formed one. Unions provide strength in numbers.”They haven’t got themselves organised to do that,” Mills says. “In NZ we have talked to coaches across rugby and cricket, but it hasn’t come together. They didn’t have a champion. With all these things, you need one or two people who drive it.”Player unions can’t represent coaches as it would be a conflict of interest. They offer support to former players, but it’s not the same as helping them in pay disputes, contractual advice or with legal matters.”The way cricket is structured comes with inherent challenges, and jobs that don’t come with security,” says Tom Moffat, FICA’s CEO. “That’s what player unions have evolved to handle. Our role is to advise players and their agents, and where possible, talk directly to these leagues. The real answers lie in proactive global protections, though, which we believe should exist and be enforced at ICC level.”FICA grew out of domestic unions in England and Australia, followed by New Zealand and South Africa. “That path of growth is important,” Moffat said. “A lot of the issues upfront for players and coaches are global issues, but starting a global union for coaches from scratch would be difficult. As a global body, a lot of our strengths still come from our domestic bodies and their members and organisations.”

“I would hate to be involved in that short-contract world, in-and-out gigs. You’re in Pakistan one month, then India, Caribbean and Australia”Fast-bowling coach Steffan Jones

Without a collective voice, coaches, especially assistants, aren’t visible. Several assistant coaches didn’t want to be quoted here for fear of upsetting their current employers or putting off prospective ones.We often have a hard time even working out what coaches do because cricket is so captain-led. When Gary Stead had a week off with New Zealand mid-series recently, it upset some. But if he is a top-quality coach, with professional systems in place, the team should perform at a high level if he’s not around for a week. One week of missing in-game situations while refreshing his overworked mind is actually a benefit to all concerned.And it’s not just those outside the game who misunderstand coaches. Even within the T20 industry there is a problem. I’ve been involved in a few franchises when they have been looking for coaches. The owners often allow the head coach to pick his friends, or they choose an assistant who is known to them. There’s almost no due diligence done by way of looking at what a coaching applicant can bring to the team.ALSO READ: Will coaches be replaced by general managers soon?Peterson got all of his jobs (Barbados and St Kitts in CPL, Northern Warriors in T10) through head coach Robin Singh, a former India allrounder. Others charm owners or get agents to help them, but most agents take on so few coaches as clients that it’s almost harder to sign with them than find an actual coaching position.Many positions are taken up by celebrity coaches. “It seems to be that if you are a big-name player, you kind of walk into those jobs without any coaching experience,” says Perterson. “Marketing or branding is probably what you would call it.”It is hard to argue. Brendon McCullum, Jacques Kallis and Ricky Ponting have been getting good jobs without having had to do much by way of apprenticeships. It doesn’t mean they are poor coaches, just that because of their playing ability, they start at the top, making it harder for the others who were never so established as players.A lot of the actual work assistant coaches do amounts to things like running throwdowns and catching practice•Getty ImagesEven empirical evidence – which is usually how we judge coaches in cricket – is rare for assistants. When you get a job, it’s hard to do any genuine work. You have two weeks, maybe two months, to work with a player. And if two months sounds like a long time, once you factor in games, rest days and travel, you’re lucky if you get eight full days to try to improve a player.”Rahul Dravid told me a couple of years ago, ‘You don’t coach in the IPL, there is no time to coach,'” says Jones. “Last year [when Jones was with Rajasthan] we did 18 flights, so there is no time to actually coach. Team meetings are about how to bowl to each player. You can manage their workloads and talk to the strength and conditioning staff, but in terms of technical changes or sharpening them up a bit, you can’t do it in the tournament.”How, then, do you work out if someone is a quality coach?”You are just guessing,” says Jones. “The head coach is just a facilitator. I don’t think an assistant coach has any impact at all on a franchise, if I am being brutally honest. You probably end up either taking the mitt or doing throwdowns.”One assistant tells a common anecdote. The franchise hired an overseas player, who had a noticeable weakness against the spinning ball. They spent all season fixing the problem. The next season, the player returned. He still had the same issue.The more traditional coaching jobs that allow for longer-term work improving players are more fulfilling. So why do former players chase after these short-term gigs?Usually it’s just to do with opportunity and what’s available. Coaches stay around in first-class set-ups and academies for longer, meaning those jobs don’t become vacant that often. T20 positions seem to arrive every seven to eight minutes.It’s also a financial issue. An assistant-coaching job in the IPL, for instance, can pay good money. There aren’t many such roles that are lucrative, but adding together a few stints can make for a good salary.For Peterson, currently the interim head coach of the Warriors in South Africa, it was about a future target. “My goal was always to coach South Africa one day. So I saw it as an opportunity to gain experience of working with international players.”

“It is the risk you take, and it’s a little bit unfair when you give up your time and skill, and you don’t get paid. That is the dark side of it”Warriors coach Robin Peterson on the problem of late or no payments in T20 leagues

As Mills notes, coaches get better remuneration in the big T20 leagues, but they’re more volatile than international jobs. “So what we’re seeing is, the best coaches aren’t even in international cricket. The smaller countries struggle to hold on to quality support staff.” He points to New Zealand’s strength-and-conditioning coach Chris Donaldson, who recently had his contract changed to allow him to work in the IPL as well. Many have to make a starker choice, and picking between a bigger pay packet and security is never easy.New coaches are fighting for jobs against recently retired players and coaches from the ’80s. Most start between the ages of 35 and 45, so they are likely to have a family and children. And after a long professional playing career where the axe was never far from your neck, it’s the same in coaching. Except this time you can’t go out there and score a match-winning hundred.Franchises have brought more jobs, but they are fraught with danger, and the lifestyle, with all the travel involved, is not ideal. The holy grail, as Peterson says, is coaching in the IPL. Of course, the problem with holy grails is that they are not easy to get your hands on.”I would hate to be involved in that short-contract world, in-and-out gigs – you’re in Pakistan one month, then India, Caribbean and Australia,” says Jones, “And it must be hard because you don’t really coach. That’s why I’m not a full-time, year-round franchise coach”. Many franchise leagues are run poorly. The wild-west nature of the T20 league landscape means there’s not enough oversight from the ICC, and often there is little to no accountability.Mills worries for the welfare of T20 coaches. Moffat wants the game to show greater responsibility in protecting its own. But coaches won’t be getting a union soon and they will have to continue navigating this freelance-coaching world alone. Along the way, cricket will lose who knows how many talented educators.Peterson has ambition, but he’s also like a lot of coaches, in that teaching runs through him. “Part of it is getting paid, but it’s also about helping people because you love doing it.”

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