Idrissa Gueye closing in on Everton return

Everton are closing in on a deal to sign Paris Saint-Germain midfielder Idrissa Gana Gueye, according to reliable journalist Fabrizio Romano.

The Lowdown: Everton interested in Gueye

Last Thursday, the Italian revealed that the Toffees had made an approach to sign the 32-year-old midfielder. The journalist reported that the Senegal international was ‘one of the names’ on Frank Lampard’s list, but talks were only in the early stages.

PSG reportedly want to sell Gueye this summer, making a potential return to Goodison Park much more likely than one would otherwise suspect.

The Latest: Romano’s update

Romano has shared a fresh update on Everton’s pursuit of Gueye.

Taking to Twitter in the early hours of Monday morning, the reliable journalist claimed: “Everton are closing on Gana Gueye deal with Paris Saint-Germain. Final details will be discussed this week, clubs now negotiating permanent deal. #EFC

“Lampard wants Gana Gueye, now optimistic after talks opened last Thursday”

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The Verdict: Hope he comes back

Having made 107 appearances for the Toffees, a Premier League return for the Senegal midfielder could end up being the best move for both him and Everton.

As per FBRef, compared with positional peers across Europe over the past year, the midfielder ranks in the 98th percentile for pass completion, the 94th percentile for pressures and the 93rd percentile for tackles.

Despite being dubbed a ‘quality’ player by former PSG manager Mauricio Pochettino, the 32-year-old started just 18 games in Ligue 1 last season, coming on as a substitute on eight other occasions.

Therefore, if Gueye wants to continue featuring at the highest level, a move to Everton would likely guarantee regular football in the English top-flight.

Furthermore, with Lampard looking to add experience to the Toffees’ midfield, this could be a good move for all parties involved.

Vieira will be ‘desperate’ to keep Zaha

Journalist Pete O’Rourke has delivered his verdict on the speculation surrounding the future of Crystal Palace winger Wilfried Zaha. 

The lowdown: Zaha linked with Palace exit…again

Seemingly perennially linked with a move away from Selhurst Park ever since returning from an abortive spell at Manchester United, the Ivory Coast international is now into the final 12 months of his contract in southeast London and could be facing an uncertain future with the Eagles.

The 29-year-old is yet to enter negotiations with the Palace board over a new deal, and the club’s hierarchy are fearful of losing a player who has directly contributed to 156 goals in 429 Eagles appearances for nothing next summer.

Following a recent report from TuttoMercatoWeb claiming that Jose Mourinho’s AS Roma were interested in signing Zaha this summer, one well-informed onlooker has had his say on the influential forward’s future…

The latest: ‘Name popping up’

Speaking to GiveMeSport, O’Rourke suggested that Patrick Vieira will be ‘desperate’ to retain the services of the 28-cap Ivorian at Selhurst Park.

He said: “It wouldn’t be a transfer window without Wilfried Zaha’s name popping up as he gets linked probably every summer.

“But Vieira will be desperate to keep him, he’s trying to build something at Crystal Palace right now and Zaha is one of the more experienced players at Selhurst Park, while he’s got all of the younger players around him as well.”

The verdict: Fingers crossed

Finishing the 2021/22 season as the top scorer for Vieira’s side with 15 goals (along with two assists), almost twice as many as Conor Gallagher in second, Zaha’s continued importance at Selhurst Park remains abundantly clear.

Now perhaps seen as the club’s stalwart, having one time been their rising sensation, the skilful winger – who was once dubbed as an ‘incredible talent’ by former Palace owner Simon Jordan – will be looked upon to nurture the likes of Michael Olise, Eberechi Eze and new summer signing Malcolm Ebiowei to develop further.

In that case, to avoid losing such a talismanic figure without an incoming transfer fee, chairman Steve Parish, sporting director Dougie Freedman and the rest of the Palace board should be doing everything in their power to tie down the £34.2m-valued star to fresh terms.

Celtic dealt Vinicius Souza transfer blow

Celtic look set to potentially miss out on securing a summer move for Brazilian midfielder and reported target Vinicius Souza.

What’s the news?

According to journalist Fraser Fletcher, Celtic are set to lose out on the signing from Lommel with PSV Eindhoven and Betis wanting to sign the player.

He revealed: “Vinicius Souza at Lommel will be moving on soon. His new club to be revealed shortly. Many want him PSV and Betis and others. Celtic not close to deal as it stands.”

Last season saw the 23-year-old spend a loan spell with fellow Belgian club KV Mechelen, in which he showed how much of a capable midfield player he is.

Celtic fans will be gutted

As the Hoops are dealt a blow in their bid to sign the talented Souza, their supporters will no doubt be gutted as he would have added a great deal to the Parkhead ranks.

With 27 league appearances to his name, the midfielder ended the campaign with more interceptions (64) and more tackles won (66) than any other player at the club.

Souza also racked up the third-highest percentage for shots on target (53.8%) at the Belgian side, which shows just how deadly he can be with the ball going forward.

This shows how much of a well-rounded midfielder he is and why clubs such as Celtic and PSV have been after him.

It also proves how much of a disappointing blow it would to the Parkhead club and their fans, if they were to see him make a move to the Netherlands this summer.

Bearing in mind how the Hoops saw the likes of Scott Brown and Olivier Ntcham leave the club last summer and also saw Nir Bitton and Tom Rogic wave goodbye at the end of the previous season, it’s safe to say that the Bhoys could do with some reinforcements in the midfield area.

With the Brazilian being identified as a potential candidate to join Ange Postecoglou’s squad, Celtic will have to look at other midfield options to bring in before their next campaign starts.

Having shown during the previous summer and winter transfer windows, in addition to already securing deals for the likes of Jota, Cameron Carter-Vickers, Benjamin Siegrist and Alexandro Bernabei over the past few weeks, that the club are very capable of being active in the transfer market, this should Celtic fans hope that there will be more signings made in the coming weeks.

While it would be bad news to miss out on signing Souza, it would give the club the chance to move on from the saga and focus on other possible midfield recruits.

AND in other news: Ange can unearth his own Van Dijk as Celtic eye £5.9k-p/w titan who has a “big future”

Aston Villa: Sky Sports drop Danny Ings update

Aston Villa have ‘no intention’ of parting ways with Danny Ings this summer, Sky Sports report.

The Lowdown: Exit rumours

Ings made the move to Villa Park last summer from Southampton in a deal worth £26.48m. The 29-year-old made 31 appearances in his first season as a Villa player, scoring seven times and registering six assists.

Reports in recent weeks have suggested that Steven Gerrard would be willing to part ways with Ings this summer to make room for a new marquee attacker, however, that doesn’t appear to be the case.

The Latest: Sky Sports update

Sky Sports provided a live TV update regarding Villa and Ings on Monday afternoon.

They were told ‘in the last few minutes’ that Villa have ‘no intention of selling’ Ings despite rumours of a move to Manchester United or Leeds United, adding that Gerrard sees Ings as an ‘integral part of his squad’.

The Verdict: Good news

Villa are fairly short of centre-forward options, with Ings and Ollie Watkins the two recognised strikers in the Midlands.

Keinan Davis and Cameron Archer spent the second half of last season out on loan in the Championship, so keeping hold of Ings appears to be the correct call.

Gerrard found success in a system using two centre-forwards, so bringing in another striker to challenge Ings and Watkins could be the better decision, and hopefully we will see that come to fruition ahead of Gerrard’s first full season in charge.

In other news: Villa now receive ‘official proposal’ for player with ‘unbelievable’ work rate. 

Moise Kean ‘hasn’t got a future at Everton’

Journalist Paul Brown has delivered his verdict on the future of out-of-favour Everton striker Moise Kean. 

The lowdown: Flattered to deceive

Signed for £25.1m from Juventus in 2019 (BBC), the Italy international arrived on Merseyside with the world seemingly at his feet having made a successful transition from youth starlet to first-team performer in his homeland.

Following a disappointing debut campaign which yielded just four direct goal involvements in 29 Premier League outings, the young striker was sent out on loan to Paris Saint-Germain, where he appeared to recapture some form with 13 goals in 26 Ligue 1 appearances.

However, after just two more fleeting cameos for the Toffees, the 22-year-old was loaned back to Juventus last September for two years with an obligation to buy, but he now faces an uncertain future…

The latest: Kean’s Everton future in doubt

Speaking to GiveMeSport, journalist Brown dismissed the notion of the 12-cap Italy ace ever returning to Goodison Park.

He explained: “It’s clear he hasn’t got a future at Everton, and I don’t think he wants one either, I think that’s also quite clear.

“The move didn’t work out for him and the man that brought him in, Marcel Brands has gone and it’s a completely different club now.”

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The verdict: Not worth it

Lauded as ‘fearless’ by Chelsea manager Thomas Tuchel, under whom Kean played at PSG, there is certainly a top-level player waiting to be unleashed in the 22-year-old. However, seemingly unwanted by Juventus, he is now stuttering along in a career which is in danger of stagnating at a very early stage.

During 2021/22 the Italian scored six times and provided three assists in 44 appearances across all competitions, another below-par campaign from a young forward with an abundance of talent.

Couple these on-field struggles when it comes to output with the fallout when replaced by Duncan Ferguson against Manchester United in 2019, and Frank Lampard may be best served to avoid bringing a disenchanted Kean back to Merseyside, even in light of the possibility of losing frontline duo Richarlison and Dominic Calvert-Lewin.

In other news: Frank McAvennie has reacted to this behind-the-scenes Everton development

Liverpool: Jota let Klopp down vs Villa

Liverpool survived an early scare to bounce back to winning ways against Aston Villa at Villa Park on Tuesday night, having been held to a draw by Antonio Conte’s Tottenham Hotspur side just a few days prior.

Manager Jurgen Klopp had been critical of Spurs’ defensive showing in that clash at Anfield, although the same could not be said of Steven Gerrard’s outfit, with the Midlands side netting inside just three minutes in what was a breathless start to proceedings.

After recovering quickly to strike back soon after through Joel Matip, the Reds completed the comeback midway through the second half through Sadio Mane, the Senegal international’s strike moving the Merseysiders level on points with Manchester City at the summit, albeit with the reigning champions having played a game less.

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The headlines will no doubt go to that man Mane for his crucial late effort – which keeps the club’s title hopes alive – although one man who endured an uncharacteristically anonymous showing was former Wolverhampton Wanderers forward Diogo Jota, with the Portuguese sensation suffering a rare off day.

The £54m-rated man has enjoyed a fine second campaign under Klopp’s tutelage, having netted 21 times in all competitions so far this term prior to the midweek clash, although rarely looked like adding to that tally following a limp display in attack.

In his 90-minute outing, the £120k-per-week star lost possession 14 times from just 42 touches – a dismal ratio of losing the ball once every three touches – ensuring he finished with just a 72% pass completion rate as a result.

The 25-year-old also won just two of his total duels and failed to register a single shot on target, eventually ending the match with just a 6.6 match rating, as per SofaScore – the second-worst among his teammates in the starting lineup.

Furthermore, he also made fewer passes (23) than substitute Jordan Henderson who played just an hour after Fabinho’s withdrawal through injury.

The Express writer Archie Griggs was also critical of the one-time Porto man’s performance, handing the player a 5/10 rating in his post-match analysis and stating of his display that: “Often managed to get himself into some promising areas and played a role for his team in attack but, like so many of his team-mates, appeared to lack the required end product over the course of the contest. Pressed well in the early stages of the match but ended up faltering away and did not exert as great an influence as he would have liked at Villa Park.”

A poor night in what’s largely been an otherwise fruitful stint at Liverpool – with 34 goals and nine assists to his name in 80 appearances across all fronts since joining in the summer of 2020 – the 24-cap international will likely be hoping he hasn’t played himself out of contention for Saturday’s FA Cup final showdown with Chelsea.

With Mo Salah set to return after earning a rest on Tuesday night – and with Roberto Firmino back in contention after his recent injury layoff – there is simply too much competition for places to allow for any passengers.

Jota seemingly was a passenger against Gerrard’s men and will be fortunate not to be dropped to the bench at Wembley.

IN other news, “Met his agent…”: Sky Sports journo drops big Liverpool update, Klopp will be fuming

How England turned the tables on spin bowling to establish a new ODI dominance

England’s white-ball revival since the 2015 has been startling to behold, and it has centred on the subversion of their oldest weakest of all

Andrew Fidel Fernando24-Oct-2018When England last toured Sri Lanka for ODIs, in 2014, their batsmen had essentially tripped over themselves in their attempts to defuse spin. By the final game of the seven-match series, captain Angelo Mathews could have packed his attack with spinners, set them loose inside the Powerplay, then slapped his hands over his eyes, and still soon found the England top order in a tangled, twitching heap in the middle of the pitch.Four years later, England have at times been imperious against slow bowling – fancy footwork, strapping sweeps, and fuss-free strike rotation characterising their batting, at least until after they had taken an unassailable 3-0 series lead. Even in the fifth ODI, in which England fielded a substantially depleted XI, it was the fast bowling of Dushmantha Chameera and Kasun Rajitha that derailed the visitors’ chase, though allsorts offspinner Akila Dananjaya would later claim a clutch of wickets.It turns out, however, that England haven’t merely been good against spin in Sri Lanka. In fact, in a matter of a few years, they have transformed themselves into one of the finest spin-playing ODI teams on the planet. Since May 2016, when England’s ODI form became truly monstrous – 12 out of 13 bilateral series won in that period (not counting the one-off Scotland game, which, you know, no one seems to) – they have averaged 56.44 against spin everywhere in the world. This is second only to India. As the graph below lays out, both teams are well ahead of the competition. Where England have been even better than India, though, is in run rate; no team comes close to their 5.91.

While India have been more or less excellent against spin right through their ODI history, it is the velocity of England’s advance that is truly surprising. In the three years prior to their 2015 World Cup group-stage exit, England had averaged only 33.06 against spin. This means that the average of 56.44, which they have maintained since May 2016*, represents a whopping 71% improvement.Their batting has got better in general, of course – their overall average climbing by 13.1 between the periods considered. But compare their gains against spin, to those against pace. In the three years before the last World Cup, they averaged 31.83 against pace, with that average only going up to 40.94 since May 2016. While ordinarily an improvement of 29% is nothing to snigger at, this figure pales in comparison to their progress against spin. Note that this also means that England are now 38% better at playing spin than they are playing pace.Essentially, of all England’s one-day improvements over the past three years, it is this manic advance against spin that is the most significant. Even accounting for the fact that England have scored only 35% of their runs against spin (as opposed to 65% against pace) since May 2016, we can attribute more of their overall increase in average to their improvements against spin.

Perhaps you may argue that England’s statistics against spin have been unfairly embellished by the flat tracks they have tended to play on at home. There may be an element of truth to this, but it tells only a fraction of the story. For starters, England’s own spinners have been more effective in ODIs at home than they used to be (more on that later). There is also the matter of England’s outstanding recent batting record versus spin in Asia, where slow bowlers have traditionally ruled. Since the 2015 World Cup, in which England have played in all four major Asian destinations (UAE, India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka), England’s batting average against spin in Asia is an excellent 46.70 – once again second only to that of India. Their run rate against slow bowling is the best among teams playing next year’s World Cup.

So how have England transformed what was for decades a crippling flaw, to arguably the strongest and most forbidding wall in their one-day fortress? Team insiders provide several reasons. The batting order they have put together in ODIs now contains Joe Root, Eoin Morgan and Jos Buttler – all decent players of spin to begin with – who have arrived in the prime of their careers, and can share the information they have gleaned from previous battles against spin, including in the IPL, with their teammates. In general, the spin intelligence in the England dressing room is understood to be far higher than it has ever been.Coach Trevor Bayliss, who has been credited with overseeing this sharp ODI rise, says this of conversations within the team: “What we’re trying to do is get them to speak to each other, and work it out between them, to a certain degree. If someone is a good sweeper, well, the other guys speak to him about how he plays the sweep shot. Other guys are good at dancing down the wicket to the ball. Well, speak to your mate and find out the plans that they might use and how they go about it. Share the information. They’ve all got an input. It can be when they’re having coffee, or over a meal. Working it out themselves is better than someone actually telling them what to do.”From a technical perspective, Graham Thorpe, the main one-day batting coach, has focused on two particular ploys. The first was to emphasise that spinning deliveries should not be intercepted in that in-between zone where batsmen are not far enough forward to smother the turn, and not far enough back to confidently play the turn off the surface. This strategy came out of an analysis England had done for Test batting, where they looked closely at Rahul Dravid, whom they considered perhaps the best recent player of spin. In doing so, they had realised Dravid intercepted only 9% of deliveries between the danger-zone, which is between 2-3 metres from the stumps. Moreover, he attacked only 2% of overall deliveries in that area. Though originally intended to enhance England’s Test game, the benefits of this analysis eventually began to be felt – perhaps even more emphatically – in ODIs.”Playing in those safer areas puts the pressure back on the bowler to hit a length that’s about a foot long, rather than a couple of yards long,” says Bayliss. “It’s about picking up the length and using the crease.”ESPNcricinfo LtdThe other of Thorpe’s priorities also had roots in a Dravid insight. Late in his career, asked what he would have liked to have learned earlier, Dravid replied that he should have hit against the turn more in his younger years. England took this on board.Where previous England sides were apprehensive of employing such a strategy, the philosophy of fearlessnes that Bayliss, Paul Farbrace and Morgan had ushered in after the 2015 World Cup was a fertile environment in which this tactic could take root. Where England had once seen danger, they now saw opportunity – hitting against the turn meant you were generally targeting the side of the field that is less-well defended by fielders. Beat the infield and fetch yourself a boundary. Morgan does this to excellent effect with his reverse sweep, which is perhaps his most reliable stroke. Root has also been good at accessing the off-side against offspinners.The cumulative effect of these changes has been dramatic to the point of being unbelievable. The graph below charts individual batsman’s growth. The first figure is their pre-World Cup average against spin. The second is the average after May 2016. (Jason Roy is not featured here as he had not played ODIs before the last World Cup.)

In many ways, these individual numbers are the most telling of all. Root has gone from being a very good player of spin, to a fire-breathing, spin-devouring demon. Morgan is a monster himself, having averaged 195 during the just-concluded Sri Lanka series. Stokes and Buttler look like the weak links compared to their team-mates, but have better than healthy numbers. Think about where these batsmen play in the top order – No. 3, 4, 5 and 6. Think about when bowling teams usually deploy their opposition spinners. At the very stage of the game that opposition captains are most likely to bring on their slow bowlers – the middle overs – England have batsmen who average 124.5, 79.7, 51.36 and 52.60 against spin over the last two years.With this taken into consideration, it is possible that England’s recent dominance of spin is even more central to their rise as an ODI batting force, than even these stats lay out. At some point, even Asian opponents may justifiably begin fielding seam-heavy attacks against England – an almost unthinkable strategy four years ago. They might also reserve their spinners for the Powerplay or the death, because based on these numbers, why bowl middle-overs spin to these freaks?Finally, we come to England’s use of their own spinners – principally Adil Rashid and Moeen Ali. Rashid’s re-inclusion in the England squad was at Bayliss’ insistence; he believed a wristspinner would play a fundamental role in a new, aggressive England outfit. While the batsmen have been scoring more runs at a quicker rate off opposition slow bowlers, their own slower bowlers have been taking a greater proportion of wickets, increasing their share by 13 percentage points.

All of which is to say that, although much has been said about England’s rebirth as a fearless and successful ODI unit, this change of approach has been matched by a marked increase in cricketing skill and intelligence. The majority of this new prowess has been in the area of playing spin; some of it has also been about bowling it. Once a side of entangled gropers and finger-spinning forgettables, England have, in the course of a little over three years, re-oriented themselves so dramatically that spin is their foremost ODI strength.

Favourites Dhaka live up to expectations

Favourites from the start, Dhaka’s win came as no surprise to many, but that does not mean it was an easy ride to the title

Mohammad Isam10-Dec-2016Tournament overview
Everyone expected Dhaka Dynamites to win the BPL. But as their captain Shakib Al Hasan and coach Khaled Mahmud said after clinching the trophy, it was never an easy ride.With expectations come pressure, and Dhaka had a lot of that this season. They had the squad for every situation and all conditions but to pick an XI was a nightmare at times.If they hadn’t won the trophy, there would have been more questions about their ability but with so many match-winners in their team, Shakib managed to get everyone together and become a successful unit.Dhaka had Dwayne Bravo and Andre Russell together towards the end of the tournament while Evin Lewis, Kumar Sangakkara, Seekkuge Prasanna and Matt Coles provided thrusts whenever required. The local players, led by Shakib and Mehedi Maruf, gave important performances too.Mosaddek Hossain, Sunzamul Islam and Mohammad Shahid made handy contributions while Nasir Hossain, Alauddin Babu and Abu Jayed chipped in at times.Kumar Sangakkara scored a 33-ball 36 in the final for Dhaka•Daily StarHigh point
Dhaka’s batting stumbled in the final but Sangakkara made sure they passed the 150-mark, which was always going to be a safe score in a night game in Mirpur. Their bowling and fielding did not relent as Rajshahi Kings were bowled out for just 103. The team effort that Shakib insisted was quite evident as they dominated a big final.Low point
The only time in the tournament that Dhaka Dynamites disappointed was when they couldn’t defend 182 against Rajshahi in Chittagong. For once their bowling fell apart, against Samit Patel’s big-hitting.Dwayne Bravo assisted the captain Shakib Al Hasan and was the tournament’s highest wicket-taker•BCBTop of the class
Dwayne Bravo was the tournament’s highest wicket-taker, and Dhaka’s best bowler on most days. He took three wickets on four occasions, with his variation always posing a problem at the end of an innings. Bravo now has the most wickets in a calendar year in T20s.Under-par performer
Nasir Hossain started the BPL with a decent innings and a great catch but ended it with a whimper. He finished with 195 runs in 10 innings, without a fifty. His bowling was irregular throughout the tournament.Tip for 2017
A similar team may be hard to put together, but Dhaka’s finances and overall resources could still see them building another championship worthy team for 2017.

Herath spins Sri Lanka into the ascendancy

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Oct-2015At 70 for 3, West Indies needed some stability and Darren Bravo provided that, mixing caution and aggression rather well•AFPSoon after bringing up his fifty though, he dragged one to midwicket where Dinesh Chandimal leapt to pull of a spectacular grab•AFPDhammika Prasad chipped in with two middle-order wickets, including West Indies captain Jason Holder for 19 as the visitors slumped to 165 for 6•AFPThe lower order added some vital runs but Herath would not be denied. He picked up 6 for 68 as West Indies were all out for 251, well short of Sri Lanka’s 484•AFPAngelo Mathews enforced the follow-on and Herath and Milinda Siriwardana picked up a wicket each as West Indies finished the third day at 67 for 2, still trailing by 166•AFP

Robson does it the English way

Nothing about Sam Robon’s batting against seam bowling even hints at coming from Australia at all. His pointy back elbow makes him look like an accountant from Somerset

Jarrod Kimber at Headingley21-Jun-2014Sam Robson struggles outside off stump. That is the general consensus. The cricket elite, twitterers and taxi drivers have spoken. Cricket gospel is written and evangelized by them.But don’t all batsmen since the beginning of overarm bowling have a problem just outside off stump in the corridor of uncertainty? Or whatever people call it now. Then there is the length, which is rarely described much more than just back of a length. It is the magic spot that Test bowlers from around the world hit.You cannot drive it. You cannot pull it. You cannot cut it. It is just close and uncomfortable, like Hessian underwear, or that creepy bloke from the pub._____The ball is left outside off stump with the assurance of a man who knows spiritually where his off stump is at all times. In his sleep, or during an attack by giant moody birds. His straight bat comes down so safely that an edge would seem like a rude shock. Runs do not flow, they often barely trickle. But every ball faced takes up more time. Bowlers tire as the ball loses colour, shape and hardness.That is how Nick Compton plays. Today Compton used none of those skills out on a cricket ground, but was instead on a bus to Nottingham taking photos of people playing cards and a selfie of himself in sunglasses.It was Sam Robson who used them._____Robson leaves the ball well. His bat is straight. He covers the off stump. He rocks onto his front foot. Yet, in his first Test he went out twice to fairly standard deliveries. The first time was after just a few balls. It seemed like Sri Lanka had either done their homework on Robson, or just bowled fractionally outside off stump as you would with the new ball to practically any human being.The second innings at Lord’s was longer. But Sri Lanka refused to leave his awkward spot alone. If they went straight, he clipped it on the leg side and scored easily. Outside off stump he scored once. An edge past slips. There was no push to point’s left hand, or dabs short of cover, no forcing, or opening the face, he just went nowhere.Eventually he ran into Shaminda Eranga, who bowled the best spell of the Test and tortured Robson outside off stump. It was the two outswingers and one straight ball combination that had Robson dragging a ball back onto his stumps. Enough was seen. You did not need to be the Sri Lankan video analyst to suggest he had a broken technique._____It is hard to clean bowl Sam Robson. Early in his innings he protects his off stump like a grumpy old man with a shotgun protecting his youngest daughter’s virginity. A middle-stump guard quickly becomes more of an off stump with an early trigger shuffle. It gives him more balls at his strength on his pads than most batsmen would get.For all the talk about his weaknesses, he does have scoring zones. He can cut, in county cricket they talk of pull shots and overpitching will result in him driving. But it is that awkward line on that awkward length that people talked about the most. His biggest problem with this zone is not a weakness, but dryness.Robson does not score when the ball is there. Virtually at all. He does not hit boundaries to put pressure on the bowler. As a top order churner, he does not have to. But he also does not find singles. He cannot get off strike. He is just a slow moving target protecting his weak spot.His first 50 balls today in this area had Robson scoring four runs from the seamers. Against Eranga in that time, it was one run off his first 30 balls there. That is five overs of a bowler bowling in the exact zone of trouble without the batsman getting off strike more than once.Now exchange the name of Eranga for Steyn, Harris or Boult. Would anyone want to give them 30 balls at you without getting off strike? Would many be able to? In first-class cricket you can sit on a bowler for a while. In Test cricket, the bowlers will sit on you.Analysts the world over will mine every single aspect of Robson’s strong willed, disciplined, nuggety, patient hundred today. He might have made 127, but his metadata score will be far higher. The video packages will show ball after ball of him not getting off strike. Plans will be hatched, attacks will be prepared and pitch maps will be emailed.Robson will patiently try to outlive them. That is his most impressive trait. Patience. It could be used against him, but he certainly will not run out of it anytime soon. You can only imagine the stick he received as a young guy playing the patience game in Sydney grade cricket while hummer driving bankers from Paddington and bearded brickies from Blacktown abused him for never playing a shot.Nothing about his batting against seam bowling even hints at coming from Australia at all. His pointy back elbow makes him look like an accountant from Somerset. His fidgeting with his front pad is straight out of Millfield School. And the squat bounce at the crease is often seen at places that sound like Thurrock, Frieth and Whitestaunton. Until he moves out of the crease against spin, his batting is as English as Gooch’s back lift, Grace’s belly or Atherton being caught down the leg side._____The ball was full and wide, Robson chased it and drove it efficiently and inelegantly into the covers. He ran hard, and easily made his second run, and then looked for a third. Having scored his 100th run, he did not throw the bat up, abandon a potential run, take his helmet off, kiss any logos, jump or even show any acknowledgement to the crowd. He looked for a third.Sam Robson may make a lot of Test runs, but he will have to work harder and longer than most to make them. He will always be looking for a third.

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