Imagine him & Nypan: Aston Villa open talks to sign Jhon Duran 2.0

Aston Villa may not win a trophy this season, but the club remain in the hunt for a Champions League spot next term.

Unai Emery is looking ahead to the summer transfer window, however, as he aims to bolster his squad.

Sverre Nypan has been earmarked as a long-term target for the Midlands side, and it looks as though they have won the race for his signature.

The wonderkid could become the next best thing and Villa have acted swiftly. Might they be moving ahead to sign another talented teenager?

Aston Villa pressing ahead to sign French sensation

Reports in France claim that Villa are closing in on a deal to sign 18-year-old Kenny Quetant this summer, with Foot Mercato outlining that talks have been held regarding a deal for the teenager.

The youngster has yet to make a senior appearance for Le Havre, but there is no doubting how high his ceiling is.

Wrapping up a move early for Quetant could allow Emery to perhaps focus on other targets during the first few weeks of the transfer window.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

If a move does go through in the coming days, Emery might just have his next Jhon Duran.

Kenny Quetant can be Villa’s next Duran

Duran did have some experience at senior level before moving to Villa, playing 72 matches in spells with Chicago Fire and Envigado, although like Quetant, he was something of an unknown quantity upon his arrival for Villa Park.

17 goals and seven assists were deemed solid, if unspectacular, but there was something about the young Colombian. He had a spark. That was enough for Emery and co to fork out £18m for the then-19-year-old in January 2023.

Jhon Duran’s Villa stats in 2024/25

Metric

Premier League

Champions League

Goals

7

3

Assists

0

0

Goal conversion percentage

23%

21%

Goal frequency (minutes)

89

79

Shots per game

1.6

2

Via Sofascore

Mainly used as an impact player at Villa, Duran’s eye for goal gave Emery a unique weapon from the bench and this is something Quetant could offer, especially during his first season at the club.

Last term, the teenager scored 11 goals for Le Harve’s U19 side, showing plenty of promise. It is a matter of when and not if he makes his senior club debut. The future of the club in attack looks promising, especially considering Emery is in talks with both Nypan and Quetant.

The Norwegian talent was superb for Rosenborg in the top flight last season. Eight goals and seven assists were recorded, while the 18-year-old also created seven big chances and averaged 1.4 key passes per game for his club.

Throughout the 2025 campaign, Nypan ranks in the top 6% for touches in the opposition box, along with ranking in the top 6% for total shots in the Norwegian top flight.

These forward-thinking abilities could make him an excellent player for Villa and one who would shine while operating just behind Quetant. Of course, the club won’t see the best of both players until they become fully integrated into the team.

Once they do begin to play on a regular basis, Villa could have two starlets who are ready to take the Premier League by storm one day, just like Duran did ever so briefly.

Aston Villa on fresh mission to sign "electric" 12-goal ace before Arsenal

He’s enjoyed an impressive season…

ByTom Cunningham May 9, 2025

For AM Ghazanfar, the future is now

The 19-year-old Afghanistan mystery spinner has already made a splash in all three formats since his international debut in 2024, and he’s got the confidence to take on the world

Nagraj Gollapudi15-Sep-2025It was July 2022. The Shpageeza League, Afghanistan’s domestic T20 tournament was being played at the Kabul Cricket stadium. At around 1am in the morning one day, AM Ghazanfar got a call from Atta Mohammad, one of his older brothers, who asked Ghazanfar to be ready to report to the stadium the next day to join the Mis Ainak Knights squad.Ghazanfar was a net bowler for Knights at the time. The team was looking to replace former Pakistan left-arm fast bowler Mir Hamza, who had gone back home. During a nets session, the captain, Asghar Afghan, impressed with Ghazanfar’s bowling, asked if he could bowl with the new ball. Barely 16 then, Ghazanfar said yes, leading to the late-night call-up.The next morning, though, the security at the ground would not allow Ghazanfar to enter as he was not authorised for access. Eventually Knights’ manager secured him entry. Ghazanfar, upon coming in, noticed the team were in a huddle. “I was late and I was worried about what Asghar Afghan would say to me,” Ghazanfar says with a smile on a Zoom chat recorded a day after he made his T20I debut, against Pakistan, during the tri-series between Pakistan, Afghanistan and the UAE earlier this month.Related

  • Trott: Afghanistan 'not shy about achieving new things or breaking new ground'

  • Bangladesh in need of a handout against buoyant Afghanistan

  • Bangladesh lose 8 for 23 as Ghazanfar spins Afghanistan to victory

  • ESPNcricinfo Awards 2024 Men's debutant nominees: Seven sensations

  • Afghanistan bring in Ghazanfar to strengthen spin department for Asia Cup

Ghazanfar changed quickly into Knights gear and joined the team. His nerves vanished soon when Afghan told him he was playing. “Uff, ! I was under pressure, but I was proud at the same time,” Ghazanfar says. “My confidence level was high and I told myself I could manage myself and everything else quickly. I told myself, this is your day, this is your opportunity.”He misremembers being Player of the Match on his debut in the Shpageeza league, against Boost Defenders; he took one wicket in his four overs in a four-run win for Defenders. It was in Knights’ next match, against Hindukush Stars, where he took four wickets inside the powerplay, of which three came in the sixth over, that he won the award for his 4 for 15. “The game changed everything for me and my cricket,” he says.

****

Last year was eventful for Ghazanfar. He made his debut for Afghanistan in ODIs, against Ireland in March 2024. In November, he became the third-youngest bowler to take a six-wicket haul in ODIs, after only Waqar Younis and Rashid Khan, when he picked up 6 for 26 against Bangladesh. He followed that up with another five-for against Zimbabwe in December, putting him on another list with those two bowling greats – as only the third bowler in men’s cricket to take more than one five-for before turning 19.Ghazanfar picked up four wickets in his debut Test, against Zimbabwe in December 2024•Zimbabwe CricketEarlier that month Ghazanfar played four matches in three days, shuttling through the UAE, featuring in both the Under-19 Asia Cup in Dubai and the AD T10 in Abu Dhabi. In the last week of the year, he made his Test debut – also his first first-class match – stepping in for Rashid Khan, who missed the first Test, in Bulawayo, due to back and hamstring issues.As Afghanistan prepped for the match, Hashmatullah Shahidi, Afghanistan’s Test captain, checked in with Ghazanfar about whether he was ready to play a Test, considering he had never played red-ball cricket. “He said, ‘You can do it, seriously?’ I said, ‘Yes, I can,'” Ghazanfar said. Later, alone in his room, Ghazanfar stayed up late to strategise and get himself mentally ready for the big game.He speaks about an inner confidence that has allowed him to handle his and others’ expectations across the three formats. “My mind is such that red-ball, white-ball doesn’t matter. The target is to bowl wicket to wicket. My match starts once the batsman engages with me face to face. I will not think this is white-ball, this is red-ball, this is T10. I like to plan and engage with the batsman’s plans.”Bowling in the Test, on a flat deck, was not easy. “They made such a wicket that two or three of their batters went to sleep on it,” Ghazanfar laughs. “Both Hashmat Shahidi and Rahmat Shah also scored double-centuries. The wicket was flat and the ground was heavy, but I got four wickets still.”

****

Ghazanfar comes from Zurmat district in Paktia province in eastern Afghanistan. The youngest of ten children, he started playing tennis-ball cricket around 2019. His parents live in Zurmat, while a few of his brothers run the family business, which is spread between Saudi Arabia and Afghanistan.At 13, when he joined the Saleem Karwan Cricket Academy in Kabul, he did everything: opened the batting, bowled fast, bowled spin. His coach at the academy, Roze Khan Zurmetai, suggested he stuck to spin bowling. It was a major turning point. In about three months, Ghazanfar says, he ended up being the highest wicket-taker in the U-16 age group in Afghanistan (though records are unavailable to verify the statistic). “Before that, while I had the skills, I did not know exactly how to use them. But the coach said my skill lies in bowling spin and I should stick to that. I focused on that, worked hard, and with the grace of God, got the results.”Ghazanfar’s many variations make it exceptionally tricky for a batter to read a delivery out of the hand•Emirates Cricket BoardGhazanfar’s bowling run-up comprises nine steps, starting with a hop and skip, and he runs through the crease to deliver with a fastish arm action, in the Rashid or Mujeeb Ur Rahman mould. Batters have found it hard to read his stock ball and his variations out of his hand.Ghazanfar was lured by the magic of the wrong’un early on. “I started bowling the googly and the carrom ball but the googly was my strength. But as I started to train and bowl a lot, I started trialling backspin and offspin with the carrom ball and googly. Slowly, slowly, I started improving with practice.”The offbreak, arm ball and flipper are his other variations. Ghazanfar credits his fast-tracked growth to former Afghanistan fast bowler Dawlat Ahmadzai, who he says helped developed his spin craft and with the mental aspect of the game.Ahmadzai, who has mentored several young Afghan talents, including Rashid, as well as the current opening pair of Rahmanullah Gurbaz and Ibrahim Zadran, was head coach at the Mohammad Mirza Katawazai Cricket Centre in Kabul in 2022 when Ghazanfar’s brother Atta approached him, keen for him to look at his younger brother. “When I spoke to Ghazanfar for the first time, he told me he had started as a fast bowler,” Ahmadzai, who is currently head coach of East Bay Blazers in Minor League Cricket in the USA, and a former chairman of selectors for Afghanistan, says. “I asked him to bowl in the nets. Then I looked at his hands and felt he had the fingers meant for a good spin bowler. The middle finger on his bowling hand is strong and long and is the key driver of his variations. He also is tall and has strong shoulders.”Ahmadzai worked on Ghazanfar for nearly a year, from the basics of his run-up and action to teaching him the importance of backspin, helping him read cues from batters and telling him how to confound them. “He improved my skills a lot, teaching me how I can utilise my skills and when, and the kind of things I always need to pay attention to during my training and during the match,” Ghazanfar says.

****

As a fingerspinner with multiple variations, Ghazanfar has quickly edged out the competition, including some of Afghanistan’s other mystery spinners, to earn places in prominent T20 leagues. He grabbed headlines during the IPL 2025 mega auction, when five-time champions Mumbai Indians bought him for Rs 4.8 crore (US$570,000 approximately). However, he did not feature in the tournament because of a back injury – a lumbar fracture that took several months to heal – that had its origins in the marathon spells he bowled in the Zimbabwe Test.Since 2022, Ghazanfar has been picked in several franchise leagues, including the IPL, LPL, CPL, ILT20, Abu Dhabi T10 and The T20 Blast•Abu Dhabi T10He travelled to India, though and spent time with the Mumbai Indians squad. MI’s scouts had been tracking him for a while by then. “In 2023 I was playing for Afghanistan U-19 in the UAE. Rahul [former India left-arm spinner Rahul Sanghvi, a long-serving senior MI official and scout] wanted me to attend trials at the ICC Cricket Academy. I did well, and they told me they would look at me at least as a back-up bowler during the 2024 season. I was very happy because to play the IPL is every youngster’s [wish]”He could not get a visa as a net bowler for MI, but he did end up going to the 2024 IPL after Kolkata Knight Riders picked him up as a replacement for Mujeeb, who was injured. “I was waiting to get picked as a net bowler but instead I got picked by a team. I couldn’t have been more happy,” Ghazanfar says.He didn’t get a game for KKR that season, but says the experience made him a better cricketer and also got him a good pay packet at the 2025 auction. KKR won the 2024 IPL, so Ghazanfar came back home that year with a medal, but he says his learnings trumped that. He spoke to spin greats like Sunil Narine and R Ashwin that season. “Having been there for big matches, including the IPL final, I saw up close how players were dealing with pressure. That was very significant for me,” he says.Gautam Gambhir, who returned as KKR mentor in 2024. “He gave me a lot of support. He said, ‘Your future is bright.’ [He said] that I should focus on my batting, which will come handy in the long run. He would stand behind me during my bowling at training and offer tips. He also said he would ensure KKR got me back for the 2025 season.”The franchise did bid hard for Ghazanfar but pulled out at the Rs 4.6-crore mark. “My kismet was with Mumbai,” he says with a smile. He expects to be retained by Mumbai for the 2026 season but still has fond memories of celebrating his 19th birthday with the franchise. “Tilak Varma ” [Tilak Varma did me especially dirty] Ghazanfar laughs, running a hand across his face to mimic how the Mumbai and India batter smeared cake all over it.Tilak was already acquainted with Ghazanfar, having played against him in the semi-final of the Emerging Teams Asia Cup in October 2024. Tilak was leading India A, who lost that match by 20 runs. Ghazanfar played a role in that defeat, getting the India opening pair of Abhishek Sharma and Prabhsimran Singh out cheaply.

Ghazanfar says he told the Afghanistan A think tank that he wanted to open the bowling against India. “I want to confront challenges. The wicket was seamer-friendly and the coaches were not sure if I could be effective. But I said I can. I told the captain, ‘Give me the ball.’ Like I said, I had learned and seen how to control a pressure situation during the [2024] IPL final. That came in handy.”Afghanistan won the tournament, defeating Sri Lanka A in the final, in which Ghazanfar was Player of the Match, taking two wickets in his four overs.Across the 45 T20s he played till the 2025 Asia Cup, a little under 60% of Ghazanfar’s overs have come in the powerplay, where he has picked up 32 wickets at an economy rate of 6.39. “My skills are more suitable for the new ball. With the hard seam I can utilise that for good turn as well as swing,” he says.

****

Ghazanfar took two wickets for five runs numbers two months ago for Derbyshire in their win against Yorkshire in the T20 Blast. In that match in Leeds, he opened the bowling and had Jonny Bairstow bowled on the fifth ball of the match. “I overheard Bairstow talking to Dawid Malan, saying he was unable to pick me. I told myself this is my opportunity for me to then trick him. I bowled one ball that moved away and the next drifted in. He was bowled by a ball I had imparted backspin on. It was an important spell for me because it gave me confidence coming back from injury.”The Blast was the first tournament Ghazanfar played since his injury and he was nervous. When he arrived in England in May, it was chilly. “I don’t like cold weather,” he says laughing. “I struggled to find rhythm in the first four or five matches. Also, I was worried about stretching too much, because at the back of my mind I was still worried about the injury recurring. But as the weather improved [I also] warmed up.”Derbyshire had a forgettable Blast, but Ghazanfar finished with 16 wickets in 14 matches at an economy of just over 7.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Vitality Blast (@vitalityblast)

It is not just batters who are trying to decode him. At the Emerging Asia Cup, Tamil Nadu and Gujarat Titans left-arm spinner R Sai Kishore sought Ghazanfar out. Sai Kishore says he wanted to know how Ghazanfar executes some of his variations. “It is always good to exchange insights. I wanted to know how he got his carrom ball, which is very good,” Sai Kishore says. “He can deceive the batsman in the air with that in-drift he gets, making the ball move in. And that is possible because his deliveries have a lot of backspin on it and also because of his release.”Sai Kishore, who is always looking to innovate himself, possibly sees a kindred spirit in Ghazanfar. He believes what the young Afghan spinner does – bowling in the powerplay with the new ball – is brave.Ahmadzai thinks Ghazanfar is already ahead of Mujeeb in terms of inscrutability to batters. “I believe the batsman can read Mujeeb from his hand, but with Ghazanfar it is not possible because of his action. Afghanistan need to play him more because he remains a mystery to many batters at this point.”It is too early to predict how Ghazanfar’s career will pan out. But in his first year in international cricket Ghazanfar has shown he wants to learn and is willing to talk to the right people. His main goal is simple: “I want to work towards becoming the best wicket-taker in one-day [cricket] and T20s in the future.”What about Test cricket? Afghanistan do not get many opportunities, but Ghazanfar’s desire to play the longest format is strong. “My skills will develop as I work on match planning, and I will get to learn a lot. Test cricket remains a favourite. It remains a priority and it is very important for me, and it will be good for me if I get to play more Tests.”

Which bowler has the longest unbroken streak of wickets in every Test innings since debut?

And has any other player hit a six and taken a wicket off the final balls of their career as Stuart Broad did?

Steven Lynch07-Aug-2023Stuart Broad hit a six off the last ball he faced in Tests, and then took a wicket with his final ball too. Has anyone else done this? asked Matthew Edwards from Australia, and many others

I think I had more messages in the last week about Stuart Broad’s feats in the last Ashes Test at The Oval than any other recent occurrence! And the short answer is that Broad is indeed the first to achieve both these feats in his final Test.Broad hit a six from the final ball he received, from Mitchell Starc, and was then left not out when James Anderson was dismissed in the next over to end England’s second innings. Two other men are known to have hit the last ball they received in Tests for six: the West Indian fast bowler Wayne Daniel, against Australia in Port-of-Spain in 1983-84, and the Australian allrounder Glenn Maxwell, against Bangladesh in Chattogram in 2017-18. Although it currently seems unlikely, it’s possible that Maxwell could yet play another Test.According to the Melbourne statistician Charles Davis, there’s one other possible addition to the list: the West Indian legspinner Tommy Scott hit a six during the last over he faced in Tests, against Australia in Melbourne in 1930-31 – but full ball-by-ball details have not survived, so we’re not quite sure when he hit it.Neither Daniel nor Maxwell (or Scott) also took a wicket with their final delivery in a Test, as Broad did. He joined a surprisingly long list – around 120 men – who have done this. Many of the players concerned are not terribly memorable, but the better-known names include Muthiah Muralidaran, Glenn McGrath, Richard Hadlee, Hugh Trumble, Charles “The Terror” Turner, Jim Laker, Alan Davidson, Garry Sobers, Derek Underwood, Andy Caddick, Sarfraz Nawaz and Dennis Lillee. Perhaps the strangest entry on the list is the South African wicketkeeper Mark Boucher, who took his only Test wicket – the West Indian Dwayne Bravo in Antigua in 2004-05 – in his 84th match, and never bowled again in 63 further Tests.In his long Test career, Stuart Broad took an eight-wicket haul and also had an innings of more than 150. How many people have managed this double? asked Derek Martin from England

The retiring Stuart Broad hit 169 against Pakistan at Lord’s in 2010, and five years later took 8 for 15 in Australia’s astonishing first-morning collapse at Trent Bridge.Broad is one of only seven men to do this particular double in a Test career. Two of them actually made double-centuries: Vinoo Mankad of India (who passed 200 twice, and also took two eight-fors) and England’s Ian Botham (two lots of eight). Two of them took nine wickets in an innings: Richard Hadlee of New Zealand, and India’s Kapil Dev, who had two hauls of eight wickets and one of nine.The other two to complete the “Broad double” were England’s Wilfred Rhodes and the South African Lance Klusener, who took 8 for 64 on his debut, against India in Kolkata in 1996-97.A further 12 men have scored at least one century and taken eight wickets in an innings during their Test career: Botham uniquely did it in the same match, with 108 and 8 for 34 against Pakistan at Lord’s in 1978. For the full list, click here.Prabath Jayasuriya has taken a wicket in every Test innings in which he has bowled. Is there a longer streak of taking wickets in innings from debut? And what’s the most consecutive innings a bowler has taken at least one wicket? asked Michael Baker from England

The Sri Lankan slow left-armer Prabath Jayasuriya has so far bowled in 16 Test innings, and taken at least one wicket each time (he has 59 in all at the moment). The record in this regard is held by the New Zealand paceman Shane Bond, who bowled in 32 innings in all from his debut in November 2001, and never failed to take a wicket.The West Indian fast bowler Andy Roberts and the 1930s England legspinner Walter Robins both took at least one wicket in the first 23 innings in which they bowled.The record for a mid-career streak is held by Muthiah Muralidaran, who took at least one wicket (and usually many more!) in 52 successive Test innings from April 2006. Bishan Bedi struck in 42 successive innings, Dennis Lillee and Waqar Younis in 41, and Andrew Flintoff in 37.Shane Bond picked up a wicket in each of his first 32 Test innings since debut, the record•Getty ImagesDuring the Ashes series I heard Glenn McGrath say he was never dismissed in a Test at Lord’s, and scored a few runs there as well. What’s the most a batter has made on one ground without ever being dismissed? asked Tim Marshall from England

Glenn McGrath played three Tests at Lord’s, and he’s correct to say that he was never dismissed there. After making 0 not out in Australia’s eight-wicket victory in 2001, he scored 10 and 20, both undefeated, and had match figures of 9 for 82 in a 239-run win in 2005. (He didn’t bat in 1997, but did take 8 for 38!)Unsurprisingly, McGrath is a fair way down the list of run-scorers who were never dismissed at a particular ground. On top is the New Zealander Stephen Fleming, who made 343 runs at the P Sara Stadium in Colombo, in the form of innings of 274 and 69, both not out, against Sri Lanka in April 2003.Next come England’s Wally Hammond, whose one Test innings at Eden Park in Auckland brought him 336 not out in 1932-33, and the more recent Indian batter Karun Nair, who made an unbeaten 303 in his only innings at the Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai, in 2016-17. For the list, click here.The West Indian fast bowler Colin Croft had five Test innings at Port-of-Spain, scoring 31 runs while never being dismissed, while the Pakistan slow left-armer Zulfiqar Babar went in to bat six times in Sharjah and was never out, collecting a grand total of 22 runs in the process.Mukesh Kumar made his debut for India in all three formats in the space of a fortnight. Is this a record? asked Suresh Joshi from India

The 29-year-old Indian seamer Mukesh Sharma made his Test debut against West Indies in Port-of-Spain on July 20, played his first ODI in Bridgetown on July 27, and made his T20I bow in Tarouba (Trinidad) on August 3.Mukesh thus completed the full set of three international formats in 14 days – but he lies only second on this particular list. The New Zealander Peter Ingram actually completed his nap hand in just 12 days, all against Bangladesh early in 2010: T20I debut in Hamilton on February 3, first ODI in Napier on Feb 5, and a first Test cap in Hamilton on Feb 15.Ingram was 31 at the time, and the New Zealand historian Francis Payne recalled: “The ironic thing was that it took him almost ten years at provincial level before he represented New Zealand at all. He reinvented himself from a modest-scoring stonewaller to an aggressive and heavy-scoring batsman.”Aizaz Cheema (Pakistan) and Dion Myers (Zimbabwe) both took 15 days to complete a full set of international formats, Kyle Abbott (South Africa) 16, and Doug Bracewell (New Zealand) 17. The England record is held by Joe Root, at a relatively sedate 29 days.Shiva Jayaraman of ESPNcricinfo’s stats team helped with some of the above answers.Use our feedback form, or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

Moeen Ali steps up to prove all-round value as England make emphatic start to T20 World Cup

CSK form feeds into star turn with ball as miserly four-over spell sets up crushing victory

Matt Roller23-Oct-2021No Stokes, no Archer, no Curran, no problem for England. “The absence of the allrounders who aren’t here does hurt us,” Eoin Morgan admitted at the toss ahead of their opening Men’s T20 World Cup match against West Indies, “but hopefully we can make it work.”With three of their key all-round players missing, England had a tough choice to make heading into the game: should they play an extra bowler and compromise their batting depth, or pick an extra batter and risk running out of bowling options? They opted for the latter, meaning they would have to bowl eight overs of spin; crucially, they won the toss, avoiding the possibility of dew affecting them.Watch the T20 World Cup on ESPN+

Sign up for ESPN+ and catch the Men’s T20 World Cup live in the US. Match highlights of England vs West Indies is available here in English, and here in Hindi (US only).

Morgan had talked up Liam Livingstone and Moeen Ali’s credentials as “genuine allrounders” in his pre-match press conference but had rarely used them as such. Livingstone had bowled 10 overs in his T20I career and Moeen only 13.5 in his previous 10 appearances. In England’s two warm-up games, they bowled seven overs between them which cost 67 runs.Still, it was no surprise to see Moeen thrown the new ball, with West Indies opening the batting with Evin Lewis, a destructive left-hander with a vulnerability against offspin, and Lendl Simmons, a right-hander but a cautious starter. The first over was a score draw. Moeen dug the ball into the pitch on a good length and was looking to hit the top of the stumps but when his last ball was overpitched, Lewis shimmied down and slammed it back over his head for six.But Morgan gambled after Chris Woakes had removed Lewis – a slower ball which he mistimed to Moeen, backpedalling at mid-off from the edge of the circle to take a superb catch over his head – by giving Moeen a second over, even with Simmons on strike.He struck with its second ball. Simmons was hitting towards the big side – one boundary was 10 metres longer than the other – and picked out Livingstone at deep midwicket. “Brainless batting,” Nasser Hussain said on commentary, bringing to mind Daren Sammy’s famous riposte to a Mark Nicholas column after their 2016 title. But Moeen was rewarded for bowling straight, playing on Simmons’ ego by daring him to try and clear the boundary-rider.ESPNcricinfo LtdWith Shimron Hetmyer, another left-hander, in his sights, Moeen was able to rattle through four more dots to complete his first-ever maiden in T20 internationals, and after Hetmyer hit the first two balls of his third over for four – a loft over midwicket and a chip inside-out over extra cover – he struck again: a fast, flat offbreak rushed him on the pull, which he plinked straight to Morgan at mid-on.By the time Moeen had completed his fourth over – four dots and two singles, to end with his cheapest-ever T20I figures when bowling a full allocation – West Indies were 33 for 4, giving England a 76% chance of winning according to ESPNcricinfo’s forecaster. Crucially, the fifth bowler’s allocation – a pressing concern only half an hour before – had been fulfilled at the earliest possible opportunity.It was telling that Adil Rashid, who returned remarkable figures of 4 for 2 in 2.2 overs, was overlooked for the match award – with ESPNcricinfo’s impact tool also rating Moeen as the MVP on account of the fact he struck twice in the Powerplay, when wickets are most valuable. “When you bowl the first over you’re obviously trying to keep it tight,” Rashid said. “That’s the aim and if wickets come, wickets come. They may just have a look but you’ve still got to bowl well and I thought Mo bowled exceptionally well there, especially bowling four overs in a row. He kept it tight and picked up wickets as well, so that really set the tone.”Related

Moeen Ali riding the confidence wave as England chase twin white-ball glory

England launch T20 World Cup campaign with rout of West Indies

Stats – West Indies' worst batting effort in T20 World Cups and first loss to England

Pollard bemoans 'unacceptable' collapse: 'There are no words to explain it'

England have severely underused Moeen in T20 cricket over the last 12 months. He went ten consecutive games without being picked across their tours of South Africa and India last winter and home fixtures against Sri Lanka in the summer, and when he has played, he has had a bit-part role with both bat and ball, often bowling a solitary over and hidden as low as No. 7 with the bat.But he has been embraced by Chennai Super Kings, who made him a senior player in their title-winning season after shelling out INR 7 crore (USD 930,000 approx) for him at the IPL auction, and his success appeared to remind England of his talents. “That role in the team is really good for me: I feel like I’m really involved with the bat and ball and in the field,” he said afterwards.”It obviously helped with so many left-handers in their team but I’ve been bowling all right: I’ve been bowling well in the nets so I’ve got quite confident, and I think because I’ve been playing cricket, I wasn’t as nervous as probably some of the other guys. I was actually glad to get the first ball.”Morgan said: “He summed up conditions beautifully, hit his lengths really well and took chances when his match-ups were right. The reason he hasn’t featured as much as we would have liked is down to conditions… [but] to come in and take his opportunity like he has – he’s full of confidence after his success at the IPL and he’s going to be a huge contributor throughout this campaign hopefully for us.”

Pirates vs. Braves Prediction, Odds, Pick and Probable Pitchers for Friday, June 28

The Atlanta Braves have been crushed by the injury bug in the 2024 season, but they’re still in play for a playoff spot as the trade deadline and All-Star Game approach in the MLB season. 

Atlanta is favored at home on Friday night against the Pittsburgh Pirates, who will send lefty Martin Perez to the mound against Atlanta’s Charlie Morton. 

While the Braves haven’t mashed left-handed pitching this season like they have in the past, RBIs is still a great matchup considering the rest of Pittsburgh’s power-throwing righties that they could have faced. 

How should we wager on this NL matchup? 

Pirates vs. Braves Odds, Run Line and Total

Run Line

Pirates +1.5 (-122)Braves -1.5 (+102)

Moneyline

Pirates: +160Braves: -192

Total

9 (Over -110/Under -110)

Pirates vs. Braves Probable PitchersPittsburgh: Martin Perez (1-3, 4.71 ERA)Atlanta: Charlie Morton (4-4, 4.20 ERA)Pirates vs. Braves How to WatchDate: Friday, June 28Time: 7:20 p.m. ESTVenue: Truist ParkHow to watch (TV): Bally Sports Southeast, AT&T SportsNet PittsburghPirates record: 39-41Braves record: 44-35Pirates vs. Braves Key Players to WatchPittsburgh Pirates

Bryan Reynolds: The engine of the Pittsburgh offense, Reynolds is having a great season, hitting .279 with 13 homers and 46 runs batted in. He’s second on the Pirates in batting average, first in homers, first in runs batted in and second in stolen bases. He is 2-for-3 with a double and a home run against Morton in his career.  

Atlanta Braves

Charlie Morton: Want a crazy Charlie Morton stat? He’s allowed four or more runs in six outings this season, but four times he’s bounced back with an outing of two or fewer earned runs. He’s looking to make it five on Friday, as he allowed five runs in his last start. Morton has an ERA of 4.20, xERA of 4.41 and a FIP of 3.95 this season. 

Pirates vs. Braves Prediction and Pick

It’s never fun to lay a major price on the moneyline in baseball, but I’m going to do it on Friday night. 

Morton (4.20 ERA) has pitched better than his ERA suggests this season, posting a 3.95 FIP, and eight of his 14 starts have resulted in him allowing two or fewer earned runs. 

The Braves are just 6-8 in his outings, but that’s a better record than the Pirates have when Perez pitches. 

The lefty has led them to just a  4-7 record in 11 starts, and his ERA has skyrocketed this month, going from 2.86 at the end of May to 4.71 on June 28.

That’s not going to get it done against an Atlanta offense that is in the top five in homers against lefties and 11th in OPS in 2024.

I’ll take the Braves to pick up a win at home on Friday.

Thorpe's widow says 'he would still be alive' with better support

“If he’d had just a little bit of the support framework, it would have made all the difference”

ESPNcricinfo staff25-Nov-2025

Graham Thorpe’s wife Amanda and daughter Emma rang the bell at the start of a “Day for Thorpey” at The Oval•Getty Images

The widow of Graham Thorpe, the former England and Surrey batter who took his own life in 2024, believes that he would still be alive if he had received better support from the ECB after his dismissal as England batting coach.Speaking to the talkSPORT podcast Head Before Wicket, Amanda Thorpe said that had Graham not been suddenly cut off from the game following the 2021-22 Ashes, “it is really clear [to me] that he would still be alive”.”If he’d had just a little bit of the support framework there to lean on a bit to just transition a bit more, it would have made all the difference,” she said.Related

Thorpe struck by train; family confirms he 'took his own life'

England to pay tribute to Graham Thorpe during Old Trafford Test

Oval Test to feature 'Day for Thorpey' in commemoration of Thorpe

Thorpe died in August 2024 after being struck by a train, an inquest was told, with his family confirming that he took his own life following a battle with depression and anxiety.Thorpe’s removal as England batting coach came in the wake of a 4-0 Ashes defeat in Australia, on a tour severely affected by Covid restrictions. After the final Test in Hobart, police were called to the team hotel to investigate reports that Thorpe had lit a cigar indoors.Amanda Thorpe said her husband “was really teetering on the edge on that tour” and he was “absolutely gutted” by the incident. “He went round on the flight back and apologised personally to every person on that tour,” she said.The coroner’s report into Thorpe’s death concluded that there were “shortcomings” in the healthcare provided, but did not criticise the ECB’s decision to terminate his employment, noting it had “funded treatment, hospital stays and extended his health treatment insurance”.The ECB paid for ten online counselling sessions, but Amanda Thorpe described this as “woeful”.”As he went through these sessions, it was clear that he wasn’t coping. He was getting worse. We really did ask for help. I knew he needed more help than that. And, it wasn’t forthcoming.”An attempt by Thorpe to take his own life in 2022 was unsuccessful but left him severely unwell. “It was too late, basically, after the crisis [in 2022], he was very ill. He nearly lost his life. He had a stroke. We don’t know how that affected his brain after that.”The ECB might say, well, we didn’t know how ill he was. Although the doctors he was under did know, but then they sort of said, oh, but there’s confidentiality. There’s got to be some connection [between the ECB and their doctors].”Last summer, during the Oval Test between England and India, the second day of the match was dubbed a “Day for Thorpey” in order to celebrate his life, as well as raise funds and awareness for the mental health charity Mind.An ECB spokesperson described Thorpe as “a deeply admired and much-loved person”.”His loss has been felt deeply across the cricketing community and far beyond, and our thoughts and heartfelt sympathies remain with his wife Amanda, his children, and all those who loved him.”Graham’s passing is a heart-breaking reminder of the challenges many face with mental health. His death was examined by a coroner; the inquest was held earlier this year with full support from the ECB.”We have met with Amanda to discuss her concerns and have been in regular contact with her and the wider family.”

برنامج الأهلي اليوم في المغرب | توروب يضع خطة مباراة الجيش الملكي بدوري الأبطال

يعقد ييس توروب، المدير الفني للفريق الأول لكرة القدم بالنادي الأهلي، محاضرة فنية للاعبين في فندق الإقامة بمدينة الرباط؛ استعدادًا لمواجهة الجيش الملكي المغربي في الجولة الثانية لمنافسات دور المجموعات لبطولة دوري أبطال إفريقيا.

ويستعد الأهلي لمواجهة الجيش الملكي في الجولة الثانية لمباريات دور المجموعات لبطولة دوري أبطال إفريقيا، والمقرر إقامتها في التاسعة من مساء غدٍ الجمعة بتوقيت القاهرة، الثامنة بتوقيت المغرب، العاشرة بتوقيت السعودية.

طالع | كريم الدبيس يوضح كواليس رحيله عن الأهلي وسر البكاء بسبب كولر

ويستعرض توروب خلال المحاضرة لقطات من مباريات فريق الجيش الملكي؛ يشرح من خلالها أسلوب اللعب والخطة التي يعتمد عليها الفريق المنافس.

ويختتم الفريق تدريباته في التاسعة من مساء اليوم بتوقيت القاهرة الثامنة بتوقيت المغرب على ملعب مولاي الحسن وهو نفس الملعب الذي يستضيف مباراة الغد.

وكان الفريق قد أدى مرانه الأول في المغرب، مساء أمس، على ملعب الجمعية الرياضية للقوات المسلحة الملكية.

واشتمل المران على فقرة بدنية لمدة عشرين دقيقة، تخللها الجري حول الملعب، وانتهى المران بتقسيمة قوية بين اللاعبين.

Torcedores do Fluminense protestam no CT Carlos Castilho

MatériaMais Notícias

Um grupo de torcedores do Fluminense se dirigiu ao CT Carlos Castilho, na manhã desta quarta-feira (15), para protestar contra o mau desempenho do time na temporada. Após a derrota para o São Paulo, fora de casa, a equipe comandada por Fernando Diniz entrou na zona de rebaixamento do Campeonato Brasileiro.

continua após a publicidade

➡️ Siga o Lance! Fluminense no WhatsApp e acompanhe todas as notícias do Tricolor das Laranjeiras

As manifestações, no entanto, foram pacíficas. O grupo foi pelo vice-presidente geral Mattheus Montenegro, pelo diretor de futebol Paulo Angioni e pelo ídolo e diretor de planejamento Fred.

Os torcedores cobraram os dirigentes por uma melhora no desempenho da equipe e prometeram apoio total à instituição. Apesar da tentativa, os manifestantes não tiveram acesso aos jogadores do elenco.

continua após a publicidade

Na última segunda-feira (13), o Fluminense perdeu por 2 a 1 para o São Paulo e entrou no Z4 do Brasileirão. Com apenas cinco pontos em seis rodadas, o Tricolor perdeu as três partidas que disputou fora de casa e venceu apenas o clássico contra o Vasco.

Nas copas, a situação é diferente. Líder do grupo A, o Fluminense precisa de um empate contra o Cerro Porteño para garantir a primeira colocação da chave. Na Copa do Brasil, venceu a partida de ida contra o Sampaio Corrêa por 2 a 0 e decide a vaga às oitavas de final no Maracanã.

continua após a publicidade

Tudo sobre

FluminenseFutebol Nacional

Luke Wells leads Lancashire to comfortable lead

Glamorgan 265 and 41 for 2 trail Lancashire 374 (Wells 78, Jones 62, Balderson 51) by 68 runsLancashire have left Glamorgan with much to do to force a positive result after gaining a three-figure lead at Sophia Gardens.Luke Wells’ dogged 78 to pass 1,000 runs for the season along with a much-needed 62 for Scottish international Michael Jones and George Balderson took Lancashire to 374. Several other starts, including Keaton Jennings’ 1,000-run landmark, also boosted the visitors to a 109-run lead.Allrounder Timm van der Gugten’s involvement in his 100th first-class match wasn’t finished with a half-century on day one as he took the reigns to take 5 for 85, Glamorgan fighting back with the final four wickets inside nine overs with the second new ball.Resuming overnight on 55, openers Wells and Jennings resumed momentum with the expectation to bat all day. Jennings’ half-century looked inevitable before being removed on 49 as Van der Gugten’s first victim despite Jennings’ tall stature batting outside his ground on a rising delivery.George Bell was next to fall short of a half-century with a stylish 45 while Wells remained quiet since pulling a boundary to bring up his thousand-run season.Partnerships of substance without kicking on continued to be the theme. When Wells eventually was undone by Mason Crane finding some turn, a chance to rip through the middle order looked possible, Jones struggling to line up Crane initially in a good battle. Even after two sixes in quick succession from the Scot, Sam Northeast persevered with bowling the former England leg-spinner who created numerous chances in a long spell which deserved more than his 2 for 109 suggests.Ned Leonard hobbling off two balls into a spell left more pressure on Glamorgan. Jones’ second half-century of the season came after just 42 balls and Hurst was the next to fall short of the milestone.Tom Hartley pleasantly drove the first ball of the 89th over (Glamorgan’s first with the new ball) for four, giving warning signs of more to come at 337 for 6 – but Van der Gugten’s experience to gain his 300th first-class Glamorgan wicket, and one for Harris, was enough to wrap up before more potential damage on a variable pitch.Similar to the previous day, the opening pair would need to negate 17 overs as the sun lowered at Sophia Gardens. Zain Ul Hassan avoided his pair and stuck out the day after an important spell of bowling claiming both Jones and Hurst, who put together 88 in the afternoon.Asa Tribe and nightwatcher Harris couldn’t grind out Lancs’ seamers despite a positive start from the former; a low ball making him the latest to succumb to that method on the deteriorating Cardiff pitch.

Joey Votto Discusses the Differences Between Dodgers and Yankees Crowds

Game 1 of the New York Yankees-Los Angeles Dodgers World Series will be underway in a matter of hours. There's so much to discuss as these two blueboods square off in their first shared Fall Classic since 1981. Two incredible atmospheres will host all the drama as baseball crowns its ultimate champion.

Joey Votto was asked about the differences between playing in New York vs. playing in Los Angeles on , and his answer didn't disappoint.

"No disrespect to LA, but there is nothing like being in New York with a good Yankees team, at Yankee Stadium. There is nothing like it. I'll tell a quick story. I was in New York at the old stadium. First time. The roster was Jeter, A-Rod, Hideki Matsui, the roster was deep. It was the seventh inning and I was on the field up 3-1 thinking sort of thing. And all of the sudden you could just feel the energy of the crowd. This is a regular season game. You could feel the ghosts. There's no ghosts. I'm not a ghosts believer but you could feel the ghosts inside the stadium."

Votto added that with this Yankees roster replete with stars and the brightest lights descending on the Bronx that there's a chance to create a new aura there.

Time will tell. About a week's time.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus