Warwickshire take control at Taunton

Inviting the opposition to bat first at Taunton was always likely to prove a risk, but in Marcus Trescothick’s worst dreams he can barely have imagined how badly the decision would backfire

George Dobell at Taunton15-Apr-2011Stumps
Scorecard
Inviting the opposition to bat first at Taunton was always likely to prove a risk, but in Marcus Trescothick’s worst dreams he can barely have imagined how badly the decision would backfire.By the time Warwickshire were bowled out, deep into the second afternoon, they had amassed an eye-watering 642 runs. That represents the sixth highest total in their first-class history and, by some distance, the highest score they’ve made having been inserted.It left Somerset’s pre-season tags as championship favourites looking highly questionable. While no-one disputes they have some quality batsmen, their bowlers will have to improve markedly on this performance if they’re really to claim that elusive first title.For this is not nearly such an easy batting surface as Warwickshire’s scoreline might suggest. While it’s clearly no mine-field, there is enough help to assist anyone pitching the ball in the right area, but the Somerset attack lacked the pace, consistency or skill to exploit it.If that was not apparent when Warwickshire batted, it certainly was when they bowled. The Taunton pitch suddenly appeared a seamer’s dream as ball beat bat more in an hour than it had in the previous day-and-a-half as Somerset lost six wickets in the final session. Though bad light spared them the final six overs of the day, they will resume on day three requiring another 346 just to avoid the follow-on.There are a couple of mitigating factors. Firstly, Warwickshire have played some very good cricket in this game and secondly, Somerset were obliged to bat in unusually gloomy conditions that would, only a few years ago, have prevented any play.But Somerset would be fooling themselves if they hid behind those excuses. The truth is they have, to date, been out-batted and out-bowled by a team who were tipped by the bookies to suffer relegation.There have been two key differences. Firstly, Warwickshire’s batsmen have appeared more willing to work for their runs. They’ve appeared more patient, more disciplined and more hungry, while their bowlers have appeared quicker and more able to exploit any help available in the surface.And then there’s Trescothick’s captaincy. If his original decision to insert Warwickshire was questionable – and, despite the score that remains debatable – his tactics during the Warwickshire innings were bewildering. The lack of a third man cost Somerset heavily, while his decision to employ Steve Kirby – who remained on the field throughout and whom the club insist is fit – for just two overs on the second day was mystifying. The bowlers must take some of the blame for conceding nearly four-and-a-half an over throughout, but they were not helped by some curious field placingsWith Peter Trego and Gemaal Hussain unable to stem the flow of runs, it left Ajantha Mendis and Charl Willoughby carrying a heavy burden. The Sri Lankan, who bowled immeasurably better than the previous day, finished with the most expensive figures of his career, as did Hussain, while the 36-year-old Willoughby appeared exhausted after his 34 overs.The chief architect of the Warwickshire innings was Varun Chopra. Having invested in a patient start to his innings, the 23-year-old reaped rich rewards by completing a maiden first-class double century. Very well he played, too.But, almost as impressive as Chopra, was the batting of Chris Woakes. The 22-year-old swing bowler recorded his fourth first-class century as Warwickshire turned the screw on the second day, punishing a tiring attack, and timing the ball with a sweetness that few young players can match. Truly, if Woakes couldn’t bowl, he’d still be a decent England prospect.His century here occupied just 106 balls and contained an array of strokes all around the wicket. It’s interesting to note that this was Woakes’ third championship century; as many as Eoin Morgan has managed to date.Though Mendis finally found one to nip back and end Woakes and Chopra’s 123-run stand for the seventh-wicket, Woakes then added 110 in 24 overs for the eighth wicket with the increasingly fluent Ant Botha. Every run seemed to grind away at Somerset’s spirit and heads had dropped long before Woakes drove to mid-off, Andrew Miller missed a straight one and Botha drove to long-off.Somerset’s reply actually started pretty well. Though Trescothick fell in the first over after tea, edging a loose drive to first slip, Arul Suppiah and Nick Compton took the score to 118 for 1 without undue alarm. Suppiah, neat off his legs and elegant through the covers, looked particularly fluent.All that good work was undone, however, when Suppiah cut a short ball straight to gully to precipitate a collapse that saw Somerset lose five wickets for 24 runs in 7.5 overs. Compton was left groping by Woakes’ swing, before James Hildreth’s timid poke only saw an inside edge on to his stumps. Jos Buttler edged a beauty from the sharp Rikki Clarke that bounced and left him before Criag Kieswetter’s oddly frenetic innings ended when he edged a drive to slip.Had Trego, on five, been caught, as he should have been, by Botha at gully, it could have been even worse for Somerset. But for a side with title aspirations, this has been a remarkably chastening experience to date.

Hartley joins Brisbane Heat

Chris Hartley, the Queensland wicketkeeper, has signed with the Brisbane Heat for the Twenty20 Big Bash League

ESPNcricinfo staff05-Aug-2011Chris Hartley, the Queensland wicketkeeper, has signed with the Brisbane Heat for the Twenty20 Big Bash League, and will serve as understudy to Brendon McCullum during the tournament.Not known for particularly fast scoring, Hartley was set targets for off-season improvement by the Bulls and Heat coach Darren Lehmann, and was signed once he had reached them.”We gave a number of the players some specific things we thought they needed to work on during the off-season and Harts more than met expectations,” Lehmann said.”He showed that he can play the sort of game we want in T20 and his batting has been as good as anyone in the Queensland squad so far in our preparations.”It’s also good to have another ‘keeper in the squad in the event that Brendon McCullum has to miss a game. And Harts is just one of those people you want to have around the group. He’s incredibly dedicated and has a sharp cricket brain.”Hartley’s signing is the Heat’s 15th ahead of the BBL, bolstering a squad that includes the likes of McCullum, Daniel Vettori, Daniel Christian, Ryan Harris, James Hopes and the previously retired opener Matthew Hayden.The squads so far
Adelaide Strikers Aiden Blizzard, Cameron Borgas, Lee Carseldine, Tom Cooper, Adam Crosthwaite, Theo Doropoulos, Brendan Drew, Callum Ferguson, Daniel Harris, Michael Klinger, Nathan Lyon, Aaron O’Brien, Gary Putland, Kane Richardson. Overseas players: Kieron Pollard.
Brisbane Heat Ryan Broad, Nick Buchanan, Daniel Christian, Ben Cutting, Peter Forrest, Ryan Harris, Chris Hartley, Nathan Hauritz, Matthew Hayden, James Hopes, Chris Lynn, Michael Neser, Chris Swan. Overseas players: Brendon McCullum, Daniel Vettori.
Hobart Hurricanes Travis Birt, Mark Cosgrove, Xavier Doherty, Luke Feldman, Evan Gulbis, Ben Hilfenhaus, Michael Hogan, Phil Jaques, Matt Johnston, Jason Krejza, Nick Kruger, Ben Laughlin, Rhett Lockyear, Tim Paine, RIcky Ponting. Overseas players: Rana Naved-ul-Hasan, Owais Shah.
Melbourne Renegades Ryan Carters, Aaron Finch, Shane Harwood, Aaron Heal, Jayde Herrick, Michael Hill, Brad Hodge, Glenn Maxwell, Andrew McDonald, Brenton McDonald, Dirk Nannes, Nathan Reardon, Will Sheridan, Shaun Tait. Overseas players: Abdul Razzaq, Shahid Afridi.
Melbourne Stars George Bailey, James Faulkner, John Hastings, Jon Holland, David Hussey, Alex Keath, Clint McKay, James Pattinson, Rob Quiney, Peter Siddle, Chris Simpson, Adam Voges, Matthew Wade, Cameron White. Overseas players: Luke Wright.
Perth Scorchers Tom Beaton, Michael Beer, Mark Cameron, Nathan Coulter-Nile, Ben Edmondson, Michael Hussey, Simon Katich, Mitchell Marsh, Shaun Marsh, Marcus North, Luke Pomersbach, Nathan Rimmington, Luke Ronchi. Overseas players: Paul Collingwood, Herschelle Gibbs.
Sydney Sixers Ed Cowan, Pat Cummins, Brad Haddin, Josh Hazlewood, Moises Henriques, Brett Lee, Nic Maddinson, Ian Moran, Peter Nevill, Steve O’Keefe, Ben Rohrer, Steven Smith, Mitchell Starc, Dominic Thornely, Shane Watson. Overseas players: Michael Lumb
Sydney Thunder Sean Abbott, Tim Armstrong, Nic Bills, Doug Bollinger, Luke Butterworth, Scott Coyte, Tim Cruickshank, Matthew Day, Luke Doran, Ben Dunk, Jason Floros, Phillip Hughes, Usman Khawaja, Craig Philipson, Daniel Smith, David Warner. Overseas players: Fidel Edwards, Chris Gayle.

Bancroft, bowlers star in easy win

Australia’s batsmen had the workout they wanted, and they were backed up by their bowlers to complete an easy win over Nepal

The Report by George Binoy in Townsville13-Aug-2012
Australia’s batsmen had the workout they wanted, with Cameron Bancroft and Kurtis Patterson spending time in the middle and playing substantial innings to achieve the first 200-plus total of the Under-19 World Cup at the Tony Ireland Stadium. The target of 295 was always out of Nepal’s reach but their chances of batting 50 overs were shattered by fast bowler Harry Conway, whose early hat-trick precipitated a collapse in 23.5 overs.Though Nepal had a torrid first game, they were constantly cheered by a surprisingly large number of their fans. They came early, wearing purple shirts and carrying flags, sitting on the grass banks and in the grandstand. They were approximately about 75 of them, outnumbering and out-cheering the Aussies.Nepal’s captain Prithu Baskota won the toss and, given how poorly England and India had fared after getting sent in, asked Australia to bat. They celebrated an early wicket, when an aggressive Jimmy Peirson drove Krishna Karki to mid-off. The next breakthrough, however, was a long time coming.Bancroft, who made 2 in the first game against England, did not try to over attack and just knocked the unthreatening bowling into gaps. He could have been dismissed on 15, though, had the fielder hit the stumps direct. Bancroft received four overthrows instead.Patterson, who was contracted by New South Wales in July, did attack more than Bancroft. Their run-rate was around four an over at the 25-over mark and with plenty of wickets in hand, Australia were poised for a surge in the second half of their innings. Patterson was lucky to survive a stumping opportunity on 42, when he came out of his crease and was beaten down the leg side, but wicketkeeper Subash Khakurel did not collect cleanly.Patterson went on to reach his half-century before Bancroft did: off 62 balls to Bancroft’s 93. Australia took the batting Powerplay in the 34th over and scored 44 runs off its first 3.2 overs. Patterson cleared the big boundaries at long-on and square leg and looked set for a century in quick time. On 86, however, he tried to slog-sweep but was bowled by one that kept extremely low from the left-arm spinner Bhuvan Karki.Bancroft had also picked up speed, and reached his hundred off 129 balls, his fourth century in Under-19 internationals. He hit medium-pacer Avinash Karn over the midwicket and straight boundary, and was aiming to clear midwicket again but his pull was intercepted by Sagar Pun, who, moving to his right, caught a ball that was travelling quickly, and held on to it as he hit the turf hard.Australia lost a few more wickets as they tried to get as many as they could and finished on 294 for 7.Nepal had made 11 for 0 before Conway, who did not play against England, began to batter the right-handers’ off stump. Three times in a row he pitched full and straight and all three times he was on target, while the batsmen played down the long line.Nepal lost wickets quickly after that and slumped to 82 all out. The offspinner Ashton Turner, who had taken 3 for 30 against England, had another good day, picking up 4 for 28 to take an early lead in the race for most wickets.

Aston Villa plotting bid for Josh Brownhill

Aston Villa are lining up a bid for Burnley midfielder Josh Brownhill as Steven Gerrard continues his rebuilding job at the Midlands club ahead of next season.

What’s the word?

That’s according to 90min, who reported that Villa are interested in signing the Clarets ace to bolster their squad.

However, they could face competition from Premier League rivals West Ham, who are seemingly the frontrunners for the midfielder due to a long-standing interest.

It could cost up to £15m to sign the 26-year-old, which could be a bargain for Villa when considering Brownhill’s performances this season.

Brownhill could be a replacement for Sanson

With Football Insider revealing last month that Villa had set their price for Morgan Sanson amid interest from Marseille, Brownhill could be a more than suitable replacement for the Frenchman, who will likely depart the Midlands this summer.

Burnley team-mate Jack Cork dubbed the 26-year-old “brilliant” following their recent victory against Watford, and there seems little doubt that Brownhill would improve and stabilise the Villa midfield.

His tackling average of 2.1 per game would put him third in the Villa squad, while attacking-wise he would be joint third for assists with three so far this season, proving he is competent at both ends of the pitch.

Given the inflated fees being thrown about for players on the continent, Gerrard could grab a bargain with Brownhill, and as a player with prior Premier League experience, he could quickly become a vital cog in the Villa midfield rather than needing time to settle into the division.

With Johan Lange set to back the manager with the necessary funds in order to bring success to Villa Park, there is no excuse for a poor start to next season. Therefore, the club must do all they can to try and lure the Burnley ace to the Midlands, and if it means cutting Sanson loose once and for all, so be it.

AND in other news, Villa eyeing £16k-p/w ace who “gives absolutely everything”, he’s better than Mings

West Ham plotting move for Mavropanos

West Ham are looking to make a bid for defender Konstantinos Mavropanos, who is on loan at Stuttgart from fellow Premier League side Arsenal.

What’s the word?

German news outlet Kicker have reported that the Hammers are currently preparing to make a bid of £21m for the Greek defender, with his market valuation currently sitting at £15.3m.

However, Stuttgart appear to hold the upper hand when it comes to any possible transfer, as they could sign the player for just £2.5m due to a clause in his loan contract. This may mean that Arsenal will lose out on a massive transfer fee from West Ham for the centre back.

West Ham must move for Mavropanos

Mavropanos moved to Arsenal in 2018 from PAS Giannina for £1.89m but it hasn’t really worked out for him in north London, making just eight senior appearances in all competitions.

His spell at Stuttgart has been productive so far this season, playing 30 matches and scoring five goals as he looks to impress Mikel Arteta, but it looks like his Arsenal days may be completely behind him given this transfer news.

West Ham urgently need a central defender, with Angelo Ogbonna a long-term injury absentee, Kurt Zouma and Issa Diop also spending time on the treatment table, and Craig Dawson (32 next Friday) the only other natural option in that role.

Indeed, the Greek defender may well be an upgrade on the exit-linked Diop, having played 15 matches more than the Irons centre-back this season and registering an impressive 64 tackles compared to just nine for the Frenchman. Mavropanos is also competent at starting attacks from the back, completing 16 successful dribbles, whereas Diop hasn’t completed any so far this season.

These figures show the 24-year-old could be a significant upgrade for West Ham, and the “gladiator” – as his Stuttgart boss Pellegrino Matarazzo once called him – could be a tremendous coup if he joins the Hammers in the summer.

AND in other news, Moyes can axe “superb” £50m ace with WHU swoop for “one of the most exciting talents”

Wolves plot move for Geoffrey Kondogbia

Wolverhampton Wanderers are interested in signing Atletico Madrid midfielder Geoffrey Kondogbia.

What’s the word?

That is according to a report from Goal Espana, who claimed that Bruno Lage’s side have “monitored” the 29-year-old, with Atletico willing to consider a “good offer” for the Central African Republic international.

The “Octopus”

Dubbed “El Pulpo” in Spain, which translates to “the octopus” – as per Domingo Ortiz on Twitter – Kondogbia has earned his nickname for his ball recovery in midfield.

In fairness, this billing by the Spanish media is entirely apt, with his average of 12 ball recoveries per match placing him in the elite category for positionally similar players in Europe’s top 5 leagues.

In comparison, N’Golo Kante – who is renowned for winning back possession – achieves roughly 8.5 ball recoveries per game, which is nowhere near the elite category considering his position, according to FBRef.

Wolves star Ruben Neves boasts an average of around 10.7 ball recoveries per match, with team-mate Leander Dendoncker averaging 8.2 recoveries per game.

All of the aforementioned players are very sufficient in this area, but with both Neves and Dendoncker potentially departing Molineux this summer, Lage will need at least one replacement midfielder. ‘El Pulpo’ would provide that option and more to the 45-year-old.

The Central African Republic player is more defensive-minded than both Neves and Dendoncker, with his average of six tackles and interceptions per game bettering the Wolves pair’s numbers. Neves comes the closest with an average of five, whilst Dendoncker falters in comparison with an average of three.

These numbers may not seem too dissimilar, but if a player is achieving superior numbers in and around the middle and defensive third like Kondogbia is, it could only enhance the defensive stability of Lage’s team.

The signing of the £13.5m-rated player would give Lage the license to axe Neves and Dendoncker, who cost the Molineux club a reported £133k per week in wages, as per Salary Sport.

Kondogbia’s attributes out of possession would likely enable him to fill the void in the midfield, although it could be worth pairing the 29-year-old workhorse with a more creative threat in what could be a powerhouse of a midfield for the Old Gold next season.

In other news: Lage could end Wolves’ goal draught with 6 ft 2 striker who “can’t stop scoring”…

All-round Shakib stars in comprehensive win

Shakib Al Hasan, not for the first time, reaffirmed his position as Bangladesh’s most valuable player, following up his spirited half-century with two wickets on a turning track to peg back Zimbabwe in their chase

The Report by Siddhartha Talya21-Aug-2011
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Shakib Al Hasan scored 79 and then took 2 for 26 in seven overs•Zimbabwe CricketShakib Al Hasan, not for the first time, reaffirmed his position as Bangladesh’s MVP with a sterling display that included runs, wickets and brilliance in the field. His performance helped Bangladesh win their second consecutive game, and though it came a little too late because the series was already lost, it ended a largely dispiriting tour on a motivating note. A determined recovery stand with Mahmudullah, which bore testimony to his hard work and fitness, and a tight spell on a turning track formed the backbone of a comfortable win.The Zimbabwe bowlers, after their captain Brendan Taylor chose to field, lacked consistency in their lines and lengths but did enough to ensure Bangladesh didn’t dominate on a pitch that promised plenty of runs. Spin was to prove the key weapon on this pitch, and the Zimbabwe slow bowlers stepped in to gain the ascendancy.Prosper Utseya bowled a couple of tight overs and Ray Price struck at the right time just as Tamim Iqbal was looking for a release; he mistimed a slog-sweep and was caught. Price then brought an extra fielder inside the circle on the leg side, and almost immediately Mushfiqur Rahim gifted him a catch. Price pushed the fielder back after Shuvagoto Hom was kept quiet for four deliveries, prompting a heave off the fifth that found deep midwicket. Zimbabwe were ahead but Shakib stood in their way.Walking in at No.5, and watching his team slide to 127 for 5 in the 30th over, Shakib was faced with the task of doing justice to a good batting pitch. He initially counterattacked, smashing Price for a massive six followed up by a crunched four off Malcolm Waller. But he had to tone down after losing Mushfiqur Rahim and Shuvagoto in quick succession. Shakib ran hard between the wickets, worked the spinners through the spread-out field, employed the cut, closed the face to play square and drove down the ground with regularity. He went without a boundary for 40 deliveries and yet scored at better than a run-a-ball.Shakib also benefitted from some ill-directed bowling from Zimbabwe in the late overs. He clipped Elton Chigumbura for two fours in the 42nd over, and swung Price and Chris Mpofu through square leg. He should have inflicted the same treatment on a full toss from Keegan Meth, called in for Kyle Jarvis, but was bowled as he shuffled across to paddle it fine. His wicket came after a century stand, with Mahmudullah already having indulged in some enterprising batting in the final Powerplay. Dropped by Price when on 24, Mahmudullah reached his half-century, lofting Mpofu over his head and following up with a scoop for four more, taking his team past 250.The innings ended on an unpleasant note as Nasir Hossain smashed a ball back towards Meth, who didn’t react in time and was struck hard on the mouth. He broke his teeth, was bleeding profusely, and looked in plenty of discomfort. He didn’t come out to bat.Zimbabwe were indisciplined while batting. Taylor, yet again, was out caught behind while playing away from his body. The in-form Vusi Sibanda was a threat to Bangladesh’s defence, striking the ball cleanly, including two massive sixes off the seamers. So it seemed an aberration when he completely miscued an attempted pull off Shakib and it cost him his wicket, triggering a decisive turn of events.Hamilton Masakadza looked assured for the bulk of his stay but was trapped in front when he played across the line to an arm ball from Abdur Razzak. Tatenda Taibu was plumb when he missed a sweep off Shakib. Three wickets had fallen for 14 runs in 23 balls and Zimbabwe were forced to go into rebuilding mode. Forster Mutizwa and Waller kept the fight going, concentrating on working the field and playing the odd aggressive shot.The pair added 67, aided by sloppy fielding from Bangladesh, but was separated by brilliance from Shakib. Though he had hurt a finger on his bowling hand, Shakib dived full length and recovered to return an accurate throw to the wicketkeeper’s end and run out Mutizwa. There was a procession of wickets from there on and Mahmudullah helped himself to three scalps to complete another impressive all-round performance.

Spinners' experience advantage for hosts – Dilshan

Sri Lanka’s captain Tillakaratne Dilshan believes the experience of his slow bowlers will provide a useful advantage over Australia’s rookie spinners in the first Test in Galle

Daniel Brettig in Galle30-Aug-2011Sri Lanka’s captain Tillakaratne Dilshan believes the experience of his slow bowlers will provide a useful advantage over Australia’s rookie spinners in the first Test in Galle, which begins on Wednesday.The hosts are leaning towards playing only two of the three spinners in their squad, as doubts remain over the allrounder Angelo Mathews’ ability to deliver significant spells following his recent knee problem. Rangana Herath and Suraj Randiv would appear to be the frontrunners for those two spots over Ajantha Mendis, who has played more ODI cricket than Tests of late.Herath, who made his Test debut against Australia on this ground in 1999, and Randiv both have vast experience of the Galle pitch and the sea breezes that influence the flight. By contrast, neither Michael Beer nor Nathan Lyon had ever set foot in Sri Lanka before they were picked for this tour.”Yes definitely [experience is an advantage], our spinners have bowled here in practice games and they’ve played club cricket here,” Dilshan said. “They know how to adjust to this wicket and the wind, I think that is a small advantage.”[Beer and Lyon] bowled well in the practice game, the left-arm spinner and the offspinner. The thing is, we have to bat really well. In the last [home] series against India we faced Harbhajan [Singh], one of the best spinners in Asia. [So] I think our guys can handle their spinners.”Experience was clearly a priority for Dilshan and the Sri Lanka selectors. They chose to omit the fresher-faced trio of Seekuge Prasanna, Shaminda Eranga and Dhammika Prasad who had featured in the limited-overs squads, even after Prasanna and Eranga had impressed in the one-dayers. The 13 that remain will be trimmed on the morning of the match.”It’s an important match starting tomorrow here and I want to try and play the experienced guys who’ve been playing well for us the past few months,” Dilshan said.Mathews captained the Sri Lanka Board XI against the Australians in their only warm-up match before the Tests, and though he batted solidly on the final day he did not bowl at all. Dilshan said Mathews would only be capable of ten to 15 overs in an innings, hardly the stuff of a new-ball bowler – a role he would have to fill, if Sri Lanka are to play all three spinners – in any conditions.”He’s fit enough to bowl maybe ten to 15 overs for one innings, not long spells. Three-over spells might be his sort of thing,” Dilshan said. “Angelo is a good batsman, he has batted at No. 7 in the last few years. I could manage [juggle] a little bit in the middle, he might be available to bowl tomorrow.”History suggests that Galle is all but guaranteed of producing a result, unless the weather intervenes, and Dilshan said he was confident his batsmen would be able to compile enough runs to put pressure on Australia.”We have had a very solid [Test] batting line-up in the last three or four years,” he said. “From No. 1 to No. 6 we’ve batted really well. Especially in the last series, we batted well with six batsmen in England. I have confidence in my line-up, with Thilan [Samaraweera] in the middle order and Prasanna Jayawardene.”

Celtic: Ange drops Carter-Vickers update

Ange Postecoglou had dropped an update on Celtic’s attempts to sign Cameron Carter-Vickers on a permanent basis.

What’s the talk?

In recent comments cited by John McGinley, the 56-year-old Bhoys’ manager revealed that Michael Nicholson is in continued talks with the Tottenham Hotspur loanee regarding a permanent switch to Parkhead – with the Hoops reported to possess an initial £6m option to buy the defender this season.

Speaking about the potential signing of the 24-year-old, Postecoglou simply said: “It will take care of itself.”

Nicholson must act now

Considering just how impressive Carter-Vickers has been for Celtic since his arrival at Parkhead last summer, it would appear highly advisable for Nicholson to do everything in his power to secure the permanent signing of the Spurs centre-back at the earliest possible opportunity – in order to reduce the chances of the defender being tempted with a bigger or better offer elsewhere this summer.

Indeed, over his 20 Premiership appearances this season, the £2.7m-rated USA international has been in imperious form for the Hoops, helping his side keep 11 clean sheets, scoring two goals and registering one assist, as well as making an average of 1.4 interceptions, 0.9 tackles, 4.7 clearances, 75.9 passes and winning 6.3 duels – at a success rate of 72% per game.

These returns have seen the £20k-per-week centre-back average a quite astonishing SofaScore match rating of 7.42, ranking him as the fourth-best player in the top flight of Scottish football.

As such, it is clear for all to see that Carter-Vickers is a player who improves the Celtic backline immensely, something which would very much appear to suggest that the Bhoys’ £6m option to sign the defender would be something of a steal for the Premiership league leaders – a deal that Nicholson simply must get wrapped up before the 24-year-old returns to North London at the end of the current campaign.

In other news: “I’d be surprised…”: Devlin drops big Celtic transfer update, fans will be gutted

Lorgat hits back at 'irresponsible' May

The ICC has reacted strongly to FICA chief Tim May’s comments about players not approaching its Anti Corruption and Security Unit [ACSU] because they have no faith in it.

Nagraj Gollapudi12-Nov-2010The ICC has reacted strongly to FICA chief Tim May’s comments about players not approaching its Anti Corruption and Security Unit [ACSU] because they have no faith in it. Haroon Lorgat, the ICC chief executive, said he was extremely annoyed by May’s remarks and even called them “irresponsible”. Lorgat said he would have normally preferred not to react but what had fuelled his ire was May’s point that the ICC leaked details to the media in the past of the players who approached its watchdog. That only led to players becoming more insecure, May said.”He said that the players have no confidence in approaching the ACSU. I felt quite strange that Tim May [was] making such comments,” Lorgat told ESPNcricinfo. He said he was trying hard to understand the FICA chief’s reasoning. “He either made that out of ignorance or I hope he is not being irresponsible. Those comments are certainly not justified in my view.”In an interview to BBC World Service on Thursday, May had praised former Pakistan wicketkeeper Zulqarnain Haider’s defection to the United Kingdom after receiving threats from unnamed people during the ODI series against South Africa in the United Arab Emirates. In London, Haider subsequently revealed to the media the reasons behind his escape. He even had a few suggestions for the ACSU including “tapping” the players’ phones to discourage the bookies.May said Haider had made an unprecedented and brave move. “If what he [Haider] says is true, what he’s done is not cowardly, it has taken a significant amount of courage, because no one has ever done that before,” May said. But May, a former Australian off spinner, said there were not many players like the Pakistani. “Some players have concerns about reporting [corruption]. They fear the confidential nature of them reporting it will be breached,” May said.According to May the players’ biggest concern was they feared the details they shared with the ACSU would be made public without their knowledge. “In the past, players have gone to the anti-corruption unit and somewhere details of their talks with the anti-corruption has reached the media. Whether those leaks have come from the ICC or whatever, it still gives the players the question over whether they can trust the ICC’s anti-corruption unit.”Lorgat was critical of May’s opinion and disagreed. “In fact we have got numerous players who have come forward and told us they were willing to talk,” he said, while stressing that neither the ICC nor the ACSU had ever gone public whenever a player revealed any kind of approach. “We have never done that,” he said.Lorgat also picked up on one of the May’s comments in the BBC interview, in which he stated that FICA had made a couple of suggestions to the ACSU recently which would encourage players to come forth with more information whenever any approach was made. “We have put forward a couple of options to the ICC in a meeting we had with anti-corruption unit in October for a change in the reporting system,” May said, and added that he was still waiting for a positive reply.Lorgat said May had only exposed his own hand here. “That is a classical example that he going to talk to media. The ACSU or ICC did not go to the media. In the past a few players made their own declarations about talking or speaking to the ACSU. We have made never made any disclosure about which player came and spoke to us. We don’t say who has come because we protect their identities.”

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