Eredivisie wonderkids: De Ligt, De Jong & 15 Under-21 talents to watch

The Ajax pair are dominating transfer rumours, but they are not the only exciting youngsters excelling in the Netherlands' top flight

With Ajax's Frenkie de Jong and Matthijs de Ligt heavily linked to the likes of Barcelona and Manchester City, the Eredivisie has been thrown into the limelight in recent months.

The pair spearhead an exciting new generation in Dutch football, but they are well-backed by a whole host of young compatriots and still just a drop in the bucket of talent in the Netherlands' top flight.

From the top of the table right down to the bottom, from the Netherlands to Brazil and even Japan, here are 15 rising stars in a league where its trust in youth continues to be justified.

GettySteven Bergwijn (PSV, 21)It’s no surprise that PSV have a perfect record in the league this season as, in addition to Hirving Lozano’s contributions on the opposite wing, Steven Bergwijn has provided five goals and six assists. The skilful 21-year-old is a fantastic dribbler with incredible pace, all attributes that have earned him his first senior caps for the Netherlands and links with Liverpool and Manchester United.AdvertisementGettyMatthijs de Ligt (Ajax, 19)Matthijs de Ligt’s name will be familiar to many as it’s one linked with Manchester City, Juventus and Barcelona. The 19-year-old centre-back is a brilliant reader of play, a strong tackler and has an aerial presence that proves effective at both ends of the pitch. Mature beyond his years with technical ability that is typical of any Dutch defender, De Ligt is expected to earn his big-money move sooner rather than later.GettyRitsu Doan (Groningen, 20)Groningen desperately gathered together the funds to make Ritsu Doan’s loan deal permanent in the summer, and it’s clear to see why. The creative midfielder, who is also effective out wide, scored nine times and provided three assists in his debut season and, with Manchester City having shown an interest, it seems unlikely the Dutch club will keep their star man much longer.ENJOYED THIS STORY?

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GettyKasper Dolberg (Ajax, 21)Recruited to Ajax by the same man who brought in Christian Eriksen and Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Kasper Dolberg is a ruthless finisher with excellent technique. His ability was abundantly clear in his 16 goals across 2016-17, before the Dane lost his place, and his confidence, last term. Dolberg is looking back to his best again though, despite injuries in pre-season, with five goals in five starts this year.

Duckett closes in on triple century

Ben Duckett played his way into Northamptonshire history with an unbeaten 282 on the second day against Sussex at Wantage Road

ECB Reporters Network11-Apr-2016
ScorecardBen Duckett scored the first double century of the season…and didn’t stop there•Getty ImagesBen Duckett played his way into Northamptonshire history with an unbeaten 282 on the second day against Sussex at Wantage Road. He batted through the only two sessions possible as the home side made 481 for 7 before bad light and drizzle prevented play after tea.Duckett’s 367-ball innings became the eighth-highest for Northants as he overtook some of the greats of Wantage Road: Wayne Larkins, Allan Lamb and Dennis Brookes.He worked around an ailing Sussex attack on a placid pitch but still found room for the odd gem: sweetly cover-driving Steve Magoffin in his early-morning burst and lifting Danny Briggs for his second six over long-off. Later in the day, he added deft paddle sweeps and was happy to offer his lower-order partners the strike – they will hope to survive long enough on day three to allow Duckett to reach 300.When he raised his maiden first-class century ton 10 overs into the morning session, he became the first double-centurion for Northants since David Sales at Wantage Road in 2013. He soon overtook the highest score by a Northants batsman against Sussex, beating the 204 made by Rob Bailey in 1990, also in Northampton.But he should have gone in just the second over of the day. Driving loosely outside off stump straight to cover he was badly put down by substitute fielder Lewis Hatchett. It was the second catch to go down off Ajmal Shahzad and a third followed when Duckett, on 237, slapped straight to Ed Joyce at short cover-point, who shelled the chance.Sussex at least had George Garton to take something positive from the day. The 18-year-old left-armer, on his Championship debut, bowled with decent pace and took three afternoon wickets. He bowled Richard Levi and Adam Rossington in consecutive overs before having Rory Kleinveldt caught behind.It briefly threatened to disrupt Northamptonshire’s progress but despite missing out on a fifth batting bonus point by four runs, Duckett found enough partners to move the total into commanding territory. David Murphy looked very comfortable before hooking to Ross Taylor at deep square leg which finally handed the deserving Shahzad a wicket. Josh Cobb fell playing the same shot in the morning session, but he gloved Ollie Robinson to wicketkeeper Ben Brown.Murphy lauded Duckett’s marathon innings: “He’s been in such good touch these past two days. He had to battle through a little bit this morning but once he got past 200 he went from strength to strength. Some of the shots he’s been playing and the way he’s controlled the spinners have been so good. And the way he’s punished anything remotely off line has been fantastic. It’s one of the best innings I’ve seen.”

'I let people down' – USMNT star Weston McKennie makes frank admission about failed Leeds loan, but believes experience is helping him at Juventus

Weston McKennie has admitted that his loan spell at Leeds did not go as well as he expected and feels he "let certain people down".

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McKennie joined Leeds on loan last seasonCould not prevent club from being relegatedMidfielder is shining again at JuventusWHAT HAPPENED?

The United States midfielder was loaned to the Elland Road club in January to aid in their bid to avoid relegation to the Championship last season. He made 19 league appearances but did not have the desired effect, registering just one assist as they finished second-bottom and dropped down to the second tier.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT MCKENNIE SAID

McKennie told in Italy: "I didn’t have the best performances. I felt I let certain people down. But at the end of the day, when I came back, I think it was important for me in general to have an experience like that, to have that happen to me at this moment of my career, because when I came back it felt like I was coming back here for the first time again. When I first came to Juventus, nobody knew who I was, everybody doubted me, everybody was against me, and I think it was important for me because it put chips back on my shoulder. That’s when I perform best and prove that I can do it and that I belong, so it was nice to come back and have that feeling again."

THE BIGGER PICTURE

McKennie has been given a key role by coach Massimiliano Allegri since he moved back to Juventus during the summer. He has played in all 12 of their Serie A games so far this season and remains an important part of the United States national team, playing all 90 minutes as they beat Trinidad and Tobago in the CONCACAF Nations League quarter-final first-leg.

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Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT FOR MCKENNIE?

McKennie had to withdraw from the USMNT team before the second-leg of the Nations League tie due to an injury, however, and it has not yet been confirmed whether or not he will be fit for Juve's headline Serie A showdown against Inter on Sunday.

Antony is the biggest waste of money in Premier League history! Man Utd must cut losses on £85m flop after 'embarrassing' Man City showing

The Brazilian was fortunate to avoid a red card in the derby, and isn't doing nearly enough to justify his place in in the squad

Manchester United have made a whole host of poor recruitment calls in the post-Sir Alex Ferguson era, especially when it comes to filling wide attacking berths. The likes of Angel Di Maria, Memphis Depay and Alexis Sanchez all failed to justify their huge price tags, leaving the club with no choice but to accept significant losses on their initial investments.

Jadon Sancho is now following a similar path after his £72 million ($87m) move to Old Trafford from Borussia Dortmund in 2021, with a January exit on the cards after his public fallout with Erik ten Hag. But in United's defence, there was at least some logic to all of those moves, as they put their money behind players with either a wealth of experience at the highest level or those with potential to becoming leading talents of their generation.

Antony, however, did not fall into either of those brackets. The Brazilian joined Ajax from Sao Paulo for just £13m ($16m) in July 2020, and spent two years at the Johan Cruyff ArenA under Ten Hag before following the Dutchman to Old Trafford last summer.

Ajax made a huge profit on Antony, who ranked 19th for goals scored (18), seventh for assists (8) and 21st for chances created (75) in the Eredivisie across the 2020-21 and 2021-22 seasons. United didn't just overpay for the winger, they had their pants pulled down in forking out £85m ($99m).

Antony hit the ground running in Manchester, becoming the first player to score in his first three Premier League games for United, but the glaring flaws in his game soon became apparent. The 23-year-old finished his first campaign with just eight goals to his name, and he's yet to score or register an assist in nine appearances this term.

There have been no clear signs of improvement in his game, with the Red Devils rarely carrying any real threat down the right flank when he is selected to start. It's clear already that Antony does not have what it takes to succeed at a club the size of United.

He is still under contract until 2027, but it would make no sense to let his stock keep plummeting. United must cut their losses on Antony at the earliest possible opportunity – on the back of his latest miserable showing in the Manchester Derby…

Getty'Absolutely ridiculous'

Antony was dropped to the bench for United's first meeting of the season with arch-rivals Manchester City on Sunday, and was seen shaking his head as Ten Hag snubbed him when making his first three substitutions of the match.

It wasn't until the 86th minute that Antony was introduced, when United were already 3-0 down, and he didn't appear to have much interest in trying to help his side stage an unlikely late comeback. In the closing stages, the Brazil international was instead beaten twice by Jeremy Doku in a one-on-one duel, and kicked out at the fleet-footed City attacker in frustration.

Doku wagged his finger in Antony's face twice in response, and both times the United star angrily attempted to push his hand away before they were pulled apart by their team-mates. When the dust had settled, referee Paul Tierney decided that a yellow card sufficed as punishment for Antony, much to the amazement of United legend Gary Neville.

"That's absolutely ridiculous, that's a sending-off," Neville said while on commentary duty for . "Absolutely ridiculous from Antony. It's embarrassing."

Doku still had the last laugh, though, as he took to social media to mock Antony after the final whistle. The Belgian posted an image of their altercation with the caption: "Stay calm. Manchester is blue."

It wasn't the first time that Antony has unnecessarily wound up an opponent, and it won't be the last. Usually, he is the one inviting fouls – but the difference between him and Doku is that he rarely goes on to create a goalscoring chance for his team.

He's a hot-head with an over-inflated opinion of himself, which is based on the misleading standing he enjoys in Ten Hag's squad. Antony wouldn't get near the starting XI at any other of the top six sides in the Premier League – he's just the fortunate beneficiary of Ten Hag's failure to look beyond players that he's worked with in the past.

AdvertisementGettyOne-trick pony

Antony was regularly criticised for his perceived showboating last season, with former United midfielder Paul Scholes going so far as to label the former Ajax star a "clown" after his his execution of a needless 360 spin move during a Europa League game.

United are in dire need of a winger that attacks his marker and gets crosses in the box after the arrival of £73m ($89m) Danish frontman Rasmus Hojlund, but Antony certainly doesn't look capable of providing the 20-year-old with quality service.

Antony will get past his man now and again with a flashy piece of skill, but he often allows the defender to get back at him and slows United down on the attack. He's style over substance, and incredibly predictable.

When he gets the ball, you know his only goal is to cut inside. Defenders are quickly able to shut Antony down because he doesn't appear to have any right foot and lacks the pace to get down to the by-line. It's exasperating to watch him run down the same blind alleys game in, game out, and his team-mates probably feel exactly the same. Ten Hag has always championed quick passing interchanges and incisive counter-attacking football, but is failing to see that Antony prevents his United team from unleashing their full potential.

"In general, end product is massive in football," former United striker Andy Cole said to in August. "Does he [Antony] create chances for his team-mates? Not really. Does he contribute by scoring goals? Not really.

"If I was playing in a team and there was an inverted winger of Antony’s ilk, then as a centre-forward I wouldn’t be happy if I wasn’t being provided with enough assists, because my job is to score goals. I don’t believe he’s produced enough considering all the opportunities he’s had to play for Manchester United."

Instagram.com/djgabicavallin & GettyOff-field distractions

United have endured a dismal start to the 2023-24 campaign, as Ten Hag has struggled to build on the platform of his promising first year at the helm – which saw him deliver the Carabao Cup and a top-four Premier League finish.

It certainly didn't help that when the action kicked-off, speculation over the Glazer family's proposed sale of the club was still raging, and the club had not yet made a decision on whether or not to reintegrate Mason Greenwood into the first-team squad.

Greenwood had been suspended since being arrested on suspicion of rape and assault in January 2022, but saw all charges against him dropped in February. United eventually announced their decision to part ways with the English forward on August 21, and he subsequently joined Getafe on loan.

But less than three weeks later, the club were forced into action again after more disturbing allegations, with Antony granted a leave of absence after his ex-girlfriend, Gabriela Cavallin, filed multiple police complaints against him.

Cavallin accused Antony of attacking her while she was pregnant, and claimed that he threw a glass at her and threatened to throw her out of a moving vehicle in a shocking interview with Brazilian outlet The case is being investigated by Greater Manchester Police and forces in Sao Paulo, with both parties giving their accounts.

United confirmed Antony's return to the club on September 29, as the player had still not been arrested or charged in the UK or Brazil. Police enquires are still ongoing, though, and the club is keeping the situation under review.

Antony and Cavallin have also released various other statements in the media, which has provided an unwanted sideshow for United after what had already been a turbulent first half of the year. It remains to be seen whether Antony will be punished for any wrongdoing or not, but the whole saga has only brought more negativity.

United have also been forced to confirm that they did carry out the necessary due diligence checks on Antony, having failed to unearth an assault allegation made against him by a woman more than three months before his arrival at Old Trafford from Ajax.

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Getty Panic buy

Ten Hag deserves most of the criticism for signing Antony, but United should have known when to stop when Ajax kept driving up their asking price during transfer negotiations.

When quizzed on the deal during a fiery exchange on social media, United icon Neville attempted to point the finger of blame at the Glazers, while also suggesting that they overpaid for Casemiro when prising him away from Real Madrid for £70m ($85m).

"Context on Antony. We’d just lost to Brighton and Brentford and the club was in reactive panic mode as per usual and sanctioned and said 'Yes' to Casemiro and Antony," Neville wrote on . "It’s all on the Glazers for complete panic and lack of leadership! They’ve done this for 10 years. CR7 [Cristiano Ronaldo] to City and panic. Alexis [Sanchez] to City and panic. Ajax couldn’t believe we’d offered that money. Owners and directors sanction deals. Now I agree Antony needs to do better, but it was never a deal to do in those circumstances."

It makes sense that United officials felt pressured into a couple of statement signings after seeing their new manager kick off his reign with two damaging defeats. The question is: can the mistake be undone?

The Glazers are now set to sell a minority stake in the club to Sir Jim Ratcliffe, who is pushing for full control over football matters ahead of a potential full takeover in a few years time. Ratcliffe reportedly questioned the club's recent transfers during the screening process for potential buyers, and is hoping that his £1.3 billion shareholder agreement goes through before the January transfer window opens.

In addition to overhauling United's policy when it comes to new signings, Ratcliffe must also clear out the deadwood in the squad – ideally starting with Antony. There should be no shortage of potential suitors for Antony, as he remains a young prospect with the prime years of his career still in front of him. United would be wise to use that as their main sales pitch, but they will also have to bite the bullet and accept another big loss. They'd be lucky to get even half of the original fee they paid for Antony given how badly he has struggled in the famous red shirt.

A loan move could also work for United, especially if an option to buy is included in any final deal. Ten Hag may not be around to protest by that time either, with calls for him to be sacked growing as his team continue to slip further off the pace in the Premier League.

Briggs turns screw on Derbyshire

Hampshire’s slow left-armer Danny Briggs claimed four wickets to leave Division Two’s bottom side Derbyshire in trouble at the Ageas Bowl

Press Association02-Jun-2014
ScorecardDanny Briggs’ four wickets left Derbyshire struggling to avoid the follow on (file photo)•PA PhotosHampshire’s slow left-armer Danny Briggs claimed four wickets to leave Division Two’s bottom side Derbyshire in trouble at the Ageas Bowl. They finished the second day on 166 for 7, still 222 runs behind and, with no recognised batsmen left, facing an uphill struggle.The visitors had done a good job of polishing off the leaders’ innings in the morning as once Michael Bates was removed having made his half-century, Mark Footitt finished off the tail.With only 56 added to the overnight total Derbyshire at least had some momentum but the loss of Paul Borrington to Briggs just before lunch curtailed their progress. Sean Ervine had Wayne Madsen caught at slip and bad light forced an early tea with Stephen Moore still unbeaten on 48.Upon the resumption, the 23-year-old Briggs was back in the action, trapping Marcus North lbw but Kyle Abbott’s removal of Moore for 53 in similar fashion dealt the real blow.At 101 for 4, Derbyshire were in trouble but Scott Elstone and Alex Hughes fought back with a partnership of 59, which was eventually broken when Ervine took another good catch at slip to give Briggs his third victim.Gareth Cross fell cheaply to Abbott before the Briggs-Elstone combination accounted for Hughes to leave Derbyshire still needing 73 runs to avoid the follow on. Briggs closed with 4 for 29 off 22 overs with his sights set on eclipsing his career-best figures of 6 for 45.

Waqar urges fielding improvement

Pakistan coach Waqar Younis has said his side needs to improve its fielding and batting against the short ball to be competitive at the 2015 World Cup

ESPNcricinfo staff20-Dec-2014Pakistan coach Waqar Younis has said his side needs to improve its fielding and batting against the short ball to be competitive at the 2015 World Cup in February and March. Pakistan lost the fifth ODI against New Zealand by 68 runs in Abu Dhabi on Friday to concede the series 2-3.”We need to improve our fielding,” Waqar said after the game. “It is not up to the mark and [we] must improve a lot. We also need to work hard on short balls as we have to go to Australia and both these things need to be spot on if you want to compete in the World Cup.” The only international games Pakistan have left before the tournament are two ODIs in New Zealand on January 31 and February 3.New Zealand scored 275 for 4 in the final ODI of the series in the UAE, with their captain Kane Williamson making 97. Pakistan were dismissed for 207 in 43.3 overs in the chase. Despite the defeat, Waqar said the series had not been a complete write-off. “We did achieve what we needed but not 100%. Now we have a one-day cup back home and hope that things will be clearer after that.”Williamson hailed the series victory as a “big achievement,” especially because New Zealand were without regular captain Brendon McCullum, and fast bowlers Tim Southee and Trent Boult. New Zealand bounced back from conceding the series lead twice before winning the decider.”There is still time for the World Cup, it’s good it will be in our conditions and this series win is a big achievement,” Williamson said. “We learned from our mistakes, beat a strong Pakistan side and have shown improvement. In a series that went up and down, it was fantastic to learn from the Pakistan side and to win in such an evenly-fought series has been great.”It was important to keep adapting our plans, the personnel changed quite a lot, we had a lot of injuries. It has been a great series, an emotional series for many reasons and both teams put on some fantastic cricket.”New Zealand will travel home to host Sri Lanka, beginning with the Boxing Day Test at the Hagley Oval in Christchurch.

Dwayne Smith joins Perth Scorchers

West Indies allrounder Dwayne Smith has joined Perth Scorchers for the upcoming Big Bash League season

Renaldo Matadeen07-Dec-2013West Indies allrounder Dwayne Smith has joined Perth Scorchers for the upcoming Big Bash League season, becoming the second international player to sign for the side following the announcement that South African bowler Alfonso Thomas would be rejoining them.”I’m really happy to have signed with the Perth Scorchers – they look to have a great squad of players with a good mixture of youth and experience. The BBL is a tournament all players want to be involved, in so I’m really looking forward to joining the lads in Perth and making an impact,” Smith said. “Hopefully I can get the side off to a good start at the top of the order and continue on my good form from the recent Champions League in India. Perth is a beautiful city, so hopefully I can experience a bit of what it has to offer in between the cricket.”Smith has struggled to cement his spot in the West Indies team, despite being a crucial part of the Mumbai Indians side that won the 2013 IPL and Champions League Twenty20, for which he was the Player of the Tournament after making 223 runs at an average of 55.75 and a strike rate of 142.94.”I want to be part of the West Indies team that defends the T20 crown next year (in Bangladesh),” he said. “I’m looking at the 2015 World Cup, so I want to make a big impression here.”Scorchers coach Justin Langer described Smith as a welcome addition to the side, citing his stunning form in the Twenty20 matches over the last 12 months, as well as the fact that he would be available for the entire BBL season.”Dwayne is a fantastic batsman, he’s a brilliant fieldsman and he can bowl some overs, so he’s a great addition to the Scorchers,” Langer said. “He was very keen to get back to BBL so it was a pretty easy negotiation. Dwayne was high on the list, because of the challenges you have with securing overseas players.”Smith has represented Sussex, Deccan Chargers, Mumbai Indians and Barbados at T20 level. In addition, he also played for New South Wales in the BBL in 2009-10.Shaun Marsh, who also announced his contract extension with the Scorchers, was equally as pleased with his team’s new signing.”I have had the pleasure of watching him play in the IPL and for West Indies over the last few years and he certainly brings a lot of excitement to the game with bat, ball and in the field,” Marsh said. “He’s a really aggressive player and I think we will work really well together at the top.”

Newcastle United confirm the signing of Antonio Barecca on loan from Monaco

[ad_pod ]Newcastle completed the signing of Antonio Barecca from Monaco on Thursday, as per the club’s official Twitter account, with the left-back set to stay on Tyneside until at least the end of the season on a six-month loan deal, with a view to joining permanently.

What’s the word, then?

Barecca is a pivotal signing for Rafa Benitez, as the Magpies boss has been desperate for another left-back to compete with Paul Dummett, who was the only recognised option in that role before the arrival of the 23-year-old from Monaco.

The Italian only joined the Ligue 1 club in the summer from Serie A side Torino, but he has made just eight appearances so far this season, as per Transfermarkt, as Monaco sit just one place off the bottom of the league, with relegation a serious possibility.

Be sure to check out the incredible story of the man who rose from a Tanzanian refugee camp to become one of Australia’s biggest football stars in the video below…

Benitez has had to play Matt Ritchie in a left wing-back role whilst Dummett has been missing through injury, so Barecca’s arrival at St James’ Park will be a huge bonus to what was looking like a severely malnourished area in the Magpies’ team.

The beginning of the end for Ritchie?

An exclusive report from TEAMtalk on Thursday suggested that the Scottish international wanted to leave the club in order to move further south to be closer to his family, and following Barecca’s arrival along with the signing of Miguel Almiron (via the BBC), the 29-year-old’s long-termfuture at the club looks bleak.

The capture of Barecca, coupled with Dummett waiting in the wings, should ensure that Ritchie never plays in a left wing-back role again, although his preferred position higher up the pitch in attack is now under threat by the Paraguayan international Almiron.

Given his reported unhappiness at the club, and with his position in the starting XI now under serious threat, perhaps the former Bournemouth man’s time on Tyneside could come to an end in the summer after a two-and-a-half-year stint with the Magpies.

Maddinson's rapid ton shows potential and pitfalls

A rapid hundred from Nic Maddinson showed why he is among the best young batsmen in Australia, but also why he still has a way to go

Daniel Brettig in Bristol21-Jun-2013
ScorecardNic Maddinson peppered the boundary with regularity during his hundred•Getty ImagesBoom. A lofted straight drive clatters into the construction site at the Ashley Down Road End of the County Ground in Bristol. Whoosh. An attempt to repeat the shot next ball draws a wild swing and a near outside edge. It is 45 minutes before lunch on day one of a first-class match. This, more or less, is the existence of Nic Maddinson, arguably the most conspicuously talented of Australia’s young batsmen in England in 2013.On a day when Australia A clambered all over Gloucestershire, Maddinson’s ball-striking – and occasional ball-missing – left the most lasting impression. In a little more than three hours he crashed 181 from 143 balls, and spent just 34 balls hurtling from three figures to his final tally. Unbridled flair taking hold of modest bowling on an unexpectedly sunny Friday made for pleasant, light-hearted viewing: the Ashes are not at stake here for the tourists, nor any Division Two points at risk for the hosts.Less jaunty was Gloucestershire’s batting in response to Australia A’s 331 for 4. Jackson Bird and Ryan Harris are working back into fitness and form while Chadd Sayers has only one full first-class season behind him, but all were made to look piercing as the shadows lengthened. Sayers could count the wicket of his South Australian team-mate Michael Klinger among three victims, while Ashton Agar also nipped out the wicket of Dan Christian. Gloucestershire’s two Australians could manage only 14 runs between them.Earlier it had been possible simply to sit back and enjoy Maddinson’s spectacle, studded with 22 boundaries and a blink-inducing nine sixes. Yet amid the flurry of runs, Maddinson showed why he has some way to go before maturing as a batsman, and why at 21 he is still deciding what sort of player he will become: a Twenty20 blaster or a more rounded Test match contender.Regular visitors to Nevil Road could be forgiven for wondering aloud why a batsman so obviously gifted as Maddinson was not in the Ashes squad proper. Their answer can be provided by a record that shows that days like these do not come as the result of an easily repeatable approach to batting.The best Maddinson can offer is unforgettable, as a wonderfully free swing of the bat can send perfectly presentable deliveries soaring into the stand at square leg or bouncing percussively off the top of Gloucestershire’s new pavilion under construction. But he remains an unfinished article, vulnerable early on when the ball is new and the bowlers fresh, and prone to frequent lapses of concentration thereafter. In the early overs Maddinson struggled by comparison with the more obdurate Jordan Silk, beaten often outside off stump even if he was not aiming an almighty heave towards the cover fence.Later, well after a more experienced player would have settled in, Maddinson showed a tendency for the over eager, often following a pristinely struck boundary with a six, and then a swing-and-miss. In this he recalled nothing so much as the former Australia coach Bob Simpson’s line that Ian Healy “bats faster and faster until he gets out”. At one point Maddinson offered a vertical bat in some kind of outlandish ramp shot attempt that fell just out of reach of the field. Somewhat fittingly he was to be dismissed the ball after clouting his biggest six of all, skying Benny Howell to mid-off.Maddinson was certainly playing a game not familiar to his batting partners, two of whom have greater challenges ahead. After Silk offered no shot to be bowled by Gloucestershire’s Twenty20 signing Christian, Phillip Hughes strode out at No. 3. A few balls after his arrival Hughes faced up to Liam Norwell, who shares some quirks of a bowling action, if not a common level of skill or pace, with Andrew Flintoff. The Gloucestershire captain Klinger posting a leg slip. This show of 2009 Ashes nostalgia did not overtly perturb Hughes, and his dismissal cutting at Howell was a surprise.Usman Khawaja followed Hughes to the middle, and set about batting in an unhurried manner that did not suggest too much anxiety about not having topped 51 on tour so far and therefore not really enhancing his claims to an Ashes batting spot. He was comfortable without dominating, composed without looking commanding. Perhaps bigger runs will come in the tour matches against Somerset and Worcestershire, but it was difficult to imagine Khawaja being entirely thrilled when the captain Steve Smith – leading in place of a resting Brad Haddin – declared at tea.Smith’s decision granted his bowlers the chance of an afternoon run, and the pacemen were to find enough movement in the air and off the pitch to be dangerous. Sayers showed his command of line when Chris Dent shouldered arms and was bowled, and Harris coaxed a feather-edge from Dan Housego after he was swung around to the pavilion end in place of Bird, who was tidy in his opening spell.Sayers would go on to have Klinger taken at mid-on, and Gareth Roderick losing his off stump. Like Maddinson he is not in direct Ashes contention, but may be attracting the interest of several Championship sides with his consistency and knack for wickets. The left-arm spinner Agar had Christian snaffled at short midwicket and Fawad Ahmed, now eligible for his passport thanks to the passing of new legislation back in Australia, twirled through two overs before the close.

Imam-ul-Haq ton crushes Afghanistan

An unbeaten century by opening batsman Imam-ul-Haq helped Pakistan crush Afghanistan in the first of the three-match Under-19 ODI series in Lahore

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Jan-2014
ScorecardAn unbeaten century by opening batsman Imam-ul-Haq helped Pakistan crush Afghanistan in the first of the three-match Under-19 ODI series in Lahore. Imam hit 15 fours and two sixes in his 91-ball 106 and added an unbeaten 129 for the third wicket with Saud Shakeel to overhaul Afghanistan’s total with 14.1 overs to spare.Chasing 181, Pakistan lost their first two wickets for 52 runs, but Imam and Shakeel not only prevented any further damage, they also kept scoring at a brisk pace. Imam reached his half-century – in 55 balls – with consecutive boundaries off Hashmatullah Shaidi, but then increased the pace further, reaching his hundred off the 88th delivery, an over before the finish. Shakeel, too, completed his half-century in the same over, reaching the landmark in 58 deliveries.Barring Abdullah Adil, none of the Afghanistan bowlers were able to put a check on the scoring. It was in contrast to how Pakistan had operated after losing the toss. Left-arm seamer Zia-ul-Haq had batsman Ishanullah lbw off the fourth ball of the third over, after opener Shahidullah was run-out three balls earlier. A half-century stand between Shaidi and Usman Ghani lifted Afghanistan to 72 from 18 for 2, raising hopes of a 200-plus total. But once Ghani was dismissed, Afghanistan struggled to put together any other meaningful partnerships, eventually folding for 180 off the last ball of the innings. Left-arm spinner Kamran Ghulam chipped in with four wickets, while Zafar Gohar picked up three.

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