Forest remain interested in Alex Moreno

Nottingham Forest have been linked with a move for Alex Moreno this summer, and a reliable source has now given an update on the club’s pursuit of the player.

What’s the latest?

According to The Athletic’s Nottingham Forest reporter Paul Taylor, the club remain interested in signing the Real Betis left-back this summer.

The report stated that, following the acquisition of Jesse Lingard, the Reds are now moving on to their next transfer target, and Moreno has been named as one of the players Steve Cooper that would like to add to his squad.

Cooper can land his own Azpilicueta

Forest have been getting stuck into the transfer window this summer ahead of their long-awaited return to the Premier League, making 11 signings already, and they are not showing any signs of slowing down if Taylor’s report is to be believed.

The Reds signed young left-back Omar Richards from Bayern Munich only a few weeks ago, but clearly Cooper wants to add depth to his left-hand side – justifiably so with Richards suffering from a hairline fracture in pre-season.

Moreno has been impressing in his performances for his current club, and if his statistics from last season are anything to go by, he would be a major coup for Forest as Cooper continues to strengthen his squad.

Over 30 league appearances in 2021/22, the 29-year-old scored five goals and delivered three assists. He made 2.5 tackles, 1.1 interceptions and 2.3 clearances and took 62.4 touches per game, along with winning the majority of his ground and aerial duels combined (52%).

The talented £17m-valued Spaniard – who was dubbed “quality” by journalist Ethan Lamb – could even become Cooper’s very own Cesar Azpilicueta, as the Chelsea defender was one of the most comparable players to Moreno according to FBRef.

Despite the Stamford Bridge star making more touches (1,958) and completing more dribbles (75%), Moreno outperforms him in several different areas, with more goal contributions (eight), a better success rate for pressures (30.4%) , completed more tackles (79) and offered more shot creating actions (55), as per FBRef.

With that in mind, the signing of Moreno would be a great piece of business for Forest as Cooper puts together his squad as they prepare for their Premier League return.

AND in other news – After Lingard: Forest plot bid for “very talented” £27k-p/w gem, imagine him & Johnson

West Ham get green light in Belotti chase

West Ham United have been handed the ideal chance to land Italy international Andrea Belotti this summer…

What’s the word?

As per The Athletic – and other sources – the 28-year-old has officially departed Serie A club Torino following the expiry of his contract, having spent the past seven years in Turin after joining from Palermo in 2015.

The 44-cap brute has recently been linked with a move to the London Stadium as David Moyes’ search for a new centre-forward continues, albeit with club insider ExWHUemployee having also suggested that the Scot has snubbed the chance to land the striker in the past.

The hope will be that the former Manchester United manager changes his mind, albeit with fellow Premier League side Everton also said to be in the race for the player’s signature, as too are Italian champions AC Milan.

Too good to be true

The arrival of the “unbelievable” talent – as described by one source – would seemingly be “too good to be true” for West Ham supporters, with Belotti perhaps the ideal man to solve their centre-forward woes.

Not only available for nothing – ensuring a relatively risk-free deal – the £18m-rated marksman also offers an almost guaranteed supply of goals, having been in truly prolific form during his time in Serie A.

In 251 games in all competitions at Torino, the 5 foot 11 marksman recorded a staggering tally of 113 goals and 28 assists, netting exactly 100 league goals for the club in that time.

While the most recent campaign saw the striker score just eight league goals, that was the 26 goals during a particularly prolific 2016/17 season.

Not just a threat in attack, the powerful forward is also a useful asset for his hold-up play and ability in the air, ranking in the top 14% among those in his position across Europe’s top five leagues for aerial duels won, with 4.27 per match.

Having that alternative option to current centre-forward Michail Antonio could well be vital for West Ham next season as they once again juggle their domestic and European duties, with the club needing someone else to shoulder the goalscoring burden up top alongside the Jamaica international.

Although Chelsea’s Armando Broja has been touted as one potential option, in Belotti the Hammers would have an almost guaranteed supply of goals, with the menacing striker set to prove an astute piece of business if the Irons can snap him up on a free transfer.

AND in other news, Moyes plotting move for “special” £45m “baller”, he’d be a “superstar” for West Ham

Everton eye Chelsea striker Broja

Everton are reportedly now ‘keen’ on signing Chelsea striker Armando Broja this summer.

The Lowdown: Striker uncertainty

Both Dominic Calvert-Lewin and Richarlison face uncertain futures at Goodison Park, with a number of clubs keen to sign the pair after the Toffees almost got relegated last season.

If one or both of them were to leave Merseyside – the interest in the Brazilian appears to be particularly intense – then Frank Lampard’s team will need to recruit another marquee striker in this window.

The Latest: Broja interest

Taking to Twitter, journalist Toby Cudworth of 90min has revealed that the Blues are just one of a number of sides now ‘keen’ on signing Broja, with Leeds United, West Ham United and Wolves also in the mix for his signature.

Expanding in his article for 90min, Cudworth adds that Chelsea will allow Broja to leave if the price is right, although that could be in excess of £30m.

The Verdict: Get it done

With at least one of Calvert-Lewin and Richarlison likely to leave, EFC will no doubt need to bring in another forward, and given the competition from their Premier League rivals, they need to get a deal done for Broja as soon as possible.

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Dubbed a ‘dangerous‘ player by Southampton manager Ralph Hasenhuttl and one with ‘incredible pace and strength‘ by Sky Sports pundit Jamie Redknapp, the 20-year-old is certainly going places after scoring nine goals in total while on loan at the Saints last season.

Nonetheless, having played in the top flight last term, he should be able to settle in and find his feet very quickly, and could be the player that sends Everton shooting back up the table.

Wolves set for Adama & Trincao crunch talks

Wolverhampton Wanderers boss, Bruno Lage, is set for crunch talks with the Old Gold hierarchy.

What’s the word?

That is according to a report from Birmingham Mail, who claims that the Wolves boss will meet with the Molineux hierarchy to discuss the future of Adama Traore and Francisco Trincao.

The former is set to return to Molineux after Xavi declined Barcelona’s £25m option to re-sign their youth product at the end of the season, whilst Lage’s stance on the latter is currently yet to be decided.

Wolves have a reported £25m option to buy within Trincao’s loan deal and with Traore set to return to his parent club to enter what will be the final year of his current deal, the Old Gold have a decision to make.

Time to go?

With Traore’s latest setback in being rejected by the Blaugrana once again, he requires a club that can work around his direct style and within a system that gets the best out of him.

Ironically, Wolves have missed the spark that the Spaniard of Malian descent offers on the wing, and as Trincao will have found out this season when looking at his numbers in comparison to the rest of the squad, no one comes close to Adama’s average of 7.0 dribbles per 90, with Trincao closest to that Premier League-leading tally, having managed an average of 3.0 dribbles per 90.

You get the impression that a player of Adama’s technical ability would see him shine at the likes of Liverpool, if he was afforded regular game time that is. But whilst that is very unlikely to be the case, a move to a side that commits more bodies forward in the attacking phase of the game could suit the La Masia youth graduate well – especially if Wolves are to decide on signing Trincao permanently.

At the age of 26, Adama needs regular game time, and having suffered a slight blip in his career, despite showing glimpses of his potential under Lage, Trincao needs regular minutes in a progressive system also.

With Trincao linked with a reunion with former Braga-boss-now-Sporting manager Ruben Amorim, a return back to his homeland in an exciting project with familiar faces will surely prove too much of a temptation to reject.

Wolves could find themselves without the £177k-per-week duo, amidst what looks to be a big rebuild at the Molineux this summer.

In other news: In talks: Lage can unearth Wolves’ new Neves & Moutinho in double swoop for £12.8m duo 

Aston Villa linked with Henrikh Mkhitaryan

Aston Villa have been name-checked with an interest in AS Roma attacking midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan by journalist Alfredo Pedulla.

The Lowdown: Mkhitaryan at Roma

Mkhitaryan has impressed in recent seasons after leaving Arsenal for Roma back in 2019. The Armenia international made a loan move permanent as a free agent and has turned out on 119 occasions for the Serie A giants.

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The 33-year-old has scored 29 times in a Roma shirt, taking his tally for club and country to 201, however, he is out of contract with the club at the end of June, leading to rumours of a possible Premier League return.

The Latest: Pedulla’s post

Pedulla took to Twitter on Wednesday evening to share an update on Mkhitaryan’s future.

He stated that Roma wants to renew the 33-year-old’s deal, but said ‘watch out’ for a possible ‘surprise’ move to Villa. Inter Milan, Napoli and Tottenham were also name-checked alongside Villa in regards to a potential swoop.

The Verdict: Avoid?

Although Mkhitaryan has impressed in Italy, contributing to 24 goals in 34 league games last season, Villa could be better off avoiding a free transfer.

They have now secured a permanent deal for Phillipe Coutinho and also have club-record signing Emiliano Buendia on the books, two high quality attacking midfield options. Therefore, if Steven Gerrard wants another this summer, the club may benefit from looking to land a younger player who can learn from Coutinho and Buendia and will be happy to be a bit-part player.

You’d expect that Mkhitaryan would want regular game time in the final years of his career, something Villa may not be able to offer, but it could still be one to watch closely.

In other news: ‘Incredible…’ – Sky Sports man buzzing at major Villa news after ‘speaking to the players’. 

Doherty stealing a living at Spurs

Tottenham Hotspur defender Matt Doherty is quickly becoming a forgotten man around N17.

The arrival of Djed Spence in a £15m deal from Middlesbrough during the summer transfer window was always going to make the right wing-back spot a crowded department and it appears as if the Irishman has slipped further down the pecking order.

Despite doubts over the credentials of Emerson Royal, the 30-year-old is seemingly on the periphery of the first-team squad, having failed to register more than eight minutes of action since the start of the 2022/23 campaign.

It means the £15m Jose Mourinho signing is quickly becoming a complete waste of money as he cannot break into the starting XI, even when manager Antonio Conte needs to rotate his team with seven matches in a three-week period.

The youthful Spence may well now be preferred, particularly as at the age of just 22, he’s the better long-term prospect to the former Wolverhampton Wanderers star, who was once dubbed the “weak link” of this Spurs side.

Doherty did enjoy some success at the back end of last season but injury curtailed his progress under the stern Italian head coach and evidently, since then, Conte has preferred other players over him.

Now valued at a lowly £6m by CIES Football Observatory, any hopes of earning some of that £15m back in future windows appear to be dead and buried – he’s not playing and certainly isn’t getting any younger.

Premier League rivals West Ham United were among the teams interested in a late move for him on deadline day.

“West Ham also looking at trying to do a right-back today and have asked Tottenham about a loan for Matt Doherty,” tweeted the The Sun’s Jack Rosser.

The 6-foot wide man isn’t amongst the highest earners at Hotspur Way, in fact he’s quite some margin off Harry Kane’s mooted £200k-per-week contract, but he is in the next rung of players, raking in around £65k-per-week, as per Capology (via FBref).

Overall, the signing of Doherty back in summer 2020 – some 105 weeks ago – has been nothing short of a waste as since then, he’s cost the club around £21.8m in total, when factoring in his wages and transfer fee.

The Ireland international continues to burn a hole in the pockets of the ENIC Group, so if the opportunity arises to move him on this winter, then sporting director Fabio Paratici must do so as there appears to be no future for him at Tottenham.

AND in other news, 75% duels lost: £43m-rated Spurs lightweight badly let Conte down, he must now be dropped…

Ayush Mhatre: Another Mumbai teenager with dazzling potential

The 17-year-old made his maiden first-class century playing his third game, against Maharashtra in the Ranji Trophy

Vishal Dikshit18-Oct-2024The Bandra-Kurla Complex (BKC) isn’t like the rest of Mumbai. In a city where poverty and opulence co-exist without any tangible borders, the BKC is an upmarket commercial hub embellished with offices of multinational companies, high rises adorned by modern-day reflective glass, five-star hotels, upscale restaurants and lavish offices of some of the top banks of the country. Against the backdrop of a metro, its chaos and congestion, this place feels as if it was planted there like a drop-in pitch.And in the middle of this swanky complex stood a 17-year-old boy on Friday who was a bit different to everybody that was around him too. He had been toiling in the scorching sun for close to four hours, sweating to earn each and every run for his team, getting his whites dirty, and physically proving his worth surrounded by people much older – some twice his age.Ayush Mhatre’s face still has a boyish roundness to it. It was hard to miss when he took his helmet off after scoring his maiden century in only his third first-class game and held his arms aloft facing the Mumbai dressing room.Mhatre is the latest from Mumbai’s production line that rolls out promising youngsters ever ready to step up when the first-choice players are unavailable. Two years ago, when the likes of Yashasvi Jaiswal and Sarfaraz Khan were away for national duty for the last couple of seasons, a 17-year-old Musheer Khan made his Ranji Trophy debut. And now when Musheer is out injured after a car accident last month, another 17-year-old has stepped in in his place, almost like he was packed and ready in a warehouse in BKC.Mhatre embodies the struggle of the average Mumbaikar. To chase his cricket dreams, he has had to travel nearly 80 kilometers one way by train from Virar (outside Mumbai) to Churchgate (next to Wankhede Stadium) to access the famed and cricket coaches. He was always supported by his parents to pursue this dream, and it was his (maternal grandfather) and then his (father’s younger brother) who chaperoned him on his journey into the city so he could have it all.Mhatre took the game up when he was five, but it was at 15 that he really began to think that the runs he was piling up in school and club cricket could be done professionally. His personal highest score stands at 254 not out, in a private tournament, and he “gained a lot of confidence” in playing the Kalpesh Koli Under-16 tournament in Mumbai. By December 2023, he had made it to Mumbai’s Under-23 squad for the CK Nayudu Trophy and was also named in MCA’s Under-19 team of the year for 2023-24.Ayush Mhatre is unbeaten on 127 against Maharashtra•PTI At the start of this season, still in Class XII, Mhatre had an inkling that a Mumbai call-up was coming. He was asked to take part in the red-ball KSCA Thimmappiah Tournament, which several players use to tune up for the start of a new Ranji season. There, he smashed 173 against Gujarat and 52 in the next game opposite Andhra. He also started prepping for the challenges fast bowling could throw at him in first-class cricket by batting against plastic balls on tiles with Prashant Shetty, who has coached many Mumbai players including Prithvi Shaw and Jemimah Rodrigues. Eventually, when the call came for the Irani Cup clash against Rest of India, after Musheer had met with an accident, Mhatre was mentally ready.”I was surprised, but there was no pressure, I was excited,” he said on Friday.Mhatre scored 19 and 14 against the likes of Mukesh Kumar and Yash Dayal, and as soon as the Ranji Trophy season started, he took no time to register his maiden first-class half-century against Baroda, top-scoring with 52 on a spicy surface in Mumbai’s first innings when only one other team-mate crossed 30.On Friday, batting on his home turf, after Maharashtra had been bowled out for just 126, Mhatre saw off the new ball while Shaw and Hardik Tamore fell cheaply, and he stitched useful partnerships with his captain Ajinkya Rahane and Shreyas Iyer to power the score past 200.He reveres his Mumbai senior Rohit Sharma – also from the suburbs – for his trademark pulls and timing, and almost as a tribute to him, Mhatre pulled a short ball so handsomely towards the Bank of America building towering over the ground that the Mumbai dressing room erupted in applause. He seems comfortable off both the front and the back foot – the straight bat drives and the confident cuts showed as much. There was rarely a lull when he was at the crease, his strike rate hovering around 75 as he brought up a half-century off 63 balls and his century off 133 balls. Eighty of his 127 runs came on the off side.”The first hundred is always special,” he said after the day’s play. “I was confident which kept building in this innings.”Mhatre said Rahane coached him through a 99-run stand for the third wicket by setting “small targets of five runs at a time,” before he batted “calmly” with Iyer in an unbroken partnership of 97 as the field spread out and the baking sun made the pitch more batting friendly. Even at this nascent stage of his career, he understands he can’t get carried away even if he loves to attack.”I have to play with control, play according to what the situation demands, that’s what the team expects from me.”Mhatre has started with a bang, he has lived up to the promise he had shown in age-group cricket, and now he will want to stay true to the character of a promising Mumbai batter and really make it big.

Tireless, incisive Cummins a big threat even on spinning pitches

The Australia captain has shown over the years that he has the tools to extract help from the flattest of tracks

Karthik Krishnaswamy04-Feb-20231:31

Cummins won’t forget ‘how good Australia fast bowlers are’

Among all the remarkable things about Pat Cummins, the most remarkable could be his durability. In an era when other world-class, genuinely quick bowlers – think Jofra Archer or Jasprit Bumrah – routinely miss matches and series for injury or workload-management reasons, Cummins is almost always part of Australia’s Test XIs. He has featured in 46 of Australia’s last 50 Tests, and only Nathan Lyon (50) has been more of an ever-present.It wasn’t always so, of course. Cummins, the Player of the Match on Test debut in November 2011, waited five-and-a-half injury-ravaged years before getting to play Test cricket again.In March 2017, he made his comeback in Ranchi, and proceeded to show the world just how special a talent he was. Figures of 39-10-106-4 aren’t immediately eye-catching, perhaps, but that performance was exceptional for two reasons.Related

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The first reason was what Cummins brought up when asked about Ranchi on Saturday, in Australia’s first press conference since landing in India for the four-Test Border-Gavaskar series, which begins in Nagpur on February 9.Cummins had only played one first-class game in the 18 months leading up to that game in Ranchi, and given his injury history, no one could have been certain how much of a workload he could get through. As it turned out, he bowled 39 overs as India piled up 603 for 9 declared. To date, he hasn’t bowled more overs in a Test innings.”I think what I learned about myself was, it was my first Test match in six years, it kind of reaffirmed that that’s where I wanted to be,” Cummins said, “and in Test cricket, you can’t be worried about your body or different things, you’ve just got to go all-in. I really enjoyed that.”I think also the lesson there is that Test cricket can be really, really hard. You’ve got to accept that it’s going to be a grind sometimes, and you have got to be up for it and embrace that challenge. I think, coming here to India, a lot of the talk is around big spinning wickets, mainly fast [-moving] Test matches, but it’s not always the case.”You need to get into the grind at times, and that role as a fast bowler might be bowling plenty of overs for not a heap of reward but doing a job for the team. I really enjoyed that aspect of that last tour.”

“We have got plenty of bowling options here – fingerspin, wristspin, left-arm [spin], and Starcy [Mitchell Starc] when he comes back”Pat Cummins is relying on the variety of his attack to pick 20 wickets

The second thing that made that Ranchi display so remarkable was that on a track that was slow, low and utterly lifeless when any of Australia’s other bowlers tried their luck on it, Cummins threatened to run through India. By means of searing pace, conventional swing with the second new ball, reverse with the old one, and offcutter-bouncers that reared at the gloves, he had, at one stage, taken four wickets to leave India six down and trailing Australia’s first-innings total by 123.Cheteshwar Pujara and Wriddhiman Saha turned the match around thereafter, putting India in control with a 199-run seventh-wicket stand, but Cummins had shown Australia how he had both the stamina and the sting to be a threat on subcontinental pitches.Australia recognise that pace could play as crucial a role as spin in their push for a first Test-series win in India since 2004 – their two best bowlers in that series were Jason Gillespie (20 wickets at 16.15) and Glenn McGrath (14 at 25.42) – and the attacks that led them to victories in Bengaluru and Nagpur featured three quicks and one spinner.While a lot of the pre-series talk this time has revolved around who among Ashton Agar, Mitchell Swepson and Todd Murphy will partner Lyon in Australia’s spin attack, Cummins suggested that three quicks and one spinner could be an option too.”I wouldn’t say [two spinners is] a given,” he said. “Obviously it’s very conditions-dependent, particularly in the first Test. Once we get to Nagpur, we will see. But yeah, I think sometimes talking about a couple of spinners, you forget how good a lot of our fast bowlers have been in all conditions.Pat Cummins picked up eight wickets in the Lahore Test last year to help Australia win the series•AFP/Getty Images”You know, even some of the SCG wickets, [there hasn’t] been a lot in it for the quick bowlers, but the quick bowlers have found a way. So yeah, we’ve got plenty of bowling options here – fingerspin, wristspin, left-arm [spin], and Starcy [Mitchell Starc] when he comes back down the line. So yeah, we’ve obviously picked the bowlers that we think can take 20 wickets. How we are going to split that up, we are not 100% sure yet.”Australia’s most recent Test match, against South Africa in January, came on one of the SCG pitches Cummins referenced flat and slow. Rain dashed Australia’s hopes of forcing a win, but Cummins put them in a position to push for that result, summoning every weapon at his disposal, including bouncers from around the wicket with a leg-theory field, to dismiss three of South Africa’s top six and force them to follow on.Cummins had bowled with similar hostility in Lahore last year, picking up five wickets in the first innings and three in the second as Australia wrapped up a series victory their bowlers had worked tirelessly for on some of the flattest Test pitches of recent times.Cummins wasn’t just tireless, though. In a series where the next-best Australia bowler averaged 34.12, he took 12 wickets at 22.50. On pitches designed to blunt his wicket-taking threat, he was both tireless and incisive.Over the next six weeks or so, there will likely be as much – or more – chatter about the pitches in Nagpur, Delhi, Dharamsala and Ahmedabad as there is about the superstars who will bowl and bat on them. No matter how the pitches behave, though, Cummins – as he showed six years ago in Ranchi – will be a threat, quite likely the foremost threat in India’s minds.

Why Rishabh Pant needs to understand his own game better

He hasn’t excelled in the IPL this year, and now finds himself out of favour in the India set-up. He still has his talent but his mindset might need some work

Aakash Chopra05-Nov-2020Rishabh Pant is the only Indian wicketkeeper to score Test centuries in Australia and England. He was the second-highest run scorer in the IPL in 2018. He’s young, he’s dynamic, and his style of play is refreshingly liberating. His early exploits in Test match cricket ensured that he would get a long run in the India side, and his style of play almost guaranteed a place in limited-overs cricket as and when the opportunity arose. It felt like the world was at his feet.But though the new blue-eyed boy of Indian cricket seemed to quickly get everything he might have desired, it didn’t last long. Pant is no longer in India’s white-ball squads, and he is second in line after Wriddhiman Saha in the Test team. His successes in ODI cricket for India were sporadic, and the modes of his dismissals converted some of his fans into critics. Who goes for a glory shot when you need less than a run a ball to take the team home? Or how do you justify a high-risk shot first ball when the team has just lost a wicket?Pant’s Test and IPL returns suggested he had cracked the longest and shortest formats but simply didn’t understand the rhythm of the 50-over game. Is that possible?We’ve seen it in the past. Virender Sehwag bossed Tests but was below average in ODIs. We make attempts at understanding the anomaly to make sense of it, but we are far from deciphering it completely. However, we must keep trying, and here I too will make an attempt.ALSO READ: Why Rishabh Pant is perhaps India’s first T20 batsman with a T20 attitudePant burst onto the international scene after his exploits in the IPL. There were no expectations of him to play a certain kind of cricket and he played in the fashion he knew best. That’s how a lot of young cricketers start their careers: see the ball and react. He did just that in Test cricket. It didn’t always work but that can be said about any method one might employ. Nothing is foolproof, but the success of a method is in the percentages. And when your preferred method stops yielding an acceptable success rate, you ought to reinvent. Is it the case that Pant does not know his methods of play completely?Scoring runs and knowing how to score runs aren’t the same thing. Lots of players score a lot of runs to merit selection but few know the art of scoring runs. Confused? Let me elaborate.The ability to react to a ball that’s coming your way is built over years, decades even. The more you play, the more you learn about eliminating errors, and that, in turn, enables you to score runs. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that you have understood your game inside-out. While you know that you react differently to different situations, you don’t really fully know how and why you react to a particular situation in a certain manner, and what your best response should be – if it isn’t the one you’re presenting. You know you have played a bad shot and got out, but you don’t remember what mindset you were in, because of which you played that bad shot. Unless you know the state of mind and the thoughts that led to that false shot, you won’t see the red flags in time the next time and will repeat the mistake.Awareness about your own play and what makes you behave differently in different situations isn’t acquired overnight. I scored over 5000 first-class runs before I made my India debut, and to be honest, I didn’t understand my game even after I was dropped from the side in 2004. That understanding developed only in the summer of 2007, while playing league cricket in England.Going back to Pant – he comes across as someone who is confused about his role and his responsibilities towards his own game. I’m not talking about what the team or the situation demands of him but just his comfort with his own style of play. His last couple of Test matches and this edition of the IPL have brought that uncertainty to the fore. He is blessed with the ability to hit the ball long and hard, but it seems that he is unsure of the right time to do so.2:45

Tom Moody: Rishabh Pant not in the best shape when he arrived for this season

There have been instances in this IPL where left-arm spinners have come and gone unscathed. The bowlers he wouldn’t allow to settle down in the past have kept him quiet this season because he chose to let the moment pass and wait for a better, more opportune moment. Pant was Pant because he could change the tide, but now he’s trying to swim with it and by the time he thinks about changing it, it’s a little too late.There’s a theory doing the rounds that since he is batting slightly lower down the order, he has been asked by his franchise to play a different role. While data suggests that he has been at his best when he has had more overs to bat through in T20 cricket, and so that there is merit in the argument that this new role isn’t doing him any favours, the fact is that batting lower down the order should give him the license to go berserk quicker. That is when he is at his best, right?Wrong. Once you’ve tasted some success at the top and have been dropped thereafter, your overriding thought is about making it back into the side. Now your best game is no longer the game that got you the India cap in the first place but the one that you think is likely to help you regain it.It’s time for Pant to clear the cobwebs and spend more time with his own game, understanding its nuances. He is the same player who everyone thought had the X-Factor, he is the same player who was seen as a natural successor to Dhoni, and he is the same player who produced consistent performances at high strike rates in T20 cricket. He is the same player because you don’t lose these skills overnight.Temperament is the combination of knowing the demands of the situation and the best response based on your own strengths and weaknesses. Some of us are born with exceptional hand-eye coordination and the ability to pick the length and line a fraction earlier, but temperament has to be acquired.Pant has entered the second stage of his career. This phase is about understanding and acquiring. The sooner he does that, the better for him and for Indian cricket.

MLB Reporter Pays for 15-Mile Wager After Huge Giants Victory Thursday Night

San Francisco Giants reporter Justice delos Santos of the in San Francisco certainly got his steps in to pay off a bet with Chicago Cubs reporter Jordan Bastian.

During Wednesday night's game, Santos told Bastian that he would run a mile for every run scored in the matchup between the Giants and the Cubs. The two teams picked a good night to score 15 combined runs in a contest the Giants won 12-3.

Here's the hilarious clip of Santos discussing the bet that he would have to pay off.

By the way, he did it.

Safe to say he might think twice before making that bet next time!

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