Inter Miami player ratings vs FC Cincinnati: Lionel Messi and Co. can’t conjure magic in lopsided loss as rumored Rodrigo De Paul arrival looms

The Herons made headlines in the afternoon and then suffered a beating on the pitch in the evening

Wednesday was the latest banner day of this Inter Miami era. Another one of Lionel Messi's friends is reportedly close to coming to town, and this particular one, Rodrigo De Paul, isn't just coming to play. He's known as Messi's bodyguard, a physical force that inspires fear in others and comfort in his teammates. He's also one hell of a footballer. Inter Miami have done well to navigate the rules to get him in – if it happens.

That was Wednesday afternoon, though. Wednesday night? Not a successful navigation of anything. In fact, Wednesday's clash was more of a sleepwalk, one that showed just how helpful someone like De Paul can be when he does inevitably arrive.

On the road in Cincinnati, Messi and Miami couldn't find any of their trademark magic in a 3-0 defeat. The Argentine was held scoreless for the first time in seven games, having scored 11 goals in that span. On Wednesday, he got close a few times, but never close enough. There were a few decent looks, a blocked shot, and a curled effort from range chief among them, but it was Cincinnati that made the most of their chances, not Messi and Miami.

The opening goal came relatively early, as the right side of Miami's defense collapsed under pressure from Luca Orellano. The Argentine was able to play through Gerardo Valenzuela, who made no mistake with his far-post finish to give the hosts an early advantage.

Cincy's advantage was doubled early in the second half in another instance of Miami's defensive frailty. defense was buzzed through by Cincy star Evander, who pushed off Sergio Busquets before slotting home to make it 2-0. Evander then made it three in the 70th minute, firing home from close range after backup goalkeeper Rocco Rios Novo, who came on after Oscar Ustari left with an apparent injury, parried a shot right into his path. On this night, it was that easy for him, and it was that hard for Miami to do anything right.

On a day when Miami seemingly got better, they suffered one of their worst defeats of the season. They'll have to move on quickly, too, with another game this weekend against the New York Red Bulls, and they'll surely be eager to get to it after such a rough night in Ohio.

GOAL rates Inter Miami's players from TQL Stadium…

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    Goalkeeper & Defense

    Oscar Ustari (N/A):

    A rough break for the goalkeeper, and perhaps for Inter Miami. Forced out after just 25 minutes after making two saves, and Miami will now be sweating over the veteran goalkeeper's fitness.

    Marcelo Weigandt (3/10):

    Another game, another rough moment defensively for the fullback. Absolutely smoked by Luca Orellano on the Cincinnati opener, exposing his defense because of his inability to get anywhere near the Cincinnati wingback.

    Tomas Aviles (4/10):

    Not totally his fault, given the Weigandt moment that preceded it, but Aviles was also caught napping as Valenzuela breezed right by him. Saw a lot of the ball and passed well, but again, another moment of defensive weakness.

    Maxi Falcon (4/10):

    Wasn't particularly good and could have done much better on the third goal. Also struggled to win his duels as Cincy regularly got the best of him.

    Jordi Alba (6/10):

    Had a few pops from range, but otherwise wasn't able to do much going forward. Could have done a little better with a few crosses.

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    Midfield

    Tadeo Allende (5/10):

    Didn't see nearly enough of the ball, getting just 29 touches, three of which were in the box. Was taken out after the third goal, with the game all but gone.

    Benja Cremaschi (6/10):

    One of the only Miami players who actually came to play. Had several big tackles and, although he could have done better on the third Cincy goal, his fight and presence in midfield were notable.

    Sergio Busquets (4/10):

    Not influential on the ball and was bullied defensively on Evander's first goal. Just not good enough from the Barcelona icon.

    Telasco Segovia (6/10):

    Was actually pretty good when he got on the ball, but he was never really on it in any dangerous positions. Had exactly zero touches in the box and one pass into the final third, which shows just how withdrawn he was from the important moments.

  • Attack

    Lionel Messi (5/10):

    Created a few dangerous moments, but this certainly wasn't Messi at his best. Off days happen, even to him, but it's tough when it happens to everyone else around him, too.

    Luis Suarez (6/10):

    If Miami were doing anything productive, it usually came from him. Created a few chances and did get one look on goal, providing some moments of danger.

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    Subs & Manager

    Rocco Rios Novo (4/10):

    Admittedly, a tough spot to be put in off the bench, but he has to do better on Cincy's third, which he parried right into the path of Evander.

    Gonzalo Lujan (6/10):

    Essentially brought in as a form of concession shortly after Miami fell behind 3-0.

    Fabrice Picault (6/10):

    Replaced Allende to give him a rest for the final 15 or so minutes. Had a few touches.

    Yannick Bright (N/A):

    Given a few garbage minutes at the end.

    Javier Mascherano (5/10):

    Can't fault him too, too much in this one as Miami were undone by individual errors. Even so, Mascherano didn't put his team in a place to succeed, either, but things should change if De Paul arrives.

Agni Chopra smashes first-class record with centuries in first four games

Filmmaker Vidhu Vinod Chopra’s son has made a splash in the Ranji Trophy Plate League

ESPNcricinfo staff01-Feb-2024Agni Chopra has become the first batter to score centuries in his first four first-class games after making his debut for Mizoram in the Ranji Trophy Plate League earlier this month. Chopra, 25, is the son of film critic Anupama Chopra and filmmaker Vidhu Vinod Chopra, who recently made the popular movie (KC Cariappa) and Mohit Jangra,” he told PTI. “They are inclusive and welcoming and I never felt like an outsider. I have been taught a few Mizo words and phrases and I don’t feel in a vastly different place.”Chopra admits that moving from Mumbai to Mizoram in the domestic circuit would not have been a lateral move and the bowling attacks in the Plate League would not be the same. While the top 32 teams in the domestic circuit play in four groups of the Elite League, six other teams, five of which are from the north-east region, feature in the Plate League.He says his current aim is to help Mizoram qualify for the Plate League final, which will promote them to the Elite League next season.”People will say what they have to say but, at the end of the day, it’s your performance and there are lot many players who are playing in the same division and not scoring that many runs. The standard is same for everyone.”I think I am trying to be in present and my aim is to take Mizoram to Elite division. If we are in Elite division, then there is nothing to think about in terms of quality of bowling and I will play for Mizoram.”

Chopra had decided not to follow in the footsteps of his father, who has been directing and writing Hindi movies for over 30 years and has delivered a number of hits like , and its sequel .”So I have been asked this question from childhood that will you go into movies but I never thought I would ever be in movies,” he said. “I never thought that, ‘oh, I should get in because my dad makes movies and it will be an easy avenue for me’.”I was never interested in movies. I mean I love watching movies and have a great time but it was never my passion.”Chopra says the career advice his father instead gave him was to pick anything and strive to be the best in it.”My dad told me and my sister when we were younger what his father told him: ‘. (If you want to become a cobbler, be the best cobbler in your street).”He gave us freedom to do what we wanted but told us to try to be the absolute best. Talent can only take you that far, as the rest depends on the work you do and I saw that in his movies. The amount of work my father and my mother put in their professions, I saw that it rubbed off on me.”

Case dropped against man charged with robbing Andre Onana's wife after £62k handbag and gold watch stolen in street incident

The case against a man charged with stealing a £62,000 handbag and gold watch from the wife of Manchester United keeper Andre Onana has been dropped.

  • Incident took place in March 2025
  • Case dropped due to lack of evidence
  • Tough time for Onana in Manchester
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The incident in question is alleged to have taken place on March 29, 2025. Melanie Kamayou was targeted outside an Italian restaurant in the Alderley Edge region of Cheshire. She found herself caught up in a frightening street raid.

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  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Liam Ross, a 25-year-old from Wibsey in West Yorkshire, was charged with the robbery – which saw a designer handbag and expensive piece of jewelry go missing. Said case has, as reported by , now been discontinued.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    That is due to the Crown Prosecution Service offering no evidence. Ross has still been sentenced to 24 months in jail by Chester crown court after pleading guilty to a separate charge of producing cannabis.

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    TELL ME MORE

    That is not the outcome that 35-year-old pharmacist Kamayou was hoping for. She moved to the UK alongside her Cameroon international partner in 2023 – with the likes of Cristiano Ronaldo, David Beckham, Rio Ferdinand and Wayne Rooney having previously called Alderley Edge home.

Cook's impressive debut

Alastair Cook arrived arrived in India as a raw, 21-year-old but within two sessions of the opening Test, he showed just why he is so highly rated in England

On the Ball with S Rajesh01-Mar-2006Alastair Cook arrived in India as a raw, 21-year-old with only 37 first-class matches under his belt, but within two sessions of the opening Test, he showed just why he is so highly rated in England. That he played the seamers quite comfortably wasn’t surprising, but the manner in which he handled Anil Kumble and Harbhajan Singh would have encouraged Duncan Fletcher no end, though it must be remembered that this was only a first-day track.With the pitch offering little assistance to the fast bowlers, the spinners came into operation in the tenth over itself, but Cook stayed firm. Admittedly, his scoring rate dropped dramatically – he scored at 4.15 runs per over off Sreesanth (27 off 39), but only managed 32 from 117 off the spinners (1.64 per over) – but he was rarely troubled by the slow bowlers: his in-control percentage against them was an impressive 91.5. As the graphic below shows, Cook’s biggest virtue was his patience – he defended or left alone 71 balls, while 21 out of 32 runs came from a stroke no more adventurous than a flick to leg.Cook also showed his penchant for the leg side in his innings – 31 runs were scored in the arc between midwicket and backward square leg, a fact which might force the Indians to bowl on or outside off more often. Cook will surely face sterner battles over the next few weeks, but the start couldn’t have been much better.

Out Of My Comfort Zone

A review of Steve Waugh’s latest book, Out Of My Comfort Zone

Peter English24-Nov-2005
Steve Waugh, Viking, A$49.95Steve Waugh’s career was an epic so it’s not surprising he produced a doorstop that dwarfs the Almanack. Waugh’s cover is a shade of baggy green and his devotion to it is a theme throughout the 800 pages of memories. However, the big statements delivered by his batting and in captaincy press conferences are replaced by brief judgments as he records the key moments of his career as studiously as he compiled his popular diaries.Unfortunately, the tour books are part of the problem. Through the diaries most details were recorded in satisfying, if sometimes repetitive, detail; in the life story the events from him being kicked out of the nets as an aggressive 12-year-old by Barry Richards to his farewell a year later are dutifully reported but not pored over, making it a great resource tool instead of a thrilling, moving and thought-provoking experience. The match-fixing and betting scandals that so affected his brother are covered in less than a chapter and the famous SCG century, an experience which was the subject of the book , is dusted in three pages.Waugh is at his best when discussing his great innings and his feelings, which were usually masked by the Iceman glare. The twin hundreds at Old Trafford in 1997 and the series-sealing double-century against West Indies in 1995 are compulsive but short reading, and his re-telling of the vulnerability at the start of his career, when he felt isolated as a new player, and at the end as he debated the merits of family life and retirement is also impressive. The variety of coverage is strong enough to hold interest but if finishing it is a mission you want to accept then be prepared for hands that ached as much as Waugh’s during his Old Trafford double.

Tale of the tape

Cricinfo does a head-to-head on the two contenders for the post of India coach

Dileep Premachandran08-Jun-2007


Job assured: ‘When Rahul Dravid himself calls to ask if you wouldn’t mind applying for the job – which is what happened to Ford – it’s yours’
© Getty Images

Graham Ford, who won eight of 11 series in charge of South Africa at the turn of the millennium, must be the prohibitive favourite, but the intervention of certain influential figures in Indian cricket means that John Emburey’s candidature can’t be taken too lightly. Cricinfo looks at the background of the two coaching hopefuls in an attempt to figure out which man might be best suited to the job.What they did as players: This means little, as the coaching records of Kapil Dev and Sir Vivian Richards would testify. Ford’s playing credentials are negligible at best. A top-order batsman, he averaged 13.5 in seven first-class matches for Natal B.Emburey was the dour half of Middlesex’s 1980s spin duo – Phil Edmonds provided the flamboyance. Comparisons with Ashley Giles aren’t too wide of the mark, and a return of 147 wickets from his 64 Tests illustrated why he was always a supporting act to the marquee names.Verdict: Emburey shades this category, though Indians could tell you that Greg Chappell’s stellar playing career didn’t count for much when it mattered.What they did as coaches in domestic cricket: For a man who began his coaching career in the modest setting of the University of Natal’s Pietermaritzburg campus, Ford has come a long way. He took Natal to the first-class championship in 1994-95, and in 1996-97 his team won both the first-class and one-day competitions. He returned to the franchise twice, and left twice, after being sacked by South Africa in 2002 in the wake of another thrashing by Australia. Ford has coached Kent since 2004 but has yet to earn silverware with them.Emburey was unable to lift a poor Northamptonshire side out of the bottom four in his three seasons in charge, and his time at Lord’s was scarcely more memorable. Middlesex made it back to the first division of the Championship in his second season there, but the seasons that followed were ones of treading water before the deluge swept them back to the bottom drawer in 2006. His replacement by Richard Pybus, another South African with impressive domestic credentials, couldn’t have come soon enough.Verdict: Ford powers ahead here.What they’ve done internationally: South Africa won eight of the 11 Test series they played under Ford, losing to Australia home and away and drawing in Sri Lanka. Ford took over in the wake of the tied 1999 World Cup semi-final against Australia. His darkest hour was also his brightest: in the tumultuous days after Hansie Cronje’s corruption was exposed, South Africa won a one-day series against Australia.Emburey’s international experience is limited to a brief stint with England A and a spell assisting David Lloyd with the national side.Verdict: Again, a no contest.

For a man who began his coaching career in the modest setting of the University of Natal’s Pietermaritzburg campus, Ford has come a long way. He took Natal to the first-class championship in 1994-95, and in 1996-97 his team won both the first-class and one-day competitions

View from the press box: Ford’s brow invariably shone with perspiration at press conferences during his tenure as South Africa’s coach. It wasn’t that he was nervous to front up to the likes of us; he was sweaty after a hard day’s work. As hands-on as he is low-key, Ford revels in the anonymity of the back room. “To the players be the glory,” would be an apt motto. He is technically and tactically astute, and utterly unencumbered by ego. And, lest we forget, he has had to make his own way in the coaching world – something former players don’t always have to do. – Telford Vice, MWP, South AfricaFew people would have picked John Emburey – who has been moved upstairs at Middlesex this summer – as a leading candidate for the India coaching job. As a player, Emburey hardly seemed to relish his visits to the subcontinent.
In the warm-up matches on Graham Gooch’s tour in 1992-93, he was so badly savaged by Navjot Singh Sidhu that he talked himself out of the Test team. He wasn’t the biggest fan of the cuisine either.
He once said of England’s finest all-rounder, Ian Botham: “The Indians used to call him Iron Bottom. But he wasn’t – not after all that ******* curry.” – Simon Briggs, , UKVerdict: The media’s opinion is again of little relevance, but it’s perhaps telling that you don’t see anyone trumpeting Emburey’s coaching ability.What they say: “He coached me at Natal even before I played for South Africa. He was fantastic. He prefers to be in the backroom and gives more than 100 per cent and works really hard. If the Indian Board is looking for such a guy, then Ford is the right person. I wish him luck.” – Shaun Pollock talks about one of his mentors.”Striking a rapport, winning their trust is one of the key roles of my job. India has immense talent. My job would be to help create a system so that a conducive environment would be there for all to enjoy the work.” – John Emburey talks about his strengths.”Shaun Pollock, Lance Klusener and Jonty Rhodes – he was the one who worked with them and allowed them to reach the levels they did. If you’re playing for your country, you’re good enough in terms of ability. What you need is a coach who can motivate and guide you, and as far as I’m concerned he’s the perfect guy.”He always encouraged me to play my natural game. Whenever he was available, I’d have a few net sessions with him. He’s someone who knows how to bring the best out of his players.” – Gulam Bodi, of the Nashua Titans, who played under Ford at KwaZulu Natal.Overall verdict: When Rahul Dravid himself calls to ask if you wouldn’t mind applying for the job – which is what happened to Ford – it’s yours.()

Playing favourites

Salman Butt, Yuvraj Singh and Mahendra Singh Dhoni were yet again successful against their favourite bowling attacks, writes Sidharth Monga

Sidharth Monga in Kanpur11-Nov-2007


Salman Butt and Misbah-ul-Haq added 80 for the fifth wicket
© AFP

An average of 24.60 with four half-centuries would, in most cases, end an opener’s career. It’s his three hundreds against India that had given Salman Butt’s numbers (an overall average of 33) some credibility and justified his selection for this series. On Sunday Butt improved those figures with his fourth hundred against India – a career best score of 129, an innings built upon breathtaking strokeplay, sensible consolidation and a final charge.The supple wrists were at their rubbery best, the elbow always high, the signature punch at the time of contact crunchy. There was no rash batting, no need for aerial shots and, barring the two edges off Irfan Pathan that eluded the slips, this could have passed off as a Test innings.It is when the field spreads and the boundaries run out that Butt’s problems begin. India soaked up the runs today when Zaheer Khan came from round the stumps with a short mid-off and four fielders patrolling the 30-yard circle. The ball angled away and Butt timed the shots straight to the fielders on the ring. He had to play out two maiden overs from Zaheer – the 10th and 14th of the innings – which came right in the middle of his charge.A familiar throwing away of the wicket seemed just round the corner but that didn’t happen for he found ways of taking singles through the leg side and, though he scored only 19 runs
off 35 Zaheer deliveries, he attacked the other bowlers.His three earlier hundreds against India had set up wins for Pakistan but this one, chasing a huge total on a crumbling track, did not. That was largely because two Indian batsmen – Yuvraj Singh and Mahendra Dhoni – had got stuck into their favourite bowling attack.Their hundred-run partnership today was their fourth century stand against Pakistan, at an average of 99.8. The three earlier century stands had set up victories for India – two big chases in Lahore and Karachi, and a tricky one in Guwahati.Dhoni said batting with Yuvraj has always helped him ease into his own innings.
He would know for has seen Yuvraj’s six sixes from the other end of the pitch. “It really helps when I play with Yuvi. If I do not get boundary for a couple of overs, he gets that boundary. So we are really never under pressure even if we are chasing eight or nine runs
per over,” Dhoni said.This partnership came about after the two had struggled against the Pakistan spinners for a while. Somewhere around that time Dhoni, at the non-strikers’ end, came in the way of a Yuvraj shot that would have been a sure boundary.


Yuvraj Singh and Mahendra Singh Dhoni attacked the Pakistan bowlers ruthlessly
© AFP

The bonhomie and the banter the two of them share was there to be seen and perhaps a pact had been signed and a challenge issued. Because in the next over Yuvraj picked his bowler – the left-arm spinner Abdur Rehman – and hit him for two sixes. Dhoni is not one to stay behind and chose Shoaib Malik for similar treatment in the over that followed. From then on, it was a contest – not so much against Pakistan bowlers as between the batsmen. Yuvraj caressed, Dhoni bludgeoned, and the runs flowed. From the start of the 34th over till Dhoni got out in the 44th, they scored 87 runs, proving to be the difference between 260, which Malik hoped to restrict India to, and 294.Although Dhoni maintained there was no special liking for the Pakistan attack, he did mention that the flat subcontinent tracks that the two sides have met each other on have played their role.

'Harsh, but he had it coming'

Has the PCB saved cricket from Shoaib or deprived it of him for the next five years?

04-Apr-2008


Is this the end of the long and turbulent road for Shoaib?
© AFP

“Tell me how many players in world cricket have been banned for five years on discipline charges? Previous incidents of indiscipline should have been dealt with at the time instead of being allowed to accumulate.”
“Disappointing is no word to describe Akhtar’s ban, I would call it pathetic and request the new political government to sack the Nasim Ashraf-led PCB.”
“I don’t think the board has done anything wrong by banning Shoaib Akhtar. I am sure the PCB has taken his past record into consideration before banning him … It’s not right on Shoaib’s part to approach the media.”
“Personally, I wouldn’t have banned him. I’d have made him earn his international place back by playing domestic cricket.”
Pakistan coach “The PCB should have supported Akhtar more because there have been characters like Akhtar – there was John McEnroe in tennis and our own Aamer Sohail – who were temperamental yet talented and gave sports a lot to cheer.”
“I can tell you with all honesty that there was no ulterior motive involved in the ban. It was a situation where we had to decide how much longer could we allow Shoaib Akhtar to keep on violating discipline and work ethic.”
“Shoaib shot himself in the foot and there’s nobody else to blame. Something like this was waiting to happen and there’s a very clear sequence to Shoaib’s self-destruction.”
“Just like a child, Shoaib too has a very low tolerance level. He should first think before saying or doing stuff. Shoaib needs to be mature and get married too.”
“I feel sorry for Shoaib, but it is also true he has been involved in many disciplinary cases. However, I would like to add here that it is the result of the PCB’s leniency towards Shoaib’s past blunders. His [latest] offence is not that grave, as several Pakistan Test cricketers in the past have done this type of wrong act repeatedly and got away with it.”
“I think after me now the board has targeted Shoaib Akhtar. Their next targets are Mohammad Yousuf and Shahid Afridi.”
“I think the matter has gone too far. This whole issue is damaging for Pakistan
cricket so I hope that a compromise is reached.”
“His USP is his aggression. All these things keep on happening. We should take things in the right spirit.

Sachin evokes his prime

Bring back Shane Warne, Shaun Pollock and Wasim Akram because we have a conundrum here that only they can solve. The way Sachin Tendulkar has batted on this tour, and in the matches leading up to it, it seems he has hit the kind of patch he did in the mid

Sidharth Monga in Hamilton20-Mar-2009Bring back Shane Warne, Shaun Pollock and Wasim Akram because we have a conundrum here that only they can solve. The way Sachin Tendulkar has batted on this tour, and in the matches leading up to it, it seems he has hit the kind of patch he did in the mid-90s. One can’t be sure if it is due to the deteriorated standards of bowling, but in some ways Tendulkar might even have got better, which the bowlers of the 90s might think of as a ludicrous proposition.Tendulkar was not completely authoritative when he took guard at Seddon Park yesterday, which is also a credit to the pitch that has kept the good bowlers in the game. But once he was given the reprieve, dropped on 13, he turned it into a helpless situation for the bowlers.With a young Tendulkar at the crease, the bowlers might have stayed interested because there was an element of risk to his batting. In this innings it was a no-win situation for them. He didn’t even have to try to be dominant to beat the bowlers mentally. Apart from that, we saw the Tendulkar of old at Seddon Park today.All along, the runs kept coming, through cannily placed singles and gorgeous boundaries alike. Once the new ball was taken late yesterday, with New Zealand looking to cash in on some tight bowling over the 81 previous overs, Tendulkar raised his game too.It continued today, when he took the attack to the bowlers under overcast skies early in the morning. The cuts, the glances, the straight-drives, the cover-drives, no longer inspire that awe, but the feeling of ‘Yes we know them and the bowlers still can’t do anything about it’.What he might have lost in pure instinct and brute strength he has gained in experience and wisdom. It shows in the way he assesses match situations, be it any form of the game. He doesn’t get bogged down now, as was the case in 2005 and 2006. There is a certain relaxed manner to which he approaches batting. Perhaps it has to do with the feeling that this is the best batting line-up he has been a part of, something he acknowledges too.

Sachinspeak
  • First up: Yesterday, initially it was a little difficult to get used the pace and bounce of the wicket. It did take some time to find the centre of my bat. Later on, it got better. I felt the contact was much better, and gave me a lot of confidence.
  • From thereon: I thought once the new ball was taken I started timing the ball much better, and after that things were different. I was quite happy with the way I moved and found the centre more often than not. Every hundred is not going to be a fluent one, that is what Test cricket is all about. I was prepared to wait for my chance to come and eventually when I found the centre of the bat consistently I thought I was playing a different game altogether. Initially they [New Zealand bowlers] did bowl good lines and in good areas. You have just got to respect and play out good spells. And that is what I did.
  • His dismissal: I went for the single. I saw that there was no fielder at mid-wicket and square-leg. So I wanted to work the ball around there. Probably the ball was not there to be played to square.
  • The match situation: I think we are in a strong position now, and that is what really matters to us. There is a terrific atmosphere in the dressing room. We have sort of led from the first session of this Test match, and at this point in time we are very much on our way to achieving some good things. We don’t want to take anything for granted. Tomorrow’s first session is going to be extremely important, and we hope to go flat out.

Tendulkar may not say it, and thereby put undue pressure on himself, but 100 international hundreds are more than just a hope now. They are increasingly becoming a reasonable possibility. His last two innings have been imperious centuries, he has scored three centuries in his last four Tests, and after today’s exhibition Tendulkar is eight shy of reaching the 50-mark in Tests.Cricket can throw up some meaningless statistics, but 100 hundreds can’t be one of them. It is perhaps too early to think and talk of it, but the way Tendulkar has been batting it is a tempting thought.There are no indications to the effect, but from the way Tendulkar is enjoying himself, it seems his hunger won’t die until he has had another crack at the World Cup, which is still two years away. It is not impossible to score 15 centuries in the next two years. Between March 25, 1998 and December 26, 1999, he hit 20 centuries. Between February 18, 1996 and December 3, 1997, he managed 14. He is not the same batsman as he was in the mid-90s, but the effect he is having is quite the same.He has scored eight international centuries since May 2007, and has been dismissed seven times in the 90s. The umpires, and once even a diving Kamran Akmal (now that’s unfortunate) have had a role to play in that. Regardless, he has put behind him the lacklustre 2005 and 2006 – when he managed only four international centuries – to get to playing as well as he has, albeit in a different manner.It seems, after 2006, he has started ageing backwards. But obviously he hasn’t. With form on his side, his big enemy is his body. He has attracted more cramps and niggles in the last two years than he perhaps did through his career. It is impossible for an outsider to understand what his body must be going through after 19 years of international cricket. The niggles stay with him for longer than they ever did, which showed in the resurfacing of the rib trouble during the Christchurch ODI.He has started picking and choosing what matches he plays. But the heart wants to stay involved. When asked whether New Zealand was becoming his favourite place, what with back-to-back international hundreds, he said, “I’m a bit superstitious. I’ll let the others count the hundreds, and let me go and bat.” Don’t worry, we’ll do the counting, and will stay pretty busy if he bats the way he did today.

Plenty hunger, not enough teeth

Andrew McGlashan presents England’s marks out of ten for their series against West Indies

Andrew McGlashan11-Mar-2009England arrived in the Caribbean with high expectations, but, after their embarrassment in the first Test in Kingston, they found they lacked the firepower to blast their way back into contention in the series. Cricinfo runs the rule over the men that came, saw, and were thwarted.Andrew Strauss hit the form of his life, but was left floundering for that elusive win•Getty Images9Andrew Strauss
Led from the front after the debacle at Sabina Park, finding the form of his life with three hundreds in three matches. He was back playing the way of the Andrew Strauss who burst onto the scene in 2004 and if anything his 142 in Barbados was his most fluent Test innings. Captaincy clearly has a positive impact on his batting – he now averages more than 60 in the role – and he also remained an impressive figure off the field, dealing with the multitude of issues that came his way in a calm manner. There was the
odd murmur that he could have been more aggressive in his tactics, but the end results were hampered by an attack that laboured for wickets on flat surfaces.8Paul Collingwood
Once again Collingwood silenced any doubters with a run-filled series,
striking centuries in Antigua and Trinidad along with 96 in Barbados.
He won’t always be everyone’s cup of tea because he lacks the flair
of other players, but his value to the team is huge. One criticism
that probably can be levelled is his pace of scoring, strange for
someone who has a good one-day record, as he occasionally becomes
one-paced in the longer format. But the runs speak for themselves –
Collingwood isn’t going anywhere in the near future.Matt Prior
A series that restablished Prior as the best all-round wicketkeeping
option for England despite a swift trip home to see his newborn son.
He was in strong form before the interruption to his tour, and even
better when he returned. Hit a career-best 131 in Trinidad and that
was followed by 61 off 49 balls to conjure the victory opportunity. Those
efforts suggested he could hold down the No. 6 slot on a permanent
basis, but his glovework still needs refining as 51 byes and a crucial
drop off Shivnarine Chanderpaul showed in the final Test.Graeme Swann
Despite an encouraging tour of India, Swann had to wait until the
hurriedly-arranged ARG Test for his chance but immediately grabbed it
with both hands. Deserved to finish on the winning side after a maiden
five-wicket haul before toiling long and hard for five more on the
featherbed in Barbados. Between times it emerged that a long-standing
elbow problem was having a serious impact and it was decided surgery
was required. However, he almost helped England to a memorable
series-levelling victory with an outstanding final-day spell. If the
elbow recovers he’ll be facing Australia.7Alastair Cook
The key moment for Cook was finally reaching three figures for the
first time since December 2007, although his unbeaten 139 in Barbados
was made in the most benign of conditions. After a tough start in
Jamaica, Cook’s form improved during the series and his partnership
with Strauss flourished. His technique outside off stump still remains
suspect, but his runs tally can’t be argued with. The fielding is a
different matter and he still doesn’t convince as a close catcher,
especially at bat-pad to the spinners.Kevin Pietersen
He saved his best until last with a flamboyant 102 to give England the
chance of a series-levelling victory. Until that century it had been a
subdued series for Pietersen, a hangover from the events of January
that still hurt him. His 97 in Kingston proved plenty of points, but
when the going got easier on flat pitches Pietersen didn’t cash in
like his team-mates. Still, it’s all relative, and the final numbers
of 406 runs at 58 are not too shabby.Stuart Broad
Developed nicely on what was billed as a crucial tour. Bagged his
first significant haul with 5 for 85 in the first Test (subsequently
forgotten in defeat) and put in impressive spells throughout the
series. Showed strong stamina, but couldn’t hide his frustrations at
the batsman-friendly surfaces. With the bat he continued to look the
part and there is a Test century looming, while he is a long-term
option for the No. 7 spot depending on Andrew Flintoff’s health. Needs
to watch his appealing and temper.James Anderson
He nearly reached breaking point in Trinidad as a hostile spell of
reverse swing went unrewarded, which was the tale of Anderson’s tour.
Unlucky to be dropped for the opening Test he returned to bowl with
pace but without the wickets to show for it. On the last afternoon he
almost buried all those frustrations with another wicked spell and his
reputation, certainly within the team, remains very high. Will enjoy
seeing the green grass of home.6Monty Panesar
He looked much more like the old Monty when recalled for the final
Test. He had clearly worked on his variations, with the introduction
of an arm-ball, and there were more changes of pace. The bounce, both
from the ball and the bowler, returned as well, but he finally got the
fine that has always been coming his way for over-zealous appealing. He will
have to fight for his place when just one spinner is selected, but the signs are
that he is learning.Ravi Bopara
After a marathon 41-hour journey from New Zealand, Bopara impressed
straight away. Called into the side to replace Flintoff he at last showed the
talent that everyone knew he possesses, and cashed in with his maiden century, albeit in some of the flattest conditions imaginable. His bowling is no more than part-time at best,
but he has a future in the top order, though at which position remains to be seen.5Andrew Flintoff
Another tour, another injury. Before a hip problem curtailed
Flintoff’s Test series he’d posed his normal threat with the ball
while maintaining his inability to claim major hauls. However, to watch
him bowl through the pain in Antigua was a stirring experience,
although the long-term cost is still being measured. The time has come
to realise he is not a Test No. 6. The Ashes are looming and they
could well determine how his career is remembered.Tim Ambrose
Did all that could be asked of him after a rapid recall to replace
Prior. Hit a sparky 76 to propel England towards 600 and kept tidily
through West Indies’ marathon innings. Has maintained his name in the
frame should injury strike Prior at any stage.4Owais Shah
After waiting so long for his chance, 133 runs at 22.16 wasn’t what he wanted. Shah’s spell at No. 3 started brightly enough with a half-century in Antigua, but his insistence for a nightwatchman later in the match when England were miles ahead was a poor decision, as was the crass run-out that denied him the chance to push for a century. After that he went into his shell, appearing tense at the crease, and suffered another bout of hand cramp in the final Test. The selectors have said he will have a run in the side, but questions are already being asked about the longer term.Amjad Khan
A wayward debut, but there could be something to work with for the
future. He managed the key wicket of Ramnaresh Sarwan while also
giving Prior plenty of diving behind the stumps. He certainly has pace
and with a little refining – and a correction of his no-ball issues –
he needn’t be a one-cap wonder.Steve Harmison
Harmison’s winter has been a bit like the hokey-cokey – in, out, in,
out, spray it all about – and it’s impossible to know what the future holds. The
usual provisos still apply that if he is bowling well he is a must,
but that form has been absent since the end of the English season. He
didn’t actually bowl badly in the two Tests he played,
battling through illness on a slow surface in Antigua, but it still
wasn’t good enough from a strike bowler.3Ryan Sidebottom
How the mighty have fallen. England’s reigning Player of the Year was a
shadow of the performer who led the attack for 18 months and those
strains have caught up with him. He was economical, but unthreatening, in
Kingston and sadly a bit of a liability in Barbados when he shouldn’t
have played. The mind is clearly willing, but the body has other
ideas.2Ian Bell
The writing was on the wall for Bell the moment he played a limp cut
shot the ball before lunch on the fourth day at Sabina Park. The form
slump that was evident in India continued with a number of loose
dismissals early in the tour and eventually patience ran out. He will
come again, but may have to wait a while. An Ashes place is in the
balance, although England could do with his close-catching skills.

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