Punjab struggle on Day One

A fighting knock of 94 from captain Reetinder Singh Sodhinotwithstanding, Punjab found itself struggling at the close of playat 269/9 against Jammu and Kashmir in their Ranji Trophy league tieagainst Jammu.The home side, with their wider knowledge of the conditions, opted tobowl first; they struck immediately with the wicket of Manish Sharmawith the score on six. Yuvraj Singh fell soon, but the onlysignificant partnership of the innings then developed between RavneetRicket and Sodhi.Ricky fell for 68, with the score on 165. Wickets then fell at regularintervals, with Ashwani Gupta (3-72) and Jagtar Singh (2-74) cleaningup the middle-order.At stumps, Gagandeep Singh was unbeaten on 28 and Sanjay Dhull on one.Only one wicket remains to fall in Punjab’s first innings, and theywill have to bowl well to avoid losing face to a less-endowed opponent.

Celtic: Jullien is becoming a burden

When Celtic spent £7m on Christopher Jullien back in the summer of 2019, hopes for the centre-back were extremely high at Parkhead.

Indeed, upon the then-26-year-old’s signing, Neil Lennon said of the Frenchman: “We are delighted to bring Christopher to Celtic. He is a quality player with great attributes.”

And, the Northern Irishman’s belief that the £4.95m-rated defender was a talented player proved to be correct over his secure the Premiership title, the Scottish Cup and the Scottish League Cup, as well as reaching the knockout stages of the Europa League.

The £23.5k-per-week man continued his impressive form over his nine Premiership outings last season, in which he helped his side keep five clean sheets, scored one goal and registered one assist, in addition to making an average of 1.2 interceptions, 1.2 tackles, 3.6 clearances and winning 6.9 duels per game – with these returns seeing the 29-year-old average a highly impressive SofaScore match rating of 7.43.

However, since sustaining a serious knee injury in a 3-0 victory over Dundee United in December 2020 – a setback that was initially predicted to keep the former French youth international sidelined for around four months – Jullien has played just 16 minutes of football for Celtic, coming on as a second-half substitute in the 4-0 SFA Cup win over Raith Rovers in February.

Indeed, over the Bhoys’ last monster” – in his matchday squad, something which has left many to question whether the centre-back has a future under the Greek-Australian coach.

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And, with just 12 months of his current contract remaining this summer, in addition to having already set Celtic back around £3.5m in wages over his 142 weeks in Glasgow – 60 of which were spent on the treatment table – it would indeed appear a wise for Postecoglou cut his losses on the defender at the end of the current campaign, as Jullien is quickly becoming a rather expensive burden at Parkhead.

AND in other news: Celtic handed huge Old Firm boost as fresh update emerges, Postecoglou will be buzzing

On-loan Davies wrecks Northants

1st dayLancashire and Hampshire tried to make up for lost time at Old Trafford on an interesting day as play finally got underway. Consistent batting from Hampshire’s middle order gave them the edge in what is now a three-day match. Jimmy Adams made 63 before being run out and Michael Lumb hit a more aggressive 64 before he was removed by Dominic Cork. Muttiah Muralitharan, in his final match of the season, dismissed former Lancashire batsman John Crawley for 47, but Sean Ervine continued Hampshire’s progress during the final session.For John Ward’s report on the first day at Scarborough, between Yorkshire and Warwickshire, click here.Rain prevented a start between Kent and Worcestershire at Canterbury2nd dayFor the second day running rain prevented any action at The Oval between Surrey and Sussex

Derbyshire’s lower order pulled them out of a hole against Glamorgan at Cardiff. Alex Wharf and James Harris did the early damage as Derbyshire fell to 34 for 4, and Simon Jones finally picked up a wicket as the innings slumped further to 67 for 6. James Pipe and Ant Botha began the fightback, but the main recovery came from Graham Wagg (61) who hit 10 hours off 57 balls. Robert Croft ended with five wickets and Glamorgan started well in reply with an opening stand of 71. However, Wagg broke through and when Gareth Rees fell for 61, Glamorgan tottered on 115 for 4 although they closed with 27 runs.On-loan seamer Mark Davies claimed a career-best 7 for 59 as Northamptonshire squandered a strong position against Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge. He broke a stand of 130 between Andrew Crook (70) and Rob White (71) and made short work of Lance Klusener and Nicky Boje as four wickets fell for 13 runs. David Sales hit 57, and the lower order showed some fight, but Davies wrapped up the innings.Only two overs were possible at Colchester between Essex and Leicestershire before bad light curtailed the day.There was no action at Lord’s between Middlesex and Gloucestershire.

BCCI to invest $347 million on domestic facilities

The BCCI intends on lighting up every stadium in the country © Getty Images

The Indian board (BCCI) has decided to invest US $347million to improve domestic facilities over the next year. Lalit Modi, the BCCI vice-president, confirmed that the amount will be channelled to every state association and that infrastructure would be upgraded in all stadiums in the country.”In the next one year you would see a majority of BCCI stadiums having (flood) lights to play day-night cricket,” Modi told reporters. “I don’t think a single stadium would be left which would not have facilities or infrastructure of international quality. Until now, domestic associations depended on revenue from matches played in their jurisdictions to fund development programmes. But because there are so many venues in the country of over 1 billion people, matches at one place were few and far between, resulting in low revenues. Now that BCCI is earning large amounts of money, the next big step would be to put money in our own stadiums.”The BCCI, one of the richest sporting associations in the world, has funded the ongoing Malaysia tri-series, as part of their ‘offshore investments’, and spent close to $1 million on a temporary floodlight system at the Kinrara Oval.Modi was impressed by the job done in Malaysia and said the game should be spread in countries and venues outside the traditional ones. “The objective of the BCCI, and of all members of the ICC, is to promote cricket all over the world and to enhance the level of facilities that are available for international-caliber cricket,” he said. “We have to spread the game across the world. It is important for us not only to play in India but to take it to fan bases around the world.”India will host Champions Trophy next month and co-host the 2011 World Cup with Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.

Blackwell smashes fastest hundred of 2005

Ian Blackwell: ensured the Walter Lawrence Trophy stayed at Taunton © Getty Images

On the final afternoon of the longest first-class season ever, Somerset’s Ian Blackwell dramatically snatched the Walter Lawrence Trophy, for the season’s fastest first-class hundred, from the grasp of the previous joint-leaders, Shane Warne and Matt Prior.Blackwell eclipsed the previous best by five balls with his 67-ball century against Derbyshire at Taunton. He survived two chances in the slips off successive balls when he had made 35 before racing to 107, which included two sixes and 18 fours.Blackwell will receive the Walter Lawrence Trophy, prize money of £5,000 and a silver medallion from Aon Ltd, the Trophy’s supporters, at a ceremonial dinner to be held in the Long Room at Lord’s on October 4.Blackwell’s last-gasp hundred means that the Trophy will return to Taunton for the second year running: last year’s winner was Somerset’s Richard Johnson, whose 63-ball century was scored in the Trophy’s 70th year.

Keedy's heroics all in vain

Lancashire 0 for 0 trail Gloucestershire 311 for 8 dec (Hancock 61, Taylor 60, Adshead 52*, Keedy 7-95) by 311 runs
Scorecard

Gary Keedy: took the first seven wickets to fall© Getty Images

If, as now seems almost certain, Lancashire are relegated sometime in the next three days, no fault will be attached to Gary Keedy, whose career-best figures of 7 for 95 kept their outside chances of survival alive a little longer.Keedy bowled unchanged from the 11th over, taking the first seven wickets to fall as Gloucestershire, who won the toss, ploughed towards three batting points. When they declared on 311 for 8, shortly before bad light ended play early, they were within one point of safety. The ECB had warned them that any declarations made with a view to deliberately depriving Lancashire of bonus points would be penalised, but not even the harshest critic would claim that this one one made anything other than perfect tactical sense.Craig Spearman and Phil Weston gave Gloucestershire a sound start after Chris Taylor won the toss, adding 55 before Keedy struck twice. He had Spearman stumped by Warren Hegg for 34 and then bowled Weston for 19 (60 for 2). Gloucestershire reached lunch on a sedate 156 for 2, but shortly after the restart Keedy struck three times in as many overs.But after that flurry of activity, Tim Hancock and Steve Adshead put on a vital 97 for the sixth wicket, and in so doing almost extinguished Lancashire’s slim hopes. Keedy broke the stand, dismissing Hancock and Ian Fisher in quick succession, but Gloucestershire passed 300 – and earned another batting point – before, with the gloom enveloping Old Trafford, both in the skies and the pavilion, they declared.”Although it would obviously be a big disappointment, it wouldn’t be the disaster that being relegated from the Premiership has become in football,” Jim Cumbes, Lancashire’s chief executive, told the Daily Telegraph. “Financially, all counties receive the same central funding no matter which division they are in, and we wouldn’t be looking at a mass exodus of players or anything like that. But we see ourselves as one of the top four or five counties, which doesn’t square with being in the Second Division.”

Boost for Darwin school children with heroes in town

Having some of Australia’s World Cup heroes in town for the first Test to be staged in Darwin has its advantages for local schoolchildren.On Tuesday next week, Andy Bichel, Adam Gilchrist, Jason Gillespie, Justin Langer, Brett Lee and Brad Hogg will host 150 pupils from three primary schools, Durack, Casuarina Street and Nightcliff, at the Northern Territory Cricket Association (NTCA) No 1 Oval for a MILO Cricket superclinic.Darwin’s first Test match, between Australia and Bangladesh starts at Marrara Oval on Friday week.The schools were selected from a competition run in the local newspaper, the Northern Territory News. The two-hour session in the afternoon will feature several modified games and skill-building activities and will be co-ordinated by NTCA development officers.Gilchrist acknowledged the chance the Test match provided to pass on some knowledge and tips to local youngsters. “The MILO Cricket programs, with its emphasis on participation fun and learning, are the ideal ways to introduce young players to the game. Cricket is Australia’s only true national sport, and it’s particularly exciting to be able to take the MILO Cricket program to the Top End. It’s the second time I’ve been involved in the program in Darwin and I know the kids are going to get a lot of enjoyment from it.”Under the sponsored-Superclinic program, more than half a million young Australians are exposed to cricket each year. Eight Superclinics are being held around the country this year.The programs include: Have A Go a cricket club-based program focused on introducing five to 10 years old to the game;Kanga Cricket – a school based program that is now part of 90% of Australian schools syllabuses; and Super 8s – a modified game played by more than 4400 teams from secondary schools and cricket clubs around the country.

Baroda need 163 to win

Baroda, with eight second wickets in hand, require another 163 runson the final day to win their Ranji Trophy tie against Gujarat.On Friday, Gujarat, who resumed their second innings at 26 for one,were bowled out for 211. Tejas Varsani and Kirat Damani engineeredtheir side’s recovery after coming together when the scoreboard read59 for six. Their 103-run partnership meant that Gujarat set Barodathe task of scoring the highest total in a low-scoring match. ForBaroda, Irfan Pathan and Shekhar Joshi claimed three wickets each.The defending Ranji champions, who lost both their openers, reached 72for two at stumps. Importantly for them, their first-innings topscorer Nayan Mongia was still at the crease. Atul Bedade on nine waskeeping him company.

Crystal Palace: Olise hailed vs Everton

The Daily Express journalist Ryan Taylor has praised the performance of Michael Olise as Crystal Palace won 4-0 at home to Everton in the FA Cup this afternoon.

The Lowdown: Star performance from Olise

The 20-year-old shone yet again for Patrick Vieira’s team at Selhurst Park, grabbing the assist for Marc Guehi’s opening goal while also hitting the post in the second half, with Wilfried Zaha tucking in the rebound.

The winger won nine of his duels in total, more than any of his team-mates, and also completed two successful dribbles, one key pass, one accurate cross and two long balls (SofaScore).

He did his defensive work for the team as well, making one clearance, one interception and two tackles (SofaScore), and he was ultimately one of their standout performers.

The Latest: Taylor reacts to Olise’s display

Taking to Twitter, Taylor gave an instant reaction after the match finished, hailing the business that Palace pulled off to sign him and even taking a sly dig at Everton’s recruitment by comparing Olise’s price tag to Alex Iwobi.

The journalist tweeted: “Michael Olise: £8m. Alex Iwobi: £34m. Phenomenal business from Crystal Palace. An utter steal.”

The Verdict: Bargain

Looking at the price for which Palace managed to sign him, Olise has proved to be a real bargain, as Taylor has pointed out.

That is one more goal contribution in his entire three-year Toffees career, despite costing over four times as much.

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Given his age, Olise still has so much potential, which can be well and truly fulfilled in south London under the management of Vieira.

In other news, Palace are now keen on signing this ‘phenomenal’ ace

New Zealand lead by 94 as wickets tumble


Scorecard and ball-by-ball details3:23

Rogers: Best day of cricket this season

The pink ball and green pitch have combined to produce a vivid brand of cricket over the first two days at Adelaide Oval, where a three-day Test now appears a near certainty. At stumps on the second evening, it was Australia who had the upper hand but in a match full of rapid momentum swings, New Zealand were well and truly still in the contest. Their lead of 94 runs with five wickets in hand could yet develop into a target that will challenge Australia.That the third innings was already half over was an indication of how quickly this Test had progressed. Runs were at a premium, with only three players having so far reached half-centuries, and none having made hundreds. On the first day 12 wickets had fallen and on the second, 13 more tumbled, but it was a not-out decision that may yet have the greatest impact on the result of the match, a reprieve for Nathan Lyon, who usually bats at No.11 for Australia.The scene was this: Australia were 8 for 118 in reply to New Zealand’s 202, and Lyon top-edged an attempted sweep off Mitchell Santner into his shoulder and up to slip. New Zealand’s appeal was denied on field by umpire S Ravi, and Brendon McCullum asked for a review, confident that Australia would soon be 9 for 118. But despite evidence that would have convinced most courts of law, the third umpire Nigel Llong was unswayed.After five minutes of replays, Llong upheld Ravi’s decision. There was a clear Hot Spot on the top edge of Lyon’s bat, and he had walked halfway to the dressing room. There also seemed to be a deviation in the ball’s course. But nothing showed up on Snicko, which appeared to create enough doubt in Llong’s mind. To add to the farce, he checked also if it could have been lbw off Lyon’s shoulder, but seemed not to notice that the Eagle Eye replay was of the previous delivery.It was a costly call for New Zealand. Lyon and Peter Nevill went on to compile the highest partnership of the match, adding a further 72 runs after the review. Undeterred by his near miss, Lyon continued to sweep with the enthusiasm of an Olympic curler, and the shot brought him plenty of runs, including the second six of his Test career. At the other end, Nevill played the perfect innings for the moment, his 66 the top score of the match so far.Eventually Lyon was caught at gully off Trent Boult for 34, but Mitchell Starc hobbled to the crease in spite of the stress fracture in his foot, and thumped 20 runs off one Mark Craig over and 24 in total. He was not out when Nevill holed out to deep cover off Doug Bracewell, and Australia had somehow turned what seemed a certain hefty deficit into a 22-run first-innings lead.It also meant that New Zealand would face the challenging task of batting under lights, when the pink ball seems to swing most. And even without Starc, Australia’s pace trio of Josh Hazlewood, Peter Siddle and Mitchell Marsh asked some serious questions of the New Zealand top order. Martin Guptill had no answers, caught at gully for 17 when he drove at a fullish outswinger from Hazlewood, completing a disappointing series with the bat.Shaun Marsh’s return to Test cricket ended in a run-out for 2•Cricket Australia/Getty Images

His opening partner Tom Latham again survived the early overs but could not push on. In every innings of this series, Latham has reached double figures but never has he scored more than 50. This time, he too drove at Hazlewood and edged behind to Nevill for 10. Most importantly for New Zealand’s hopes, Kane Williamson also fell cheaply, a faint tickle behind off Mitchell Marsh ending his innings on 9.Australia are adamant they need an allrounder in case a fast man breaks down, so in the absence of Starc there were great expectations on Marsh to step up. Getting rid of Williamson was the perfect start; dismissing McCullum was a bonus. On 20, McCullum prodded forward and was struck on the pad by Marsh; McCullum challenged the umpire’s out decision but it was an ambitious review, and he had to depart.One more wicket was to come, Ross Taylor trapped right in front by Hazlewood for 32, and nobody was more relieved than Steven Smith, who had put down Taylor at slip off Hazlewood before he had scored. The pink ball was easy enough for the 42,372 spectators to see under the floodlights but Smith seemed to have trouble watching it into his hands, also putting down BJ Watling later in the night on 2, also at slip off Hazlewood.By stumps, Watling was on 7 and Santner had 13, and with the score at 5 for 116, they and the tail needed to stick around for as long as possible on day three to set Australia a challenging target. Quite what such a target would be was unclear, for the Australians had collapsed to 8 for 116 themselves earlier in the day. Although the first session brought only 62 runs, the fewest of any session in the series, the match was moving at rapid pace.New Zealand seemed to have taken control of the game in that first session, collecting six wickets and doing almost nothing wrong. The fast bowlers swung the ball and kept the runs tight, the spinners extracted turn and wickets, and the fielding was as outstanding as anything seen so far in the series. Especially memorable was McCullum’s diving stop at mid-off, then his roll and throw to have Shaun Marsh run out for 2.Marsh had nobody to blame but himself for his call and hesitation, and it was the second wicket of the day after Tim Southee hooped the ball brilliantly to have Adam Voges caught at slip for 13. Mitchell Marsh replaced his brother and prodded an edge behind for 4 off Doug Bracewell, and it was just reward for Bracewell’s nagging lines and the pressure that he built.Bracewell bowled with such impressive economy that he could have been AAA-rated by Standard & Poor’s, his 12.1 overs bringing him 3 for 18 at less than 1.5 an over. Smith was the only Australian batsman to show the necessary patience and he reached his half-century from 108 balls, but he could not help going after the spin of Mark Craig, who turned the ball enough to catch Smith’s inside edge as he danced down the pitch and Watling moved quickly to take a sharp catch.Smith’s 53 had given Australia a base, but Craig soon added Siddle, caught in close for a duck, and Santner bowled Hazlewood for 4 to bring Australia to their knees. Unfortunately for New Zealand, when Lyon went to his knees for a sweep and was reprieved in the third umpire’s room, the momentum shifted back Australia’s way.