Lanning, Haynes star as Australia take series lead against NZ

The captain and her understudy hit fifties to lead Australia’s comeback after they were reduced to 4 for 45 in a chase of 163

The Report by Daniel Brettig29-Sep-20182:29

Keen to change poor T20I record against New Zealand – Lanning

Australia’s captain Meg Lanning and her leadership understudy Rachael Haynes took command of a steep chase to fire the hosts to victory over New Zealand in the opening Twenty20 international, in front of an enthusiastic North Sydney Oval crowd and a prime time television audience on the new free-to-air broadcaster, Seven.This match was the first televised international on Australian soil not broadcast by Channel Nine in almost 40 years, signalling the start of a new era for the game in Australia, and Lanning and Haynes ensured that it would be marked with a winning result for the home side. Katey Martin and Sophie Devine had led New Zealand to 162, a total that had not appeared likely when the tourists were 5 for 120 with fewer than four overs remaining.However Martin’s clean hitting, with help from Bernadine Bezuidenhout, presented the Australians with a more challenging task, and early wickets in the pursuit did not aid their cause. Alyssa Healy and Elyse Villani fell in the space of a single Devine over, while Beth Mooney and Ashleigh Gardner also fell swiftly. At 4 for 45, New Zealand appeared very much the more likely winner.But Australia’s women have never lost a T20 international at North Sydney, and Lanning’s team consider the ground their most valued home advantage. A fierce intent to protect that record was write large across the partnership that subsequently developed between Lanning, who missed last year’s Ashes series due to shoulder surgery, and Haynes, who had successfully deputised for the captain.It was actually Haynes who played the more dominant role in the stand, unusually given Lanning’s pre-eminence as a power hitter and stroke maker in the women’s game. This dynamic flummoxed New Zealand and their captain Amy Satterthwaite, who was unable to summon any bowling combination to limit the Australian pair.Having initially allowed the required run rate to drift out, Haynes and Lanning reeled it in steadily, before ultimately cruising past the total with 14 balls to spare with a flurry of boundaries towards the end of the chase. Devine’s 2 for 31 was the only analysis that sufficiently contained the Australians, with victory arriving as the stand swelled to an unbeaten 119 for the fifth wicket – Australia’s star allrounder Ellyse Perry was not even required to bat.She had bowled with notable economy in New Zealand’s innings, a trait also shared by the spell of Sophie Molineux. While Martin and Devine were able to find the boundary regularly against the rest of the Australian attack, they were unable to climb high enough to prevent Lanning’s collective from preserving their proud North Sydney record as a new era began.

Bhuvneshwar, Jadhav's three-wicket hauls set up easy win for India

Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Kedar Jadhav helped India bundle Pakistan out for 162 before their batsmen made light work of the chase

The Report by Sidharth Monga19-Sep-20180:55

Manjrekar: Pakistan can’t blame their bowlers

Having survived a banana peel against Hong Kong, India came back with a near-perfect bowling performance to register their most comfortable chase against arch-rivals Pakistan: with 126 balls remaining. Going through a patch of uninspiring performances, the bowlers returned with a thorough show, exposing Pakistan’s hardly-used middle order, which showed its lack of experience of batting through 50-over innings by going for big shots every time they were tied down.Bhuvneshwar Kumar returned to form after 35.2 wicketless overs in ODIs, and Kedar Jadhav’s return to the side – that cushion of the sixth bowler – showed just what India missed in England. Between them, they took six wickets; Jadhav’s 3 for 23 were his best figures in ODI cricket.Both the slots – opening bowler and the pressure on Hardik Pandya in absence of a sixth bowler – had been matters of concern coming into this match. Bhuvneshwar came into the match with an average of 48.50 and a strike rate of 61 in the Powerplay overs since the start of 2017, third-worst numbers among those who have bowled 500 Powerplay balls or more in that period. Here, reunited with Jasprit Bumrah who missed the England ODIs with a broken thumb and was rested in the Asia Cup opener, Bhuvneshwar showed the worth of his experience.In the first five overs, there was not a single loose ball bowled. The left-hand openers were cramped for room, and knowing there was no movement to be had, the bowlers didn’t bowl a single drive-able ball. Imam-ul-Haq tried to break the shackles by giving Bhuvneshwar the charge, who shortened the length accordingly to draw an edge. Fakhar Zaman, who scored a sensational hundred in his last match against India, the Champions Trophy final, wasn’t even given a ball he could pick a single off. Frustrated, he finally tried to pull but Bhuvneshwar managed to cramp him up, and forced the top edge to make it 3 for 2.In two swift blows, Bhuvneshwar had taken out two big threats. One of the remaining batsmen, Shoaib Malik, had scored more runs and hit more boundaries than the rest of the XI put together. Captain Sarfraz Ahmed had been called upon to bat only ten times in their last 20 ODIs. Arguably their best all-round batsman, Babar Azam completed the middle-order core that was now left to bat a majority of the innings before the big-hitting allrounders could take over.Bhuvneshwar Kumar celebrates after Imam-ul-Haq’s dismissal•Associated PressAzam and Malik began promisingly enough, adding 82 for the third wicket, but even in this partnership risks had to be taken. India didn’t allow them easy rotation of the strike. When eventually Kuldeep Yadav went past Azam’s outside edge with a lovely wrong’un, the game was opened up once again. It didn’t matter that Malik was reprieved twice – once by MS Dhoni and then by Bhuvneshwar in the deep. It didn’t matter that Hardik Pandya hurt himself so badly while bowling that he had to be stretchered off the field. Pakistan’s middle order just crumbled under the pressure, with the next four wickets falling for just 25 runs.Pandya’s replacement, Jadhav, managed to frustrate the batsmen with his shrewd changes of pace and trajectory before Sarfraz tried to hit him for a six wide of long-on. This time, Pandya’s replacement in the field kicked into action. Manish Pandey, no stranger to tough boundary catches, hared across to his right, took the catch, realised he was going to struggle to stay in the field of the play, lobbed the ball back in, stepped out and came back to take it, all the while making it look quite easy.Malik made the next dismissal look easy. Asif Ali, the new batsman, refused to acknowledge Malik’s call when the ball had gone to short third man, but Malik took an age to turn, and a long, circular route back, presumably to try to deny the fielder a clear sight of the stumps. In the end, the circuitous route and the lack of a dive or even a proper stretch resulted in his wicket.Then, Jadhav first and the quicks later ran riot to not even let Pakistan bat their allotment of 50 overs. Once the target was that low – 163 – it was clear India weren’t going to need their allotment themselves. Not with Shikhar Dhawan carrying on from the hundred against Hong Kong and Rohit Sharma timing everything sweetly. Rohit looked in absolute peach form, hitting three sixes during his 52 in an 86-run opening stand. The one disappointment for Rohit will be the return of his legspin troubles from the IPL: he fell to the first ball from Shadab Khan, a wrong’un.Now was not the time for India to worry about those things. They had come out unharmed from a possible slippery start to their Asia Cup campaign, winning two ODIs in two nights and heading to the Super Four stage as the leaders of their group. Not that the position changed anything if you qualified: all teams play each other in the next stage and carry no bonus points from the first round.

Fabrizio Romano: Chelsea feel they’ve signed a "bargain" gem for Pochettino

Chelsea chiefs are believed to be over the moon with one signing they've made, and feel as if he's already an "absolute bargain".

Chelsea form under Pochettino

In the last fornight, Mauricio Pochettino's side have slowly turned a corner after what was an unideal start to the Premier League campaign. At one point, the west Londoners went from mid-August to early October without even scoring a league goal, a torrid run which ended after Chelsea's 2-0 win over Fulham at Craven Cottage.

Pochettino's men, since that much-needed win, have gone on to beat both Brighton in the EFL Cup and Burnley 4-1 at Turf Moor before the international break.

Those results have seemingly instilled positivity back at Stamford Bridge after a very regrettable 2023 overall, with Pochettino heaping praise on his players after their most recent demolition of the Clarets.

“Always when you concede first and you need to break down the opponent always you feel proud when you achieve that,” Pochettino said after their Burnley 1-4 Chelsea at Turf Moor.

“The team were playing well and with the chances conceded in a situation that was completely unfair, but the team were really good, solid, the whole team. We want to improve players and try to recover the players that were injured. The next two weeks we’re going to spend working on the training ground with a different mood from the last months. After two victories it is much better but I think we will keep pushing, working hard to be better in the next months.”

Kendry Paez transfer update

Supporters will be hoping their near £400 million spent over the summer transfer window will eventually result in an imperious run of form, and one which could hopefully have Chelsea challenging at the very top again. They made some signings for the future as well, though, including Ecuadorian wonderkid Kendry Paez.

chelsea-pochettino-kendry-paez-transfer-caicedo-brighton-gossip

The 16-year-old, who's already doing excellently for the Ecuador national team despite his tender age, will move to Chelsea in 2025, but despite not even playing for them yet, club chiefs already believe they've signed an "absolute bargain". That is according to Fabrizio Romano, who shared the Paez update in his Daily Briefing.

"It’s becoming clearer all the time that Chelsea have signed a fantastic talent," wrote Romano.

"Paez will move to Stamford Bridge in 2025, with Chelsea winning the race for his signature earlier this year when other big clubs like Manchester United and Bayern Munich were also interested in him. The Blues also increasingly feel that they got an absolute bargain for the teenage midfielder, whose value has probably already shot up since they agreed the package for him.

"It was not easy for Chelsea to arrive there ahead of other clubs, so it’s a great job by their recruitment team, and a smart deal. Chelsea feel he’s probably already worth double what they paid for him, so who knows where he’ll be by the time he joins the club when he turns 18."

Paez is currently plying his trade at Independiente Del Valle in Ecuador, where he is eagerly anticipating his switch to the Premier League.

Trevor Bayliss tells England batsmen to have 'a good, hard look at themselves'

The England coach accepted that progress “was taking longer than we would have liked” after a sixth defeat in eight Tests

George Dobell at Lord's27-May-20181:52

England outplayed in all three departments – Root

Trevor Bayliss has admitted England were “nowhere near good enough for Test level” in subsiding to a nine-wicket defeat against Pakistan at Lord’s.Bayliss, the England coach, accepted that progress “was taking longer than we would have liked” after England’s sixth defeat in eight Tests (the other two have been drawn) and third defeat in four at Lord’s and questioned whether playing in the County Championship at this time of year provided any benefit for aspiring batsmen.And, while he reiterated his desire to see out his contract as coach in all formats of the game, Bayliss shrugged off the prospect of being sacked from the Test role by saying he was “looking forward to a bit more time gardening” if the axe should fall.He was particularly scathing of England’s batting, accepting that their failures at Lord’s were far from unique and suggesting they needed to take “a good, hard look at themselves.” And he defended Joe Root’s decision not to insert Pakistan on a green, first-day surface by stating that, had England batted better, the tactic might have been justified.”It’s very disappointing,” Bayliss told . “Especially from a batting point of view. It was nowhere near good enough for Test level. Pakistan bowled well but we have to be better.”To be bowled out for 180 and 240 is simply not good enough. Usually when we lose one or two quick wickets, it usually follows with another two or three so that’s something we have sit down – we’ve done it in the past which may make things worse – and continue to work on.”It’s not as though we haven’t talked about that before. They are working hard on it but we keep making the same mistakes. The batters have to have a good hard long look at themselves.”Jos Buttler and Dom Bess showed the approach early on his very important: let the ball come, play it under your eyes, get yourself in and give yourself a chance.”I was 50-50 on the toss decision. Joe really wanted to put the pressure on Pakistan in the fourth innings and we saw even today there were some balls keeping low. We simply didn’t bat well enough. Even though the ball was doing a bit we have to be better and get the match into the fifth day if that’s the decision the captain makes.”Asked whether more players should have been involved in the County Championship ahead of the Tests – Buttler and Ben Stokes joined the squad straight from the IPL – Bayliss questioned the value of the competition as a learning ground. He also stated that England felt they could help Mark Stoneman more with his firm in the nets than allowing him to play a one-day match with Surrey.”Only two guys missed those county matches with IPL,” he said. “When it comes to four-day cricket we have to make the decision if it’s worth playing on those little seaming green-tops where slow medium pacers take all the wickets.”We felt it was better to do some hard work with Stoneman in the nets. The other thing we need is some putting pressure on from the outside and making plenty of runs and that’s not necessarily happening either.”Bayliss also insisted that he and his coaching staff were on the right track and reiterated his desire to see out his contract, which ends in September 2019. But he did make the intriguing suggestion that a new seamer could be drafted into the team if it was concluded they required someone to “bowl fuller more often.””James Anderson and Stuart Broad have 900 Test wickets between them and should know how to bowl on these wickets. From a swing bowler’s point of view, Jimmy’s mode of operation is a bit different to others. He likes to starve the batter of a lot of full balls and when the full one comes they throw their hands at it straightaway. He’s taken 500 Test wickets, it’s a bit hard to say that’s the wrong approach.”If we want someone to bowl fuller more often it means we maybe have to put someone in the term that’s their mode. Those two boys, with 400 and 500 Test wickets, I don’t think they’ve done a lot wrong.”I’ve committed to September 2019 in both forms of the game. If that’s a decision someone higher up makes, then I’m looking forward to a bit more gardening.”Personally I think the things myself and the coaching staff are working on are the right things, it’s taking a little longer than we would have liked and we have to keeper hammering away. I believe it will be the right way and these are the best players we’ve got.”

'Disgusting' – Mark Robins slammed for behaviour towards 13-year-old boy after Haji Wright's dramatic FA Cup winner for Coventry against Wolves

Wolves' Gary O'Neil says it was "disgusting" for Coventry City boss Mark Robins to celebrate their FA Cup win in front of a 13-year-old boy.

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Coventry beat Wolves in FA CupRobins celebrates in front of ball boyO'Neil slams Coventry boss' actionsGetty ImagesWHAT HAPPENED?

The Championship side secured a dramatic 3-2 victory over Wolves at Molineux on Saturday, with USMNT star Haji Wright grabbing a 100th-minute winner. While the Sky Blues were understandably delighted at reaching the last four and Wembley, manager O'Neil slammed his managerial counterpart for cheering and fist pumping in front of the young ball boy, who had earlier attracted the ire of Coventry defender Jake Bidwell for seemingly not getting the ball quick enough. After the match, Robins apologised for his actions.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT BOTH MANAGERS SAID

O'Neil told reporters: “I wasn’t aware of it until afterwards. I was disappointed, I waited for Mark downstairs and spoke to him because I was really respectful at the end, having lost a massive game, waited for them to finish their celebrations, shook everyone’s hands, congratulated them on a real good performance, reaching Wembley and what a fantastic achievement it was. And he apologised, to celebrate in a young boy’s face like that I thought was disgusting, the boy is really upset. It shouldn’t happen, but too much to say about it because we have lost and it’s going to seem bitter, but I thought it was really important to speak to Mark about it because they are just kids doing a job.”

Robins added: “I have an apology to make. Before the winner went in, the ball boy had the ball, a young kid, he has the ball in his hand, drops it and walks away smiling. It really annoyed me, but he’s a kid at the end of the day. I have reacted, we scored the goal and I went and celebrated in front of him. I apologise to him. I do not show emotion very often but that is what the FA Cup does to you. I apologise to him unreservedly.”

Getty ImagesTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Coventry's last-gasp win looked unlikely when Wolves were leading two minutes from time after Rayan Ait-Nouri and Hugo Bueno cancelled out Ellis Simms' controversial opener. However, Robins' team kept plugging away and equalised in the 97th minute through Simms before Wright sealed a famous victory at the death. Coventry are aiming to win their second FA Cup after lifting the trophy back in 1987.

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WHAT NEXT?

Coventry, who are aiming to earn promotion to the Premier League as well via the play-offs, will find out who they face in the semi-finals on Sunday afternoon. They will then face their last four opponents on either April 20 or 21 at Wembley.

West Ham: Moyes could find perfect Cresswell heir in "excellent" 18 y/o

West Ham United won the Europa Conference League last season after keeping the faith in manager David Moyes, who was struggling to replicate his past success in the Premier League.

The Hammers currently top their Europa League group after two matches, having qualified for continental competition despite finishing 16th in the league last season after winning the Conference League.

The return to Thursday night football also means that the east London outfit are now enjoying their fourth successive term on the European scene, and will undoubtedly be targetting further silverware after getting a taste in June.

They are doing so without Declan Rice, with the coveted England international joining Arsenal in a £105m transfer in the summer having risen from the Irons academy to a position as one of the game's finest midfielders.

His development will have been galvanising for the club's latest crop of youthful talent to witness, who know that they too could tread the path that the 24-year-old was walked.

Moyes might want to make use of such players to fill the gaps, with a host of first-teamers, including Aaron Cresswell, set to depart at the end of the season.

Is Aaron Cresswell going to leave West Ham?

With multiple aces currently enjoying their final term at West Ham, Moyes and his transfer team will indeed be discussing internally the options possible to continue the rich vein of form that has stretched, by and large, across four campaigns now.

Of course, this will arrive in a blend of new additions, youth players and the inevitable extensions for one or two possible departees.

Player

Age

Tomas Soucek*

28

Pablo Fornals

27

Ben Johnson

23

Vladimir Coufal*

31

Michail Antonio*

33

Conor Coventry

23

Aaron Cresswell

33

Lukasz Fabianski

38

Angelo Ogbonna

35

Divin Mubama

18

Joseph Anang

23

*Club option to extend for another year

One player on the list who likely will be headed for the exit is Cresswell, who would complete a decade of service to United upon his contract's expiry, having joined from Ipswich Town for around £2m in 2014.

Having made 332 appearances, Nottingham Forest and Wolverhampton Wanderers were both interested in his signature over the summer but he ultimately remained in London.

Despite his ageing years, Cresswell still maintains his fantastic ball-playing ability, with FBref ranking him among the top 11% of full-backs across Europe's top five leagues over the past year for shot-creating actions, the top 19% for passes attempted and the top 10% for progressive passes per 90.

The £50k-per-week ace has been a solid and significant stalwart in West Ham's progress over recent years, with his role at the club leading talkSPORT's Tony Cascarino to hail him as an "unsung hero" for the club.

West Ham United defender Aaron Cresswell.

But given that he is out of contract at the end of the campaign, his journey might now be set to reach its culmination, especially given his dwindling presence on the pitch over the past few years.

Because of this, the time might be right to start providing youngster Regan Clayton with added responsibility, with the academy starlet boasting all the attributes to succeed at West Ham and serve as Cresswell's heir.

Who is Regan Clayton?

Clayton has been at West Ham's academy since he was ten, having shone during his formative years and now moves within reach of a senior debut in the not-too-distant future.

Citing Bayern Munich phenom Alphonso Davies as his inspiration, the 18-year-old is electric, unflinching and eager to contribute to offensive passages of play whenever he can, with such dynamic qualities custom-made for a place in a Moyes team.

The club's Scottish manager is perhaps known for his conservative, disciplined philosophy, but would certainly scoff at the 'defensive football' tag at the London Stadium, having scored more goals than Chelsea and Manchester United this season and led West Ham to new, silver-laden heights since his appointment.

A more accurate description is that he instils resilience and solidity and in return breeds fluidity in transition, with overlapping full-backs opening pockets for offensive focal points to work laterally across the frontline.

Clayton would be a fantastic addition to this system, and the teenage talent actually benefits from the rich resources the club currently offers at left-back.

Emerson is considered the Irons' first-choice option, while Ben Johnson offers flexibility across both full-back positions; Cresswell is now a veteran but still brings his creative, rounded skill set to the table.

Davies might be Clayton's idol but it is his senior teammate who is the role model, remarking at the 33-year-old's protean ability across the spectrum of a defender's game.

What is Regan Clayton's style of play?

Now a seasoned veteran at youth level, Clayton has chalked up 90 appearances for the Irons' development squads, posting five goals and assists apiece.

Last season, the prodigy even earned a place on the bench on two occasions in the Conference League for the Hammers – meaning he received a winners medal – emphasising the trust already placed in his ability.

Robson said: “Regan Clayton came in from the U18s and I thought he did excellent when he came on and added some quality, and it’s great we get that level from these lads coming into the U23s.”

One scout was particularly impressed by his displays in a less-favoured centre-back role, claiming that he "has anticipated and defended transitions excellently. Using his intelligence to negate his lack of height at the back."

Soccer Football – Premier League – West Ham United v Brighton & Hove Albion – London Stadium, London, Britain – August 21, 2022 West Ham United manager David Moyes shakes hands with Aaron Cresswell after the match REUTERS/David Klein EDITORIAL USE ONLY. No use with unauthorized audio, video, data, fixture lists, club/league logos or 'live' services. Online in-match use limited to 75 images, no video emulation. No use in betting, games or single club /league/player publications. Pleas

Such intellect and understanding on the pitch will be crucial in taking the steps towards first-team involvement, but based on the current evidence, he truly is well on the way to realising this.

While Clayton will likely need to build some minutes at U21 level before Moyes decides that he is ready for the senior side, he is set for a big role under Robson this season and could find himself on Premier League soil in no time.

The fact that Emerson, Johnson and co ply their trade at the club should really be viewed as a positive; Clayton can develop and absorb the fruits of his peers' labour, and steadily work his way to the top – a position very much attainable for so talented a prospect.

Monchi now reaches agreement to sign new "good character" for Aston Villa

Aston Villa have reached an agreement over the signing of a “good character” this summer, according to a key update from reliable journalist Jacob Tanswell.

Rumours of McGinn out and Luiz back at Aston Villa

Transfers rumours continue to come thick and fast at Villa Park this summer, with ins and outs expected in the coming weeks leading up to the new Premier League season.

John McGinn has been a wonderful servant for Villa down the years, but the Scottish veteran has been linked with a move away from the club this summer. Everton are thought to be interested in snapping him up, with Unai Emery perhaps feeling that now is the right time to sell the midfielder, with his current deal expiring in the summer of 2027.

In fact, Douglas Luiz has been backed to return to the Midlands for a second stint from Juventus, with the Brazilian potentially coming in as his former teammate’s replacement in the middle of the park, according to some reports. He was an influential figure first time around, and at 27, he still has a huge amount to offer in his career.

It remains to be seen what will happen regarding McGinn and Luiz this summer – some supporters may love the idea of them being back together at Villa Park next season – but away from their respective sagas, another player looks set to be heading to the club.

Aston Villa close to signing 34 y/o "good character"

According to a new update from The Athletic‘s Tanswell on X, Aston Villa have “finalised terms” to complete the signing of veteran Brest goalkeeper Marco Bizot, with NSWE and Monchi working their magic.

“AVFC have finalised terms to sign Marco Bizot from Brest. 34yo regarded a good character, with experience & low-cost fee other key factors. Will be GK No 2 – target position filled for Villa & remain in pursuit of defender & winger.”

Aston Villa managerUnaiEmeryduring a lap of honour after the match

The signing of Bizot may not feel like the most earth-shattering piece of business that Villa have ever done, given his age and the fact that he is likely coming in as a squad player, but it still feels like a sensible signing for them.

AZ Alkmaar

164

166

72

Brest

148

213

40

Genk

74

85

25

FC Groningen

59

82

15

SC Cambuur

21

30

3

The Dutchman is a vastly experienced head, making over 300 appearances in Ligue 1 and the Eredivisie combined in his career – 139 in the former and 175 in the latter – as well as winning one cap for the Netherlands.

Tanswell’s description of Bizot as a “good character” certainly bodes well, in terms of him bringing a strong team ethic to the squad, and he can be an influential figure both on and off the pitch.

Big McGinn upgrade: Aston Villa make contact to sign £138k-p/w "engine"

Aston Villa are set to target a new midfielder this summer

ByJoe Nuttall Jul 9, 2025

Villa will no doubt look to secure more expensive signings between now and the end of the summer transfer window, but Robin Olsen’s departure required a new backup goalkeeper and Bizot feels like a good choice to replace him.

'115 charges loading' – Fans rage at Kyle Walker after Man City star praises referee Michael Oliver and defends decision not to award Liverpool a penalty

Manchester City defender Kyle Walker has come under fire by rival fans for defending Michael Oliver's decision not to award Liverpool a penalty.

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Liverpool drew with City in fierce battleLate penalty decision went Cityzens' wayWalker slammed after backing referee for showing "character"(C)Getty ImagesWHAT HAPPENED?

The two Premier League titans came head-to-head in a fiercely contested battle that went to the wire on Sunday evening, with goals from John Stones and Alexis Mac Allister setting up a tense finale. It was Liverpool that pushed for a winner and they appeared to have done enough to win a penalty in the last minute. However, Jeremy Doku's high challenge on Mac Allister was somehow deemed a fair challenge by referee Oliver, leading to natural uproar from the Reds fanbase.

And those supporters have been angered again after City defender Walker doubled down on praise for the match official in a recent interview, lauding Oliver for not "crumbling" under the Anfield pressure.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT WALKER SAID

Asked by for his thoughts on the late decision that went in City's favour, Walker said: "My view is the referee and the VAR have made a decision on what it is. I feel that the ref reffed it really, really well, I feel once you have Anfield and the crowd behind him, he [Oliver] could've crumbled. But that shows his experience and his character, and is why he's regarded as probably one of the best referees in this country and in the world at the minute."

Pressed on whether he thought it should've been a penalty, the full-back added: "Listen, it's probably not up [to] me to say if I do think it's a pen, if I say it's not a pen [there'd be] headlines, if I say it is a pen then [there'd be] headlines. So the VAR's checked it, the ref's done it, that's all I'm going to say on that."

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WHAT THE FANS ARE SAYING

After such frank comments about a questionable performance from Oliver – who also allowed Stones' goal to stand despite Nathan Ake potentially affecting play from an offside position – Liverpool supporters haven't held back in their abuse at Walker.

X user @Khaya_LFC labelled it a "weird interview" and trolled Walker for getting "cooked by [Luis] Diaz" in said match. Another user, @LFC92, pointed out the Oliver did cave to the pressure, writing that "he literally crumbled and made the incorrect decision". Another more brutal comment pointed towards Walker's infidelity allegations, with @RadiantL1ght11 saying "A cheater praises cheating what a surprise". Lastly, City's reported Financial Fair Play (FFP) breaches were inevitably brought up, with @connelpounds writing “115 charges loading” and @PHPetosquare stating "City ain't beating the allegations".

'This world needs to f*ck off!' – Man Utd legend Paul Scholes appears to post furious reaction to Brendan Rodgers 'dinosaur' label from his bathtub amid sexism storm surrounding Celtic boss

Legendary Manchester United midfielder Paul Scholes appeared to weigh in on the latest sexism storm surrounding Celtic manager Brendan Rodgers.

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Rodgers criticised for "good girl" commentCeltic boss branded a "dinosaur" over remarkScholes tells world to "f*ck off" in apparent response(C)Getty ImagesWHAT HAPPENED?

The Hoops boss has come under fire for saying "good girl" to reporter Jane Lewis after his side's late victory over Motherwell on Sunday. Rodgers has been urged to apologise to Lewis by women's organisations in Scotland, who have branded the Northern Irishman a "dinosaur" for his remarks. It was that news, presented by , that Scholes appeared to be reacting to while sitting in the bathtub.

AdvertisementWHAT SCHOLES POSTED

The Red Devils legend gave a blunt response, seemingly in reference to the Rodgers sexism storm, writing in an Instagram story that has since been deleted: "This world needs to f*ck right off… bye!"

IG: paulscholesaaaTHE BIGGER PICTURE

The incident in question came after Celtic's 3-1 over Motherwell in the Scottish Premiership on Sunday. That victory took the Hoops to within two points of arch rivals Rangers at the top, although Rodgers strangely claimed that the title race story "has already been written about this group, but we will write our own story”. Lewis then pressed that cryptic answer but was met with a cold "You know exactly what I mean" and a repeated "No, no no", before Rodgers shut down the interview. It is these words that have drawn most ire from women's groups, as the Celtic boss said condescendingly: "Okay, done. Good girl. Well done, cheers.”

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(C)Getty ImagesWHAT HAS BEEN SAID

Both Lewis and Rodgers have since spoken out about the incident, with the BBC reporter quoted on as saying: "Clearly, the interview on Sunday has become a talking point. I don't believe there was any offence meant by Brendan Rodgers – and for my part, there was none taken."

Rodgers pointed to a wider problem in society and echoed Lewis' thoughts of no offence being meant, saying on Tuesday (via ): "I will address it because I have been obviously aware of it. Sadly for me in society now we are either looking to offend or find something that is offensive to try to pin onto people. I have spoken to Jane, she wasn't offended, we had a laugh about it, she will continue to ask me awkward questions. But I see here every week and we have good relations, like I have with most people in my life, whether that is professional or social."

Xavier Marshall left out of USA selection camp in Texas

The former West Indies batsman is not among the 33 players invited to camp to be held from June 21-24 in Texas. Former USA captain Steven Taylor, however, has made the cut

Peter Della Penna20-Jun-2018Xavier Marshall, the former West Indies batsman who made his USA debut in January during the CWI Regional Super50 tournament in Antigua, has been left out of a list of 33 players invited to a senior-team selection camp to be held from June 21-24 in Houston, Texas. Marshall is the only player from the 15-man squad that toured the West Indies to not receive an invite to this weekend’s camp.USA selection camp invitees

Capped players: Camilus Alexander, Alex Amsterdam, Fahad Babar, Adil Bhatti, Elmore Hutchinson, Nosthush Kenjige, Ibrahim Khaleel (capt/wk), Ali Khan, Jaskaran Malhotra (wk), Prashanth Nair, Saurabh Netravalkar, Mrunal Patel, Nisarg Patel, Sagar Patel, Timil Patel, Usman Rafiq, Roy Silva, Jessy Singh, Sunny Sohal, Steven Taylor
Uncapped players: Usman Ashraf, Sachin Asokan, Shaheer Hassan (wk), Akshay Homraj (wk), Jannisar Khan, Keshav Pabisetty, Monank Patel (wk), Tirth Patel, Kyle Phillip, Srinivas Raghavan, Srinivas Salver, Arjun Thyagarajan, David Wakefield
Junior players: Amrut Pore, Ali Sheik, Sanjay Stanley, Yasir Syed, Tejas Vishal, Shashank Vittaladevaram.

Marshall, 32, began his USA career with scores of 40 and 51 in his first two innings of the Super50 against Leeward Islands and Guyana, but only managed 46 runs combined in his last six innings of the tournament. Ahead of the Super50, Marshall had told ESPNcricinfo that one of his goals was to gain a contract in the Caribbean Premier League (CPL). Even though it is mandatory for each of the six CPL franchises to draft a USA player – or retain a Canada player from 2017 – Marshall was not one of the six USA players taken in the 2018 CPL draft.All 33 players invited to this weekend’s camp took part in one of eight regional combines organised through the spring by USA Cricket. Marshall had attended the New York Combine that took place from May 31 to June 3, top-scoring with a half-century in the T20 trial match that was held on June 1. However, he failed to show up the following two days to participate in two 50-over trial matches.Instead, Marshall chose to play two club matches over that weekend, in New Jersey for Somerset Cavaliers and New York for Villagers Social & Athletic Club. Marshall’s absence on the final day of the New York Combine in particular was a hot-button issue. According to USA Cricket officials who were on site at the regional combine in New York, Marshall called in the morning to say he was on his way to Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx where the trial was being held, but allegedly called back later to say he could not get a ride from his home in Long Island. However, he showed up later in the morning at Roy Sweeney Park in Queens to play for Villagers.Gajanand Singh was another noteworthy name to not receive an invite to the final squad trial this weekend in Houston. The 30-year-old former West Indies Under-19 batsman played last season for Guyana Amazon Warriors in the CPL, scoring 151 runs in 11 matches to finish fourth on the team’s run-scorers’ list, and was retained by Warriors for 2018 after being taken in the 13th round. Gajanand is understood to be a US resident and attended the New York trial, top-scoring for his side in the T20 trial match. However, like Marshall, he no-showed on the last two days, choosing instead to play club matches for Somerset Cavaliers in New Jersey on each day.American batsman Steven Taylor drives for a single on his Amazon Warriors debut•Peter Della PennaFormer USA captain Steven Taylor, who is currently contracted with Jamaica in the West Indies first-class franchise system, has been invited to the squad camp in Texas. Taylor, 24, attended the New York Combine but has not played for USA since 2017 WCL Division Three in Uganda, after which he and USA Cricket administrators came to a mutual decision to have him step down from captaincy following his decision to relocate to Jamaica upon taking up a professional contract.Four uncapped players who rose to prominence during the regional combines and received invites to the USA squad camp for the first time are Tirth Patel, Akshay Homraj, Kyle Phillip and David Wakefield.Tirth, 20, was one of the leading wicket-takers at the New York Combine and is a former Ahmedabad Under-19 left-arm spinner currently attending university in Ohio. Tirth played for Ahmedabad Under-19 as recently as June 2016 and, as a result, it is unclear if he will be eligible to qualify under the ICC’s three-year residency rule to play for USA this year at their next two assignments – the 2020 ICC World T20 Regional Qualifier from September 16-23 and WCL Division Three later in the year. Homraj also competed at the New York Combine and formerly represented Guyana Under-19s in 2014.Phillip, 21, is a tall fast bowler currently residing in Florida after migrating from Trinidad & Tobago in 2016. He impressed at the regional combine held at the Central Broward Regional Park in Lauderhill, Florida from May 3-6. He was recently signed up by Winnipeg Hawks in the Global T20 Canada draft, one of the only three USA-based players to be roped in along with captain Ibrahim Khaleel and fast bowler Ali Khan.Wakefield, 23, was born in North Carolina but raised in New Zealand and played for Canterbury Under-19s. The right-hand batsman is still based in Christchurch but paid his own way to attend the USA Cricket regional trial in Florida this May where he scored a pair of half-centuries in the two 50-over trial matches. He would qualify to play for USA automatically as a US citizen and passport-holder from birth.In addition to the 33 senior men’s players invited to the camp, six junior players have also been given the opportunity to attend the camp in order to immerse them early on into the national team set-up. The players will take part in a series of T20 and 50-over trial matches at Smart Choice Moosa Stadium in the Houston suburb of Pearland. A 14-man squad is expected to be chosen following the camp for USA’s next assignment, the World T20 Regional Qualifier that USA is hosting in September where they will take on Belize, Canada and Panama.

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