The allrounder was unbeaten on 182 at the close, his third century in his last four innings for Western Australia
Andrew McGlashan06-Mar-2021Cameron Green’s spectacular form continued with his seventh first-class century, and third in the Sheffield Shield this season, to put Western Australia in a dominant position on the opening against Queensland.For the second time this season he was within touching distance of a maiden first-class double-century having fallen for 197 against New South Wales in the first part of the summer. For a while it appeared he would have time to reach it within the first day but was content to see through to the close.The innings also gives Green a currently tally in the Sheffield Shield at the Gabba of 382 runs without being dismissed having made unbeaten scores of 87 and 121 early last season – a game where he batted No. 8 in the first innings and No. 9 in the second, the century earning Western Australia a draw.Green’s latest hundred came after an unbeaten 168 against South Australia in the previous round which he followed with a maiden one-day hundred, the small matter of 144, against the same opposition. He had entered the return of the domestic season on the back of a double century in grade cricket.”His technique allows him to bat for long periods but his mental capacity and desire to bat, and bat for longer periods, is unparalleled for a 21-year-old and think that’s what makes him so good,” Western Australia coach Adam Voges said. “He just wants to keep batting and he’s doing it brilliantly well at the moment.”He had come to the crease after an impressive new-ball spell from Jack Wildermuth removed both Western Australia’s openers inside 10 overs, following Queensland’s decision to bowl under overcast skies, and dominated the scoring after getting through to lunch. The third-wicket stand with Shaun Marsh was worth 226 and when Green brought up his century off 138 balls – having gone from fifty to his hundred in 43 balls – Marsh had 37 from 137 deliveries.Shortly after reaching three figures he danced down the pitch to the left-arm spin of Matt Kuhnemann and deposited his second six of the day something he repeated a while later with a monstrous blow over long-on. Throughout his innings the drive – through the off side, straight and through mid-on – was pristine.Marsh’s bid for another century ended when he fended a catch to slip of Mark Steketee but Hilton Cartwright, who battled a back injury last week to help force a draw against South Australia, accompanied Green until the close in a stand worth 83. The toil for the Queensland attack was summed up when Marnus Labuschagne bowled two overs of medium pace late in the day.
Everton are in the race to sign James Ward-Prowse from West Ham in January, with the midfielder “almost certain” to leave the London Stadium in the new year.
Ward-Prowse has enjoyed an impressive career, spending many years at Southampton and being renowned for being one of the best set-piece specialists in Premier League history.
Ward-Prowse has struggled to be a regular for West Ham this season however, and with his current deal expiring in the summer of 2027, the Hammers are set to listen to offers for him in January.
“There’s no way he’s getting back into the plans at West Ham. Nuno just doesn’t want him in the team; he is not open to the idea of this turning around,” reported Dean Jones earlier this month, claiming a move is “almost certain”.
“I don’t see any possibility that West Ham try to stop him from leaving. I think they will treat him with respect and allow him the chance to move.”
Everton are the team most strongly linked with the 11-cap England international, and now a new update has emerged regarding a possible move for the 31-year-old.
Everton ready to offer Ward-Prowse exit route
Speaking to Football Insider, former scout Mick Brown talked up Everton’s interest in Ward-Prowse due to his connection with David Moyes, confirming the Blues are “willing” to offer him a fresh start.
At 31, Ward-Prowse is now in the autumn of his career, so Everton wouldn’t be signing him as a long-term prospect with lots of sell-on value.
That said, he could be a shrewd signing in terms of his experience and enduring quality, not necessarily being a key starter but adding depth to the Blues’ squad at a relatively low cost given his contract situation.
Friedkin now plotting 2026 move to sign "sensational" boyhood Everton fan
He recently scored a hat-trick.
ByTom Cunningham Nov 21, 2025
The fact that Moyes knows him well can only be a positive – he wouldn’t want him if he didn’t value him as a player and a character – so the positives outweigh the negatives.
Only three players earn more than James Ward-Prowse at West Ham
Mushfiqur Rahim on the perception that Bangladesh only do well at home, his captaincy tenure, and what lies next
Interview by Mohammad Isam05-Sep-2018In the last five years, how have you managed to average 50 in Tests abroad? I don’t think anyone intends to score more runs only at home or only on foreign soil. I want to contribute in every series to the most of my ability. But it is true that I have taken it as a challenge to score abroad. There’s a perception that Bangladeshi players only do well at home. I have tried to improve this in my game, anticipate the difficulty of the conditions and bowling attacks.Tamim [Iqbal], Shakib [Al Hasan], Riyad [Mahmudullah] and myself have often discussed that as a batting group, we should take the lead. I didn’t do well in the West Indies Tests, but in the next opportunity, I hope I do better. In New Zealand, South Africa and Sri Lanka, I have tried hard to play to my ability.Which among your three recent hundreds – in Kingstown in 2014, and Wellington and Hyderabad in 2017 – abroad is your favourite? The Wellington hundred was quite special. I was out with an injury after the first ODI and neither the team nor I had a great record in New Zealand. By Allah’s grace, I played a good innings. Tamim and Mominul should get a lot of the credit because of how they tackled the new ball and got us past the difficult part in those conditions. It became slightly easier for Shakib and I for the rest of the innings.ESPNcricinfo LtdThe Hyderabad century is not too far behind. India is one of the best sides in the world, and they have a superb bowling attack. It was a dream to score a hundred against them, and I was leading in Bangladesh’s first Test on Indian soil. These two, for me, are very special hundreds.There was a big jump in your performance in ODIs in 2014 and 2015, compared to the first seven-odd years of your international career. How did you bring about that shift in your run-scoring and strike rate? These days even 300 is not safe, particularly on a good wicket. I have realised that under the existing fielding restrictions, it is not impossible to bring more shots into your game. From the 11th to the 40th over, against spin or pace, you have mid-on and mid-off inside the circle. There are boundary options against offspinners and left-arm spinners. I have tried to improve my shots during this period. If you maintain a healthy strike rate, you can score fluently and the bowler is under pressure. The team also benefits if you have a 100-plus strike rate. Other batsmen, who take a bit of time to get settled, get that extra time and can cash in later on.I have tried to develop this aspect [of my game]. It took me a long time to hone. I needed to know my game, particularly in knowing where I can be attacking.I should give some credit to Chandika Hathurusingha, our last coach. I spoke to him freely about this and he backed me. He said that I should play this way with confidence. There used to be a time when I held myself back after we lost early wickets. I would play slowly and then cash in later. But he told me not to think about the scoreboard and back my ability if I thought the wicket was good for strokeplay.I was able to do it in the 2015 World Cup, by Allah’s grace. It gave me a lot of confidence playing in such a big tournament against such bowling attacks. Even matches against Afghanistan and Scotland weren’t easy.ESPNcricinfo LtdYou made a really quick 30 that completely changed the game against West Indies in the first ODI in July this year. Against Sri Lanka last year, you batted out the last hour to ensure Bangladesh’s first Test win there. These are two vastly different situations but you responded perfectly. How much does batting differently under pressure depend on mentality and skills? It is a combination of both. As a strokeplayer you have to shift according to the situation. It is a mental strength. You itch to play down the wicket, or play a shot against the spin, but you have to curb yourself. It is also a matter of practice. It has a lot to do with batting and mental skills.Fitness also helps me in these situations. If you can finish a lap in 50 seconds instead of 60, that extra motivation in my fitness level translates into similar confidence in the skills part. I always try to prepare well ahead of time, and imagine what I may be facing.Which is harder – playing a quick-fire innings or holding off big shots for a considerable period? Both are difficult situations, especially for Bangladeshi cricketers. We don’t face these things frequently. Indian players are equipped to win from these situations at least nine out of ten times. We might face these moments once in six months, or even up to a year. It becomes tricky, as a result. When you get over these situations, you get confidence in your ability.What is the source of your motivation to train at the same level, having now played for Bangladesh for 12 years? I don’t think I have still maximised my ability to provide for Bangladesh. It is the only motivation. It is a luxury to represent your country for 12-13 years. At the end of my career, I want to feel that I have been able to justify the opportunity given to me. This is what keeps me eager. I set small goals, series by series. I try heart and soul. I have tried to maintain my fitness.”When you know that 18-20 crore people pray for you, you don’t need any more motivation”•AFP/Getty ImagesHow important is pride for you, playing for Bangladesh? It should be the first and final word to represent a country. We make a lot of sacrifices by staying away from our families for months. There’s no greater pride than doing something for your country. When you know that 18-20 crore [180-200 million] people pray for you – a rickshaw-puller may have given up on his day’s earning just watching our match; so it drives me. You don’t need any more motivation. There’s no bigger privilege. A lot of talented cricketers started off with me but Allah gave me the opportunity [to keep going].Your captaincy ended last year. What were the best and worst moments? I am the sort of person who likes to stay in the background and do my job properly. Doing it well is the most important part. Any player goes through ups and downs, and my captaincy had those too. Last year’s South Africa tour was hard for me as a player and captain. We didn’t do well as a team. We should have done better.But there were good days. We beat Australia and England, we beat Sri Lanka in their backyard. We also won ODI series against New Zealand and West Indies. These make me proud. The captain isn’t the only one with the credit; it takes a team to win anything, so I thank them.How has it been playing with Shakib, Tamim, Mahmudullah and Mashrafe Mortaza, for more than ten years now? A large credit for my consistency in the last four or five years is due to these four players. Life becomes easier when you are batting with Shakib, Riyad or Tamim. Cricket is not an individual sport. Partnerships are vital, and all of us have had match-winning contributions through big stands. The five of us have tried extremely hard in the last four or five years, and we have found ways to perform at the highest level. It is a privilege to play with such a generation of cricketers. Mashrafe is incomparable; Shakib, Tamim and Riyad are all world-class players.Tamim has said that one of his motivations is to be among the top ten batsmen in the world. What is your motivation for the next five years? I definitely have similar goals, but my thoughts are always at improving myself from my last series to the next one. My childhood dream was to be a match-winner for Bangladesh, and I still cherish it. I may have failed in some matches but there have been good days. I hope to have more such good days, at least eight or nine times out of ten games.How important is the period leading up to the 2019 World Cup? A team needs momentum to do well in a big tournament. It cannot just turn up and win it. If we can do well in the Asia Cup and against West Indies and New Zealand, we will have confidence as a team, which is particularly important for a team like ours.Champions Trophy is in the past, and we have a bigger challenge coming up. I think if the entire team can build this momentum leading up to the World Cup, we could have a memorable tournament with great performances.
In May, James Anderson became the first England bowler to take 400 Test wickets but a side injury which forced him to miss the final two Ashes Tests raised questions as to how much longer he would play. At 33, he still feels he has plenty left in the tank
Andrew McGlashan in Dubai29-Oct-2015James Anderson has a lower Test bowling average in the UAE than any other country he has played in. For a fast bowler, that is quite some badge of honour.It is not a skewed sample size either. He has now played five Tests in the region, the same number he has clocked up in South Africa and New Zealand and only two fewer than India and West Indies.In those five outings, Anderson has collected 16 wickets at 23.93, his seven wickets at 19.14 so far in the two matches of this tour nudging his average below his figure playing in West Indies where his returns come at 24.92.In terms of visiting pacemen in the UAE he has the fourth lowest average after Glenn McGrath (7.40), Andy Bichel (13.25) and Vernon Philander (23.00). The figures of McGrath and Bichel are helped by having been involved in the 2002 Test in Sharjah when Pakistan were bowled out for 59 and 53 in Sharjah.Spoils have not come that easily for Anderson on this tour – and he can only dream of a scenario where Pakistan are skittled in such fashion in the final Test – but he takes extra satisfaction from earning success on pitches which test a fast bowler’s skill and endurance to the limit.”It is a real test of your skills and it is quite good fun,” he said. “If you have a good day out here you feel you get more out of it personally. There is more reward.”Anderson, with 67 overs, has also bowled more in this series than any other England quick (Wahab Riaz is top overall with 83 overs) but the workload has been very evenly shared between him, Stuart Broad (56), Mark Wood (62.5) and Ben Stokes (58.1). After some initial worries when they first arrived and the temperature was in the mid-40s, Anderson said that conditions have not proved too demanding.”The first couple of days we were worried about how we were going to get through because the heat was quite severe but as the series has gone on the temperature has dropped and we have got used to it as well. We have been bowling three, four, five over spells which doesn’t actually take too much out of you.”Anderson has operated in a variety of guises through the two matches – both of which have seen England bowl first after Alastair Cook lost the toss – from a traditional new-ball bowler for the few overs where the ball might swing, to searching for reverse later on and also bringing out a repertoire of slower balls.”In these conditions you’ve got to try and get something out of it as a seamer, you try all sorts of things,” he said. “We’ve had the keeper up at different stages, you bowl offcutters and things like that. The ball that got Misbah the other day was a genuine offspinner, you just try it.Anderson’s economy for the series is a parsimonious 2.00 while Stokes at 3.00 is England’s most expensive seamer as Pakistan have sought to play out the pacemen and target the spinners – Moeen Ali has conceded 4.34 an over and Adil Rashid 4.27 – which has left Anderson wishing the batsmen would play more shots against him.”It has been frustrating as well because you need people to go after you on these wickets to get the chances, so that is why we’ve set certain fields and tried to be aggressive with our plans,” he said.The four-man pace attack is likely to be retained for Sharjah, where England need to win to level the series, which would be a move away from the pre-series thoughts they had on playing three spinners. It would also be significant because Mark Wood will have played three consecutive Tests where the initial suggestion was his body may only allow him two.England may have to consider relieving him of ODI or T20 duty later in the tour – with an eye on the South Africa Test series which starts on Boxing Day – but he produced his most impressive Test performance in Dubai where he collected five wickets in the match and, especially in the first innings, troubled Younis Khan and Misbah-ul-Haq with short deliveries.”He has done brilliantly. Him and Ben Stokes, their bowling has improved out of sight on this trip,” Anderson said. “The first week we were here, the first warm-up game I remember both of them saying it was pretty boring. They both want to take wickets, they want to steam in and rough people up but you can’t just do that out here.”The way Mark bowled in that first innings [in Dubai] going away from his natural game… I thought he was outstanding and he’s getting to grips with bowling different balls, cutters and little subtle variations which again will improve his game no end.”Not that Anderson has any plans on permanently passing England’s fast-bowling baton onto the younger models anytime soon. In May, Anderson became the first England bowler to take 400 Test wickets but a side injury which forced him to miss the final two Ashes Tests raised a question as to how much longer he would play. At 33, he still feels he has plenty left in the tank.”You’re making me feel really old … as if I’m coming to the end! But why can’t I play for another five years? I’m loving it at the minute, loving bowling, loving playing, enjoying taking wickets and the challenges we’ve got ahead. I’m going to keep going till my body can’t take any more.”James Anderson is speaking on behalf of Waitrose, Official Sponsor of the England Cricket Team. For exclusive player content visit waitrose.com/cricket
Surrey’s rookie skipper left with frustration as Gloucestershire keep hopes alive
ECB Reporters Network19-Aug-2022Tom Price was the tail-end hero with 38 not out from 34 balls as Gloucestershire pulled off a breathless two-wicket Royal London Cup victory against Surrey at the Kia Oval.Ben Geddes, Surrey’s 21-year-old Royal London Cup captain, had done his best to inspire his team by scoring 71 in Surrey’s 292 for 9, running out Tom Smith with a direct hit on the bowlers’ stumps during a tense finish and also juggling his rookie bowling attack with skill.But fast bowler Price, who came in at No 8 with Gloucestershire seemingly making a mess of a chase that had initially looked well on course, kept his head in an unbroken ninth wicket stand of 42 with Paul van Meekeren.Price pulled the winning four off Matt Dunn to clinch a win, with 2.3 overs to spare, that is Gloucestershire’s fourth Group A victory and keeps alive their hope of qualification for the knock-out stages.Earlier, Jack Taylor had followed up his 3 for 38 with five sixes in a 46-ball 51, but Gloucestershire kept losing wickets at vital times as a crowd of more than 3,500 lapped up the entertainment in warm sunshine.Related
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Taylor’s seven overs of leg breaks contributed to 34 overs of spin bowled by Gloucestershire, with Pakistan international Zafar Gohar not conceding a single boundary in his ten overs. Gohar also bowled five of those overs in the first powerplay, having Ryan Patel held on the deep square leg ropes for five and, in the end, impressing with 1 for 35.Gloucestershire’s chase did not start well, with Ben Wells bowled off stump for 12 by a beauty from Dunn and Australian Test left-hander Marcus Harris chopping into his stumps against Tom Lawes.But, from 34 for 2, they counter-attacked through James Bracey and Ben Charlesworth, who added 61 in nine overs with some sparkling strokeplay.Six of Bracey’s first seven scoring shots were fours, including extra cover driven and forced offside boundaries from the second and third balls he faced, from Lawes.On 34, however, Bracey lifted his 25th ball to cover off Cameron Steel’s leg-spin and, on 49, Charlesworth chipped a return catch to Yousef Majid, Surrey’s 18-year-old slow left armer, just out of Cranleigh School.Majid was then struck for three sixes in four balls by Taylor but Gloucestershire’s progress was checked when 21-year-old Oli Price, having batted commandingly to reach 45 from 33 balls with eight fours, was strangled down the legside by seamer Nick Kimber.Gohar made a useful 30 before reverse-sweeping Majid to short third man, and Taylor struck further legside sixes off Lawes and Majid before holing out to deep midwicket in the 39th over. When Smith was run out by Geddes in the next over, the game was in the balance at 252 for 8 – but Price and Van Meekeren were equal to the task in hand.Surrey’s innings was built upon a 102-run second wicket stand in 17 overs between Geddes and Steel, and then a further partnership of 51 for the third wicket by Geddes and Josh Blake.But that initial momentum stalled when Van Meekeren had Steel caught at the wicket for a fine 54-ball 61 with one that bounced and Oli Price’s off spin then dismissed both Geddes and Blake (31) during his excellent seven-over spell of 2 for 34 from the Vauxhall End.Smith’s left-arm spin accounted for both Nico Reifer, brilliantly caught and bowled with a diving left-handed effort for 11, and Sheridon Gumbs, who on 17 was unfortunate to pick out Wells at short third man with a sweetly-hit reverse sweep.Suddenly, 181 for 2 had become 222 for 6 in 11 overs of struggle against the two spinners and it took Lawes’ third successive Royal London Cup half-century to pull Surrey up to a defendable total.Lawes flipped Van Meekeren for an extraordinary six to fine leg when the Dutch international fast bowler was reintroduced for the 45th over, and then produced a similarly cheeky stroke to the next ball to flick it to fine third man for four.Kimber managed a few meaty blows before skying Taylor to square cover on 17 and Gloucestershire’s skipper – taking on the responsibility of bowling three death overs – then dived to his right to send back Conor McKerr for 2 with a smart caught and bowled.Lawes swatted Van Meekeren over deep midwicket for his second six and then reverse-slapped Taylor for four to reach his fifty in the final over before, on 50 from 40 balls, mis-hitting to short third man where Van Meekeren ran in to take a good tumbling catch.
Reliable news outlet The Athletic is reporting that a 21-year-old is now actively looking to leave Chelsea when the January transfer window opens.
Players who could be sold or loaned out by Chelsea in January
Enzo Maresca has a few players who have been deemed surplus to requirements at Stamford Bridge, and there is a very high possibility that they will part company once we reach the turn of the year.
"Sensational" £70m player "extremely" keen to join Chelsea as they plot bid
The west Londoners are weighing up a move and have encouragement.
1 ByEmilio Galantini Nov 30, 2024
Maresca candidly admitted in a press conference earlier this season that left-back Ben Chilwell – who’s played just 45 minutes in all competitions this season – was meant to depart in the summer window.
“Hopefully we can give him some minutes tomorrow,” said Maresca on Chilwell before Chelsea’s 5-1 win over Barrow in the Carabao Cup.
Aston Villa (home)
December 1
Southampton (away)
December 4
Tottenham (home)
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Brentford (home)
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Everton (away)
December 22
“The idea for him was to leave. In the moment that he’s here, he’s one of the squad, he’s training. He will be in the squad tomorrow, and hopefully we can give him some minutes.”
According to respected Blues reporter Simon Phillips, Chelsea have spoken to numerous clubs over Chilwell’s transfer in the last few weeks, with sides in England, Italy and Spain all taking a keen interest in the £200,000-per-week defender.
Chelsea are also prepared to sell Carney Chukwuemeka in January, amid rumoured interest from the likes of Barcelona and Milan, but Maresca has confirmed that forward Christopher Nkunku won’t be going anywhere, following reports linking the France international with a mid-season exit.
Chelsea have an abundance of star wingers and attacking midfielders in their squad, leading to uncertainty surrounding the future of Mykhailo Mudryk, despite the Ukraine international’s excellent Conference League performances lately.
“I hear they’re keen to move him on in January,” said well-connected former Premier League scout Mick Brown to Football Insider this week.
“I think they’ve got the makings of a very good team at Chelsea, but he isn’t likely to be a part of that. There isn’t space for him in the team at the moment and I don’t think Maresca has been particularly impressed by him so far.
“But I don’t think they’re likely to make a profit on him or even get their money back, let’s put it that way.”
Harvey Vale looking to leave Chelsea in January
Now, The Athletic has provided another bit of exit news out of the club, as the outlet writes that 21-year-old attacking-midfielder Harvey Vale is looking to leave Chelsea in January.
The Cobham academy graduate, who spent last season on loan at Bristol Rovers, has captained Chelsea’s Under-21s this season and put in an array of top performances at that level – but this is the extent of his action at the club recently.
Making five total senior appearances, Vale’s contract expires next summer, and it is believed the Englishman is seeking new pastures as Vale looks to kickstart his professional career.
The wealth of talent ahead of him in Maresca’s pecking order means that the best next move for him is to find a new club, and this could apparently be as soon as the next transfer window, despite the fact he’s able to leave for free later in 2025.
The more optimistic Everton supporters will claim that Sean Dyche’s system and the club’s success still sit in the melting pot, though the cynics within the broad Toffees camp might point toward a middle-grounded future at best.
Everton have lost one of their past seven Premier League matches after starting the season with four defeats on the trot, but performances have routinely lacked colour and inspiration.
Everton players react including Beto
Dyche, at least, has upheld comparatively decent defensive numbers, with the 17 goals conceded from 11 matches so far the second-best from any side in the bottom seven, and the same total as ninth-placed Aston Villa’s.
The gruff-talking manager’s very appointment was built on the pledge that he would give rise to a restored defensive pedigree.
Everton manager Sean Dyche
Everton, whose future remains frustratingly nebulous and excitingly uncertain in juxtaposition, have long prided themselves on solidity, preservation in the top flight. Defensive pedigree runs blue through the veins of the Merseyside-sat club.
Everton's defensive pedigree
Say what you want about Everton’s chequered fortunes on the field across the past however many years, but you can’t deny that Goodison Park has fostered some immense defensive talent.
In August 2016, Manchester City completed the £47.5m signing of John Stones, who had been at Goodison Park since he was 18 and became the second-most expensive defender ever, at that point in time.
Previously, Joleon Lescott had changed to a lighter blue hue in joining City back in 2009 for £22m, taking the newly-moneyed outfit to £120m as they rose to indomitable power.
Sylvain Distin and Phil Jagielka are both iconic names at Everton, distinguished and experienced defenders, while Jarrad Branthwaite looks like the latest prodigy to have been birthed in Finch Farm, arguably the star of Dyche’s squad.
It hasn’t always gone to plan at the rear, though, especially when Stones moved to Manchester. The loss of such a talented player demanded a high-class replacement, but Ashley Williams was anything but.
Everton had a howler with Ashley Williams
Williams, who is now retired and 40 years old, enjoyed a successful Premier League career that found its brightest days with Swansea City, who the Welshman captained and was hailed as “truly one of Swansea City’s greatest players” by Alan Curtis.
Swansea City
352
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5
31,471′
Stockport County
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1
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Bristol City
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Having led the Swans from League One to the Premier League, competing across five top-flight campaigns, Everton felt that they were signing an experienced and commanding head, but he fell heavily by the wayside.
Journalist Ben Marlow’s assessment bore echoes of the general consensus: “Thought he would be great for us but turned out to be a total liability. Awful defender.”
Former Everton defender Ashley Williams
Perhaps a tad harsh, but then emotions cloud impartiality when one’s club is concerned, struggling because of the strife of the player. Williams featured 73 times for Everton but indeed failed to inspire the kind of confidence that was ever-present in Wales.
In fairness, he featured prominently after signing for Everton in a deal worth £12m. It was August 2016, and the 31-year-old was indeed lined up to be the perfect Stones heir. Out with the new, in with the old. It was a risk, even for great financial gain.
His first term as a Toffee was decent enough. Williams started 35 Premier League matches as Everton finished seventh under the wing of Ronald Koeman, and though he remarkably averaged 7.9 clearances per game, the one-time Wales international also made three mistakes and only won 52% of his ground duels, which hardly speaks of defensive superiority.
The regression was fast and furious. Williams was relegated to a more bit-part role in 2017/18, starting 20 league fixtures but making even more errors (five, to be precise) and winning 48% of his ground battles.
His final Premier League campaign with Swansea, by the way, saw him command a 65% success rate.
It clearly didn’t have the desired effect, and given that Williams took home £70k per week during his time at Goodison Park, it wasn’t exactly cheap either. That’s a salary packet that, even now, stood as two times what Branthwaite earns while playing for Dyche’s team, with the sinew-framed star on a £35k-per-week pay packet.
Branthwaite, it almost need not be said, is the club’s finest young centre-back since Stones burst onto the scene. The 22-year-old carries the trappings of a world-class titan and will see his team recoup a mammoth sum if he is indeed to be sold in the year ahead.
Jarrad Branthwaite
Concerning Williams – Stoke City swept in and signed the veteran on a season-long loan move in 2018, and it is unclear whether the Potters provided Everton with a portion of his wages, or whether it was the Toffees who leaked money as the veteran plied his trade elsewhere.
Let’s imagine Everton did in fact cover the breadth of Williams’ £3.6m-per-year salary. In conjunction with the £12m transfer fee, this would mean that the Merseysiders suffered financial damages totalling almost £23m for a player who proved to be a disastrous Stones heir.
One to forget about, eh. Williams led a storied career below the clamour of those at the Premier League’s highest echelon; he remains a beloved figure in his homeland and proved to be a strong and inspiring figure for much of his career.
Unfortunately, it didn’t come together at Everton, and considering the £23m that was taken from Everton’s resources, almost half of the fee collected from the decorated Stones’ sale, it’s one that should have been avoided.
Everton must regret selling star who's now worth £45m & outscoring Salah
Everton appear to have offloaded the talent way too prematurely.
Home side recover from 68 for 6 through Wiese and Roelof van der Merwe but target still not enough
ECB Reporters Network09-Aug-2022Early success with the ball preceded Dawid Malan’s imperious, match-clinching 88 not out as Trent Rockets continued their winning start to the men’s Hundred at the expense of the Northern Superchargers at Headingley.England fringe quick Luke Wood and fellow seamer Luke Fletcher struck twice apiece as Superchargers, invited to bat, slipped to 68 for 6 after 53 balls before a blistering 50 off 27 from David Wiese ensured respectability at 152 for 8. But, at a notoriously fast-scoring venue, it was never likely to be enough – and Rockets won by seven wickets with six balls remaining.Yorkshire’s Malan led the chase on home turf, sharing 86 with opening partner Alex Hales. Malan hit three leg-sixes in his 49-ball innings.Namibian allrounder Wiese walloped five sixes, the majority down the ground, in an entertaining rescue act alongside Roelof van der Merwe, the seventh-wicket pair adding 83 in 44.It came after the home top order subsided against some accurate and aggressive back-of-a-length bowling from Fletcher and left-arm duo Wood and Australian overseas Daniel Sams. Sams secured the pick of the Rockets’ figures with 3 for 31 from 20 balls.Adam Lyth top-edged the fixture’s first ball – a pull at Wood – to short fine leg before captain Faf du Plessis feathered Sams behind to leave the Superchargers at 14 for 2 after eight balls.Michael Pepper, Dwayne Bravo, John Simpson and Adam Hose all then fell after making starts. The latter was stumped by Tom Kohler-Cadmore off Samit Patel’s left-arm spin, a particularly tight call which led to third umpire Steve O’Shaughnessy amusingly exclaiming, “Oh my giddy aunt, that doesn’t help me much” when shown a different replay angle.Wiese was lbw to a Fletcher no-ball on 20, and then caught off the free hit, allowing him to boost the Superchargers.They were missing Harry Brook due to England Lions duty and the injured David Willey, meaning Lyth and Adil Rashid were the only two Yorkshire players in their line-up. Rockets included three in Kohler-Cadmore, Malan and favourite son Joe Root.A 13,836 crowd basked in the glorious Headingley sunshine. They saw Malan, strong on both sides of the wicket, dropped on 9 by Hose at cover off Wiese early in the chase.It was the kind of chance which needed to be taken, as Hales crashed Wiese down the ground for six to end the second set of five at 19 without loss. Already, it was looking a tough road back for the Superchargers.Both Hales and Malan deposited further sixes over midwicket into the Western Terrace, taking the Rockets to 58 after 23.Superchargers hung there and when Hales and Kohler-Cadmore – to Rashid and Ben Raine – both fell in the space of 10 balls, the score became 93 for 2 after 62. However, Malan reached his fifty off 36 balls and ensured there were no surprises with the second-highest individual score in the men’s Hundred.
ESPNcricinfo staff22-Aug-2015The pair brought up a century stand, and went to lunch unscathed, adding 84 in 28 overs as Sri Lanka clawed their way back into the match•AFPIshant Sharma prised out Thirimanne just after lunch, as he was given out caught behind – a decision which did not impress him•AFPMathews steadily made his way towards his sixth Test century•AFPHe reached the landmark off 164 balls but soon fell for 102 to Stuart Binny•AFPMishra combined with Ashwin to clean up the tail dismissing Sri Lanka for 306•AFPDhammika Prasad struck early for Sri Lanka, pegging back KL Rahul’s off stump and reducing India to 3 for 1•AFPHowever, M Vijay and Ajinkya Rahane put on an unbroken 67-run stand that gave India firm control of the game with a 157-run lead at stumps on day three•AFP
The Red Devils put in their worst display of the season as their league title hopes went up in smoke
Manchester United's Women's Super League title hopes are all but over after a 3-1 defeat to a clinical Liverpool on Friday night.
United dominated the vast majority of the first half, with Celin Bizet and Grace Clinton bringing good saves out of Liverpool goalkeeper Rachael Laws.
But the hosts took the lead completely against the run of play when Olivia Smith burned past United's defence and then fired underneath stopper Phallon Tullis-Joyce in the 42nd minute.
Fuka Nagano made it 2-0 when she swept home in style to finish off a rapid counter-attack to stun the visitors in first-half stoppage time.
Things went from bad to worse for United when Gabby George, who had been limping, was taken off early in the second half as their frustrations mounted.
Jayde Riviere then scythed down Cornelia Kapocs in the box and Smith dispatched the resulting penalty in the 67th minute against the shellshocked Red Devils.
Maya Le Tissier buried a clinical finish into the corner one minute from time but it meant little as United lost just their second game of the league season as their seven-match winning run ended.
The result meant United, who still have the division's meanest defence, dropped to third in the table after Arsenal's win at Everton. Marc Skinner's side are now eight points behind league-leaders Chelsea with just six matches remaining.
GOAL rates United's players from Anfield…
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Phallon Tullis-Joyce (4/10):
Has had a brilliant season but made an uncharacteristic error for Liverpool's opener and that seemed to open the floodgates for the hosts.
Jayde Riviere (5/10):
Made some good attacking forays into Liverpool's half but gave away a clumsy penalty to put the game out of United's reach.
Maya Le Tissier (7/10):
Fired some nice long balls over the top but she wasn't as assured as usual at the back. Took her goal with aplomb, though.
Millie Turner (5/10):
Didn't do a huge amount wrong but her defence was cut apart too easily when the team looked in control.
Gabby George (5/10):
Sometimes struggled with the pacey Smith and then was taken off before the hour mark with a suspected injury.
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Grace Clinton (4/10):
Was a threat in attack early on but maybe could have done a bit more to stop the speedy Smith for Liverpool's first goal. Then faded quite badly.
Dominique Janssen (4/10):
Didn't do a great deal when her team were in the ascendency and lost control as the game wore on.
Ella Toone (4/10):
The England international has been in excellent form of late but that appeared to desert her on Merseyside.
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Celin Bizet (7/10):
Was United's best and most threatening player in the first half and still was a nuisance in the second.
Elisabeth Terland (5/10):
The former Brighton striker had a quiet game as Liverpool's defence kept her in check. But she needs more service up front.
Leah Galton (4/10):
Was quite anonymous at Anfield and Melvine Malard seemed to do more in her cameo than the experienced forward did in 75 minutes.
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Anna Sandberg (7/10):
Had a good tussle with Smith and largely held her own.
Rachel Williams (6/10):
Showed the right attacking intent off the bench.
Hinata Miyazawa (6/10):
Wasn't afraid to try her luck on goal.
Aoife Mannion (6/10):
Was competent enough when called upon.
Melvine Malard (6/A):
Looked lively when she came on and should have started.
Marc Skinner (4/10):
His team looked a confident side for much of the first half and played some eye-catching football but they were hit by two sucker punches out of the blue. There was no real reaction from United in the second half and maybe he should have gone to the bench earlier. Maybe their worst performance of the season.