South Africa's attempt to put pressure back on spinners backfired – du Plessis

The South Africa captain explains what else went wrong for his team in Galle, such as the absence of reverse swing

Andrew Fidel Fernando in Galle14-Jul-2018South Africa let the opposition tailenders score too many runs, their own batsmen were too defensive against spin in the first innings and too aggressive in the second, and reverse swing did not play as big a role in the Test as they had expected. These were the gleanings of captain Faf du Plessis, after South Africa crashed to a 278-run loss in Galle inside three days.As if the margin of victory was not bad enough, South Africa’s totals were their two lowest in Sri Lanka. What’s more, their 73 all out in the second innings was their worst since readmission. Several batsmen were out playing aggressively, which du Plessis put down to a muddled approach; having been spun out playing defensively in the first innings, South Africa wanted to get on top of the spinners early in the second, but got even worse results with that approach.”It’s just a case of our batters somehow trying to put pressure back on the quality of spin bowling that Sri Lanka have,” du Plessis said. “There’s two ways of looking at it. You could sit it out and try and bat for as long as possible, but you also need to put pressure on the opposition. There were one or two more expansive shots than we would normally play, but the thinking behind the batting was to try and put some pressure back on the bowling, because they don’t give you anything. That’s the quality the spinners have over here. If you sit there the whole day you’re also not going to score runs. There’s an element of what is a medium risk, compared to a high-risk shot, especially on the wickets that we’re playing on, with the ball stopping a little bit more than we’re used to. It is lessons that we can learn. But we weren’t good enough in this game, and Sri Lanka showed us why they were better.”Sri Lanka had got their wickets in clumps right through this Test, with South Africa losing their first five wickets for 48 in the first innings, and 32 in the second. Du Plessis wished his batsmen had emulated Dimuth Karunaratne, who had been solid at one end, even while wickets were falling at the other, as he scored 158 not out and 60 – the only batsman to make a half-century in the Test.”If you keep losing wickets, it is tough coming in – I think that’s the biggest difference when you play in the subcontinent,” he said. “When you do lose a wicket, that next five overs become tricky – you need to make sure you get through that. Karunaratne was there the whole time for them in the first innings. He scored more than half the runs of their total. So he was fantastic this game. As bad as we were in our batting, he was very, very good.”That South Africa have lost as badly as this is all the more incredible for their having more-or-less controlled the game for much of day one. South Africa had reduced Sri Lanka to 176 for 8 just after tea on Thursday, with Kagiso Rabada in particular proving effective with the short ball. But then Karunaratne struck up productive partnerships with the Nos. 10 and 11 batsmen, and Sri Lanka’s total grew by a further 111, completely changing the outlook of the game.”We had them 170 for 7, so there you should get the tail out quickly,” du Plessis said. “If we had got them out for 200 to 220, the whole structure of the game would have changed. But we were very soft in that period. We let the tailenders pretty much boss the show.”One reason why South Africa failed to dislodge those batsmen may have been down to conditions. There had been a brief torrential downpour just prior to those partnerships and residual moisture from the outfield dampened the ball and hampered his bowlers, du Plessis said.”Our fast bowling wasn’t as effective because the ball wasn’t reversing,” du Plessis said. “Our deadly instinct when they had the tail in there wasn’t there, and those extra 100-run partnerships towards the end happened. When it’s spinning in conditions like these, we rely on reverse swing to be just as effective a weapon, because we have the pace. But because of the wet outfield reverse swing wasn’t a factor, and therefore it eliminated the threat we didn’t have in our pace. That was something we didn’t plan for.”Having failed to make a match aggregate of 200, South Africa must also now consider beefing up their batting order for the second Test, at the SSC. They had fielded five specialist bowlers in this match, with Vernon Philander coming in at No. 7.”If you play six batters on pitches that are not flat – whether it be green or spinning – it puts a lot of pressure on your top six to score the runs,” du Plessis said. “Especially after a game now where we haven’t scored the runs, that is something that us as a brains trust need to think about – what’s the best way we can counter their strengths? We’ll have those conversations.”

Daredevils hope for lift at pace-friendly Eden Gardens

Delhi Daredevils are second from bottom but have a potent pace attack and will hope they can exploit the movement and bounce that is likely to greet them at Kolkata Knight Riders’ fortress

The Preview by Nikhil Kalro27-Apr-2017

Match facts

Kolkata Knight Riders v Delhi Daredevils
Kolkata, April 28, 2017
Start time 1600 local (1030 GMT)3:30

Agarkar: Mathews for Rabada to beef up Daredevils’ batting

Head-to-head

This season: Kolkata Knight Riders completed a stunning comeback, from 21 for 3, to chase 169 with one ball to spare at the Feroz Shah Kotla. With eight runs required off the last three balls, Manish Pandey struck a six, followed by a bunt into the covers to finish the chase.

Form guide

  • Kolkata Knight Riders: beat Rising Pune Supergiant by seven wickets, beat Royal Challengers Bangalore by 82 runs, lost to Gujarat Lions by four wickets

  • Delhi Daredevils: lost to Mumbai Indians by 14 runs, lost to Sunrisers Hyderabad by 15 runs, lost to Kolkata Knight Riders by four wickets

Overall: In 19 games between these two teams, Knight Riders have won 11 times. At the Eden Gardens, Knight Riders have won five of six games, their only loss coming in 2012.

In the news

With Knight Riders moving back to the Eden Gardens, Nathan Coulter-Nile is expected to reclaim his spot in the XI, at Darren Bravo’s expense. Knight Riders are likely to persist with the same bowling combination that demolished Royal Challengers Bangalore for 49.Daredevils signed Marlon Samuels as Quinton de Kock’s replacement, but he is expected to join the squad only on April 29. A relaid surface at Eden Gardens, favouring seam more than spin, could mean Daredevils stick with their overseas combination – Corey Anderson, Kagiso Rabada, Chris Morris and Pat Cummins – from their loss against Mumbai Indians.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

The likely XIs

Kolkata Knight Riders: 1 Gautam Gambhir (capt), 2 Sunil Narine, 3 Robin Uthappa (wk), 4 Manish Pandey, 5 Yusuf Pathan, 6 Suryakumar Yadav, 7 Colin de Grandhomme, 8 Chris Woakes, 9 Nathan Coulter-Nile, 10 Kuldeep Yadav, 11 Umesh YadavDelhi Daredevils: 1 Aditya Tare, 2 Sanju Samson, 3 Karun Nair, 4 Rishabh Pant (wk), 5 Shreyas Iyer, 6 Corey Anderson, 7 Chris Morris, 8 Kagiso Rabada, 9 Pat Cummins, 10 Zaheer Khan (capt), 11 Amit Mishra

Strategy punt

Zaheer Khan has the third-worst economy rate in the IPL this season outside the Powerplay (9.91). In the Powerplay, Zaheer has an economy rate of 6.45 this season, the fourth best among all teams and best for Daredevils. Zaheer has also dismissed Gautam Gambhir six times in the IPL. A mixture of slower balls and his wiles could make him effective against Sunil Narine as well. Zaheer could, therefore, bowl three overs within the Powerplay, leaving their overseas seamers to bowl in the end overs.

Stats that matter

  • Sunil Narine has dominated Daredevils’ top order in the IPL. In a combined 56 balls against Sanju Samson, Karun Nair and Corey Anderson, he has conceded just 49 runs with three dismissals.
  • Chris Morris has been Daredevils’ end-overs specialist with both bat and ball. He has scored 319 runs in just 173 balls in the end overs in the IPL, at a strike rate of 184.39 and an average of 53.16.
    With the ball, he has taken 29 wickets in 36 innings at an economy rate of 8.18.
  • Narine has scored 89% of his runs this season in boundaries. He has hit 122 runs of his 137 in fours and sixes.
  • Rishabh Pant hits a boundary nearly every two dot balls he faces in the IPL. He has hit 44 boundaries – 28 fours and 16 sixes – and has faced 90 dot balls.
  • Robin Uthappa has struggled against Daredevils’ bowlers in the IPL. He has been dismissed nine times in the 134 combined balls he has faced from Chris Morris, Amit Mishra and Zaheer Khan. He has scored just 139 runs in those 134 deliveries.

Bell leads the way as MCC down champions

Champions Yorkshire were beaten by four wickets in Abu Dhabi as Ian Bell helped lay the platform for a comfortable MCC win

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Mar-2016MCC 299 (Foakes 91, Clarke 58, Burns 51, Bresnan 4-58, Carver 4-106) and 257 for 6 (Bell 66, Westley 58) beat Yorkshire 275 (Ballance 105, Rhodes 95, Tredwell 3-53) and 279 (Lees 86, Patel 3-52, Tredwell 3-79) by four wickets
ScorecardIan Bell top-scored in MCC’s successful run chase•Getty Images

Champions Yorkshire were beaten by four wickets in Abu Dhabi as Ian Bell helped lay the platform for a comfortable MCC win. Bell, who has designs on an England Test recall after being dropped over the winter, compiled 66 from 134 balls and although he was dismissed with 57 needed, Ben Foakes guided MCC over the line.Yorkshire’s first defeat of the season – and only their fifth in first-class cricket since Jason Gillespie took charge in 2012 – came with the added discomfort of Tim Bresnan limping off with a sore Achilles, having only bowled two overs. Gillespie, however, suggested his withdrawal was a precautionary measure.Yorkshire added 40 to their overnight score, despite losing Will Rhodes in the fourth over of the day, to set MCC 256 on a pitch that was increasingly taking spin. Karl Carver, Yorkshire’s 19-year-old slow left-armer, got through 25 overs to pick up 2 for 88 but MCC built several useful partnerships on their way to victory in the final session.Bell, captaining MCC ahead of taking charge of Warwickshire’s 2016 fortunes, was at the centre of the pursuit. Adam Lyth’s part-time offspin accounted for Nick Browne and Rory Burns was run out but Essex’s Tom Westley stroked ten fours and a six during an 84-run stand with Bell that pushed Yorkshire back.Westley was stumped off Carver but Bell took the score on in partnership with Samit Patel and Foakes before becoming the fifth man out trying to hit over the top with MCC on 199. Yorkshire had been reduced to bowling Jack Leaning and although he picked up his second and third first-class wickets, Rikki Clarke’s sprightly 33 ensured MCC would not be derailed.

Stokes' blast earns last-ball win

A stunning innings of 72 not out from Ben Stokes took Durham to a three-wicket victory over Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge

19-Jul-2013
ScorecardA stunning innings of 72 not out from Ben Stokes took Durham to a three-wicket victory over Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge and lifted his side from the foot of the Friends Life t20 North Group.Stokes had arrived at the crease in the sixth over with the Dynamos in some difficulty at 30 for 3, in pursuit of a victory target of 160.The 22-year old left-hander had only registered one previous half-century in the shortest format of the game, that coming in the corresponding fixture at Trent Bridge last season. He faced 48 deliveries and hit one four and five sixes, each of them coming from a different Nottinghamshire bowler.Despite Stokes’ heroics, he needed the help of Michael Richardson to get Durham over the line, with the winning run being scored from the final ball of the contest.Earlier, Nottinghamshire had posted 159 for 7 after being invited to bat first, with James Taylor contributing a measured fifty of his own. Taylor eventually holed out to the final ball of the innings for 54, with his runs coming from 43 deliveries faced, with one six and four boundaries.Alex Hales and Samit Patel were the other leading contributors in the Nottinghamshire innings. Patel had looked in good touch, hitting Gareth Breese for three consecutive boundaries before putting Chris Rushworth over the ropes at extra cover but after reaching 33 from just 19 deliveries he was yorked by Graham Onions.Hales hit six fours in his 41 but once he had departed, Nottinghamshire lost their way somewhat and it was left to Taylor to ensure the home side posted a competitive total.Durham lost three wickets inside the opening six overs of their reply, with two of them falling to Harry Gurney, who ended with figures of 3 for 26.The home side appeared on course to stretch their winning sequence over Durham to seven victories in eight matches but Stokes’ well-paced innings condemned Nottinghamshire to their second defeat in this season’s competition and denied them the opportunity of returning to the top of the group.

Elusive victory within West Indies' grasp

The preview of the second Test between West Indies and New Zealand in Jamaica

The Preview by George Binoy01-Aug-2012

Match facts

August 2-6
Start time 1000 (1500 GMT)Chris Gayle last played a Test at Sabina Park in 2009. He made 104 against England.•AFP

Big Picture

Kieran Powell was 19 when West Indies last won a Test series against opponents other than Zimbabwe or Bangladesh. He celebrated his birthday on the first day of the Trinidad Test against England, which ended with West Indies’ Nos. 7 and 10 clinging on for dear life to secure a scrappy 1-0 victory in a five-match series. He was 13 when West Indies won before that. Powell, now 22, is one of a generation of young cricketers who have grown up watching West Indies struggle to win series. At Sabina Park, he will have the opportunity to be part of a rare triumph if West Indies draw or win to protect their 1-0 lead.Kane Williamson was 15 when New Zealand last beat a Test side other than Zimbabwe or Bangladesh – a 2-0 win against West Indies in 2006. He was 11 when New Zealand last won such a series away from home – in West Indies in 2002. New Zealand cannot win this series, but a victory in Kingston will secure a draw and build on their relatively satisfactory recent performances – a drawn series in Australia, a 0-1 defeat against South Africa.Like they did in Hobart so memorably, New Zealand will have to win without Daniel Vettori, who’s out with a groin injury. Vettori’s 2012 hasn’t been productive – he’s taken only one wicket in each of his last five Tests. What he does provide New Zealand unfailingly, however, is economy and, with it, a measure of control. Vettori conceded less than two and a half per over in four of those five Tests. His poorest return was 2.81. He reined in Chris Gayle after the batsman had raced to a half-century in the first innings in Antigua. Someone else will have to do that job in Jamaica.New Zealand’s challenge will be to control the pace of the game. Their inexperienced bowling attack needs to slow West Indies down at the start in order to allow Ross Taylor to keep wicket-taking fields. Their batsmen need to find a way not to stagnate against Narine and the rest in high-pressure scenarios like they did on the final morning of the first Test.West Indies, on the other hand, won in Antigua with no contribution from their most reliable player – Shivnarine Chanderpaul. Chris Gayle made a huge splash in his comeback Test, while Narine and Roach took turns to run through New Zealand in each innings. There were useful contributions from several others, too, and Chanderpaul hailed the “fantastic team effort.” A similar performance, beginning tomorrow, will make it extremely hard for New Zealand to force a win.

Form guide

West Indies WDLLL (Completed games, most recent first)
New Zealand LDLDW

Watch out for…

New Zealand’s mongrel. For a country that earned a reputation by felling stronger sides, New Zealand showed little fight in Antigua. They dropped catches, their fielding was sloppy, and their batsmen’s ultra-cautious approach to saving the Test did not last long enough to be successful. Neil Wagner, who is one-Test old, promised New Zealand would come out fighting on Thursday. He spoke of being ruthless and giving West Indies nothing. Without Vettori, that will be a little harder.Sunil Narine was Man of the Match in his first home Test, taking eight wickets in the match. He had to toil through 85 overs for them, though, and called his performance a “big achievement” because of the conditions he had to bowl in. Martin Guptill, who made 97 and 67, said the New Zealand batsman had begun to play Narine better now that they’d seen a bit of him. The threat posed by Narine could be significantly enhanced if the Sabina Park pitch is to his liking.

Pitch and conditions

It’s hot and humid in Kingston and the forecast is for a chance of thunderstorms over the next few days.
The pitch at Sabina Park is expected to have more pace and bounce than the one Antigua. “It’s a typical Jamaica wicket,” Darren Sammy said. “Plenty of runs in it and
hopefully something in it for the bowlers. The wicket here has some early moisture,
[but] most pitches in the Caribbean are good for batting. Sides come here, win toss
and bat first.”Ross Taylor said: “It’s a welcome change. We struggled to maintain pressure on the West Indies batsmen and I’m sure the bowlers are looking forward to having some bounce and putting pressure on the West Indies batsmen.”

Team news

West Indies brought Fidel Edwards into the squad because Ravi Rampaul sustained a groin strain. However, with Tino Best, who sat out in the first Test, already in the squad, Edwards might have to watch from the sidelines.West Indies: (probable) 1 Chris Gayle, 2 Kieran Powell, 3 Assad Fudadin, 4 Marlon Samuels, 5 Shivnarine Chanderpaul, 6 Narsingh Deonarine, 7 Denesh Ramdin (wk), 8 Darren Sammy (capt), 9 Sunil Narine, 10 Tino Best, 11 Kemar Roach.New Zealand have to fill Vettori’s spot and the only other specialist spinner in the squad is the legspinner Tarun Nethula, who could be in line for a Test debut. They must also find a new opening combination after Daniel Flynn was ruled out due to a groin injury. BJ Watling is the only back-up batsman in the squad and could slot straight in to open alongside Martin Guptill, or could slot in down the order to allow Brendon McCullum to open.”Daniel has been carrying the grade one injury [a right adductor muscle strain] since the last day of the first Test but had responded positively to treatment,” Paul Close, the New Zealand physio, said. “We felt there was a reasonable chance he would be fit to play but his progress over the past 24 hours plateaued. He was still experiencing pain during the team training session today with a subsequent fitness test ruling him out. We are confident he will be fully fit in time for the upcoming tour of India.”New Zealand: (probable) 1 Martin Guptill, 2 BJ Watling, 3 Brendon McCullum, 4 Ross Taylor (capt), 5 Kane Williamson, 6 Dean Brownlie, 7 Kruger van Wyk (wk), 8 Doug Bracewell, 9 Neil Wagner, 10 Tarun Nethula, 11 Chris Martin

Stats and trivia

  • Since 2004, Gayle averages 65.25 against the top eight teams in wins (excluding Zimbabwe and Bangladesh), and 31.10 in losses against them.
  • West Indies’ total of 522 in Antigua was their highest in a result game against one of the top sides since February 1995, when they scored 660 for 5 declared against New Zealand in Wellington.
  • New Zealand haven’t won any of their last 15 series against the top sides – they’ve lost 11 and drawn four (dating back to April 2006). During this period they’ve won four Tests and lost 22.

Quotes

“We’re pumped up. We did a great job in Antigua and we celebrated our achievements. It has been a while since West Indies won a Test Series at home, so this will be a chance to do it in front our fans.”
“We’re a young unit, very inexperienced in some ways. The boys learned a hell of a lot in the previous Test. It’s not an easy place to come and play … We will always come out fighting.”

Players better educated against corruption – Lorgat

Haroon Lorgat has questioned what evidence Steve Waugh has for his assertion that 56 players reported illegal approaches from bookmakers last year

ESPNcricinfo staff24-Jul-2011Haroon Lorgat, the ICC’s chief executive, has said that the increase in the number of players reporting illegal approaches by bookmakers was because cricketers were now better educated against the dangers of corruption.”What I can say is that we have substantially more players coming forward and reporting approaches made to them and I think that’s a result of the education process, the awareness that we’ve created among all of the international players,” Lorgat told Radio Five Live’s programme.”Who’s to say there were not as many [approaches by bookmakers] in years gone by that were not reported? The fact is players are far more conscious today. The vast majority certainly play the game in the right spirit and they have the integrity to play the game properly, and they are coming forward and reporting such approaches; so that’s a good thing.”Earlier this week Steve Waugh had revealed that substantially more cricketers were reporting illegal approaches compared to 2009, when only five players came forward. Waugh also suggested that players willingly submit to a polygraph test to prove their innocence, a proposal that was soundly criticised by FICA.”I don’t know if the ICC is doing enough. I’d like to have some conversations with them,” Waugh told . “They are doing some good work because last year 56 players reported an approach by a bookmaker and the year before it was only five, so that suggests the players have confidence in the system and confidence that it will work.”Lorgat, however, did not know how Waugh had come by the information that 56 players had reported approaches.”I’m not sure where Steve Waugh gets that figure from because we do not publish any such information,” Lorgat said. “In fact there’s one individual in the Anti-Corruption and Security Unit that maintains such records and he does not even know the figure himself, simply because he had not compiled it. So I’m not sure where Steve Waugh gets that figure from.”

Nottinghamshire want Sidebottom decision

Ryan Sidebottom has been given until August to decide whether he wants to remain a Nottinghamshire player.

Cricinfo staff19-Jul-2010Ryan Sidebottom has been given until August to decide whether he wants to remain a Nottinghamshire player. His contract with the club expires at the end of the season and they have received an official approach from at least one other county interested in signing him.Sidebottom is currently a centrally contracted player, but if he loses his 12-month ECB deal – which is a strong possibility as he has faded from the Test scene – then he will come with a hefty price tag. However, at 32 he should still have some good seasons of county cricket in him even if his England days are numbered.”It may be that his England career is coming to an end and this may be his last major contract as a player, so it’s important to him and we understand that,” Mick Newell, the Nottinghamshire coach, told the . “But we would like to have the issue resolved in early August because it can have a knock-on effect. We obviously need to know where we stand.”Sidebottom is part of a strong unit of pace bowlers at Trent Bridge which includes Darren Pattinson, Andre Adams, Luke Fletcher, Charlie Shreck and Andy Carter. Stuart Broad, who rarely appears for the county, is set to face Warwickshire in the County Championship this week along with Graeme Swann as they prepare for the Test series against Pakistan.Sidebottom is the latest big-name England cricketer to be considering a county switch at the end of the season. Kevin Pietersen has already said he will be leaving Hampshire, probably for either Middlesex or Surrey, while Eoin Morgan is being chased by Warwickshire.

Forget Kane, this is the essential Spurs star for England

England’s remarkable comeback victory over Germany in the most recent series of international friendlies has raised optimism ahead of EURO 2016, even if a defeat to Netherlands was slightly disappointing.

Of the side that showed such fighting character in Berlin, five of the starting line-up were members of the Tottenham Hotspur team that has impressed so much this season and continue to push for the Premier League title. It appears that much of Mauricio Pochettino’s good work at White Hart Lane will be of benefit to the Three Lions, with a handful of the Spurs youngsters set to play a role in France.

Hot-shot centre forward Harry Kane is the most impressive of the lot, while Dele Alli’s potential could make him a feature in the national side for years to come. However, of the North London youngsters making a name for themselves, there is an argument to suggest that Eric Dier should be the one to get most excited about.

The former Sporting Lisbon starlet has been reborn this season at Tottenham after being unleashed in the centre of midfield by Pochettino. A ploy that not many would have seen materialising, Dier has supplied the brawn and diligence in the Spurs midfield that has allowed others such as Alli to saunter forward and impress.

The reformed centre-back has not gained the plaudits that he deserves due to the exertions of others, but from a purely functional perspective his importance to club and country cannot be overstated. Every top team has a dominant player in front of its defence and for Spurs this season that man has been Dier. Pochettino has instilled positional discipline in the former Everton loanee, while the 22-year-old’s physical attributes have been a real boost to his club.

A commanding figure in both the tackle and the air, Dier has continuously broken up opposition attacks this season in the Premier League and been a pivotal part of a Spurs side that has conceded the fewest goals in the division.

Another really impressive feature of Dier’s play for the North London side has been his instruction to drop deep and pick the ball up from Hugo Lloris when Spurs are in possession. He has been calm and composed while on the ball and often the White Hart Lane outfit’s attacks originate through the holding midfielder.

Looking at it from an England perspective, Dier is the best proponent at Roy Hodgson’s disposal for the defensive shield to anchor the team’s midfield. Despite the presence of excellent and distinguished midfielders over recent years such as David Beckham, Frank Lampard and Steven Gerrard, the Three Lions have lacked a player of Dier’s ilk – one prudent in decision-making and meticulous in positioning.

Much of the promise of a young England side comes from attacking midfield areas, with the likes of Alli, Ross Barkley and others able to hurt the opposition. However, for these starlets to have a licence to play, a reassuring and defensively minded player such as Dier is needed to balance the team.

At this point in time the Tottenham star must start for England at EURO 2016 and his presence will surely make Hodgson’s side more aggressive, combative and tactically astute.

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Jude Bellingham impressing his idols! Zinedine Zidane ‘a big fan’ of Real Madrid sensation as legendary midfielder blown away by ‘incredible’ Englishman

Zinedine Zidane has revealed that he is "a big fan" of Real Madrid sensation Jude Bellingham, as he hailed the Englishman's "incredible" performances.

Article continues below

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  • Zidane revealed himself to be a fan of Bellingham
  • English midfielder shares Zidane's famous No.5 jersey
  • Has scored 20 goals already this season with Los Blancos
  • Getty/GOAL

    WHAT HAPPENED?

    When Bellingham moved to the Spanish capital in the summer, he decided to wear the No.5 jersey at Real Madrid, an iconic shirt previously worn by Zidane himself. While many scoffed at the daring of a 20-year-old, his performances on the pitch have silenced his critics and now the former midfield maestro himself has lavished praise on the youngster.

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  • WHAT ZIDANE SAID

    During a chat with , Zidane said: "He’s an unbelievable player who does incredible things. You could have imagined what he was going to do, but he’s surpassed all the statistics with what he’s doing.

    "Don’t forget that he’s only 20 years old. He arrived at Real Madrid with a lot of desire, a lot of goals and he is setting the bar very high. He’s just showing everyone what he is and it’s great to see him like that. I’m a big fan of his and now we want him to win trophies with Real Madrid. It’s everything he wanted for himself.”

  • Getty/GOAL

    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Bellingham has become the poster boy of Adidas and has featured in several commercials promoting the new line of Adidas predator boots, which was once worn by Zidane. He first wore those boots against Napoli in the Champions League and also scored the second goal for his team in a 4-2 win over the reigning Serie A champions.

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  • WHAT NEXT?

    Bellingham has 20 goals and eight assists to his name in his maiden campaign at the Santiago Bernabeu. He leads the goal-scoring charts in La Liga and has already surpassed Zidane's tally of most strikes in a season for the club with a brace against Barcelona earlier in October.

Nenê faz dois, Fluminense bate o Internacional e vence a primeira no Brasileirão

MatériaMais Notícias

O Fluminense, enfim, conquistou a primeira vitória no Campeonato Brasileiro. Neste domingo, em partida válida pela terceira rodada, o Tricolor venceu o Internacional por 2 a 1, de virada, no Maracanã. Nenê, artilheiro do Tricolor na temporada com 11 gols, marcou duas vezes, de pênalti. Paolo Guerrero descontou.

Com isso, o Flu chega aos quatro pontos na competição e vai para a oitava posição. Na próxima rodada, visita o RB Bragantino, na quarta-feira, às 19h15. Já o Inter perde a primeira no Brasileiro e fica com seis pontos no quinto lugar. Também na quarta, o time de Eduardo Coudet encara o Atlético-GO.

VEJA A TABELA DO CAMPEONATO BRASILEIRO

LIDERADOS POR GUERRERO

Em um primeiro tempo agitado no Maracanã, mesmo sendo visitante, foi o Internacional quem ficou com a bola no pé a maior parte do tempo. Paolo Guerrero foi quem liderou as ações ofensivas do Colorado, primeiro achando Edenílson e Thiago Galhardo dentro da área em condições de finalizar, com Igor Julião defendendo em cima da linha uma das oportunidades. Mas o centroavante foi quem decidiu ao aproveitar uma sobra dentro da área para abrir o placar após cobrança de escanteio.

MELHORA E EMPATE

Mesmo atrás, o Fluminense acabou melhorando após o gol sofrido e tentou criar mais. Aos 37 minutos, a dupla Marcos Paulo e Evanilson, responsável pelas melhores chegadas do Tricolor nas últimas partidas, voltou a funcionar. O primeiro achou um bom lançamento para o centroavante, que foi derrubado por Victor Cuesta na área. Nenê foi para a cobrança e marcou seu 10º gol na temporada, sendo o primeiro após a paralisação.

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FLUMINENSE MELHOR

Sedento pela primeira vitória na competição, o Fluminense foi para cima na segunda etapa. Dodi obrigou Lomba a fazer boa defesa em cobrança de falta e Michel Araújo ainda teve outra oportunidade aos 17, quando até marcou, mas viu o lance ser anulado pois a bola bateu em sua mão. A melhor chance do Inter foi com Edenílson, que tocou de cobertura, mas viu Luccas Claro salvar quase em cima da linha.

A VITÓRIA

Na pressão, o Flu conseguiu mais um pênalti para passar à frente no placar. Aos 28 minutos, após cobrança de falta para a área, Luccas Claro finalizou, mas Lomba espalmou para fora. No entanto, antes do chute a bola bateu no cotovelo de Zé Gabriel. Nenê foi novamente para a cobrança e marcou o segundo do Tricolor. O Inter foi para cima nos minutos finais para aproveitar o recuo dos donos da casa, mas não conseguiu ser eficiente.

FICHA TÉCNICA:
FLUMINENSE 2X1 INTERNACIONAL
Data/Hora:16/08/2020, às 18h
Local:Maracanã, Rio de Janeiro (RJ)
Árbitro:Raphael Claus (FIFA – SP)
Auxiliares:Danilo Ricardo Simon Manis (SP) e Fabrini Bevilaqua Costa (SP)
VAR:Jose Claudio Rocha Filho (SP)

Cartões amarelos: Dodi, Nino (FLU),Boschilia, Saravia, Edenilson (INT)
Gols: Guerrero (27’/1ºT) (0-1), Nenê (38’/1ºT) (1-1), Nenê (31’/2ºT)

FLUMINENSE: Muriel: Igor Julião, Nino, Luccas Claro e Egídio; Yuri, Dodi, Michel Araújo (Wellington Silva – 27’/2ºT); Nenê (Ganso – 37’/2ºT), Marcos Paulo (Luiz Henrique – 27’/2ºT) e Evanilson (Yago Felipe – 44’/2ºT).Técnico: Maurício Dulac.

INTERNACIONAL: Marcelo Lomba; Saravia, Zé Gabriel, Victor Cuesta, Moisés; Lindoso, Edenilson, Boschilia (Marcos Guilherme – 21’/2ºT), Patrick (Yuri Alberto – 38’/2ºT), Thiago Galhardo e Guerrero (William Pottker – 21’/2ºT). Técnico: Eduardo Coudet.

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