Crystal Palace targeting "gifted" £25m star who's been compared to Van Dijk

Already thinking about summer targets, Crystal Palace have now reportedly set their sights on signing a young defender who’s earned comparisons with Liverpool captain Virgil van Dijk for his abilities in the air.

Glasner urges Crystal Palace to embrace final

Whilst transfer rumours continue to come thick and fast off the pitch, Crystal Palace and Oliver Glasner have been preparing for one of the biggest games in their history this week. Wembley and the FA Cup final awaits the Eagles, as they go in pursuit of their first-ever FA Cup victory.

In front of them stand a Manchester City side looking to restore some pride to what has been their worst campaign under Pep Guardiola. Still battling for Champions League qualification with two Premier League games to go, the Citizens find themselves in unfamiliar territory and in with every chance of falling victim to a shock upset at Wembley.

The nerves will only be natural for all involved in South London, but Glasner has urged his players to embrace the occasion, telling reporters this week: “What is clear is that we should feel no burden. Pressure comes when you are trying to avoid relegation, when you are playing for your future, the future of the football club and the club’s employees.

“But playing in a Cup Final means that you can achieve something incredible. This is what we are all playing for, this is the childhood dream! When these players were kids, I’m sure they all watched the Cup Finals and dreamed of one day being involved in one. Now, everyone has the chance to fulfil that childhood dream.”

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It is also worth noting that FA Cup final victory would also see Crystal Palace qualify for the Europa League in a moment that would have an impact both on and off the pitch.

Crystal Palace targeting De Winter

One deal that Europa League qualification would help with is for a Serie A star. According to Football Transfers, Crystal Palace are now targeting a move to sign Koni de Winter from Genoa this summer. The central defender has only been at the Italian club for a year, but they’re already hoping to make profit by selling the former Juventus man for around €30m (£25m) in the coming months.

Dubbed a “gifted footballer” by U23 scout Antonio Mango during his Juventus days, De Winter has only pushed on at Genoa to earn comparisons with Virgil van Dijk by Football Transfers.

Those comparisons are certainly understandable, too. According to data relayed by their report, De Winter is well above average when it comes to his aerial performance in the Serie A, so it’s perhaps no surprise he’s scored three times with his head in his 22 league starts this term.

It’s the type of impact in both boxes that Crystal Palace should go all out to sign this summer, as Glasner looks to reinforce his backline.

He's more creative than Trent: Liverpool make £87m "superstar" a top target

At some point this week, Liverpool could be crowned champions of the Premier League, should Arsenal lose at home against Crystal Palace on Wednesday evening or Anfield claim three points against Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday.

Of course, neither juncture could turn the Reds toward the title, but there’s no doubt in anyone’s mind that the Redmen’s romp toward the finish line has turned into a procession.

Liverpool head coach Arne Slot

The Premier League is lauded by many as the toughest, most competitive and most prevalently entertaining division in the world, and while some would claim that the top flight has lulled this term, Liverpool have capitalised emphatically to defy pre-season predictions and move Arne Slot within touching distance of the crown in his first year.

It’s quite the feat, especially since he entered an outfit dealing with three contractual conundrums which have itched at Liverpool’s campaign all year long.

Virgil van Dijk and Mohamed Salah have penned extensions, but there’s been radio silence from Trent Alexander-Arnold.

However, noise from the media suggests that his move to Real Madrid on a free transfer is a matter of when, not if.

What Liverpool will miss when Alexander-Arnold leaves

Alexander-Arnold scored the winner against Leicester City at the weekend, and his celebration felt like a farewell of sorts, hanging his shirt on the corner flag.

While the most optimistic Liverpool supporters are holding onto hope that the 26-year-old will pen a new deal with his boyhood club, Fabrizio Romano and the rest have confirmed that Trent’s camp and Los Blancos are working toward an agreement on a summer move.

He will be missed. Not only is the emotional connection strong, but Alexander-Arnold is one of the most distinctive players in the game.

The unique advantage that the right-back offers, sparking attacking play with such frightening consistency from an unconventional ball-playing position, has helped Liverpool maintain their place as the Premier League’s most creative team for the past five seasons.

*24/25

Liverpool

97

23/24

Liverpool

102

22/23

Liverpool & Man City

103

21/22

Liverpool

97

20/21

Liverpool

82

Conor Bradley may well get the nod as Slot’s first choice at right-back next season, but Liverpool are going to need to replace Alexander-Arnold’s ball-playing genius somehow.

Liverpool lining up potential Trent replacement

Reports in recent weeks have suggested that Liverpool could make a move for two full-backs, namely Jeremie Frimpong of Bayer Leverkusen and Nottingham Forest’s Ola Aina.

Yet, could Slot replace Trent’s creativity from a different area of the pitch instead?

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

Well, according to Spanish sources, Liverpool are ready to compete with Manchester United for the signing of Xavi Simons this summer, with the RB Leipzig magician now said to be a ‘top target’ for the Reds.

A transfer fee might prove a sticking point, though, with the Germans looking to bank around €100m (£87m) for the 21-year-old this summer, just one year after buying him from Paris Saint-Germain for a €50m (£43m) fee.

However, if sporting director Richard Hughes can move discussions into a more agreeable zone, this could be a stunning capture for Liverpool.

What Xavi Simons would bring to Liverpool

Don’t worry, we’re not suggesting Simons could take Alexander-Arnold’s berth at full-back. However, the little Dutchman is one of the most exciting attacking midfielders in the business, and he’s still got plenty of development left to complete.

However, the Netherlands international does have a similar sort of ball-playing strength that could be utilised and unleashed to preserve Liverpool’s slick offensive play, maybe even unlocking a new dimension.

Matches (starts)

21 (21)

Goals

9

Assists

5

Pass completion

84%

Big chances created

10

Key passes*

2.2

Dribbles*

1.3

Ball recoveries*

5.1

Tackles + interceptions*

1.5

Duels won*

4.4

He’s a complete midfielder, capable of shifting into flanking positions too. Simons’ 2.2 key pass average this term actually stands taller than Alexander-Arnold’s 1.9 average, further evidence that he has what it takes to thrive at Anfield.

But to emphasise it more clearly, the Dutchman ranks among the top 13% of attacking midfielders and wingers across Europe’s top five leagues over the past year for passes attempted, the top 19% for shot-creating actions, the top 10% for progressive passes and the top 7% for ball recoveries per 90, as per FBref.

There’s a reason Simons is shaping up to be such a hot commodity with his talent for picking at the seams of opposition defences, something Liverpool could make good use of, especially if Alexander-Arnold leaves.

Simons’ playmaking superiority over the Liverpool man may in part be down to positional placement but it doesn’t detract from his being a high-level “game-changer” with his passing and flair, as has been said by talent scout Jacek Kulig.

It’s exactly the kind of quality that Liverpool will need. Trent has scored 23 goals and racked up 90 assists across his 350 career appearances as a Liverpool player, described as a “genius” by reporter Neil Jones.

Simons may still be young, but his 41 goal involvements across 72 Leipzig games, partnered with the underlying creative metrics that speak in his favour, do suggest that Slot could make good use of his countryman’s qualities, transferring Liverpool’s playmaking hub to a more central area.

Liverpool boss Arne Slot

It’s possible that Liverpool have accelerated their plans to sign Simons due to the growing sense that Alexander-Arnold is going to leave the club this summer. Maybe, tacitly, those in FSG’s head offices already know the outcome.

With plans already being drawn up for a new centre-forward, it might be worthwhile to sign such a player to sit in behind, jockeying with Dominik Szoboszlai for a regular starting berth and enhancing the overall fluency of the Anfield side.

Xavi Simons celebrates

In any case, it might be good for Slot to steer the creative heartbeat toward the middle of the park, with Simons, who has been described as a “superstar” in the making by analyst Ben Mattinson, capable of anchoring Liverpool’s inventiveness behind the frontline, reorienting toward a more conventional well of supplementation.

Truth is, though, it’s far simpler: the Dutchman is a brilliant young player, one who could do really well in Slot’s Liverpool team.

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Trent Alexander-Arnold isn’t the only Liverpool star potentially on the move this summer.

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Rock and Roll it podcast: Analysing India's Test team under coach Gambhir

Dustin Silgardo, Sidharth Monga and Karthik Krishnaswamy get together to discuss India’s Test series against West Indies, Gambhir’s time so far as the India head coach, and more

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Oct-2025Why was India’s decision to follow on in the Delhi Test puzzling? Did India underestimate West Indies’ batting? Why didn’t Nitish Kumar Reddy bowl in the Test? Dustin Silgardo, Sidharth Monga and Karthik Krishnaswamy get together on the Rock and Roll It podcast to discuss India’s Test series against West Indies, Gautam Gambhir’s time so far as the India head coach and whether he needs to manage his bowlers’ workload better.

Danni Wyatt on 150th T20I: 'I've not yet achieved what I wanted to in the sport'

The England opener looks back at her career so far – getting past burnout, making the cut in Tests, and turning from an allrounder into a pure batter

Tom Hamilton06-Dec-2023The night before a match, regardless of which country she’s in, Danni Wyatt opens her notebook to a blank page and writes down some keywords to remember the following day.Whether it’s a World Cup final or a domestic match, it’s the same process. And it was the same on Tuesday evening as Wyatt, 32, prepared for her 150th T20I for England. She wrote down “enjoy”, “relax” and a few other more aggressive reminders.Often by the time she gets to the crease, she has forgotten what she wrote. “Once I’m out in the middle I’ll just be like, let’s go, bring it on,” Wyatt says. “I try not to think too much, I just try and be in the moment and just watch the ball.” She stands tall with her chest out, head up, and aims to hit the first or second ball over the boundary.That’s the mentality that she’s fine-tuned across 13 years of representing England, leading her to this milestone 150th cap. “When I’ve played my best knocks, I’ve just thought, ‘Come on, bring it on.’ If you walk out there all shy and think you’re going to get out and have a fear of failure, you’ve got no chance.”It didn’t used to be like that, especially in the first seven years of her career, when she was cast as an allrounder with a batter’s mindset.In time, she has learnt to manage her self-doubts, but regardless of whether she’s Wyatt the experienced international, or back as her ten-year-old self, playing in the boy’s team alongside her older brother Ryan, there’s one theme bridging eras and fuelling her. “I’ve always felt like, especially in ODIs, I’ve always had to prove people wrong. And I’ve always played as if it’s my last game. I guess even when I play my 150th match, I’ll still feel like I’ve not done enough yet.”

****

It’s late afternoon in Mumbai when we talk on Zoom. The England players who played in the WBBL joined the team in India earlier in the day. Wyatt woke up feeling a bit “blah” but after a slightly shambolic coffee order and a team lunch, her spirits quickly returned to normal. It’s a familiar feeling building up to an England match; the butterflies she gets on game day are the same that fluttered as she stood at the makeshift crease on the street outside her family house waiting for her brothers to bowl at her.Related

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Cricket wasn’t always a predestined path. Wyatt was a talented footballer and part of Stoke City’s centre of excellence, but the bat and ball won her over. She remembers the first time she played alongside Ryan at the local cricket club in Whitmore. “It’s quite scary, isn’t it, for a girl? But because he was there and I knew his friends who played in the team, I just felt so comfortable. Playing against the other teams, you could hear them saying, ‘Oh they’ve got a girl, they’re going to be rubbish’, actually spurred me on to being better.”Wyatt progressed to Staffordshire Ladies and Meir Heath Women, and in 2010, the England call came for the tour of India. She made her international debut in an ODI in Mumbai, where she will walk out for her 150th T20I, although on a different ground.”I batted No. 8 and got picked for my bowling. I bowled four overs and I was so nervous I could hardly let go of the ball. It was horrible. I think I went for 24 off four overs, which isn’t great, but I batted and got 28 not out.” Three days later she made her T20I debut on the same ground. “I got run-out for 0 and everyone was saying I went from Donald Bradman to Donald Duck in the space of basically 24 hours.”Wyatt views her career as clearly split into two phases. From 2010 to late 2017, there’s Wyatt the allrounder who did okay with bat and ball but felt unfulfilled. “In my head, I always felt more of a batter who could bowl a little bit. And then I had people throw me in to be a pinch-hitter.”I was a better player than that. I used to go out there and swing instead of batting properly and doing what I knew I was capable of. Maybe I didn’t take it as seriously as I should have; I could have scored way more runs than I did.”Back then her mood was governed by her form and most recent performance – the number of wickets she took, or the runs she mustered. She was fully immersed in the cricket bubble. The pressure grew, and it came to a head after the 2013-14 Ashes down under, where she struggled for form, taking two wickets across three T20Is and two ODIs.

“When I’ve played my best knocks, I’ve just thought, ‘Come on, bring it on’. If you have a fear of failure, you’ve got no chance”

“I just wanted to be away from cricket. I got to a point I didn’t even want to be picked for a while. I had this feeling I was going to fail. I think it was just burnout.” She was only 22, but tour after tour had taken its mental toll.”I was dropped for the T20 World Cup in Bangladesh and I was actually relieved. I had a holiday, had several weeks out, and I got the hunger back. I was recharged, I did well at domestic level and got back into the squad. I’ve not missed many since, apart from the ODIs a couple of years ago, which I was really disappointed about.”In late 2017, there were a couple of months in which her cricketing life and perspective shifted. It’s a state of mind she still inhabits six years on.It was another Ashes series in Australia. A week before she flew out to join the team, her grandad died. She wasn’t picked for the Test side or the three ODIs, but then came the T20Is. “I knew it was my time. I was just like, right, come on, my grandad just died. There’s way more to life. We are all going to die one day. What’s the point in worrying and stressing? I was stressing about whether I was even going to play for England again. I was annoyed that I didn’t get picked in the ODIs. I also knew I could play Test cricket, but I’d always had these people saying, ‘You’ve not got it in you to play Test cricket’.”That annoyed me, so I thought, I’m just going to forget what everyone says. I’m going to do me and be a bit selfish.”I think I was batting at six in the first T20I. It was at the North Sydney Oval and I hit my first T20I fifty. And then I got picked to open the batting two days later in Canberra.”Wyatt remembers the huge influence England’s head coach Mark Robinson had on her career. “Robbo changed my career. And Ali Maiden, who was the batting coach, played a huge part. They put their trust in me and said, ‘You can do it’.Wyatt celebrates winning the 2023 Women’s Hundred title with her Southern Brave team-mates•Julian Finney/Getty Images”I remember Robbo saying to me the night before that match in Canberra, ‘Just promise me, you won’t be scared. If Ellyse Perry bowls you a bouncer, get behind it.'” At this point, as we talk, Wyatt mimics a pull shot. “I remembered that when I batted the next day. I think I got about 26 [she made 19 off 16] and I just felt really good.”Two days later, with the series poised at 1-1, Wyatt opened once again, and this time everything clicked. She hit 100 off 57 balls, becoming the first female England player to hit a T20I century.She remembers the emotions that bubbled over when she was on 99. “I felt myself starting to cry. I suddenly thought of my grandad, who’d be up there looking down on me, of all the times my dad drove me around the country when I was younger, Mum buying me my first set of whites. I was thinking about all the tough times in cricket to get to this place I was, about to hit a T20 hundred to win us the game and draw the Ashes.” The century came off a single from a square cut.The tears mixed with sheer exhilaration and adrenaline. She put her hands in the air and hugged her batting partner, Katherine Brunt. “It was just such a relief to finally show the world and my team-mates what I could do. At this point there was loads of talk about me having all the talent but getting out in the 20s and 30s, being a pinch-hitter, etc. But this felt like such a massive relief. I knew I could do it.”Four months later, she hit her second T20I century, 124 off 64 in Mumbai against India.Since that 2014 hiatus and the 2017 breakthrough, Wyatt has taught herself to be more philosophical with form. “The number of times I’ve been in a rough patch, you start having those thoughts in your head saying you are rubbish, you can’t play cricket anymore, you doubt yourself. Even though I’ve just hit a hundred in the series before, [if] then you fail, you start thinking, ‘Am I good enough?’ So it’s all about being mentally strong.

“I’ve been told for years that I’d never be a Test player,” Wyatt says. “They said, ‘You’ve got a different technique, you’ve not got the temperament to last that long, you are a slogger, you’re a T20 player…’ But in my head, I thought I can definitely do this”

“I remember listening to an interview from Joe Root and he said as a cricketer, as soon as you think you’ve made it, that’s when you’ll drop off.”You’ve never actually made it because it’s such a fickle sport. You can get 100 one day and then the next game get out on 0. You can train really well, feel in great touch, and then you can whack it to a fielder and be out for a low score. So that’s why it keeps you humble and keeps you improving.”Part of that is experience and age, but also the influence of her friends, family and fiancée Georgie Hodge, who is a football agent.”I think she knows far more about cricket than she lets on, but it helps,” Wyatt says about having a partner who isn’t connected with the game.There are always distractions, like the two planning their wedding next year. “It’s a very exciting time and something to look forward to. Obviously cricket is my job and it means a lot to me, but as long as my family and friends are happy and healthy, that’s the main thing, isn’t it?”It is a horrible time when you are going through a rough patch, it can be pretty lonely, but it’s all about having a good support network around you.”Right now on tour, Wyatt is focusing on her pre-match routines, like that process of writing down keywords the night before. “It’s just things to keep fresh in my mind, whether it’s ‘brave’, ‘show intent’, ‘hit with full face of the bat’.On the morning of the game, if she’s feeling the nerves, she’ll lie down in her hotel room and do some breathing exercises. On the bus to the ground she’ll listen to music, seek a laugh or two to alleviate any nerves, but the minute she’s at the ground, it’s game face.Wyatt was England’s first T20I century-maker in the women’s game•Getty Images”I won’t think about the words, but they help me prepare. It’s literally just thinking about the pitch, what it might do, what their [the opposition’s] goal is going to be, and then once I’m out there in the middle, I think you’ve just got to trust your processes and hope for good luck and just try and relax.”I do think nerves are really good. I get nervous playing in the street with my brother. It just means that we care. I do think nerves turn into energy. A lot of people say I’m a completely different person on and off the pitch. I don’t speak when I’m batting. I just like to stay in the zone and have a confident ‘arrogance’ about me.”Especially for me, [while] opening the batting, it’s my job to put the pressure on the bowlers straight away and entertain the crowd and people watching at home. And that comes with taking a lot of risks. Sitting back in the crease and trying to hit a six second ball is a big risk, but the best players all do that and sometimes it comes off, sometimes it doesn’t.”Wyatt is kicking off the winter tour after a really good season at home. In August she was the Player of the Final, leading Southern Brave to their first Hundred title, having lost the 2021 and 2022 finals. That was a career highlight, but an even bigger one had come two months earlier when she made her Test debut, against Australia at Trent Bridge, having been overlooked for so long.”I’ve been told for years that I’d never be a Test player,” Wyatt says. “They said, ‘You’ve got a different technique, you’ve not got the temperament to last that long, you are a slogger, you’re a T20 player…’ But in my head, I thought I can definitely do this.”

She pauses when asked how she’d like her career to be remembered. “Hopefully Danni Wyatt, the girl that is always there for the team, hits the ball from ball one, a good fielder and good person”

She references the way the England men have adopted “Bazball” as having “helped a little bit”, but also the philosophy of current head coach Jon Lewis, who “wants us to take the game forward”.”He wants us to put pressure on the bowlers as soon as we go out to bat. He talks about wanting to inspire the next generation. I remember as soon as [Lewis] got the job, I told him I wanted to play Test cricket and that it was my aim to play in the Ashes. At that point I wasn’t even in his sights, but every opportunity I had to impress, I made sure I took it. I finally got the nod the night before the Test.”She batted at No. 6, scoring 44 and 54. “It was kind of like an stuff-you to a lot of people. I was just so proud to be out there playing Test cricket, let alone in an Ashes. The result didn’t go our way, but we played so well throughout the five days. I just wanted to do well for myself, my family and for Lewy.”After a summer in which she featured in the Ashes, the Hundred and the Charlotte Edwards Cup, where she scored a match-winning fifty in the final, Wyatt started to feel hints of fatigue, so she pulled out of the WBBL where she was due to play for Perth Scorchers. She still looks pained as she talks about the guilt of letting people down, but she knew she was getting close to exhaustion.Away from cricket there was the exhilaration of getting engaged in March this year, but a month previous, she’d had to navigate the heartbreak of not being picked up in the groundbreaking Women’s Premier League auction – an event that promised not only the biggest payday in the history of women’s cricket but a global spotlight for the best players in the game.”I really got my hopes up. I was thinking, surely I’ll get at least a bid.” She had put herself in as an allrounder for the auction at a competitive Rs 50 lakh price tag (US$60,400 approx), ticking the batter and offspin boxes. The auction coincided with England’s T20 World Cup match against Ireland in Paarl.She remembers being on the team bus on the way to the ground, checking her phone to keep track of the auction.

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“It was hideous, actually. I didn’t even know what to do and I somehow had to get up for a game. I was so angry and upset but probably more embarrassed than anything. I wondered what everyone’s going to think. Then my confidence dropped as I straightaway thought, ‘Obviously I’m not good enough.'”England beat Ireland, Wyatt scoring 16. “I got back to my little apartment and wanted to be alone. I ordered a Thai takeaway. Luckily Maia Boucher texted and came to join me. She hadn’t been picked either. We just chatted about life and tried to not think about it, but I was pretty disappointed. The following day we were flying to the next venue and Katherine Sciver-Brunt hadn’t got picked either. She’s one of my best mates, so we hung out and we were chatting about stuff and expressing our anger.”The team made a collective vow not to talk about it – seven England players in total had been drafted, most notably Nat Sciver-Brunt [Katherine’s wife], who was picked up for a life-changing Rs 3.2 crore ($385,000), the others overlooked. In time, the disappointment subsided.Looking back now, Wyatt feels she made an error putting herself in as an allrounder. As the WPL played out, she went to play three matches in the Women’s League Exhibition in Pakistan. “I really enjoyed Pakistan, I stayed as strong as I could, talked to my family, talked to Georgie, my coaches, and tried to stay positive. Unfortunately you’ve just got to deal with it and sometimes laugh about it, or you’ll cry.”Just under ten months on, when the auction comes round again on December 9, she’ll be playing – if picked – for England against India in the second T20I in Mumbai. “What will be will be. I had a good summer and I’ve done everything I can.”This time around though, there’s no ambiguity. She’s put herself in at Rs 30 lakh ($36,000 approx), the lowest option. “I’ve also just ticked the batting box this time.”

****

When she walks out at the Wankhede Stadium on Wednesday, Wyatt will be only the third player in the women’s game to reach the milestone of 150 games, following India’s Harmanpreet Kaur and New Zealand’s Suzie Bates, and the first from England – Nat Sciver-Brunt is on 111 and Jos Buttler on 109. Wyatt hasn’t played in seven weeks, but she’s excited about getting back there in the city where it all started.

“I do think nerves are really good. It just means that we care. I don’t speak when I’m batting. I just like to stay in the zone and have a confident ‘arrogance’ about me”

“I guess with the 150th, I won’t pay too much attention to that, or want any fuss. It’ll be at the back of my mind but I still feel like I’ve not achieved what I wanted to in the sport.”Wyatt hasn’t allowed any nostalgia to seep into her preparations. Whenever she watches highlights back or catches memories of yesteryear, she still feels like the same youngster who gravitated to the game out of love, rather than any knowledge of potential commercial or monetary gain. “I still can’t believe I’m getting paid to be playing cricket. It’s a shame I’m 32 because, yeah, I feel like I could carry on playing and playing, especially the way the game’s going.”She pauses when asked how she’d like her career to be remembered. “Hopefully Danni Wyatt, the girl that is always there for the team, hits the ball from ball one, a good fielder and good person”. She then waits, before adding: “Oh, and she used to bowl a bit back in the day.”But thoughts of retirement are not yet remotely near the front of her mind. There’s unfinished business, a career yet personally unfulfilled. “I’ve not won a T20 World Cup yet, and that’s something I really want to do. We’ve got the World Cup in Bangladesh in October, so hopefully that’s the one.”I’ve performed loads in the past, but I feel like I’ve got a lot more to give. If I retired tomorrow, I’d think I’ve had an okay career, but I wouldn’t say it’s been amazing. Some people might think differently, but for me, I just think I can be better.”You can practise all you want, but as soon as you get into a match, it’s different gravy. It’s all about handling the pressure and I love that.”

Warnie was a generous, honest champion

Despite being one of the best ever at what he did, he didn’t see himself as a superstar

Ian Chappell05-Mar-202214:06

Chappell: ‘People put down their beer every time Warne came on to bowl’

It’s downright ridiculous. You don’t even get time to process Rod Marsh’s demise, let alone grieve his passing, before you find out Shane Warne has had a heart attack and died.I awoke in Sydney this morning to a string of phone messages that I presumed were condolences for the passing of my mate Rodney. When I looked a little closer, I found they were about Shane. I was already struggling and that put me in a state of shock.Warne was not only a champion legspinner, I also found him to be an exceedingly generous person and a honest bloke.Related

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Shane Warne: the showman who could do hard graft

Everyone wanted to be 'The King', Shane Warne

He gave generously of his time to kids and went beyond the recommended in talking to them as he autographed their offered items. I’ve seen Warne first-hand not only sign for a plethora of autograph hunters lined up but also chat to the bulk of them. And he didn’t just make idle talk, he actually chatted to them about stuff they were interested in.As captain of an Australia side that won in the Caribbean, I was asked to put together a group of my guys from 1973 to match a team from Mark Taylor’s 1995 side, which also won in the West Indies. I was a director of the Com-Tech company at the time and this was one of my most pleasant tasks in that role. There was no problem getting either side together and David Shein, the CEO of Com-Tech, endowed both teams with expense money for the trip.When it came to Warne, he refused the cheque on the basis that he didn’t need the money. When Shein pressed him to accept, he simply said, “Any mate of Ian Chappell is a mate of mine”, and didn’t take the money.I once saw him walk into a room full of businesspeople who all knew his name. He wandered over to the first bloke, held out his hand and said, “Hi, I’m Shane.”Man of the people: Warne was invariably patient and generous with autograph seekers of all ages•Torsten Blackwood/AFP/Getty Images”Mate,” I chuckled afterwards, “they know who you are. You don’t have to introduce yourself.”That was Shane. He didn’t see himself as a superstar. “Aw mate,” he’d say, “I’m just an average guy who likes a fag, a beer and a pie.”Warne didn’t have a radar set. This probably got him into strife at times; he was always surprised when he was photographed out on the town, having what he thought was a night out like any other normal bloke.As part of his contract with Channel 9, the two of us stayed in the same house for the 1996 Masters golf tournament in Augusta, Georgia. He came with a group of us to an Indian restaurant near the course and, despite his protests, I ordered for him. The only meal he’d agree to was plain chips. When they came, he ate one and accused me of having asked for chilli to be put on the chips and said he was going out to get a pizza. When he came back 20 minutes later, I accused him of stopping for a cigarette and he eventually admitted he’d had one while he was out.My wife, Barbara-Ann, who has studied nutrition, once told Warnie he’d have to adjust his abominable diet. He was put out by the suggestion but unfortunately it would seem Barbara-Ann was proved right.Warne was an aggressive cricketer who impressed with his excellent thinking on the game. He produced the ball of the 20th century to dismiss England’s Mike Gatting, and a myriad other excellent deliveries that netted him more than 700 Test wickets.The author and Warne on commentary duty for Channel 9 at the SCG in 2017•Cricket Australia/Getty ImagesFormer Test fast bowler Rod Hogg, writing in the now defunct , declared before Warne had represented Australia that he would take 500 Test wickets. “You’re an idiot,” the editor barked and sacked Hogg. “No one will take 500 Test wickets,” the editor said.I suppose if you’re being pedantic, Warne didn’t claim 500 Test wickets.He relied a lot on the help of former Australia legspinner Terry Jenner. Jenner was good at communicating and saw Warne through some tough times. When Warne collected only one expensive wicket on debut, TJ wanted to know what I thought of his bowling. “Don’t be fooled by those ugly stats,” I said to him. “He bowled a lot of good balls. He’ll be okay.”Never did I imagine just how good he’d be.Like Dennis Lillee before him, Warne had the fans on the edge of their seats because they felt every time he had the ball, something would happen. Marsh loved Lillee and most others who played aggressive cricket. That’s why this week has been so hard. It’s bad enough to lose Rod Marsh but to also have Shane Warne pass away is too much.Please, can I just grieve in peace for a while.

Braves Name Bench Coach Walt Weiss As New Manager

Walt Weiss was named the manager of the Braves, the team announced Monday. Atlanta parted ways with Brian Snitker after a disappointing season in 2025, and it opted to promote from within when homing in on his replacement.

Weiss has been the Braves’ bench coach since 2018. He had a 14-year playing career that spanned from 1987 to 2000, and spent his final three seasons in Atlanta. A shortstop, Weiss was a starter at the All-Star Game in 1998 and had 1,207 hits in his career. He won the World Series in 1989 as a member of the Athletics, and also won it with the Braves as the bench coach in 2021.

He’s previously served as the manager of the Rockies, where he was at the helm from 2013 to ‘16. He had a winning percentage of .437 in Colorado, failing to make the postseason in any of his four seasons with the team.

Weiss is the 49th manager in Braves’ franchise history, and he’ll inherit a talented roster that he’s plenty familiar with. The team has made the postseason in seven of the last eight years, and is just four years removed from a World Series title.

MLB Rookie Watch: A Brewer Takes Over First Place in the National League Race

How do you solve a problem like Brewers pitcher Jacob Misiorowski?

On July 11, Major League Baseball promoted Misiorowski—a flamethrowing rookie with five starts to his name—from mere curiosity to unwitting sports celebrity. The commissioner’s office named the 23-year-old to the National League All-Star team, making him the least experienced All-Star in history and setting off a firestorm of controversy.

It's true that Misiorowski has the makings of a phenomenon, and his Brewers are on an 11-game winning streak. However, he still falls just short of the experience needed to credibly contend for Rookie of the Year at this time. He should get there soon—this column's cutoff is 31 innings (a 50-inning pace over 162 games). Misiorowski has pitched 25 2/3 innings and is in line to start against the Seattle Mariners on Tuesday.

In the meantime, a different Milwaukee youngster has seized the top spot in the NL pecking order since last month's check-in. Welcome to this edition of MLB Rookie Watch.

American League

1. Jacob Wilson, shortstop, Athletics

He's still the boss after introducing himself on the national stage with a start in the All-Star Game. All three of his slash line numbers have nosedived since late June—and yet he still, with a .197/.246/.279 this month, remains second in the American League in batting average and 10th in offensive bWAR. He was hit on the wrist with a pitch against the Atlanta Braves on July 8, but it turned out, in his own words, to be "nothing serious." His biggest competition for Rookie of the Year may turn out to be…

2. Nick Kurtz, first baseman, Athletics

Wilson’s infield-mate, the white-hot Kurtz has raked to the tune of .329/.427/.776 since June 24 while Wilson has been hanging out around the Mendoza Line. It's his power stroke, however, that has put the AL on notice. His 18 home runs so far would put him on pace for 47 over 162 games, a threshold crossed only by Khris Davis (2018) among Athletics this century.

3. Noah Cameron, pitcher, Kansas City Royals

He may not be perennially unlucky Pirates hurler Paul Skenes, but he's not far off. Cameron is 4–4 with a 2.61 ERA, having received no-decisions in starts where he did not allow a run twice since the calendar turned to July. When he's on, he's on—ask the Pirates, who were overwhelmed by Cameron on July 7 to the tune of seven stellar innings. For that, he holds down his spot while (still-steady) Red Sox catcher Carlos Narváez falls out.

Honorable Mention

Narváez; Roman Anthony, right fielder and designated hitter, Red Sox

National League

1. Caleb Durbin, third baseman, Milwaukee Brewers

Along with Misiorowski, Durbin is a face of the unsinkable Brewers' in-season revival—a renaissance that has them in a dead heat with the Cubs in the NL Central race. In June, this column praised Durbin's unorthodox catalog of statistical accomplishments, like leading the NL in hit by pitches (he's still doing that) and leading NL rookies in win probability added (ditto). Now, thanks to a .373/.456/.542 tear, he's finding much more conventional success. It's getting to the point where Yankees fans are grousing about giving him up for two-time All-Star pitcher Devin Williams during the offseason.

2. Drake Baldwin, catcher, Atlanta Braves

Durbin has passed Baldwin in bWAR and in these rankings, though it should be noted that the Milwaukee fixture has done so in 61 more plate appearances. That's because the Braves remain stubbornly devoted to past All-Star Sean Murphy, who has rewarded his team's faith by slugging .774 since June 24. On Wednesday, David O'Brien of reported that Atlanta has "no intention of trading Murphy this month, despite much speculation to the contrary." This is probably good for a Braves team in observation mode, but bad for Baldwin's Rookie of the Year chances.

3. Yohel Pozo, catcher, St. Louis Cardinals

Making his first appearance in these rankings is Pozo as Dodgers second baseman Hyeseong Kim (still a contender) returns to earth. Pozo is not clearing this column's hitting threshold (95 at-bats; he has 96) by much, but this is a fractured race and that .302/.327/.490 slash line is hard to ignore. He actually made his MLB debut in 2021, after a period of homelessness reported upon by Levi Weaver of at the time. Look for his profile to increase if the Cardinals remain in contention.

Honorable Mention

Agustin Ramirez, catcher and designated hitter, Miami Marlins; Hyeseong Kim, second baseman and center fielder, Los Angeles Dodgers

Premier League star Ola Aina told to own up after admitting he is in ‘talking stage’ with another footballer's girlfriend

Premier League star Ola Aina has been told to “own up” after revealing that he is at the “talking stage” with a fellow football player’s girlfriend. The Nottingham Forest defender claims that the woman in question likes him more than her current clinch, but their budding relationship remains secret for now. Aina is being urged to address the issue with his love rival.

Forest star Aina makes shock revelation

Nigeria international Aina made his shocking revelation when appearing on show. The versatile 29-year-old said he was there to seek advice from the children and adults on the panel for what has become an obvious “dilemma”.

The former Chelsea and Fulham player, who has been at the City Ground since 2023, was happy to state in public that he has become close with the partner of a fellow performer. He now finds himself in a difficult position.

Aina said: “My dilemma is I'm in a talking stage with another baller's girl.” Asked if he is able to reveal the identity of the other player, the Forest full-back added: “Can't disclose that one.” He went on to confirm that he is at the “talking” stage, rather than the “walking” one, with the surprising scenario only playing out over a matter of weeks.

AdvertisementGettyLove triangle: Aina offered advice on what to do

Quizzed on whether interest has been reciprocated, Aina said that he “knows she likes me back”. He went on to say that he can “easily” take his fellow player one-on-one, but saw it put to him that the girl in question may be “a bit of a clout chaser” as she pits “two footballers” against one another.

Aina maintains that: “I believe she likes me more.” He has, however, been advised to clear the air with everybody involved. The ‘Aunties’ told him to “own up to the guy” and “be honest” about what has happened.

One of the children on the panel added: “Me personally, I think she's only there for your money. You're a professional footballer, you're earning bread, plenty more girls will come. She's on a permanent sin bin off the pitch, red card.”

The two sides proceeded to battle it out in a bid to convince Aina of their argument. He eventually sided with the Aunties, much to their delight. That would suggest that he is ready to speak with the fellow professional that he has become locked in a love triangle with.

Untimely injury: Aina underwent hamstring surgery

Aina does, however, have plenty of his plate at the moment. Away from his private life, every effort is being made to recover from an untimely injury that has kept him out of action since September. His last appearance for Forest came on August 31.

An unfortunate knock was then picked up during the first international break of the 2025-26 campaign, as he headed off with Nigeria. A hamstring problem has been difficult to shake, with surgery required a matter of days after being forced onto the treatment table.

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GettyAfrica Cup of Nations: Will Aina figure for Nigeria?

Aina did not figure for Forest at all during Ange Postecoglou’s ill-fated 39-day spell in charge of the Reds. He has been unable to show current coach Sean Dyche what he is capable of, with it revealed that he is unlikely to grace a Premier League fixture again until 2026.

Dyche has said when delivering a fitness update on his walking wounded: “The ones left not with us yet are Taiwo [Awoniyi], Woody [Chris Wood] and Douglas [Luiz] – although they are getting closer. Ola is getting closer to fitness but obviously can’t be with us until January.”

That is because, alongside his rehabilitation, Aina is in contention to represent Nigeria at the upcoming Africa Cup of Nations. Selection there would come as a surprise, given how much football he has missed over recent months.

The Super Eagles may take a calculated gamble on the 48-cap star, allowing him to rebuild form and fitness before returning to Trentside. The 35th edition of AFCON is set to get underway on December 21 and run through to January 18. Nigeria have been placed in Group C alongside Tunisia, Uganda and Tanzania.

'He told me you'll play' – Sai Sudharsan on Gambhir's 'impeccable' support

Sudharsan spoke about Gambhir’s influence on him, his approach to Test cricket and wanting to be versatile like KL Rahul

Shashank Kishore29-Oct-2025

B Sai Sudharsan has been named India A vice-captain for the two four-dayers against South Africa A•PTI

B Sai Sudharsan has hailed India head coach Gautam Gambhir for backing him unconditionally through a challenging initiation into Test cricket.Sai Sudharsan scored 140 runs at an average of 23.33 in his debut Test series on the tour of England, and was out for 7 in his only innings in the first Test against West Indies in Ahmedabad earlier this month. He felt under some pressure coming into the second Test in Delhi until a chat with Gambhir put him at ease.”The support has been impeccable,” Sai Sudharsan said in Bengaluru where he will be India A’s vice-captain in the first unofficial Test against South Africa A, which begins on Thursday. “After the first game in Ahmedabad, we were practicing at the Feroz Shah Kotla nets. As always, I was the last to come out of the nets.Related

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“GG [Gambhir] sir called me and said, ‘You are not getting desperate. You are one of the best players in the country. So do not think about any of the other things. Don’t think that you have to score runs in this game or what will happen if you don’t.'”He told me, ‘You will play.’ The way he said that gave me so much confidence and freedom. I was trying to be more free and not think about external factors or the magnitude of things. But when you hear it from the head coach himself, the perspective and environment change drastically.”That helped me express myself better as well. Even in that game [2nd Test], I wasn’t in a mindset just to get runs, I was in a mindset to fight and win for the team, to dominate for the team.”Sai Sudharsan hit a composed 87 in his last Test outing•AFP/Getty Images

Sai Sudharsan made 87 and 39 in Delhi as India won by seven wickets to clinch the series 2-0. While those knocks have given him confidence, he doesn’t want to put himself under the pressure of having to live up to some of India’s past No. 3s.”I take it game by game, inning by inning, look at the situation, and react as best as I can,” he said. “Playing for India, there’s so much competition. So many great cricketers who have done well, are doing well, and will continue to do well. I’m not looking at a spot to cement or thinking about securing a place. I’m playing for a reason and that is to win games and fight for my team. That’s my mindset when I walk in.”When I think about sealing a spot or playing for safety, I tend to go defensive and play for myself, which I definitely don’t want to do. I look at it from a different perspective – to win one session at a time and make a difference there. Runs will be a byproduct of that process.”That said, Sai Sudharsan acknowledges the challenges that will come with batting at No. 3, having come through domestic cricket primarily as an opener for Tamil Nadu.”It’s a great responsibility, and I’m grateful for the opportunity,” he said. “No. 3 is also like an opening spot. There’s not a big difference, to be honest. But playing for India, wherever we get an opportunity, we have to be on point, not just fill a place but be really ready for whichever spot we play.”We have great examples. Like KL [Rahul] , who has played in almost all positions and is so versatile. We can learn from him. We have to be ready for all those challenges. I wouldn’t say I prefer one or the other. I’ve played quite a lot at No. 3, even in the IPL, and when I was younger in the Under-14s and Under-16s also I’ve batted at No. 3. So I enjoy both. It’s not a big difference”

Lancashire book One-Day Cup final berth despite Kathryn Bryce century

Lancashire 241 for 6 (Lister 96, Threlkeld 92) beat The Blaze (K Bryce 124, Elwiss 55) by five runs Lancashire Women maintained their hold over The Blaze in this season’s Metro Bank One-Day Cup to book a place in the final despite Kathryn Bryce’s magnificent 124 in a tense semi-final at Trent Bridge.Ellie Threlkeld’s side await the winners of Wednesday’s second semi-final between Hampshire and Surrey at the Utilita Bowl in Southampton. The final is on the same ground on Sunday.Lancashire Women beat The Blaze home and away in the league phase and pulled off a five-run victory in this match despite being without the competition’s top runscorer, Emma Lamb, who is with England ahead of the Women’s World Cup, and another of their key batters in Eve Jones, who is injured.With the bat they recovered from 52 for four to post 241 for six after Scotland international Ailsa Lister hit a career-best 96 from 91 balls and captain Threlkeld a season’s best 92 from 128.Seamers Grace Potts, who limped through most of her spell after suffering an injury in her first over, took three for 32 and Kate Cross ( three for 47) then led an excellent bowling display, restricting the home side to 236 for nine.Bryce and Georgia Elwiss (55) combined to add 150 for the fourth wicket in The Blaze’s reply but a superbly disciplined Lancashire attack ensured that The Blaze were never on top of the required scoring rate and that pressure paid off for them as the home side, 179 for three with 10 overs remaining, ultimately fell short.Lister and Threlkeld shared a 166-run partnership for the fifth Lancashire wicket, 21-year-old Lister underlining her potential by hitting 11 boundaries before she was stumped in search of the one more needed for a maiden hundred, the home side rueing a dropped catch when she was on 66.Seamers Cassidy McCarthy (two for 27) and Orla Prendergast, who conceded only 26 runs in 10 overs, impressed among The Blaze bowlers.Asked to bat first on the pitch that would have been used for England’s washed-out T20 international against South Africa last Sunday, Lancashire Women found themselves in trouble at 33 for three after 10 overs.McCarthy uprooted Gaby Lewis’s middle stump and had Seren Smale caught at short backward square, the left-armer Grace Ballinger finding the edge to have Fi MorrisAlice Clarke – tasked with filling the shoes of Lamb at the top of the order – fell to a good catch on the legside boundary as she pulled Prendergast and with their opponents 52 for four in the 18th, The Blaze were well on top.But Threlkeld brought her experience to bear in guiding her younger partner through a testing period before the pair kicked on from the 35-over mark, upping the scoring rate to seven per over for the next 12 before Lister, spared by the normally safe hands of Kathryn Bryce at deep midwicket on 66, went down the pitch to Kirstie Gordon’s left-arm spin and paid the price.Threlkeld departed in the next over, run out going for a second by McCarthy’s arrow throw from the point boundary.The Blaze, missing their three England players but accustomed to managing without them, would have seen chasing 242 as well within their compass, although less so after matching their opponents in losing three wickets in their opening powerplay.Mahika Gaur bowled Sarah Bryce with a full delivery before Kate Cross removed Georgie Boyce, caught and bowled off a leading edge, and Prendergast, who stepped across to be leg before for a second-ball duck, leaving The Blaze in peril at 37 for three.But just as Threlkeld and Lister rescued Lancashire, Elwiss joined Kathryn Bryce to turn their side’s innings around. Yet though Bryce passed fifty for the seventh time this season from 64 balls, none of Threlkeld’s six bowlers conceded runs easily.Bryce brought up her hundred, the fifth of her career in List A cricket and a first in Blaze colours, from 121 balls as the partnership ticked over to 150, but the big breakthrough for Lancashire came shortly afterwards as Elwiss, who had clocked up her fifth half-century of the season, was caught at backward point on the reverse sweep off Fi Morris, with 55 still needed off 52 balls.The wicket opened up one end for the visitors and after Marie Kelly, Michaela Kirk and and Lucy Higham all went cheaply, The Blaze needed 33 from 18 balls, which came down to nine off the last over, but when Bryce holed out to mid-off to give Potts her third wicket, their chance had gone.

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