From Kingston to Karachi: England's ten greatest away wins

As England play their 500th overseas Test, we look back at some of their highest points on tour

Andrew Miller16-Jan-2020As England take the field for their 500th overseas Test at Port Elizabeth (which was, coincidentally, the scene of their first in South Africa in 1899), ESPNcricinfo takes a look back at ten of their finest away wins, out of a current tally of 149.Kingston 1989-90The gold standard of England’s overseas Test wins. It wasn’t simply that this result was unexpected, it was beyond the bounds of possibility, as wild a sporting upset as you could wish to encounter. England’s record against West Indies going into the first Test of 1990 was played 15, lost 14, drawn 1. They hadn’t won a Test against them since 1974, and they arrived in the Caribbean off the back of a 4-0 Ashes drubbing with a squad that had been ravaged by Mike Gatting’s rebel tour of South Africa. But in Graham Gooch’s first outing as full-time England captain, he inspired a rag-tag army to surpass themselves. Angus Fraser claimed 5 for 28 to skittle West Indies for 164; Allan Lamb produced a majestic hundred to ensure that advantage didn’t go to waste. Despite an anxious wait for rain to clear in the closing stages, Wayne Larkins sealed an incomprehensible win by nine wickets.Sydney 1894-95Only three teams in history have won a Test match after following on, and Australia have been on the receiving end on each occasion – most recently at Headingley in 1981 and Kolkata 20 years later, but also way back in the mists of time on Andrew Stoddart’s tour of Australia in 1894-95, when declared the first Test at Sydney to be “probably the most sensational match ever played either in Australia or in England”. Australia recovered from 21 for 3 to rack up a massive 586, with Syd Gregory’s ninth-wicket stand of 154 with Jack Blackham remaining an Australia record to this day, before chiselling England out for 325 by the close of day three. The follow-on proved arduous for the Aussies as Albert Ward’s 117 kept them in the field for 181 further overs, but a target of 177 ought to have been achievable. However, heavy overnight rain coupled with a steaming hot sixth day gave the pitch an attack of the vapours, and Bobby Peel required no second invitation – despite apparently needing to be stuck under a cold shower to ease the effect of his own overnight watering. “Give me the ball, Mr Stoddart, and I’ll get t’boogers out before loonch!” he is said to have declared. He wasn’t wrong. Australia collapsed from 130 for 2 to 166 all out, losing by ten runs with two minutes of the session remaining.Alec Stewart acknowledges the applause•PA PhotosBridgetown 1993-94The events in Barbados in April 1994 are proof, if nothing else, that long before the World Test Championship was introduced to provide officially sanctioned “context”, each individual Test match counted for something irrespective of the series scoreline. At 3-0 down with two to play, England were dead and buried on their 1994 tour. Their one chance at salvation, in the previous Test in Trinidad, had been scorched by Curtly Ambrose in their 46-all-out debacle, and after being routed by a West Indies Board XI in a practice match in Grenada, the prospect of a third blackwash in ten years was a clear and present danger – especially as they headed for Fortress Bridgetown, a venue where West Indies hadn’t lost since 1935. But then the miracle started taking shape. Alec Stewart and Mike Atherton added 171 for England’s first wicket, with Stewart going on to the first of his twin hundreds, before Fraser pounded through West Indies’ defences with a career-best 8 for 75. It couldn’t change what had gone before, but in a decade featuring just nine away wins, this was right up there with the best.Adelaide 2010-11Andy Flower, rarely one to let his guard slip, declared this to be nigh on the “perfect” England win, and despite the hyperbole, it’s hard to deny he had a point. This was a masterful initiative-seizing victory, a strike right at the heart of a rattled Australia team who had seen a routine win in the first Test at Brisbane quashed by the small matter of England’s second innings: 517 for 1. And Australia’s response to that indignity was calamity: a scoreline of 2 for 3 on the first morning as James Anderson snaked his way through the top order before Alastair Cook continued where he’d left off with another dry-as-dust 148. Enter Kevin Pietersen, who slapped a sun-baked attack for a punitive double-hundred, before Graeme Swann took his cue on the final day with five match-sealing wickets. To make it all the more perfect, the outfield was drenched by a thunderstorm barely half an hour after the finish.Kevin Pietersen celebrates his second double-century•Getty ImagesMumbai 2012-13It may all have ended in tears and recrimination, but like ABBA or Fleetwood Mac, Cook and Pietersen sure made some beautiful music when the mood took them. Two years after Adelaide, they reprised the same rhythm with another chalk-and-cheese alliance, and this time the impact on their opponents was even more stark. India had eased to victory in the opening Test in Ahmedabad, though not before Cook’s 176 in the second innings had shown his team the requisite bottle for Indian conditions. But when he repeated that dose in the first innings at the Wankhede, this time Pietersen was waiting to turn on the style. Newly “reintegrated” to the England team after the textgate row of the summer, he disintegrated India’s resistance with an astonishing onslaught – his 186 from 233 balls included a firestorm of boundaries against spinners R Ashwin and Pragyan Ojha. And talking of spinners, who should be waiting to ice England’s cake? Their own spin twins, Swann and Monty Panesar – the perfect combo for the conditions – who wrapped up the contest with 19 wickets between them.Sydney (and Melbourne) 1954-55Blows to the head aren’t generally advised in this day and age, but one of the most famous blows of all time is widely acknowledged as the catalyst for one of the great series turnarounds. Two years after winning the Ashes back on home soil for the first time in 19 years, Len Hutton’s prospects of retention weren’t looking too promising after an innings thumping in the opening match of the 1954-55 series, in Brisbane. His key fast bowler, Frank Tyson, claimed 1 for 160 in that match, and his tour took another turn for the worse when he was knocked out by a Ray Lindwall bouncer in the second Test at Sydney. But from that moment on, the joke was on Australia. “I was a little cranky,” Tyson later admitted, as he blew through Australia with six second-innings wickets, to turn a 74-run deficit into a famous 38-run win. Two weeks later in Melbourne, he was in an even crankier mood – nothing could survive his second-innings 7 for 27, as Australia were wrecked for 111.The England squad celebrate after winning the first Ashes Test•Getty ImagesBrisbane 1986-87Okay, so the quality of the contest was a notch below the usual standards – Australia really were at a low ebb in this post-Lillee, pre-Warne era. But who could failed to be swayed by the optics? Like the cackle of Emperor Palpatine in the trailer for the latest Star Wars, the first Test at Brisbane heralded the rise of an Australian nemesis whose best endeavours had been buried for so long, you could only assume he was finished. But no! Back he strode to his throne of Ashes – revoltingly mulleted and broader at the midriff than in his heyday, but still possessed of an eye like a dead trout. Merv Hughes bore the brunt of Ian Botham’s 14th and final Test century, as England seized an initiative that carried them to glory with a Test to spare. Can’t bat, can’t bowl, can’t field indeed…Johannesburg 2004-05England’s tour of South Africa in 2004-05 was a bruising, shattering bunfight – ideal preparation, in hindsight, for the ultimate test that awaited that summer against Australia, but at the time it seemed likely that the two teams would punch themselves to exhaustion. England might have been 2-0 up after two, but for South Africa’s epic rearguard at Durban, and instead it was 1-1 with two to play after a Jacques Kallis masterclass had set up an innings rout in Cape Town. Cue the craziest contest of the lot at the Wanderers, where Marcus Trescothick transformed a faltering third innings with a blistering 180 – including 58 priceless runs for the tenth wicket with Steve Harmison. The only trouble was… who was left to take the wickets? Harmison the bowler was on his last legs, and the rookie Anderson was out of his depth at this early stage of his career. Up stepped the shop steward, Matthew Hoggard, with an inspirational 7 for 61, including a first-ball outswinger to Kallis that has to rank among the greatest deliveries in English Test history.Nasser Hussain and Graham Thorpe celebrate victory in the dark•Getty ImagesKarachi 2000-01″Stay in the game at all costs!” Nasser Hussain’s exhortation was writ large across this magnificent heist, as his team of honest toilers gained their rewards at the end of an exhausting series dominated by slow and at times thoroughly tedious batting. But with the series deadlocked at 0-0 with just minutes left to play of the penultimate evening in Karachi, Ashley Giles unpicked the lock with the vital scalp of Inzamam-ul-Haq and England sensed their moment to strike. Pakistan lost their final seven wickets in just under 30 overs on the final day to leave England with a race against time – 176 runs before nightfall. Pakistan’s captain, Moin Khan, mocked their optimism, knowing full well that the encroaching winter darkness would save them before long, but umpire Steve Bucknor refused to give in to his time-wasting and insisted that play had to go on. Graham Thorpe anchored the chase with a masterful 64, as victory was sealed with an inside edge past the stumps, and through a Pakistan infield that could no longer see where the ball was going.Port of Spain 1973-74In a week when debate has raged about the relative merits of England’s great allrounders, here’s a compelling submission from the forgotten master, Tony Greig. His decision to join World Series Cricket in 1977 – and the concurrent rise of Botham – mean that his derring-do is too easily overlooked, but when his game was on song he was every bit the colossus. Needing victory to square the series in the final match of their 1974 tour of the Caribbean, Greig used every inch of his 6ft 6in frame to unleash his lesser-spotted offspin to devastating effect. He racked up 8 for 86 to restrict West Indies to a first-innings lead of 38, then added a further 5 for 70 in the second innings as the hosts, chasing 226, collapsed from 63 for 0 to 199 all out. It was the end of the road for Garry Sobers and Rohan Kanhai, two Caribbean greats, who never played again. But England wouldn’t win again for another 16 years, as Clive Lloyd and his mean machine prepared to roll into the region …

Tahuhu stars with bat and ball as New Zealand quell India in only T20I

Sophie Devine and Suzie Bates set the tone with a strong opening stand, while the bowlers never allowed India to get into the chase

Srinidhi Ramanujam09-Feb-2022
India Women lost five wickets, and the plot, for 35 runs in chase of 156 as New Zealand Women emerged victorious in the one-off T20I by 18 runs in Queenstown on Wednesday. Lea Tahuhu starred with both bat and ball, hitting a quickfire 27 off 14 balls when New Zealand batted, and then picking up the wicket of the top-scoring S Meghana in the chase.Put in to bat, Sophie Devine, Suzie Bates and Tahuhu propelled New Zealand to 155 for 5. From 9 without loss in the first three overs, the home side went to 49 – with no wickets lost still – in six overs. Devine was dropped in the second over by Simran Bahadur, and the New Zealand captain went on to hit two fours and two sixes in her 23-ball 31. Devine and Bates stitched together an opening partnership of 60 runs. Bates top-scored with a 34-ball 36 to set the platform for the home side.India’s four-pronged spin attack then pulled things back with tight bowling. However, Tahuhu’s surprise promotion to No. 5 ahead of Brooke Halliday and Maddy Green worked in favour for New Zealand, as her boundary spree lifted the side. Martin and Green, the latter scoring a quick 26, also biffed a couple of boundaries in the last few overs to take the score past 150.In a match where New Zealand maintained a run rate of seven almost throughout the innings, Pooja Vastrakar was the most impressive Indian bowler, accounting for two crucial wickets – first removing Amelia Kerr for 17 and then Tahuhu. Sans senior pacer Shikha Pandey, who was left out of the squad, Vastrakar stood up to the challenge to end with figures of 2 for 16 in her four overs. She stuck to her stump-to-stump line that fetched her 17 dot balls. Spin-bowling allrounder Deepti Sharma also scalped two, removing Devine and Green.India started the chase cautiously in the absence of senior batter Smriti Mandhana, who was still in the New Zealand government’s compulsory Managed Isolation and Quarantine (MIQ) facility, along with Meghana Singh and Renuka Singh. In Mandhana’s absence, Yastika Bhatia opened with Shafali Verma as India stuck to a left-right combination. The big-hitting Shafali remained passive during the powerplay, eventually departing for 13 off 14 balls when she failed to clear Green on the deep midwicket fence off Amelia Kerr. In the same over, Amelia dismissed Bhatia, who scored a run-a-ball 26, to trigger a collapse.Had it not been for Meghana, India would have ended with a lesser total. In her first international game in six years, Meghana looked at home, notching up 37 runs off 30 balls. The knock included some eye-pleasing lofted cover drives. However, with no support from the other end and with the New Zealand bowlers chipping in regularly, the visiting side failed to get past the finish line.India captain Harmanpreet Kaur, who had scored a total of 121 runs in six matches in 2021, was bowled for a 13-ball 12 when she missed an inswinger that hit the stumps, from pacer Jess Kerr. Hayley Jensen’s double strike in the 19th over meant India ended with 137 for 8.The two teams now head into a five-match ODI series in the lead-up to the Women’s World Cup, beginning next month.

'I saw things that cannot be right at elite football' – Frank Lampard insists he was correct to rejoin struggling Chelsea in 2023 following Todd Boehly & BlueCo's takeover despite recording terrible 9% win ratio

Frank Lampard claims to have seen "things that cannot be right at elite football" during his troubled spell as interim manager at Chelsea.

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Returned to Stamford Bridge in April 2023Saw out troubled Premier League campaignProving his worth again at Coventry CityFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱GettyWHAT HAPPENED?

The Blues legend, who won Premier League and Champions League titles at Stamford Bridge as a player, spent 18 months at the helm during his first stint in charge of a club that will always hold a special place in his heart. He answered an SOS call when returning to west London in April 2023.

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With Chelsea giving Graham Potter just 31 games in charge, following the big-money takeover completed by Todd Boehly and BlueCo, somebody was required to steer the Blues through to the end of a troubled campaign. Lampard, fresh from leaving Everton a few months earlier, was asked to step in.

WHAT FRANK LAMPARD SAID

Emotional ties saw the ex-England international accept that challenge, but he picked up just one victory from 11 fixtures – giving him an awful nine per cent win ratio. Lampard has, however, told of the mess that he inherited: "I saw things that I know cannot be right at elite football and that's the truth. I didn't love working in that short period because it's hard to lay down an idea when you're going to be leaving but Chelsea will always be a massive club in my life.

"But when I understand the standards of Chelsea – in that period of time a lot of players were in transition of maybe leaving and some problems and motivation were a problem – in an interim period you can't really affect that.

"When you see the results of it, I'm experienced enough to know what's right and what's wrong and basic things in a training ground on a pitch. I didn't learn anything tactical but it did reinforce my beliefs of all my experiences of when you know what a group is really fighting in the same direction – how strong that can be and when it's not, it can be really challenging."

GettyDID YOU KNOW?

Despite those struggles, Lampard claims to have taken important lessons from all of his managerial roles to date. He added: "In my first week at Derby I was fresh, open-eyed to everything and there were a lot of things I needed to learn quickly. So I've certainly matured through that and seen that, and to be able to work at Derby in the Championship was a real development year for me.

"To then go to Chelsea and work in the Champions League and get into the Champions League, through the league – those things are all great experiences, so you kind of layer them up hopefully.

"Everton in a relegation battle and we stayed up, and even going back to Chelsea's interim, it was a really tough time at the club and I saw a lot of things with people questioning like was it the right thing to do…I'm absolutely better for the experience of that, even though it was six or seven weeks."

Imagine him & Mitchell: Crystal Palace must now unleash "exceptional" ace

Heading into game week 25 of the Premier League campaign, Crystal Palace currently sit 12th in the table, just four points off of a top-half spot.

They have managed to drag themselves away from a relegation battle, now sitting 13 points ahead of 18th-place Leicester City.

The Eagles are averaging some of the worst attacking numbers in the league. But, on the flip side, their defensive shape and quality are their biggest asset right now under Oliver Glasner, conceding 30 goals in 24 games and averaging 13.1 shots against them per game (ranking 10th in the league for this metric).

Crystal Palace face Everton at Selhurst Park in their next Premier League fixture, who currently sit 15th in the league, but are coming off of a very strong string of results, beating Tottenham, Brighton and Leicester in the league and drawing 2-2 with Liverpool.

Crystal Palace team news

Glasner will remain without Joel Ward (calf injury), Chadi Riad (knee injury) and Cheick Doucoure (knee injury) heading into the Everton game this weekend. Doucoure will now need to undergo surgery on his knee, which means he will miss the entirety of this season.

The likes of Eberechi Eze, Eddie Nketiah and Ismaila Sarr are all being assessed ahead of the Toffees game, with the first two currently having knocks/slight injuries and the latter having missed the last match due to illness.

Luckily for the Eagles, Adam Wharton has made his return to action in recent weeks, just in time to take over in midfield from Doucoure, which will give Palace a strong boost.

But after making some new signings in January, and the few injuries they have picked up, Glasner could look to change things up against Everton, adding a new dynamic to his side.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast's Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

Crystal Palace's new dynamic against Everton

Crystal Palace could look to line up with both new signing Ben Chilwell and academy graduate, Tyrick Mitchell for the first time against Everton, finding a strong balance of attacking output and defensive stability on that left-hand side.

Goals + Assists

0.43

0.11

Progressive Carries

2.35

1.94

Progressive Passes

2.59

2.07

Shots Total

2.23

0.36

xG

0.16

0.03

Key Passes

1.73

1.29

Shot-Creating Actions

2.84

2.28

Tackles

1.85

2.67

Blocks

1.11

2.20

Interceptions

0.74

0.29

When you look at Chilwell’s underlying numbers from his last season under Thomas Tuchel in a back three system which allowed him to play as a wing-back, you can see the value he provides from that position, getting forward, getting shots off, attacking the box and being a threat on goal. In that sense, he could well be a better option for Glasner.

However, that doesn’t mean that Mitchell should miss out. Instead, it means the current incumbent of the left-back role could operate in a slightly unfamiliar left centre-back role in a back five/back three.

This would allow him to still defend in similar left-sided wide areas and add some protection behind the likes of Chilwell and Eze on that side, if/when their talisman is available.

Ex-Chelsea boss, Mauricio Pochettino praised Chilwell as “one of the best” left-backs in the world at his best, while Brendan Rodgers labelled him as “exceptional”, and if Glasner can get that level out of him, it would play a huge part in Palace’s bid for a second top-half finish in a row.

Crystal Palace have hit gold on Eagles star who's worth more than Chilwell

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ByConnor Holden Feb 9, 2025

Legendary goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon sees his 17-year-old son score his first international goal – but not for Italy!

Italy hero Gianluigi Buffon saw his eldest son Louis net his first international goal at youth level this week – but not for the country you'd expect.

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Buffon's son Louis scores first international goalLegendary goalkeeper won World Cup with ItalyBuffon Jnr made debut with Pisa earlier this monthFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Buffon, one of the greatest goalkeepers of all-time, had a proud moment this week as one of his sons, Louis, scored his first goal at international level, but not with Italy. Buffon Jnr made the decision to represent the Czech Republic and turned out for their U18 side, scoring a goal in an impressive 4-1 victory over France.

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In 2011, Buffon married Czech beauty pageant winner Alena Seredova, and Louis chose to represent his mother's country over his father's. According to former Czech Republic international Erich Brabec, who now serves as the technical director of the Czech Republic youth teams, a chat he had with Seredova turned out to be a decisive factor.

"I don't know Gianluigi Buffon's opinion, but after finding out that he was on our list of those called up, they contacted him from Italy," Brabec revealed earlier this month (h/t La Stampa). "Personally, I just organised everything necessary with his mother so that he could show up at the training camp with the team."

Although Buffon and Seredova separated in 2014, Louis holds dual citizenship and could yet feature for the Italian national team at the senior level in the future.

DID YOU KNOW?

Louis started his footballing journey with Sisport in 2017, before joining Juventus in 2020. In 2022, he joined CBS Scoula Calcio, before joining the Pisa academy. He is currently assigned to Serie B side Pisa's reserve team in the Primavera division. The winger made his professional debut earlier this month in the team's 3-2 loss to Spezia. Pisa are currently managed by Buffon's former international team-mate Filippo Inzaghi, with whom he won the 2006 World Cup.

GettyWHAT NEXT FOR LOUIS BUFFON?

Pisa are currently enjoying a brilliant season and are one of the frontrunners for automatic promotion to Serie A next season. Buffon Jnr is expected to be used by Inzaghi for Pisa's next game, in which they take on Cosenza on Saturday.

Ange must now drop Tottenham ace who was their best player vs Fulham

After the incredible highs of smashing Manchester City 4-0 at the Etihad, last week was a real downer for Tottenham Hotspur.

First, the North Londoners drew at home to Serie A side AS Roma, and while that’s not necessarily the end of the world, it was the manner in which it happened that hurt the most, a last-minute equaliser after having ample chances to put the game to bed earlier.

Then, despite taking the lead once again and being a man up for the last 15 minutes or so, they drew with Fulham in the Premier League, which was the fourth game in all competitions that the club have dropped points at home this season.

Premier League

Fulham (H)

1-1 (D)

Europa League

AS Roma (H)

2-2 (D)

Premier League

Man City (A)

4-0 (W)

Premier League

Ipswich (H)

2-1 (L)

Europa League

Galatasaray (A)

3-2 (L)

So, with a game away to the high-flying Bournemouth to come tonight, Ange Postecoglou has plenty of decisions to make, and one of those is dropping arguably the team’s best performer from Sunday afternoon.

Spurs' best performer against Fulham

So, the truth is that the list of best performers on Sunday afternoon for Spurs is tiny, with perhaps only a few names on it.

However, one of those names is certainly Timo Werner, who actually looked reasonably effective at times, providing the assist for Brennan Johnson in the second half, creating two big chances and earning himself a 6/10 match rating from journalist Alasdair Gold, who claimed he was the ‘most threatening of the front three.’

Yet, if Postecoglou wants to give his team the best chance of picking up all three points against the Cherries this evening, he must boldly drop the German international, for as good as he was, he still wasn’t good enough to help his team win the game.

Moreover, while his form has certainly improved in recent weeks, the former Chelsea ace still has the capacity to seriously underwhelm when it matters most, and his tally of one goal and three assists in 16 appearances this season is hardly good enough to demand his continued selection, especially not when there were far more dangerous players on the bench against the Cottagers.

The player Ange must start vs Bournmouth

So, with Johnson being his most effective off the right and Son Heung-min being even more disappointing than Werner against Fulham, the ideal candidate to start off the left against Bournemouth is Dejan Kulusevski.

Now, it’s certainly true that he’s more experienced off the right, but with his Welsh teammate now a nailed-on starter in his old position and there being few, if any, genuine options off the left, it almost feels like the manager must start the Swede there.

Moreover, the former Juventus star is undoubtedly one of the club’s most technically gifted and naturally talented players and has some experience playing off the left from his time in Italy.

Furthermore, as talent scout Jacek Kulig points out, the 24-year-old is an absolutely “world-class” player, and as this season has shown us, he’s more than capable of transitioning to a new position within the team.

For example, of his nine goal involvements this season, the Stockholm-born maestro has produced seven of them from midfield, showing that he is incredibly adaptable.

Appearances

20

Starts

13

Minutes

1300′

Goals

2

Assists

7

Goal Involvements per Match

0.45

Minutes per Goal Involvement

144.44′

Ultimately, if Postecoglou wants to give himself and his team the best chance of winning tonight, he needs to ensure he’s starting his best and most inform players, which means Kulusevski simply has to start, even if its off the left.

Spurs wasted £38.6m on Mourinho dud who's earning more than Van de Ven

The talented defender’s move to Spurs has been a disaster.

1 ByJack Salveson Holmes Dec 3, 2024

Namibia kick off World Cup in style with famous upset

Jan Frylinck, JJ Smit, Ben Shikongo show spirit and skill to hand Sri Lanka a heavy defeat

Andrew Fidel Fernando16-Oct-20223:07

‘Don’t be surprised if Namibia start winning big games’ – former batter Craig Williams

Jan Frylinck and JJ Smit blasted Namibia out of a desperate situation, then their seamers scythed their way through Sri Lanka’s batting order – Ben Shikongo taking two wickets in two balls inside the powerplay, while David Wiese and Frylinck also made key breakthroughs.Related

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In the end, the match wasn’t even close. Sri Lanka, never having seemed on top of the chase of 164, could not get a partnership going – Bhanuka Rajapaksa and Dasun Shanaka mustering the best of their innings, with 34. Namibia’s bowlers kept mixing up their pace on a slow Geelong surface that rewarded pace off the ball. Sri Lanka’s batters kept holing out. They were eventually all out for 108 at the end of the 19th over.Namibia, meanwhile, had pulled off perhaps the biggest upset in the history of their men’s side. In the last T20 World Cup, they’d beaten Full Member Ireland to make it into the main draw. This time, they’ve taken down the freshly-crowned Asia Cup champions, and a side that had won their last five successive T20Is.Frylinck and Smit blaze their way through the death
If you’re looking for a turning point in the match, this is it. Namibia were 93 for 6 with 34 balls remaining in the innings. They seemed headed for a total of less than 140, given how quickly wickets were falling, and that their most reputed batters were already out.But this is when Frylinck and Smit put on a spectacular seventh-wicket stand. In the 16th over, Frylick blasted Dushmantha Chameera square on the legside for four to begin their salvo. Next over, Smit walloped Wanindu Hasaranga over deep midwicket. The runs came quickly after that – Smit hitting another six over deep midwicket, as Frylinck motored to 44 off 28, and he to an arguably even more impressive 31 not out off 16.Together, they had reaped 70 runs off the last 34 balls, and made their total competitive.Sri Lanka falter in the powerplay
Sri Lanka’s openers had been crucial in their Asia Cup campaign, but here Kusal Mendis and Pathum Nissanka could not get out of single figures. Mendis was out first, top-edging a Wiese delivery that he had tried to pull in the second over. Nissanka was the first victim of Shikongo’s double-strike, failing to clear mid-on with a lofted drive. Danushka Gunathilaka nicked the next ball to the wicketkeeper, and Sri Lanka were 21 for 3. Their powerplay brought only 38.The middle order unravels
The middle order’s collapse was perhaps even more dramatic. Following Shanaka and Rajapaksa’s brief attempt at recovery, the climbing required rate had Sri Lanka’s batters looking for boundaries. They failed abysmally, as Namibia’s bowlers used the slowness of the surface to excellent effect. Between the 10th and 17th overs (42 balls), Sri Lanka lost five wickets, and made 25 runs, hitting zero boundaries. In fact, in the whole batting card, only four batters managed to hit a boundary.Namibia’s seamers were impressive in this period, but so was left-arm spinner Bernard Scholtz, who took 2 for 18 from his four overs.Before Namibia turned it around
The first 15 overs of this game had gone as expected, roughly. Sri Lanka fielded well through the first three quarters of their bowling innings – Dhananjaya de Silva taking an especially good running catch at deep square leg at the end of the 14th over. Up to this point, Sri Lanka’s spinners had been incredibly effective, and their quicks were hard to score off – every member of the attack having taken at least one wicket, with Madushan having claimed two.At the death, the quicks were less impressive.

Shearer says Newcastle star has "unbelievable" trait that's blown him away

As they look to get back to winning ways in the Premier League against Nottingham Forest this weekend, one Newcastle United star has received impressive praise from a club legend.

Howe previews "big" Nottingham Forest clash

So far, it’s been a good week for Eddie Howe and Newcastle. The Magpies netted four in a convincing victory against Union Saint-Gilloise in the Champions League and must now take that goalscoring form into the Premier League having so far scored just six goals in six league games.

Howe didn’t shy away from the importance of Nottingham Forest’s visit, either, whilst also taking the time to praise Ange Postecoglou as the Australian aims to turn things around following a tough start in the Midlands.

The Newcastle boss also confirmed the extent of Tino Livramento’s injury. Whilst the fullback thankfully avoided an ACL tear, he will miss the next eight weeks on the sidelines.

Howe told reporters: “He went to see a specialist, the scan initially looked better than we thought it was. The specialist confirmed it is an 8-week injury, which is a blow for us with the number of games we have in that period. It is a ligament injury and it will take time to recover.”

Newcastle now preparing to launch £60m+ offer to sign "underrated" midfielder

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ByTom Cunningham Oct 3, 2025

Although he’ll be without Livramento, there are still positives for the Newcastle boss ahead of this weekend. Nick Woltemade continued his strong start against USG by netting on his Champions League debut and another star player also enjoyed his best performance to earn praise from Alan Shearer.

Shearer blown away by "unbelievable" Elanga trait

Full of praise for Newcastle after they eased past USG, Shearer revealed that he’s been blown away by Elanga’s pace. The former Nottingham Forest star picked up the Man of the Match award after picking up an assist and running his UCL opponents ragged with his electric speed.

The Newcastle legend revealed his shock at just how quick Elanga looked in midweek, saying on The Rest Is Football podcast: “He’s rapid, isn’t he? I mean, oh my God, he’s like incredibly quick. It’s unbelievable how quick he is.”

It’s not the first time that the Swede’s speed has been on full show, either. Just last season, Elanga clocked the third-quickest run time and was only behind Matheus Nunes and Micky van de Ven.

In what has been an excellent week for Newcastle’s summer signing, he’d love nothing more than to cap things off by scoring his first goal for the club against his former side this weekend. A place on the scoresheet would truly get him up and running at St James’ Park.

WATCH: Scott McTominay channels inner Cristiano Ronaldo with outrageous overhead kick to help Scotland secure World Cup place in thrilling Denmark win

On a historic night for Scottish football that ended what will be come next summer a 28-year absence from the World Cup, Scott McTominay scored the best goal of his career by launching himself into the air to set the tone for a crunch qualifier against Denmark in Glasgow. The Napoli midfielder and reigning Serie A Player of the Year is having the time of his life for both club and country right now.

McTominay gets the party started at Hampden Park

Scotland knew that a win over Denmark at Hampden Park would secure them World Cup qualification for the first time this century, since 1998. McTominay could hardly have given Steve Clarke's side a better start, acrobatically putting his country into the lead in the third minute. Ben Gannon-Doak's cross was so inviting for the overhead kick, reminiscent of Cristiano Ronaldo in the Champions League for Real Madrid against Juventus in 2018, that McTominay soared into the air and lashed the ball into the net.

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Scotland qualify for the 2026 World Cup

The game was far from over, though. Denmark equalised just shy of the hour mark through Rasmus Hojlund, McTominay's Napoli team-mate and former Manchester United colleague, from the penalty spot. A draw wouldn't have been enough for Scotland to qualify automatically, with a point all that Denmark needed to book their place instead. So, the Scots were buoyed when, after Rasmus Kristensen was sent off, substitute Lawrence Shankland restored the lead. But another Danish equaliser came almost immediately courtesy of Patrick Dorgu that threatened to shunt Scotland into the play-offs. Yet when Kieran Tierney restored the Scottish lead for the third time and then Kenny McLean, who'd replaced the injured Gannon-Doak in the first half, added a fourth goal, it was pandemonium.

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Getty Images SportMcTominay for the Puskas Award?

Having missed the cut-off date for 2025, which passed in August, McTominay has given himself an early chance of winning the 2026 Puskas Award. It is the prize given to the scorer of the most beautiful goal each year, and McTominay’s effort has added meaning and symbolism because of its setting and context, as well as being an absolute banger of a strike.

He, of course, faces immediate competition from Tottenham Hotspur defender Micky van de Ven, whose recent Champions League goal is also already earmarked as a contender in 2026. The Dutch centre-back ran pretty much the length of the pitch at searing pace against Copenhagen, before finishing with aplomb. It mirrored a previous Puskas Award-winning strike from Son Heung-min, so there is precedent for solo efforts getting the required votes.

But who can argue against an overhead kick?

Arsenal star looks like their best bargain since the days of Henry & Vieira

During Arsene Wenger’s celebrated reign as Arsenal manager, he was the pioneer for a whole host of things, not least diet and nutrition, but his approach in the transfer market has inspired many.

Wenger was one of the first to aggressively scout overlooked regions like France and Africa. In doing so, he signed young up-and-coming players on the cheap and developed them into legends of the English game.

Think Freddie Ljungberg, who Wenger revealed that he signed from Swedish side Halmstad, having watched him playing for his country on television just twice.

“It was one of my great moments of madness”, the French boss later admitted.

A certain Kolo Toure was signed from Ivorian side ASEC Mimosas for just £150,000, eventually becoming a stalwart of the club’s backline over many a year.

Yet, two of Wenger’s biggest success stories remain all-time club record goalscorer Thierry Henry and former captain, Patrick Vieira.

Henry was signed from Juventus for just £11m. Initially arriving as a left winger, Arsenal’s great manager transformed him into one of the best strikers the game has ever seen.

Vieira, meanwhile, was signed for just £3.5m. Adjusted for inflation, Totally Money’s Transfer Index reckons Henry’s move in 2025 would be worth around £50m while Vieira’s move from Milan would be worth around £35m.

The biggest bargains of the Mikel Arteta era at Arsenal

While the Gunners spent a colossal amount of money this summer, ending the window as the second-highest spenders of all Premier League clubs, they have secured some notable bargains since Mikel Arteta arrived as Arsenal manager.

One of the biggest was undoubtedly Martin Odegaard. The Norwegian penned terms in 2021 on an initial loan deal before signing for just £30m in the summer of that year.

Arsenal's MartinOdegaardcelebrates after the match

While the playmaker hasn’t hit top form over the last year, scoring just three times in the Premier League throughout 2024/25, his rise to stardom in English football has been immense.

In 2022/23, no midfielder scored more than Odegaard’s haul of 15 goals in the league. He’s also now the club captain and while he may not be as vocal as someone like Declan Rice, his actions speak volumes.

He’s always the first to lead the press and he really does coach some of his teammates through a match.

Speaking of leaders, William Saliba and Gabriel, arguably the finest centre-half partnership in English football, are perhaps the biggest bargains of the Arteta era.

Arsenal'sGabrielMagalhaes and WilliamSaliba

Gabriel arrived from Lille in a deal worth just £23m and since then he has become a colossus at the back.

Since 2019/20, no defender has scored more than the Brazilian’s haul of 17. He’s a goalscorer but he’s also a rock of a defender. As Jamie Carragher once said, “I think Saliba is the better player but Gabriel is the better leader.”

For large parts of their partnership, the French defender has indeed been seen as the better player. Whether or not you agree with that is up for debate, but he cost just £27m and is on track to become “the best defender in the world” in the words of Rio Ferdinand.

But, speaking of Saliba, here lies what looks like Arsenal’s biggest bargain since the Wenger era.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

Arsenal have struck gold on £13m arrival

The Gunners spent lavishly this summer on bolstering their squad.

The arrival of a shiny new centre-forward in the form of Viktor Gyokeres has raised the levels at the Emirates. His signing was a necessity rather than a luxury. Arsenal needed a goalscoring striker and they have found one. The big Swede already has three goals in his first four matches.

Alongside him, Eberechi Eze and Noni Madueke serve as upgrades in attack. Madueke may not be an upgrade on Saka but as far as back-up is concerned, the Englishman certainly is.

As for Eze’s late £60m arrival last month, there was much fanfare, understandably so too. Eze has been lighting up the Premier League for a number of years now and their performances in the 3-0 win over Nottingham Forest was electrifying, earning comparisons to Saka and Smith Rowe.

Further back, however, Cristhian Mosquera deserves every ounce of praise for his performances since moving to the Emirates.

During the summer months, Berta worked hard to secure the 21-year-old’s signature. He had entered the last year of his deal at Valencia and as such, the Gunners were able to agree a cut-price fee of just £13m.

Well, the Spanish side must feel as though they’ve been robbed. When he first signed, Berta was delighted. Revealing his admiration for the young centre-back, the Italian stated: “We identified Cristhian as one of the strongest young defenders in European football, and he is an important signing for our future.”

Well, he’s certainly living up to that tag. That £13m spent is a bargain, an even bigger one than the likes of Odegaard, Saliba and Gabriel. You perhaps have to go back to the days of Vieira, Henry and Toure to find a better bargain.

While Mosquera was well known to LaLiga audiences, he wasn’t known at all in England. Berta really did take a leaf out of the Wenger playbook here and what a signing he already looks to be.

Club insider Hand of Arsenal described the youngster as a “monster” after his display against Forest, while Gunners writer Dan Critchlow noted that “it’s unbelievable we [Arsenal] didn’t face huge competition for him and pay a lot more”, suggesting he is an “incredible signing”.

So, why all the hype? Well, think of Gabriel and Saliba and in Mosquera, you have elements of both. Like Gabriel, he’s aggressive and front-footed. Like Saliba, his recovery pace is tremendous and his composure is remarkable for someone so young.

His introduction has been seamless and swift, swifter than anyone thought too. That has been born out of Saliba’s injury.

Mins played

85

90

Touches

62

92

Accurate passes

47/51

75/82

Clearances

3

4

Interceptions

0

2

Tackles

4

2

Ground duels won

4/5

2/2

Aerial duels won

0/0

1/2

The French centre-half limped off in the opening minutes of the defeat to Liverpool but Mosquera came on and looked unfazed. Arsenal may well have lost but the summer arrival didn’t put a foot wrong, winning four of his five duels and completing 92% of his passes.

Against Forest, his first clean sheet as an Arsenal player, he was equally as dominant, completing 91% of his passes and winning three of his four defensive duels.

To sign the defender for just £13m was remarkable; he really does look as though he boasts the potential to become one of the finest players in his position in the Premier League.

£115m Arsenal duo look like they could be the new Saka and Smith Rowe

Arsenal have unearthed another exciting duo at the Emirates duo.

ByMatt Dawson Sep 14, 2025

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