Hard-working Shikha Pandey lives her dream

What she lacked in natural flair, she made up with grit to become an India allrounder and an officer with the Indian Air Force

Annesha Ghosh20-Aug-2017Cricketer. Blogger. Air Force officer. Engineer. Astronaut. World Cup winner. Shikha Pandey aspired to be all of the above in one lifetime. So far, at 28, she has achieved four out of those six titles.Following her childhood idols Sunita Williams and Kalpana Chawla into space might today be a distant dream, but she missed winning the World Cup by a narrow nine runs last month.”Nothing is as bad as unfulfilled potential,” Pandey says, reflecting on India’s defeat to England in the Lord’s final. “Sarah Taylor missed a stumping. Heather Knight, their best fielder, grassed a catch. Jenny Gunn dropped a sitter. When you get so many chances and yet you don’t do it, it hurts. You realise that the 80% output doesn’t correspond to the 100% input. But that is how it is.”Batting in the 47th over, with India needing another 14 to win, Pandey and Deepti Sharma took three runs off the first two balls, after which Pandey hit a short ball to point and started out for a single that wasn’t there. She had to turn back halfway down the pitch and couldn’t make it home, though the throw back to the keeper wasn’t accurate.”I could have done it for India,” she muses. “Perhaps the pressure of playing in the final, perhaps, as my father said after the match [over the phone], I should have taken it easy.”A lot has happened in the three weeks since that dismissal and defeat. For one, her Twitter bio now contains a personal email contact in place of her jersey number. Days after the game, a photograph of her wearing her Indian Air Force uniform surfaced for the first time in the public domain. It accompanied a tweet from the IAF handle, congratulating Flight Lieutenant Shikha Pandey, the first female officer from the Services to represent the national cricket team, on being awarded the Chief of Air Staff commendation on her first day at work after the World Cup.The adulation and increased media interest around the team appear to be ceaseless, but there’s little indication that Pandey’s objectivity will be clouded by it all. “I don’t believe much in destiny,” she says. “Whatever I’ve achieved in life till now, my hard work has got me to it.”When handed a plastic bat and ball as a six-year-old, Pandey didn’t know much about the Indian women’s team. The names of two female fast bowlers, however, weren’t unfamiliar to her. Australia’s Cathryn Fitzpatrick and Jhulan Goswami – the latter then an idol, now also a colleague and friend.”To open the bowling with Jhulu has been a dream come true, but to see her work so hard in the nets, even at 34, amazes me,” Pandey says.Goswami, who handed Pandey her India cap on debut, says the same about the younger bowler. “She’s one of the most hard-working cricketers I’ve played alongside in my career. Whatever feedback I give her, Shikha will think it through and try to implement it to the best of her ability.”Shikha Pandey was run out when India needed 11 runs from 15 balls to win their first Women’s World Cup•PA ImagesThe two have played 45 international matches together, their seam-and-swing pairing most memorably twice in this World Cup – first to knock out New Zealand in the league phase and then Australia in the semi-final.After going for 48 runs for two wickets in the first two games of the World Cup, Pandey was dropped for the next two. Against South Africa, she swung herself back into form with a three-for, following it up with the wicket of captain Suzie Bates off her first delivery in the next game.”My bowling against New Zealand and Australia probably helped validate my belief I was doing justice to my selection in the side,” Pandey says, having worked to move the ball both ways so that she didn’t stagnate as a “unidimensional medium-pacer”.”The quality of a comeback tells you something about a sportsperson’s temperament,” India coach Tushar Arothe says. “Hers made me proud.”Arothe echoes what many of Pandey’s coaches – past and present – have pointed to as being the key to her steady rise despite a late entry into competitive sport. “Her passion for the game is immense. She wants to contribute to the team in some way or the other.” To Goswami, it is in Pandey’s “drive for self-improvement” that her passion shines through.Goswami is unlikely to continue playing till the next 50-over World Cup, and she believes Pandey’s “sense of responsibility” could help her become the next leader of India’s bowling attack, a role she briefly played at the World Cup Qualifiers earlier this year in Goswami’s absence.Mansi Joshi, the 24-year-old medium-pacer who made her debut during the Qualifiers and later replaced Pandey in the XI for those two World Cup games, recounts a piece of advice Pandey gave her before her debut.”I’d been going for runs in our warm-up game against South Africa. Shikha di explained how important it is to have a plan B in place against batsmen when they go after us. That came good for me in the World Cup too.”Pandey’s Twitter handle – @ShikhaShauny – reveals one of her role models in the game. “Growing up, I liked Javagal Srinath and Andrew Flintoff, but especially looked up to Pollock because he was a fast-bowling allrounder who could bat.”But more than Pollock, Srinath or Flintoff, she attributes her choice of being a medium-pacer to Sachin Tendulkar. When nine, she read in a magazine that Tendulkar’s lack of height thwarted his aspirations of becoming a fast bowler. Four and a half feet tall then, she pledged to bowl quick some day.Tendulkar was a precocious talent, Pollock a thoroughbred with fine cricketing genes, but Pandey is neither. She inherited a love for the sport from her father, Subas, a Hindi school teacher with the central-government-run Kendriya Vidyalaya. Originally from Uttar Pradesh in north India, Subas had to routinely move towns because of his job. Pandey was born in Ramagundam, in Andhra Pradesh (now Telengana), but her earliest cricketing memories are from when the family moved to Vasco da Gama, in Goa, in 1997. Most of these revolve around her father engaging her in catching practice for hours. At times, she recounts, he would throw over a thousand catches in a session.Shikha Pandey meets her idol and future India team-mate Jhulan Goswami at a camp in Guntur in 2010•Shikha PandeyGoa has been home to the Pandey family for over two decades now, and it was there that she took her first steps to becoming a professional cricketer.”Goa gave me opportunities – including that of representing the state team – I may not have got elsewhere. I owe this place a major part of my achievements.”At 15, Pandey made her foray into leather-ball cricket and went on to become the first player affiliated with the state board to represent India. Within months of her initiation into the formal set-up, she caught the eye of former Mumbai player and selector Surekha Bhandare, who was then touring the state with her team.”The girl had all the makings of a future India player. The raw talent in her was hard to go unnoticed,” remembers Bhandare, who urged Subas to send his daughter to Mumbai, promising to nurture her skills and assuring him of a job for her thereafter.After Pandey won the state-wide third rank in the class-ten board (secondary school) exams, studies took precedence over cricket for the next three summers. It was only in her second year as an undergraduate in electronics and electrical engineering that she began pursuing the sport with serious intent.During a prolific 2007-08 domestic season, she picked up a four-wicket haul in the then Rani Jhansi Trophy, the inter-state two-day tournament, on her Goa senior women’s debut. Her first wicket was a caught-and-bowled to dismiss Tamil Nadu’s Thirush Kamini, then already an India international. She also scored three half-centuries for the Goa Under-19 side, which fast-tracked her selection into the zonal squad the same season.After that Pandey juggled cricket and college, spending her mornings doing gym sessions and course work, and in the afternoons travelling 12km to Mapusa, where she trained with former Goa cricketer and Sports Authority of Goa coach Nitin Vernekar.The only girl at the boys’ facility, Pandey describes the phase as being vital to her growth as a cricketer. “Facing U-16 and U-19 boys honed my reaction time against pace bowling. I also picked up a few vital lessons on negotiating spin.”Her focus on the game did not affect her academic performance, for which she particularly credits her lecturer in Applied Mathematics, Ujwala Phadte, who helped ensure Pandey’s grades were not inversely proportional to her on-field returns. On completing her engineering degree in 2010, Pandey declined placement offers from three multinational companies in favour of taking a year off to further her cricketing ambitions.The decision, backed both by Subas and her older sister, Vibha, paid off when her first “international wicket, albeit unofficial” was Charlotte Edwards – in a 2010 tour game for the Board President’s XI against the visiting England side. The same year, in the inter-zonals, she bagged the wicket of Mithali Raj, “a yardstick for every bowler’s mettle”, and was included again in the Board President’s XI against West Indies in 2011.Mithali Raj and Shikha Pandey seal victory at Wormsley•Getty ImagesVibha, herself an electrical engineer, believes that her sister’s refusal to give up on her dreams allowed her to take a path different from most middle-class career tracks. “Finish engineering, land a job and get a good salary; I took the conventional route, as most people would. But Shikha had higher aspirations, and she took them very seriously.”In July 2011, Pandey’s disappointment over not making the India squad for the England tour, despite being among the 20 probables, was offset somewhat by another long-cherished dream, to serve as a fighter pilot, nearly coming true. She passed the common entrance exam and joined the Indian Air Force as a trainee, and in June the following year was commissioned as an air traffic control officer.During her two years at her first fighter base, in north India, the shortage of cricket turfs made her move base down to Palam in New Delhi. With the support of the Services Sports Control Board and the Air Force Sports Control Board, however, she has been able to sustain her cricketing dream.”I could continue playing in the domestic tournaments because my seniors approved my leave applications. Their cooperation has been the reason I am able to join my teams in time and get adequate preparation.”The 2013-14 domestic season offered her the most realistic chance of getting closer to achieving the dream of playing for India, but she had played for only 30 to 40 days that year. To make up for the lost time, after training with her team-mates till six in the evening, she would hit the indoor nets at the Goa Cricket Association. The extra work paid off and after taking 22 wickets and 209 runs in the season, international debuts across formats followed, first in the World T20 and then on India’s 2014 tour of England.Pandey hit the winning runs in India’s unexpected win in the Test in Wormsley – their first five-day game in eight years – and received a stump as souvenir from her captain, Mithali Raj, with the inscription: “It was nice to have a match-winning partnership with you. Here’s to the many more.”Called up as last-minute cover for batsman Punam Raut, Pandey made 28 not out in an unbroken 68-run stand with Raj, chasing 181, and got first-hand knowledge of “what it feels like to be batting overnight in Tests, especially when you’re sent in as a nightwatchman!”Later that year, she became the first India women’s player to take three wickets and score a fifty in an ODI.”Sudha Shah, then India coach, suggested I go in at No. 4.” The innings, Pandey says, made her believe she was ready for the grind of international cricket. “It gave me the reassurance I have the potential to serve the team with the bat too.”She has had her share of highs and lows in her subsequent performances but regards the tour of Australia in January-February 2016 as a test of character for herself and the team.”If you work hard for something, it will come to you – probably it will take a little time, but the wait will be worthwhile”•AFP/Getty ImagesPurnima Rau, the former India and Goa coach, who was the South Zone selector when she first saw the promise in Pandey, believes her journey as a medium-pacer began with this series. “The role she took up in Australia, even in Jhulan’s presence, was a serious statement of intent. She got those wickets regularly because she was penetrative.”Pandey was India’s leading wicket-taker on the tour, with nine wickets at 20.77, a performance that put her on the radar of WBBL franchise Sydney Sixers, although contract negotiations eventually didn’t work out.In the months that followed, Pandey finished as India’s second-highest wicket-taker in the ICC Women’s Championship, the second highest overall in the World Cup Qualifiers, and the highest in the Quadrangular series in South Africa.”I have worked a lot with Devika di [Palshikar, former India allrounder and current Goa coach] in the past year. She’s the one who has instilled confidence in me through her coaching last season.”Like others, Palshikar says that the source of Pandey’s success lies in her willingness to work hard. “But there are holes that need to be plugged,” she says. “Consistency with the bat is one of them.””Right now I consider myself a bowling allrounder,” Pandey says. “But if you work hard for something, it will come to you – probably it will take a little time, but the wait will be worthwhile.”Will she add “World Cup winner” to her considerable list of achievements? Take note of the words she recorded in a 2011 entry on her blog, which encapsulate her journey so far: “I dream higher every time I fall.”

Chelsea set to sign £25m Premier League forward Maresca called "fantastic"

Chelsea are now planning to sign a Premier League forward who Enzo Maresca described as “fantastic” earlier this season, having identified him as a key target, according to a report.

Chelsea stepping up pursuit of new forwards after Arsenal defeat

The Blues’ toothless attacking performance at the Emirates Stadium yesterday underlined the need for Maresca to strengthen his attacking options this summer, and they have been stepping up their pursuit of new forwards over the past week.

The west Londoners came out of nowhere to beat Manchester United to the signature of winger Geovany Quenda, but with the Portuguese starlet not set to join until 2026, they could also enter the market for different attacking talent this summer.

Ipswich Town’s Liam Delap appears to be a key target, with a pre-summer £60m bid being prepared for the Englishman, while Maresca’s side are also known to be huge admirers of AFC Bournemouth’s Antoine Semenyo.

Chelsea also enquire over "monster" rival star alongside Mainoo interest

Enzo Maresca is plotting an ambitious swoop…

By
Sean Markus Clifford

Mar 16, 2025

There had been reports Jadon Sancho could be in line for a surprise return to Manchester United this summer, rather than completing a permanent move to Stamford Bridge, but the transfer saga has now taken another twist.

According to a report from Spain, Chelsea are planning to steal Sancho from Man Utd for a fee of £25m, having identified him as a key target.

Jadon Sancho for Chelsea

BlueCo have made the decision to keep the winger permanently, and the board have now started work on a deal, making it clear they have no desire to let him return to his parent club at the end of the season.

It appears as though a deal should be simple enough to conclude, given that there is a mandatory £25m buyout clause included in the 24-year-old’s loan deal.

"Fantastic" Sancho has impressed at times this season

The London-born winger made a flying start to the campaign, picking up assists in each of his first three Premier League outings, while also receiving praise from Maresca for the work he has been putting in on the training ground.

That said, it is probably wise to be skeptical about the latest report, which suggests Chelsea are determined to keep hold of the Man Utd loanee, considering his form has dropped off considerably in recent times.

The former Borussia Dortmund man is now without a single goal contribution in his last nine Premier League outings, and he is starting to look like the player he was for large parts of his Old Trafford career.

It seems like Chelsea are set to sign Sancho this summer, so Maresca will be hoping the winger can rekindle his form from the start of the season after the upcoming international break.

Haris Sohail leaves his hell behind

Despite the talk that came with him being selected over the perpetually in-form Fawad Alam, and with the added pressure of Pakistan being in trouble, Haris Sohail astutely put together the “best day of his career”

Osman Samiuddin in Abu Dhabi01-Oct-2017As unfair as it may appear to start a story about Haris Sohail with Fawad Alam, specifically on the occasion of the former’s debut Test, it is impossible to do otherwise.Everyone knows the tale but it’s useful to sprinkle some details. Since his breakthrough season in 2005-06, Alam has bestrode the Pakistan first-class circuit like it’s the Ranji Trophy and he its new run-making behemoth. In 12 seasons, in order, he has averaged: 53.6, 49.11, 55.27, 97.70, 83.60, 64.00, 62.47, 48.54, 54.83, 71.90, 56.00 and 55.44. Two seasons where he has averaged less than 50 and even then, barely.Whatever your thoughts on the quality of first-class cricket in Pakistan and the value of such figures, keep them aside, because, for consistency alone, they are impossible to ignore. They are staggering. In that time he has played three Tests for Pakistan, in the first of which he played one of the most astonishing innings a Pakistani has ever played. Four innings later, having already been moved one position down from the position he made his debut at – both of which were not positions he regularly played at – he was dropped, never to return.Nobody in the years since – not selectors, not chairmen, not captains, not sources, not team-mates – has properly articulated why they don’t want him in the side. Sometimes it has been said that he doesn’t look right. Some have said he bats too slowly. A senior figure in this side, a few weeks ago, couldn’t explain it other than that he has a “touch” to him – local slang for attitude. Wild conspiracy theories – none publishable – abound. None of it makes sense. It is the great mystery of this age.So when Haris – and Usman Salahuddin – were selected in Pakistan’s squad as the first to try and fill the giant MisYou black hole, the first of many who will no doubt be ultimately sucked into it, naturally a sense of injustice erupted. Both have had good, productive domestic seasons but neither matches the consistency of Alam. And Haris had not played a first-class match since January 2014.It is plainly ridiculous that Alam has not played more Tests and even in Pakistan, where there are more stories of cricketers hard done by than there are cricketers, his could end up looming over all. But today, it’s worth reminding ourselves of Haris’ own story – in a different way as resonant as Alam’s – because, for a man who has only just begun his Test career, Haris has been through a hell all of its own.In February 2013, still uncapped, he had to return from a tour of South Africa with an ankle injury. A few months before that, he had nearly missed an India tour with another ankle injury. He finally did make his Pakistan debut in July that year in the West Indies, and over two years, in a troubled, regressive ODI side, he established himself to the degree that he was the clear future.Then, while on tour to Sri Lanka in July 2015, Haris picked up a knee injury while training, a crack of some kind in his left knee. It was serious though nobody was sure how serious. He rehabbed for four months, before going for surgery in December that year, in the UAE. A few things are unclear about this, namely that nobody can – or will – say unequivocally whether this was done against the advice of the PCB, who wanted him to go elsewhere for surgery, or with their acknowledgment. You’ll recognise the contours of this mess though.Rehab after the surgery didn’t go well and reports emerged that his career might already be over. They weren’t accurate but Haris admitted that he often wondered whether they might actually come true. Nevertheless, he persisted and went to England for some more rehab, this time with Dr Zafar Iqbal, who has worked with several English Premier League clubs. He came back to Pakistan, following his rehab programme and basing himself at the National Cricket Academy (NCA). For a year-and-a-half, he reckons, he did not even hold a bat, let alone have a net.Imagine, at your physical peak, having made it as an elite athlete, to be unable to hold the instrument with which you make a living, to do the one thing you have been doing all your life and the one thing you are better at than probably 99% of the population. Imagine, as he says, spending all that time shuffling between the gym and a room – in his case at the NCA – tiring yourself out enough in one to be able to switch off and rest in the other. What tolls this ascetic life?Well, the end of that story was today and his innings, which was many things. Smartly paced and, in parts, elegant. A range of strokes, off spin and pace alike. Intuitive, in knowing when to farm the strike and when the tail had been out there long enough to be trusted. It was, given how the Test stood when he started and how it stands now, also a game-breaker. From the first ball he faced and redirected to the point boundary, it had a certainty to it that this was what it was supposed to be. There was no sign that he was on debut, or that Pakistan were in trouble. It bore no burns from the hell he had gone through, or any acknowledgement that there’s a guy in Karachi who millions think should’ve been here, doing exactly this right now.Inside, of course, all the signs were there. He said later it was like making a comeback and a debut at once: “The last two years were very difficult. I struggled a lot. It was that kind of injury. Things weren’t right for me. That time, only I know how much I struggled. I heard many things [about my career ending]. But my goal was only one thing – to return.”He’d tried to stay away from the debate over his selection, even though it is all anyone can talk about. A few messages snuck through yesterday and it can’t have been an easy night, knowing he was to face his first ball in Test cricket the next morning. And then the first ball, only nominally from Nuwan Pradeep, but in reality from those 12 seasons and thousands upon thousands of ignored, unselected runs, from a modern day cause celebre, from a groundswell of injustice, and thanks I’ll have four there please and be on my way.He agreed later it was the “best day of his career”, which, with all that he has been through… Sure, it’s valid for your heart to burn for Alam, just make sure it’s big enough to be gladdened by the man who isn’t him.

Vishwa, Kamindu, de Silva leave Sri Lanka on brink of big win

Bangladesh’s top-order imploded late in the day when beginning their chase of 511

Andrew Fidel Fernando24-Mar-2024Bangladesh 188 and 43 for 5 (Vishwa 3-13) need another 464 runs to beat Sri Lanka 280 and 418 (Kamindu 164, de Silva 108, Miraz 4-74)Bangladesh nosedived in the dying moments of day three in Sylhet, losing five wickets for 43 runs in 13 overs before stumps. The slump though came when Bangladesh were anyway in a dire situation. Earlier in the day, Kamindu Mendis had struck 164 and Dhananjaya de Silva had also completed his second hundred of the match, leaving the hosts with an improbable 511 target to chase.Still, their dramatic collapse has left Sri Lanka needing just five wickets in two scheduled days of play. There is some rain forecast for Monday afternoon, but Sylhet’s weather otherwise looks conducive for cricket. Sri Lanka will feel they are on the brink of a rollicking victory.Sri Lanka’s quicks delivered testing lines on a pitch that still rewarded high-quality seam bowling. Vishwa Fernando got movement through the air, and Lahiru Kumara and Kasun Rajitha gained zip off the surface. Vishwa bowled some especially good balls, particularly to Mahmudul Hasan Joy, whom he trapped in front in the first over with a ball that swung late, straightened, and would have hit leg stump, as well as to Shahadat Hossain, who played and missed his first two balls and edged the third one behind.All up, Vishwa’s take for the day was 3 for 13 from his seven overs. Rajitha and Kumara took a wicket apiece.But there was indiscipline from Bangladesh too. Captain Najmul Hossain Shanto was out fifth ball, throwing his bat at a full delivery that had pitched more than half-a-metre wide of off stump. Then, the last wicket to fall was that of Litton Das, who having kept wicket all day, ran down the track first ball he faced, and played a giant hoick across the line to Kumara. Predictably, he top-edged it, and was caught metres from the pitch by the incoming cover fielder.Before Bangladesh’s batting imploded, however, Sri Lanka’s lower middle order had thrived yet again. De Silva and Kamindu had rescued Sri Lanka from 57 for 5 in the first innings with a 202-run stand. Though the team was better-placed on this occasion – 222 runs ahead with four wickets in hand – their 173-run partnership on Sunday nevertheless transformed the game’s outlook, turning Sri Lanka’s good position into an utterly dominant one.Although Kamindu was somewhat circumspect to begin with, scoring just five off his first 20 balls, both batters progressed smoothly, after coming together in the third over of the day (Khaled Ahmed had removed nightwatcher Vishwa with a sharp bouncer). With the ball almost 40 overs old, Bangladesh’s quicks were not getting much lateral movement. And the spinners were not getting purchase off the wicket.Although the pitch had plenty of pace and bounce still, it had eased to some extent, and both de Silva and Kamindu were quick to spot the length, and played the pull with particular ease. Their scoring areas were mostly square of the wicket with only the occasional boundary coming down the ground.They attacked in bursts too, to really impose themselves on the opposition, In an eight-over period starting with the 47th of the innings, the pair clattered 56 runs. Through that passage, Kamindu collected consecutive boundaries off Nahid Rana, before de Silva flat-batted the same bowler past mid on two balls later. Then, next over, de Silva clobbered Mehidy Hasan’s offspin for two slog-swept sixes. Bangladesh’s attack had been rendered flat, and they never really recovered.The second and third sessions saw Sri Lanka picking their way through milestones. De Silva got to his 12th career century off the 164th ball he faced, though he was out soon after for 108. Kamindu completed his second Test ton off the 171st ball, then later brought up 150 with a slogged six over long on off the bowling of Taijul Islam. He was the last Sri Lanka batter to fall, with de Silva not willing to declare, perhaps because there was so much time left in the game. By the time he holed out, Kamindu had struck six sixes.Bangladesh had had some chances, but these came fairly late in these batters’ innings. De Silva should have been out on 94 when he played at a Mehidy delivery that ended up in the hands of the wicketkeeper Litton. But neither keeper nor bowler spotted that de Silva had gloved the ball, and failed to appeal. Kamindu was also dropped by Litton (a tough chance), off Mehidy, on 133. The easiest chance was shelled by Rana running back from midwicket, when de Silva had top-edged a pull off Shoriful Islam.Of Bangladesh’s bowlers, Rana was by far the most expensive, having struggled for line throughout the day. He leaked 128 off his 20 overs. Mehidy was the most successful, claiming 4 for 74 from his 29 overs.

'Cristiano Ronaldo has crazy numbers' – Germany captain Joshua Kimmich blown away by Portugal superstar ahead of Nations League semi-final clash

Germany's Joshua Kimmich lauded Cristiano Ronaldo's career consistency before going head-to-head with 40-year-old superstar this week.

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  • Ronaldo praised by upcoming opponent
  • Kimmich amazed by superstar's numbers
  • Veteran's club career still uncertain
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Ahead of playing his 100th game for Germany in this week's UEFA Nations League semi-final against Portugal, Joshua Kimmich was asked at the pre-match press conference about facing Cristiano Ronaldo. The skipper spoke with great respect for an opponent who is still playing at the highest level in his fifth decade on earth and has scored more international goals than any male player in history.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Ronaldo's Portugal tally of 136 goals is a world record in men's international football. His 219 caps is another world record, by some distance, the only male player to represent a senior national side more than 200 times. Ronaldo made his senior club debut back in 2002 and has been a Portugal international for 23 years, more than half his life. There is some debate about tallies recorded by players from older generations, notably Pele – who claimed to have scored over 1,200 goals, but Ronaldo's career goal tally of 936 is also recognised as a world record.

  • WHAT JOSHUA KIMMICH SAID

    "I read that he scored [136] goals for the national team," Kimmich told reporters. "Cristiano Ronaldo has crazy numbers, especially when you look at the consistency, he's been playing at a very high level for over 20 years, performing for his country. For me, 100 caps already makes me very proud."

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    For all that Ronaldo is undoubtedly an all-time great, his powers are definitely waning. He has struggled to make a telling impact for Portugal at successive major tournaments in 2022 and 2024 and hasn't found the net in a game against what might be considered an elite international opponent since a brace against France at Euro 2020 – four years ago.

He earns more than Ndiaye: Everton must axe Thelwell's "disaster" signing

Everton have undergone an incredible transformation since David Moyes was placed at the wheel, driving up the Premier League table, away from the danger zone and toward the comfy security of mid-table.

But Moyes isn’t going to stop there. He won the Conference League with West Ham United, remember, led the Hammers through three successive campaigns on the continent.

But Merseyside is his home, Everton his club, and he wants to get them back on their perch, having struggled to impress for so long.

With The Friedkin Group replacing Farhad Moshiri at the head of the table, Moyes has been told he will have money to spend this summer, with Kevin Thelwell also exiting his role as Director of Football at the end of the term, succeeded by Leeds United’s Angus Kinnear.

Thelwell has helped to guide Everton through a turbulent period, and though he had his ups and downs, he can leave with his head held high after a promising final transfer window in 2024.

Everton's recent transfer business

Everton emerged from the 2023/24 campaign bruised but not broken. Financial breaches had allowed PSR to clamp down on Merseyside and extract eight hard-earned points from Sean Dyche’s squad, but this wasn’t enough to send them spinning to the second tier.

Everton manager Sean Dyche

Thus, spending was always going to be difficult, but the sales of Amadou Onana, Ben Godfrey and homegrown Lewis Dobbin generated finances in the £70m ballpark, allowing for several deals that needed to hit the mark.

Jake O’Brien has come into his own at right-back since Moyes took to the helm, while Orel Mangala was excellent before cruelly seeing his season ended prematurely in January due to injury. He’s a loanee, but Everton have the option to sign him permanently.

Jesper Lindstrom hasn’t been brilliant on the right flank, yet to score, but at least he’s only on loan – and has provided something of a steady and industrious outlet.

Then there’s Iliman Ndiaye, signed from Marseille for £15m. Pure magic on the alternate wing, notching eight goals from 28 matches across all competitions. He’s played 24 times in the Premier League in the Toffees, but three of his six strikes came in the five appearances under Moyes’ leadership.

Thelwell did his best and fans have been receptive to his efforts, thankful for them. However, that’s not to say he invariably hit the mark when shopping, with Everton still needing to get rid of his worst signing despite the flop last kicking a ball for the Blues in 2023.

Thelwell's worst Everton signing must go

Everton have missed the mark on more than a few occasions in the 12 years since Moyes left for Manchester United, picked as Sir Alex Ferguson’s heir.

While he hasn’t been the most costly blunder, Neal Maupay’s got to be down at the nadir, certainly one of Thelwell’s biggest misfires during his time at the decision table.

Everton striker Neal Maupay.

After several decent Premier League campaigns in Brighton, Frank Lampard’s Everton moved to sign Maupay for a £15m fee, but his time at the club quickly devolved into a nightmare.

Maupay bagged just the one goal across 32 appearances in all competitions for Everton. Notorious for his reputation as a wind-up merchant, the French striker endured his most pitiful spell by the banks of the River Mersey.

Neal Maupay: Premier League Stats by Season

Season

Club

Apps

Goals

Assists

2023/24*

Brentford

31

6

3

2023/24*

Everton

2

0

0

2022/23

Everton

27

1

0

2021/22

Brighton

32

8

2

2020/21

Brighton

33

8

2

2019/20

Brighton

37

10

3

Stats via Transfermarkt

His revival at Brentford further frustrated the Everton fanbase, but not nearly as much as his remarks last year: “Whenever I’m having a bad day, I just check the Everton score and smile.” A brazen thing to say given he’s still on the books.

With four goals and four assists apiece in Ligue 1 this season, starting only 12 matches under Roberto De Zerbi, Maupay is enjoying something of a renaissance – but that doesn’t mean he’s got a future on Merseyside.

Earning around £48k per week, the 28-year-old Everton player is still earning more than Ndiaye (£45k-per-week), emphasising the woe that cannot be shaken from this deal-that-shouldn’t-have-been.

While Marseille are likely to be covering a portion – if not all – of his salary – it still represents a hefty pack packet that was agreed upon when Everton initially welcomed him to the club with high hopes that he would become their abiding talisman.

Marseille have the option to keep Maupay at the Stade Vélodrome for about £3m, which would be decent business if Everton succeed in recouping at least something for one of their most infamous modern players.

Perhaps Thelwell orchestrated one last piece of good business in the Frenchman’s loan package. Without question, though, Maupay’s signing was a “disaster” – a sentiment shared by journalist Paul Brown – and those of an Everton persuasion just want him off the books.

Outscoring Beto: Everton must rue selling star now better than Richarlison

Everton could do with this former “menace” in their ranks this season.

By
Angus Sinclair

Mar 7, 2025

Revealed: Ruben Amorim told Alejandro Garnacho he'd 'better pray' he can find a new club in BRUTAL takedown in front of Man Utd team-mates as winger is effectively kicked OUT of Red Devils squad

Ruben Amorim told Alejandro Garnacho to "pray" that he can find a new club in a public dressing down in front of the entire Manchester United squad.

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  • Garnacho being forced out
  • Amorim brutally dresses him down
  • Garnacho seeking new club
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Per the , United boss Amorim held an open meeting at Carrington on Saturday in which he essentially confirmed that the winger can leave this summer. He was so angry, however, that he said, "You better pray that you can find a club to sign you", in a manner that informed the entire squad his United career is over.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    The Argentine has made 58 appearances in all competitions this season but he was vocal in his displeasure at how he was used in the Europa League final, as he was named as a substitute, and then played just 19 minutes in the 1-0 defeat to Tottenham. Afterwards, he claimed the season was "sh*t".

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Napoli and Chelsea have been touted as possible options for Garnacho and United are said to value him at up to £70 million ($94.5m), but it is unclear if they will be able to extract full value from a player who has now been exiled.

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    WHAT NEXT?

    United have embarked on a post-season tour of Malaysia and Hong Kong. It is unclear if Garnacho will play against ASEAN All-Stars on Wednesday.

Bayern Munich now going all in to sign "fantastic" Man Utd player for £40m

Manchester United boss Ruben Amorim may be busy trying to save his side’s faltering season, but he will also have one eye on potential summer transfer activity at Old Trafford.

Man Utd salvage late point at Goodison Park

Summing up an inconsistent run of form under Amorim, Manchester United salvaged a late point at Goodison Park on Saturday lunchtime despite finding themselves victims of a two-goal deficit against David Moyes’ in-form outfit.

Beto and Abdoulaye Docoure appeared to have put the Red Devils on the verge of another demoralising defeat, but a late free-kick from Bruno Fernandes was followed up by an inch-perfect Manuel Ugarte strike to guarantee a share of the spoils.

Nevertheless, a common theme was present in the Merseyside sunshine. United’s disconnect within the backline was exposed ruthlessly, while a lack of firepower from the likes of Rasmus Hojlund and Joshua Zirkzee threatened to consign the visitors to another damaging loss.

Man Utd’s lack of firepower in attack across all competitions

Rasmus Hojlund

Appearances – 33

Goals – 7

Joshua Zirkzee

Appearances – 38

Goals – 5

Chido Obi-Martin

Appearances – 2

Goals – 0

On this occasion, two key vessels in the engine room stepped up to save the Red Devils from further frustration. Either way, they sit 15th in the Premier League standings and will look to the Europa League and FA Cup to provide some solace in a campaign that is petering out.

Come the summer, funds need to be raised for Amorim to breed fresh ideas. Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s INEOS helped to bring Patrick Dorgu and Ayden Heaven to Old Trafford in January, but they will want to maximise profit to enact a full rebuild ahead of 2025/26.

Man Utd set price for Marcus Rashford with Bayern keen

Marcus Rashford became Manchester United’s main January window casualty after a fallout with Amorim led the England international to join Aston Villa on loan for the remainder of the campaign. He has since kicked on at Villa Park, lodging two assists in the Villans’ dramatic 2-1 victory over Chelsea on Saturday evening.

Looking ahead to the summer, reports in Spain indicate Bayern Munich want to sign Rashford for £40 million and their sporting director Christoph Freund is said to be heavily involved in negotiations to land the Three Lions attacker, with the German giants going ‘all in’ for the player still on the books of Man Utd.

Aston Villa's MarcusRashfordreacts after the match

Labelled ‘fantastic’ by Jamie Redknapp after his exploits against Chelsea, the £300,000-a-week man is at a career crossroads given his age and has raised his market value owing to a series of impressive cameos since pitching up in the West Midlands.

Thriving off the left flank, Rashford created three chances at home to Enzo Maresca’s stuttering Blues and recorded a pass completion rate of 94% alongside five touches in the opposition penalty area.

Clearly enjoying his football in the midst of a difficult first half of the campaign at his boyhood club, his recent form may pave the way for Manchester United to cash in on his services for a premium should appropriate interest arise for the talented forward.

Attempting to strike up a bidding war would be the best course of action for the Red Devils, with long-overdue investment in the first team needed to propel the club back to a position where they can challenge for trophies on a regular basis.

KL Rahul ruled out of third Test against England; Devdutt Padikkal called up

Rahul’s absence further complicates matters for India, who also didn’t pick Shreyas Iyer for the remaining three Tests

ESPNcricinfo staff12-Feb-2024India have been dealt a blow in the lead-up to the Rajkot Test against England, with KL Rahul ruled out of contention due to a sore knee. Devdutt Padikkal, Rahul’s Karnataka team-mate, has been called in as a replacement.Rahul had earlier missed the second Test in Visakhapatnam due to a quadricep injury, and was included in the squad for the last thee Tests only subject to fitness. *A BCCI release on Monday evening said he “has reached 90 per cent of match fitness” and that “he will continue his recovery process at the National Cricket Academy (NCA) in Bengaluru to be completely match-fit for the fourth and fifth Test.”Already light on batting experience with Virat Kohli missing due to personal reasons, Rahul’s absence further complicates matters for India, who also didn’t pick Shreyas Iyer for the remaining three Tests.Related

  • India's selection puzzle for Rajkot: is there room for both Kuldeep and Axar?

  • Padikkal hits the high notes after some quiet seasons

  • Iyer left out for remaining three Tests vs Eng; Kohli unavailable

  • Padikkal looks to bounce back by 'staying stable through highs and lows'

That aside, it isn’t confirmed yet whether Ravindra Jadeja has recovered from the hamstring injury he had suffered during the first Test in Hyderabad. Jadeja is in the squad to play the third Test, which will take place on his home ground, but his participation is pending fitness clearance.Meanwhile, this is a maiden Test call-up for Padikkal, who is expected to link up with the squad on Tuesday from Chennai, where he struck 151 and 36 against Tamil Nadu in the fifth round of the Ranji Trophy fixture that finished on Monday.Padikkal, the 23-year-old left-hand batter, has so far aggregated 556 runs in six innings at an average of 92.66 this Ranji season. He has scored three centuries, with a highest of 193 in the season opener against Punjab. Prior to his most-recent Ranji outing, Padikkal impressed with scores of 65, 21 and 105 for India A against the touring England Lions in Ahmedabad. The century in the second unofficial Test was part of a massive first-innings batting effort that helped set up an innings victory.He was also part of the shadow tour to South Africa with India A in December, where he had an opportunity to train alongside India’s Test regulars prior to an intra-squad fixture.So far in this Ranji season, Devdutt Padikkal has 556 runs at an average of 92.66•PTI

“South Africa was a great experience for me, in terms of having the chance to train with the seniors,” he had told ESPNcricinfo last month. “Being in and around them, playing that level of bowling prepares you well for the Ranji season. I looked at it as an opportunity to get volumes in, in terms of my batting. I’m grateful for that experience.”Having started off as an opener, Padikkal has slowly transitioned into a predominantly top-order role that requires him to bat at No. 3 – and at times even at No. 4 – for Karnataka. With Mayank Agarwal and R Samarth opening the innings for his state side, Padikkal has established himself lower down. This change of role is something he has learnt to embrace after a middling IPL 2023 for Rajasthan Royals. The tipping point, he said, was his trade to Lucknow Super Giants, where he’ll be playing under none other than Rahul.”I don’t look at it in terms of just being an opener anymore,” he had said. “I’m enjoying my opportunities, wherever they may be. Each position you bat in offers a different challenge. I’m trying to learn new things, [and] adapt to situations. It helps me grow as a cricketer, [and] helps me understand the game a lot more – not just in terms of my batting but [also] how the game works across different phases.”Overall, Padikkal has solid first-class credentials, having averaged 44.54 across 31 matches. He has played two T20Is for India, both of which came against Sri Lanka in July 2021.In Visakhapatnam, India handed a Test debut to Rajat Patidar. Sarfaraz Khan is the other uncapped batter in the mix along with Padikkal. Jadeja’s potential unavailability could well pave way for another Test debutant in Rajkot. It’s also likely India could still pick one of Sarfaraz and Padikkal even if Jadeja is available and they play their usual three spinners and two quicks.India have two full days of training leading into Rajkot, with the series locked at 1-1.India’s squad for the third Test: Rohit Sharma (capt), Jasprit Bumrah (vice-capt), Yashasvi Jaiswal, Shubman Gill, Rajat Patidar, Sarfaraz Khan, Dhruv Jurel (wk), KS Bharat (wk), R Ashwin, Ravindra Jadeja, Axar Patel, Washington Sundar, Kuldeep Yadav, Mohammed. Siraj, Mukesh Kumar, Akash Deep, Devdutt Padikkal.GMT 1450 hrs This story was updated with information from a BCCI press release

Dani Olmo’s agent responds to transfer talk amid claims Pep Guardiola dreams of signing £60m Barcelona star for Man City

Dani Olmo's agent has addressed rumours that Manchester City want to sign the midfielder from Barcelona for £60m.

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  • Olmo agent addresses transfer talk
  • Man City reportedly interested
  • Would cost £60m from Barcelona
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    It was reported this week that City boss Pep Guardiola "dreams" of bringing Olmo to the Premier League as he searches for a new attacking midfielder. Olmo's agent has claimed the player is happy at Barcelona, however.

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    WHAT OLMO'S AGENT SAID

    Olmo's agent Andy Vara told Sky Germany: "We're not talking to any other club. Dani is very happy at Barcelona right now, he's winning titles there and he's in a great team. The rumours aren't true. Although, of course, you never know what the future holds."

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Olmo has had some problems at Barcelona with registration issues meaning he missed games in January. They have been put on hold in the second half of the season, though, and he has scored 11 goals and assisted seven in his first season in Catalonia, and helped the team win La Liga and the Copa del Rey.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR OLMO?

    Barcelona have games against Villarreal and Athletic Club still to play this season, with Olmo aiming to prove his long-term value to the club.

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