Renshaw in the runs again after Australia A quicks impress

The home side were set a target of 365 after Spencer Johnson and Wes Agar claimed four wickets apiece

AAP and ESPNcricinfo staff03-Apr-2023

Matt Renshaw continued his productive outing in New Zealand (file photo)•Getty Images

Matt Renshaw gave his Ashes hopes a boost with yet another big score for Australia A in their tour match against New Zealand A in Lincoln.Renshaw followed up his first-innings knock of 112 with a quick-fire 78 off 72 balls as the visitors declared at 218 for 2. It set New Zealand A a victory target of 365, and they went to stumps on day three at 31 for 0, needing a further 334 runs to win.Related

Renshaw pushes Ashes claims by dominating opening day against New Zealand A

Agar and Johnson strike before New Zealand A fight back

Tim Ward continued his impressive outing with an unbeaten half-century while captain Nathan McSweeney helped speed Australia A to their declaration with 69 off 58 balls to also make it twin fifties in the game.Renshaw’s big knocks come at a perfect time for him given the question marks surrounding David Warner’s Test future.Warner’s lean run with the bat in the Test arena over the past 12 months means he’s no certainty to be picked for the World Test Championship final against India at The Oval in June and the ensuing Ashes series in England.Renshaw played the last of his 14 Tests in India earlier this year, posting scores of 0, 2 and 2 in his only three knocks of the series before being dropped.Despite those failures, the 27-year-old remains in the Ashes mix, and his form at Bert Sutcliffe Oval will further strengthen his chances.Renshaw cracked 11 fours and two sixes in the second innings as Australia A ramped up the run-rate in a bid to give themselves enough time to bowl out the hosts for a second time.New Zealand A were dismissed for 224 in their first innings courtesy of big displays from pace duo Spencer Johnson (4-53) and Wes Agar (4-56). Both quicks struck twice in an over to work through the home side’s batting.”We’re great mates off the field, and it’s a really cool thing to be able to tour with someone you’re so close to,” Agar said of bowling with Johnson. “To be here and performing is a really special thing. And it’s cool to have someone with pace, with aggression.”It makes my job a lot easier to be able to bash away on the wicket when you’ve got someone at the other end who is whizzing around the ears at the high 140s.”Mitchell Swepson, who is aiming to snare a ticket to the Ashes as Australia’s back-up spinner, finished with 1 for 51 from 12 overs.Cole McConchie top-scored for NZ with 74, while Tom Bruce chipped in with a handy 48.

منافس الأهلي | قائمة إنتر ميامي لـ كأس العالم للأندية 2025

أعلن الأرجنتيني خافيير ماسكيرانو، المدير الفني للفريق الأول لكرة القدم بنادي إنتر ميامي الأمريكي، قائمة لاعبيه استعدادًا لبطولة كأس العالم للأندية 2025.

ويستعد إنتر ميامي الأمريكي، للمشاركة في البطولة والتي من المقرر أن تنطلق يوم 15 يونيو الجاري بنظامها الجديد بمشاركة 32 فريقًا في الولايات المتحدة الأمريكية.

ويبدأ إنتر ميامي الأمريكي مشواره في بطولة كأس العالم للأندية بمواجهة قوية أمام الأهلي في المباراة الافتتاحية لمنافسات البطولة والمجموعة الأولى.

وتضم المجموعة الأولى كلًا من إنتر ميامي الأمريكي والأهلي المصري وبورتو البرتغالي وبالميراس البرازيلي.

وشهدت القائمة تواجد نجوم عديدة أبرزهم ليونيل ميسي ولويس سواريز وسيرجيو بوسكيتس وجوردي ألبا، نجوم برشلونة السابقين. قائمة إنتر ميامي لـ كأس العالم للأندية 2025

حراسة المرمى: دريك كاليندر – أوستاري أوسكار – ويليام ياربرو – روكو ريوس نوفو.

في خط الدفاع: جونزالو لوجان – توماس أفيليس – هيكتور مارتينيز – رايان سيلور – إيان فراي – جوردي ألبا – تايلر هال – نوح ألين – ماكسيميليانو فالكون – مارسيلو وايجاندت – إسرائيل بوترايت.

في خط الوسط: سيرجيو بوسكيتس – تيلاسكو سيجوفيا – بالتسار رودريجيز – بينايمين كريماسكي – دفيد رويز – يانيك برايت – فريدريكو ريدوندو – سانتي موراليش.

في خط الهجوم: فافا بيكولت – لويس سواريز – ليونيل ميسي – تاديو أليندي – أنفونسو ليو – ألين أوباندو.

Can Pakistan overcome off-field noise against Southee-led New Zealand?

Both sides are coming off four consecutive losses in the format

Osman Samiuddin25-Dec-2022Big pictureNew Zealand are ok. Yeah, they’re going through “a transition”. Yeah, they’ve got a new Test captain. Yeah, they have lost six of their nine Tests in this World Test Championship cycle. Yeah, they were the first guinea pigs in the Bazball experiment. Yeah, they haven’t played a single Test since then.But they are New Zealand. This just doesn’t sound drastic, right? It never does. They’ll plan, they’ll nurture, they’ll be efficient and optimal with their resources, play their cards right, quietly bide their time and be good again, and we’ll be like, yeah, New Zealand are ok. It’s just a matter of time.Related

Shahid Afridi named interim chief selector of Pakistan men's team

Ramiz Raja removed as PCB chairman

On the other hand, Pakistan have gone old-school meltdown and some of us are shouting, It’s About Damn Time. There they were until last week, floating along on a little fluffy cloud of bland, but at least in control of it. Ramiz Raja was in charge, Babar Azam was in charge, the PCB’s social media, where everything – even a historic 3-0 whitewash – was always so positive and upbeat, was in charge.Five days later Shahid Afridi is the chief selector. SHAHID AFRIDI IS THE CHIEF SELECTOR! That’s never not going to take getting used to. A coup’s been staged against Ramiz, and the new guys – who are really the old guys – cut some cake as the first order of business. Babar’s team-mates suddenly are having to tweet their support to him. Nobody’s doing the same for Saqlain Mushtaq, so he is going to go soon. The chief selector is already gone. People are talking about Mohammad Rizwan’s place in the Test side.The fast-bowling cupboard is Shaheen Shah Afridi. That’s it. The domestic system is about to be completely ripped apart. Again. Also, Shahid Afridi is the chief selector and he’s saying straight-laced things like: “We had a good discussion on the squad and agreed we needed to strengthen our bowling department to give ourselves the best chance of taking 20 wickets in a match.”What all of it means for the immediate future of the two Tests these two now play, your guess is as good as anyone’s. Pakistan are hurting, heaving with change. New Zealand are being New Zealand and for added inscrutability haven’t played a Test in yonks. Both are coming off four consecutive losses. At a pinch, let’s say it shouldn’t be boring.Form guidePakistan LLLLW (last five Tests, most recent first)
New Zealand LLLLWIn the spotlightMohammad Rizwan is not having a great year. Suddenly, one of the first names on Pakistan’s team sheet is no longer necessarily that, not with a new selection committee in place. His T20I partnership with Babar has come under increasing scrutiny. In Tests, there are calls for the return of Sarfaraz Ahmed to replace him. It’s a little unfair. His glovework may be a little theatrical, but he’s still safer than any of his modern predecessors. He is averaging 30 this year with bat, which isn’t great but isn’t diabolical either. It’s not a string of low scores either, but a series of unconverted starts. Safe to say though that he – and Pakistan’s batting – could really do with him converting one of them.In Asia, Tim Southee has picked up 48 wickets at an average of 25.47•AFP/Getty ImagesSuddenly, everyone’s a fast-bowling captain. This summer in England Tim Southee looked cooked, though, in hindsight, that was probably more England’s batting than his bowling. Now, six months later he is New Zealand’s new Test captain, ready to bowl in a continent where he has an exemplary record. Only last year he was putting on a masterclass in Kanpur but this time, he’ll be without his long-time partner-in-swing, Trent Boult. How he goes with ball in hand, and command on the field, will determine how this series goes for the tourists.Team newsPakistan had a squad. Then the PCB was overhauled. And three new players were added to the party. Now, as far as Babar is concerned, “We will have a discussion with the selectors; then we will decide the final XI”.Pakistan (probable): 1 Imam-ul-Haq, 2 Abdullah Shafique, 3 Shan Masood, 4 Babar Azam (capt), 5 Saud Shakeel, 6 Sarfaraz Ahmed (wk), 7 Agha Salman, 8 Sajid Khan, 9 Abrar Ahmed, 10 Mir Hamza, 11 Naseem ShahNew Zealand are likely to bolster their spin attack with Ajaz Patel coming in. Trent Boult, of course, is not available.New Zealand (probable): 1 Tom Latham, 2 Will Young, 3 Kane Williamson, 4 Devon Conway, 5 Henry Nicholls, 6 Daryl Mitchell, 7 Tom Blundell (wk), 8 Michael Bracewell, 9 Tim Southee (capt), 10 Neil Wagner, 11 Ajaz PatelPitch and conditionsThe Karachi pitch for the recent Test against England was slow and low, but not necessarily uneven in contest for it. It’s most likely, given the swift turnaround time, to behave similarly. But who knows, with a new administration in town, it may liven up a little. Babar expects it to “change each day, day by day things get different”.Stats and trivia Pakistan used to love playing New Zealand but since 2011 have only won 3 of their 12 Tests against them and lost seven. 60.40 > 54.77: Babar’s average against Kane Williamson’s since October 2019 (just before Babar’s breakthrough Test series against Australia). A little more surprisingly, he has played ten Tests more than his counterpart in the same period. 71.22 – Daryl Mitchell’s average this year is the third-highest of any batter with at least five Tests.Quotes”Yes, we could not play the last series the way we wanted to, because we committed mistakes. Now we need to overcome that and try to play good cricket.”

Exclusive: Ex-Arsenal player has one fear with Nwaneri and Lewis-Skelly

Former Arsenal man Jermaine Pennant has told Football FanCast that Mikel Arteta could face issues if he relies too much on Ethan Nwaneri and Myles Lewis-Skelly during the business end of the Premier League season.

Nwaneri and Lewis-Skelly now first-team regulars

Lewis-Skelly is now a regular name on the teamsheet for the Gunners, with the 18-year-old featuring in nine of the last ten Premier League games, most notably scoring the third goal in the 5-1 demolition of Manchester City at the beginning of February.

Despite being just 17, Nwaneri has also made 15 Premier League appearances this season, receiving increased game time amid the absence of Bukayo Saka, and the teenager has picked up two goals and one assist in his last four matches.

Breaking into the Arsenal first team at such a young age is no mean feat, and the duo’s performances indicate they could go on to be key players for Arteta in the years to come, but there are some concerns about their suitability for a title race.

Arsenal can sign striker with nearly 20 goals this season for £43m in July

The Gunners are still in the market for a centre-forward.

ByEmilio Galantini Feb 18, 2025 Pennant skeptical about relying on youth

Speaking to Football Fancast, Pennant, who came through at Highbury at a similar age, has suggested it may be unwise to depend on the academy graduates as we enter the business end of the season, despite how highly he rates the pair.

West Ham (h)

February 22nd

Nottingham Forest (a)

February 26th

Man United (a)

March 9th

Chelsea (h)

March 16th

Fulham (h)

April 1st

Arteta’s side have a tough run of fixtures coming up, while they are also still to play Liverpool and Newcastle United in May, so it is understandable to have concerns about relying on young players.

However, the “fearless” duo have proven they can handle big matches already, setting a new record after both scoring in the 5-1 victory against Man City.

The potential return of Saka next month will allow Arteta to be a little less reliant on Nwaneri, but as suggested by Pennant, the lack of experience can also be a positive.

Having been uninvolved in the previous two title races, the young duo are less likely to be inhibited by the fear of failure, and they will be full of confidence after both putting in top-drawer performances against City earlier this month.

'It wasn't nice' – Kevin De Bruyne opens up on heartache of Man City refusing to hand him new contract with legendary midfielder adamant he can still 'perform at this level'

Manchester City midfielder Kevin De Bruyne has opened up on the heartache of receiving no new contract offer from the club, saying 'it wasn't nice'.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

  • De Bruyne leaving this summer
  • Still wants to play at highest level
  • Man City decide against new deal
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  • Getty Images Sport

    WHAT HAPPENED?

    Speaking to the press after City's 2-0 win at Everton on Saturday, the 33-year-old spoke out about the behind-the-scenes activities that led to him announcing his Etihad exit earlier in April. While De Bruyne's Premier League performances haven't quite been up to scratch this season, it's clear he still backs himself and is not happy about the club's decision to let him go once his current deal ends.

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  • WHAT DE BRUYNE SAID

    According to De Bruyne, "there was a little bit (of shock)" when he found out he wouldn't be offered a contract extension. He said: "I didn't have any offer from them through the whole year and the club made a decision. Obviously, I was a bit surprised but I have to accept it. Honestly, I still think I can perform at this level like I'm showing but I understand that clubs have to make decisions. It was half a week till I reported it out and it wasn't nice. My family weren't home. They were on holiday so it was a bit weird but it is what it is… I told (Txiki Begiristain, sporting director and Ferran Soriano, CEO) that I feel like I still have a lot to give. I know I'm not 25 anymore, but I still feel like I can do my job."

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    The Belgium international has struggled for consistent form over the past two seasons and has been increasingly plagued by injuries as he's grown older. But at 33, De Bruyne still has the quality and physical capacity to turn a top-level game on its head, as he showcased in a brilliant display against Crystal Palace earlier this month. When his City contract ends, there will no doubt be several clubs interested in bringing him in.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR DE BRUYNE?

    The Belgian star evidently isn't ready to retire just yet, but there aren't many clubs that would be able to match his extortionate Etihad wages. In the same interview, De Bruyne told the press, "I'm open for anything because I have to look at the whole picture. I'm looking at sporting reasons, family and everything together." Before that transfer rolls around, he'll be keen to play a central role in securing City Champions League qualification.

England's injury list grows with Livingstone ruled out of remainder of the Hundred

England will pick their squad for the seven-T20I tour of Pakistan tour next week and might have to name an expanded contingent of players

Matt Roller28-Aug-2022England’s injury crisis has deepened ahead of their seven-match T20I series in Pakistan and the T20 World Cup this winter, with Liam Livingstone becoming the latest to be ruled out of the final stages of the men’s Hundred.Livingstone was the MVP at the 2021 men’s Hundred as Birmingham Phoenix finished top of the table after the group stage, before losing in the final. But an ankle injury means it’s the end of the Hundred for him this time around.England’s white-ball set-up had hoped the Hundred would give key players the opportunity to find form ahead of a busy winter but a significant number of players have had to withdraw through injury.

Jos Buttler, England’s white-ball captain, picked up a calf injury and is not expecting to play every game in Pakistan, while Jason Roy missed Oval Invincibles’ win against London Spirit on Saturday night with “lower back stiffness”.Chris Jordan (finger) and Tymal Mills (toe) both picked up knocks while Richard Gleeson is yet to feature for Manchester Originals after a series of niggles. Reece Topley pulled out of the final stages to manage his workload, while Jofra Archer, Brydon Carse, Saqib Mahmood, Olly Stone, Chris Woakes and Mark Wood were all out with injuries.England will pick their squad for the Pakistan tour next week and the scale of their injury crisis, plus a packed schedule that will see them play seven T20Is in 13 days, means they are likely to select a larger touring party than usual.Will Jacks is expected to feature after a breakout season in the Blast and the Hundred, while his Surrey and Invincibles team-mate Tom Curran will be back in the reckoning after a long injury-enforced absence from the England set-up.Livingstone’s absence is a significant blow to Phoenix’s chances of reaching the knockout stages, as they have lost their leading run-scorer and a key allrounder ahead of two vital games against Originals and London Spirit.Phoenix could go top of the table with a win against Originals on Sunday night but defeat would see Originals leapfrog them and leave them relying on results elsewhere in the final round of games.They have signed Sol Budinger, the explosive Nottinghamshire opener, as a replacement, but are likely to bring one of Dan Mousley, Brett D’ Oliveira or Graeme van Buuren off the bench and into their side on Sunday night.Phoenix said in a statement that Livingstone would be assessed by the ECB’s medical team. Craig Flindall, their general manager, said: “We’re disappointed to lose Liam, not just for his performances on the pitch but also his leadership within the group.”

£120k-per-week Arsenal player decides to leave with West Ham approach made

West Ham United have made an approach to sign a player from Arsenal in the last week, following his decision to depart the Emirates Stadium.

Julen Lopetegui drops West Ham transfer hint for January

Hammers boss Julen Lopetegui has dropped a January transfer hint with the winter window now well underway, as injuries strike for crucial figureheads.

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ByEmilio Galantini Jan 1, 2025

Jarrod Bowen has broken his foot and will be out for the foreseeable future, dealing a seismic blow to Lopetegui, who now ponders life without his club captain. The east Londoners take on Premier League champions Man City at the Etihad Stadium this afternoon, and it will be a difficult game to navigate minus the talismanic winger in their side.

Meanwhile, long-serving striker Michail Antonio has been discharged from hospital after suffering a horrific car crash in December last year, and the Jamaica international is expected to face a lengthy spell of rehabilitation before deciding whether he can play again.

Man City (away)

January 4

Fulham (home)

January 14

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Aston Villa (away)

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February 3

“Unfortunately for us it is not going to be a few days,” said Lopetegui on Bowen’s injury.

“He was able to play 30 minutes with his injury, but now he has to rest and recover. Let’s see, but it is not good news for us. We are sure that Jarrod is going to try to make shorter the time that he recovers, because of his character. But it is true that he is going to be out in the next matches.

“Jarrod is one of our main players and our captain. But now we have to find solutions and it is the moment for other players to show that they are ready to help us.”

Newcastle defender Lloyd Kelly against Jarrod Bowen

When asked about the January window in his pre-Man City press conference, Lopetegui claimed that West Ham are “working” on potential new additions behind-the-scenes.

“It is true that we have these two important losses [Bowen and Antonio]. The club knows our needs and are working about [on] that,” said Lopetegui on West Ham signing players this month.

“We have to be focused in preparing for the next match against Manchester City, despite for sure the club is going to be working.”

There are reports that West Ham are targeting Real Sociedad forward Brais Mendez as an option, but it is believed they’re also thinking of reinforcing their back line.

West Ham make approach for Arsenal defender Kieran Tierney

According to The Boot Room and journalist Graeme Bailey, the Irons are keen admirers of Arsenal left-back Kieran Tierney, who’s apparently decided to leave N5 in January.

Arsenal defender Kieran Tierney.

Tierney is widely reported to be in pre-contract talks with Celtic, as his contract expires at the end of this season, but TBR write that the Scotland international is eager to quit Arsenal as early as this month.

They also claim West Ham have made an approach for Tierney in the last week. However, the £120,000-per-week defender has snubbed their interest, and ultimately favours a move back to former club Celtic above all as he continues talks with the Scottish champions.

Tierney made his first senior appearance for Arsenal in over a year during a 69-minute Carabao Cup cameo against Crystal Palace in late December, featuring in each of their last seven Premier League matchday squads, but his long-term future is certain to be away from north London.

Enquiry made: Chelsea make first move to sign "genius" star who’s Felix 2.0

Chelsea have been one of the more free-flowing, attacking teams in the Premier League this season, scoring 38 goals in their opening 19 matches and sitting fourth in the table on 35 points.

However, in the past few weeks, Enzo Maresca’s side have struggled to break down teams in a low block, with a 0-0 result against Everton, a 2-1 loss against Fulham, and a 2-0 loss against Ipswich.

Chelsea head coach Enzo Maresca

The Italian has made fewer changes from the bench in these games, posing the question of his trust in Chelsea’s rotation options on the bench, and therefore the Blues could make a move in the January window to add a game-changer substitute to their ranks.

Chelsea looking at Barcelona star

According to reports from Spain, Chelsea are among the clubs showing interest in Barcelona attacking midfielder, Dani Olmo, who has also received interest from the likes of Tottenham, Manchester City, Manchester United, Liverpool and Arsenal.

The reports state that Chelsea and Tottenham have recently made enquiries for the 26-year-old star, with Fabrizio Romano also confirming La Liga have rejected Barcelona’s appeal to register Olmo in their squad. This issue is what could make a deal for Olmo more feasible for all the interested parties, and cause big competition for his signature.

Olmo has made 15 appearances so far this season in all competitions, scoring six goals, providing one assist and totalling 813 minutes played.

João Félix vs Dani Olmo comparison

One man Chelsea signed from Athletico Madrid this summer, who fits the same description as a creative attacker who can make a difference, is João Félix, who joined last summer for a fee of around £45m.

Like Olmo, Felix is another who spent some time with Barcelona (on loan) scoring ten goals and providing six assists in 44 games for the club.

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Felix and Olmo are similar in the sense that they do their best work playing behind the striker, drifting into pockets of space to receive the ball. However, both have been utilised as wide men, who drift inside when a full-back provides width, becoming a secondary number ten instead.

Felix vs Olmo comparison

Stats (per 90 mins)

Felix

Olmo

Goals

0.56

0.57

Assists

0.19

0.19

xG

0.70

0.36

xAG

0.32

0.26

Progressive Carries

4.61

2.56

Progressive Passes

6.97

6.00

Shots Total

4.44

3.02

Key Passes

1.71

1.56

Shot-Creating Actions

4.47

3.78

Successful Take-Ons

2.24

2.22

Stats taken from FBref

When comparing the two, Felix is actually outperforming Olmo in most metrics this season, but many of these numbers will be inflated due to the number of minutes the Portuguese has played in the UEFA Conference League, against what many would deem to be “inferior” opposition.

Olmo has still shown his ability to provide output, scoring slightly more than Felix and providing the same assists per 90 (0.19). Both players have strong creative underlying numbers, providing over six progressive passes per 90, more than 1.5 key passes per 90, and over two successful take-ons per 90.

Olmo could well provide Maresca with another “genius” option from the bench, as he was described by journalist Josh Bunting on X for his performances in EURO 2024. Another creative option such as the Spaniard could offer another way of unlocking compact low-block defences, something the Blues continue to struggle with.

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Forget the platitudes about grit and passion and fight – Mauricio Pochettino and USMNT were undone in Nations League not by rhetoric, but familiar tactical shortcomings

Criticism of USMNT's effort and "want to win" are largely off the mark, yet there remain a litany of tactical issues to be addressed

Welcome to the U.S. men's national team panic sphere, where this team is suddenly "in crisis." It's a tragic place for a soccer team to reside. It doesn't really anything. What it does do, though, is fuel the kind of nonsensical rhetoric so often found around this most puzzling of footballing entities.

On Thursday night, the U.S. lost 1-0 to Panama in the CONCACAF Nations League semifinals. It was a pretty bad one. Mauricio Pochettino got his tactics wrong. Panama defended very, very well. Throw in some poor goalkeeping from Matt Turner at the death, a couple of puzzling non-subtitutions, and it was the perfect storm – a picture-book international smash and grab from the Panamanian perspective.

The U.S., as a result, will not play for the opportunity to defend their Nations League crown. Instead, they will face Canada in a not-really-that-happy-to-be-here third-place match at 6 pm ET Sunday at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles. This, in the eyes of many, means the U.S. soccer world is ending. There have been cries for more "intensity" and "grit" and "passion."

There are references to the good old days, when mid-table Premier League players such as Landon Donovan and Clint Dempsey, plus a plucky bunch of MLS fillers and European exiles willed their way to a series of dramatic, heroic failures by simply shouting at each other and wanting it more.

And so the rhetoric rumbles on around the national team. These are common themes, this central idea that American ideals – a "pull yourselves up by your bootstraps" style of soccer – is needed to push this overtly European looking side to victory.

Even Pochettino said after the loss that the USMNT "need to find a way to compete better. I don't like to say that. We are the USA, but you can't win with your shirt. You cannot win because you play here or there. You need to show and you need to come here and be better and suffer and win duels and work hard."

But that continuous insistence on "fight" is a vast oversimplification of a far more complex problem. These are a lot of good footballers who really do want to win when they step on the pitch. The Panama fixture was far more indicative of a lacking player pool and poor tactical nous – weighed down by an expectation of excellence that is unrealistic to place on a series of talented yet flawed players.

Getty ImagesThe burdens of the past

The United States has a puzzling history when it comes to its men's national soccer team. Like many nations, it has a series of signature moments. There was the famous 1-0 win over England at the 1950 World Cup, the "Dos a Cero" over Mexico 52 years later, Donovan's winner against Algeria, Tim Howard's 16 saves in defeat to Belgium.

Soccer is relatively new in this country, its culture still brewing, but there are still touchpoints to be found.

What it lacks, though, is a clear soccer identity. And that is the problem. There is no recognizable game-model to fall on, or signature style to harken back to. Spain keep the ball and pass you to sleep. Germany run and press. Brazil are more technically skilled. England – also quite good at losing in big moments – are stronger.

But modern football requires a top-to-bottom set of principles as to how a team should play with the ball. Instead, the U.S. seems to run off platitudes. They are going to "fight harder" than you. They just "want it more." They have that "dog" in them. And, ironically, for some time, that was enough. The United States made a living in the early to mid 2000s off being the plucky underdog side that could dig in, win its tackles, defend the box, and hit on the break.

For a generation of players, that was a calling card. Mix that intensity with a few talented individuals playing above the level of everyone else, and it worked a charm. Donovan, Dempsey, Howard, Michael Bradley – total Champions League appearances, 10 – were treated like national heroes. These guys became known for their fighting spirit, mostly because it was the way they could win.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportChange, change, change

The irony is, playing off emotion can only last for so long. It also relies heavily on the assumption that each wave of players thinks, acts and responds in the same way. But these are abstract qualities that don't exist in every footballer.

The U.S. was, in some senses, lucky that a group of players with similar mentalities came through at the same time. There was a collegiality here that really counted for something. Still, look at the results, and there isn't much to fall back on. The actual material stuff in the trophy cabinet holds little value.

The USMNT have won the Gold Cup – a competition that is increasingly a glorified set of summer friendlies between reserve teams – seven times. Elsewhere, they have slightly overperformed in the occasional World Cup, but always lost at the expected time (thus explaining the hunt for an elusive "signature win.") Tim Howard's performance against Belgium is remembered fondly in American circles, but came in a 2-1 loss to a vastly superior team.

Expectations, we are told, should be different now. In this generation – and no, it is not "golden" – the U.S. has its most talented group of footballers ever. Position for position, on quality alone, they would likely beat any other era of American side.

Getty Images SportA program revamp and the expectations

The difference, now, is that there is pressure on a manager to get it all right. And the U.S. has tried and failed for some time. That famous loss to Trinidad and Tobago that ushered out the "dog" era came with a new face in the dugout and a litany of new names worked into the mix. But even that soon turned stale.

The last 18 months of the Gregg Berhalter era felt like a sporting funeral procession. There was an understanding among many observers – often unspoken – that the former Columbus crew manager was not good enough to carry the U.S. through another World Cup cycle. He was considered, in some ciricles, fortunate to be in charge for Copa America.

And he proved as such in 270 minutes at that tournament. The U.S., of course, went out in the groups, losing to – and here's the kicker – Panama, in one of the more underwhelming major tournament performances from a host nation in recent memory. Berhalter went unceremoniously, and there were very few who felt particularly bad about it.

A new face had to come in. So arrived Mauricio Pochettino, experienced club manager, expected to play savior. The early signs were good. A win over – you guessed it – Panama opened his reign with promise.

A comprehensive defeat in Mexico was cast aside and tagged down, fairly, to a litany of injury issues and player absences. Jamaica were handily done away with in November, before January camp was negotiated with the kind of sigh appropriate for a 10-day period in which nothing of consequence ever happens.

Getty Images SportPanama and what went wrong

The Nations League is a curious thing. For non-host nations, there are implications associated with seeding and World Cup qualification. For the USMNT, hosts of the 2026 World Cup along with Canada and Mexico, it serves as more of a pin in an imaginary board, a date circled on a calendar.

There is a vague importance to all of this, if only because there is a game to be played – and the USMNT had never lost in the tournament. This new generation had another shot to prove that it could shake off the burdens of the old.

Pochettino himself stressed the importance of defending the Nations League title, both near and long-term.

"I want to win the competition," he said earlier this week, "because that is going to help us to build our confidence and trust in the way that we are going to need. At the same time, we need to be intelligent, to try to discover the best players and to build a strong core of the team that has the possibility to fight for big things. That mentality is about now, winning."

"The objective is the World Cup, and I think we are translating the idea that we need to compete in our best way and win the tournament because I think it's important for the future. In one year, we want to compete for the big trophy: the World Cup."

And as a result, Pochettino, groovy, shouty, and all, sincerely tried here. There was a formation in place, with footballers assigned to play them. What looked like a five at the back on paper turned into something resembling a 4-2-3-1 in possession. Yunus Musah looked like a right back on the team sheet, but spent a good portion of the game playing as an extra center midfielder or floating in the high right half space. There were, to be sure, ideas.

But Panama were good – very good. Like any shrewd opponent playing away from home, they set up to lose. Two banks of five parried away every U.S. attack with relative ease. They never really tried to keep the ball, and ensured that they didn't have it in areas where they could be pressed.

They completed 320 passes to the USMNT's 645. And when Cecilio Waterman, a 33-year-old forward who plays his football for Coquimbo Unido of the Chilean League, was given his chance in the 94th minute, he buried it. This was counter-attacking football in all of its whimsy.

Jason Behrendorff, Chris Green join Middlesex as Shaheen Shah Afridi, Mujeeb Ur Rahman bow out

International commitments cause availability headache as counties seek stand-ins

ESPNcricinfo staff22-May-2022

Jason Behrendorff claimed five wickets at Lord’s in the 2019 World Cup•Getty Images

Jason Behrendorff, the Australia left-arm seamer, has joined Middlesex for this season’s Vitality Blast campaign as a replacement for Shaheen Shah Afridi, whom the club has confirmed will not be returning this season due to his international commitments with Pakistan.Behrendorff, 32, claimed a career-best 5 for 44 at Lord’s during the 2019 World Cup, when Australia beat England during the tournament’s group stages, although his career to date has been limited to 12 ODIs and nine T20Is. He will link up with the club as soon as his IPL stint with Royal Challengers Bangalore is complete – they play Lucknow Super Giants in the Eliminator on Wednesday.In a further change to Middlesex’s original line-up for their Blast campaign, Behrendorff’s fellow Australian Chris Green will rejoin the club in early June, as a partial replacement for their original overseas signing, Mujeeb Ur Rahman, who is due to take part in Afghanistan’s three-match ODI series in Zimbabwe but will still play at the start and end of the group stages.Green, 28, was impressive with both bat and ball for Middlesex in last summer’s Blast campaign, playing in seven of the club’s South Group matches, and like Behrendorff has also tasted success in the Big Bash League, winning the title with Sydney Thunder in 2017.Afghanistan’s tour to Zimbabwe has caused a headache for several counties. ESPNcricinfo understands Rashid Khan will only arrive at Sussex after that tour in time for their ninth Blast fixture, with Mohammad Rizwan and Josh Phillipe filling their two overseas slots at the start of the season while Rashid is at the IPL.Related

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Rashid’s Gujarat Titans team-mate Rahmanullah Gurbaz is also likely to miss most of the Blast, with Leicestershire lining up New Zealand’s Hamish Rutherford as a replacement. Naveen-ul-Haq and Qais Ahmad, the other Afghanistan players involved in the Blast, have both arrived in the UK ahead of stints with Leicestershire and Kent respectively.”We are delighted to have added Jason and Chris to our T20 squad for the forthcoming Blast campaign,” Alan Coleman, Middlesex’s head of men’s performance cricket, said. “With Shaheen heavily committed to international duty with Pakistan we needed to bring a quality seamer into the attack for our Blast campaign, and in Jason we have a left-arm seamer of proven international class.”With Mujeeb also leaving on international duty, we were keen to ensure that we were covered in the spin department, and we all know what Greeny is capable of in the short form of the game. He fit in brilliantly last summer and can play a match-winning role for us, so we’re really looking forward to welcoming him back into the dressing room.”With more international cricket now being played it is becoming increasingly more difficult to secure the long-term availability of international players of the quality that you need over an extended period of time, and we are delighted that we’ve been able to secure players of the quality of Jason and Chris in the periods that we need them for. “

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