MLS Coaches on the hot seat: FC Dallas's Eric Quill, Atlanta United's Ronny Deila and New England Revolution manager Caleb Porter all under pressure

GOAL takes a look at three managers whose seats are heating up in the second half of the MLS campaign

D.C. United's Troy Lesense in the latest to get caught up in the MLS coaching carousel, with the former RBNY assistant fired after the team's elimination from the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup last week. He joined Sporting Kansas City manager Peter Vermes, CF Montreal coach Laurent Courtois, and St. Louis CITY manager Olof Mellberg among the coaches dismissed this season.

There is little margin for error as the second half of the campaign begins, with each Conference race heating up.

Eric Quill, the first-year head coach with FC Dallas, has looked somewhat out of his depth in recent weeks, and heading into Matchday 25, FCD sit 13th in the standings and eight points outside a guaranteed playoff spot in the West.

New England Revolution boss Caleb Porter and Atlanta United manager Ronny Deila have both had underwhelming stretches, and both will be under pressure considering how competitive the East is this season.

GOAL takes a look at MLS coaches on the hot seat.

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    Eric Quill: FC Dallas

    Quill, in his first year at FCD after joining from USL side New Mexico United, has faced mounting concerns this season. Injuries haven't been kind to his roster at times, and some key players have missed minutes. But as it stands, FCD isn't seen as a threat by their Western Conference competitors.

    In 21 matches, they've only taken 21 points and sit 13th in the West. They have the second-worst goal differential in the conference at minus-12, with just 23 goals and 35 conceded. Notably, they're the worst-performing home team in the West this year so far.

    They only have one home win on the season, taking five points from a possible 30, with a mark of 1-7-2. Mellberg, who was fired by CITY earlier this season, was also a first-year manager in MLS – and was removed just months into his new role. Things must turn around for Dallas if Quill hopes to escape that fate.

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    Ronny Deila: Atlanta United

    Deila, a former MLS Cup winner with NYCFC, was expected to take Atlanta United to new heights in 2025 after the club spent big this offseason – that included MLS-record signing Emmanuel Latte Lath from Middlesbrough and club legend Miguel Almiron from Newcastle United.

    The duo joined as Designated Players alongside a former Europa League winner from Atalanta in Alexey Miranchuk. The trio – arguably the most star-studded DP group outside of Inter Miami's ex-Barcelona group of Lionel Messi, Jordi Alba, and Sergio Busquets – cost the nearly $50M. With that, expectations were enormous.

    Fast forward to the season's mid-point, and Atlanta is on just 19 points through 21 games and has yet to win a single road match. They're 12th in the Eastern Conference, 12 points back from a guaranteed playoff spot, and 25th in the race for the Supporters' Shield.

    Seemingly everything has gone wrong for Deila this season, from struggling to figure out his tactical setup to individual defensive errors plaguing his squad. As it stands, Atlanta – the league's highest-spending team in 2025 – is going to miss out on the postseason by a wide margin.

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    Caleb Porter: New England Revolution

    It's been a familiar theme over the past 18 months: Caleb Porter on the hot seat in New England.

    He managed to last the entire 2024 campaign. The club turned over their roster in the offseason, and things looked to be trending positive through the first 15 weeks – including a stretch in which they won five straight across all competitions.

    Since that stretch, however, the Revs have played 12 matches and they've won just once – that came against CF Montreal, who were in last place in the East at the time. They're winless in six at the moment, and things are not looking good for the club.

    The positive spin is that are in the thick of the playoff race. Just four points separate the Revolution from ninth-place Charlotte, and six from the final guaranteed playoff spot in the East.

    For Porter and the Revs, qualification for the playoffs is the bare minimum.

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    Others to watch

    + Ben Olsen and the Houston Dynamo missed the playoffs from 2018 through 2022, made the Conference semifinals in 2023, and exited the 2024 version in the opening round. However, they have stagnated in 2025. As it stands, they're competing for a play-in spot, and are hoping to climb into a guaranteed postseason position.

    + Pablo Mastroeni has an important transfer window ahead of him for Real Salt Lake. It's make or break for a club that is in desperate need of reinforcements. Factor in that there there is European interest in Diego Luna, and the window becomes even more important. If Mastroeni and the RSL front office can't bolster their roster ahead of a playoff push, things could take a turn for the worse.

Rohit and India keep faith in their methods to gain record-breaking reward

They lead England 2-1 having stayed calm in the face of an early onslaught in Rajkot

Karthik Krishnaswamy18-Feb-20245:02

Rohit: ‘The youngsters belong here and want to stay here’

It ended like so many India home Tests over the last decade. A hefty winning margin was in sight, and R Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja were fighting over the final wicket.Ashwin has more Test-match-ending wickets than anyone else in history, 23, one more than Shane Warne in second place, but Jadeja won on this occasion, completing his 13th five-wicket haul as India sealed victory by a record 434 runs.It was an entirely familiar finish, but seldom have India got to one in quite this manner. They had been 33 for 3 on the first morning, and recovered to post 445. England, in reply, had rocketed to 207 for 2 in 35 overs by stumps on day two. Later that night, Ashwin, the most experienced member of India’s line-up, had left Rajkot for personal reasons, leaving them with only four bowlers for the remainder of England’s innings.From there to the accelerated finish in the dying moments of day four, when England collapsed to 122 all out, India had played some of their very best cricket. And while it was in one sense a comeback win, it didn’t necessarily fit the traditional narrative of a comeback – where a team changes its style of play to counter and overcome a dominant opposition.Related

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  • Yashasvi Jaiswal, Ravindra Jadeja star in India's biggest Test win by runs

It was, instead, a win of persistent belief in Plan A when Plan A may not have seemed to be working in any obvious sense. It had not seemed to work in the first Test in Hyderabad, where England pulled off a remarkable come-from-behind win. It had brought India a win in Visakhapatnam, but it seemed – at least to the spectator – that the result could have been different if not for a great display of fast bowling from Jasprit Bumrah. When Plan A led India to where they were at the end of day two in Rajkot, other teams may have wondered whether it was time to try something different.India did not. While they made micro-level tactical adjustments, like any bowling group would, their overall strategy remained much the same: hammer away on a good length, and keep the stumps in play as much as possible. They trusted in these methods, and trusted that they had too much quality in their bowling group for those methods to not bring rewards at some point.”When you’re playing Test cricket, it’s not played over two days or three days. We do understand the importance of extending the game for five days,” India captain Rohit Sharma said at the post-match presentation. “[England] played well, to be honest, and played some really good shots. They put us under pressure a little bit there, but look, we’ve got class in our squad, when it comes to bowling.”Obviously, the message was to stay calm because when things like that happen, it’s actually easy to drift away from what you want to do as a team. But I’m really proud of how we came back the next day, stuck to what we discussed, and when those things happen, it’s a delight to watch.”2:04

Harmison: Rohit’s captaincy applied pressure on England

Ben Duckett peppered the boundaries in Rajkot, hitting 23 fours and two sixes in a 151-ball 153, but India kept reminding themselves to judge themselves on whether they were bowling good balls and forcing the batters to take risks to score their runs.”Yeah, look, they actually played shots off really good balls,” Rohit said at his post-match press conference. “Even the first Test match where [Ollie] Pope got that [196], he was very much in control and played shots off some really good balls, and when the batter is doing that, obviously the plan is to keep it very simple, nice and tight, follow the plans that have been discussed.”These guys have bowled a lot in these conditions, so they exactly know how to keep coming back into the game. Rather than getting frustrated and doing too many things, it is important that you stick to your strengths, understand where the run-scoring opportunities are, for the opposition, and then try and stop them.”India’s persistence paid off, as Kuldeep Yadav bowled 12 incisive overs of wristspin on the third morning to lay the groundwork for Mohammed Siraj to burst through England’s lower order with an irresistible spell of reverse-swing. Their efforts, and those of the relentless Bumrah and Jadeja, helped India claim a 126-run lead. That swelled to 556, thanks to Yashasvi Jaiswal’s second double-hundred in consecutive Tests and half-centuries from Shubman Gill and Sarfaraz Khan, before India declared 50 minutes before tea on day four.”Lot of turning points,” Rohit said. “Once we won the toss… that was actually a good toss to win because we know in India how important it is to win the toss and put runs on the board. And the lead that we got was very, very crucial for us. And the way we came out and bowled after that onslaught from the English batters was important for us to stay calm. The bowlers actually showed a lot of character and not to forget we didn’t have our most experienced bowler as well. But for this group to come out and get the job done in that fashion was really, really proud to watch.”The group Rohit referred to was one of the more inexperienced combinations India have used in a home Test in recent times.Kuldeep, who made his Test debut in 2017, was playing just his 10th Test match, and Jaiswal his seventh. Sarfaraz was on debut, as was wicketkeeper Dhruv Jurel, while Rajat Patidar, at No. 4, was playing only his second Test. Gill (23 Tests) is still new to the No. 3 role that was occupied by Cheteshwar Pujara for most of the last decade.India have been without Virat Kohli (113 Tests) and Mohammed Shami (64) all through this series, while KL Rahul (50) has featured only in one Test. Jadeja (70) missed the second Test in Visakhapatnam, and Ashwin (98) bowled only 13 overs across the two innings in Rajkot.”Two debutants and not a lot of Test matches amongst the playing XI as well,” Rohit said. “So lot of these guys are learning from the experience they’re having in the middle. We got a lot to learn [from] how we played in Hyderabad, and then in Vizag when we won, obviously we knew it’s not going to be an easy one for us to just come out here and win this series, we have to work really really hard, especially with a lot of our frontline players missing as well.”A lot of credit to these young boys who have come in and shown a lot of character. Looks like they belong here, and they actually want to stay here as well. So yeah, it is quite satisfying when you win a Test match like that. We always talk about the bench strength. Today and even in Vizag, we got to see a lot of bench strength as well.”

'It didn't work out' – Marcus Rashford admits he wanted to join Barcelona in January before making loan move from Man Utd to Aston Villa instead

Marcus Rashford admits he wanted to join Barcelona in January but was unable to do so, after he was confirmed as the club's latest signing.

  • Rashford joins Barcelona on loan
  • Catalan giants have option to buy
  • Rashford lifts lid on failed switch
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Rashford has been confirmed as Barca's newest signing, joining the club on loan from Manchester United. The Catalan giants retain an option to buy the England international in the summer should they so wish. Now, the forward has confirmed that he wanted to move to Camp Nou in January, before eventually opting to move to Aston Villa on loan.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Rashford insists he had no difficulty in choosing to join Barcelona, as it has been his "preference" from the outset. The figures clearly did not align in the winter window, although he has finally ended up in Spain ahead of the 2025/26 campaign. He will wear the number 14 shirt at Barca, and has also issued a classy farewell to United.

  • WHAT RASHFORD SAID

    Rashford said at his unveiling: "Not difficult. I was clear on my preference from the very beginning, actually from January, but it didn't work out in January so I went to Aston Villa. I enjoyed a good period there, I enjoyed myself a lot, and I'm very grateful for the opportunity to play there. The summer came around quickly and again, it was time to make another decision but my choice was easy. I feel like, one, it's a family club, something I'm used to from my past and it feels like home so I feel like I've made the right decision. I'm just excited to get going and play the first game, and play in front of the fans, to play for this football club is a special moment for me so I'm ready to get going."

    He added, on United: "The club is in a period of change and has been for a while. I don't have anything bad to say about Manchester United. It is an important part of my life. I wish them all the best and I hope they are successful in the future."

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    WHAT NEXT?

    Rashford will not be making his debut in a previously scheduled pre-season friendly against Vissel Kobe because Barca have been forced to cancel their friendly, throwing their entire Asia tour into doubt. La Liga kicks off on August 16, with Barca playing Mallorca away.

Discipline wins the day

England’s bowlers and Mohammad Kaif reaped the rewards of keeping it tight

On the Ball by S Rajesh03-Mar-2006When play began on the third day, with Wasim Jaffer and Rahul Dravid well-entrenched at the crease and many stars to follow, few would have thought that India might at one stage be in danger of following on. That they were in such a position was largely due to outstanding efforts by Matthew Hoggard and Monty Panesar.As the graphic below shows, both had impeccable control over the lengths they bowled. On a slow track, it was imperative to pitch the ball up to the bat, and cut the short deliveries to a minimum. Both Hoggard and Panesar managed that superbly. When they did err – and it wasn’t often – it was on the fuller side.Not only was Hoggard’s length spot on, his line was exceptional too – out of 180 deliveries, 170 pitched around middle-and-off or further off side. To make it even worse for the batsmen, he moved the ball both ways – 58 deliveries came back into the batsmen, while 40 moved away. It was the perfect combination of accuracy and seam and swing, and the Indians had no answer.They still managed to end the day in a comfortable position, thanks to Mohammad Kaif and Anil Kumble. Struggling to cement his place in the side, Kaif was understandably watchful for much of his innings – after 104 balls he had scored just 20, before he found a higher gear. His strokes chart indicates he played the percentages well – he eschewed the horizontal-bat shots and was well on his way to a century before Panesar produced a peach to sour the day.

Players to watch

Osman Samiuddin and Dileep Premachandran pick their three players to watch

Osman Samiuddin and Dileep Premachandran12-Jan-2006


Rana Naved-ul-Hasan could be equally dangerous this time round
© Getty Images

Inzamam-ul-Haq
For Inzamam, batting has never been as precise a skill as it has been in the last year. Almost every time he has moped to the crease, he has begun intent and finished with aplomb. More often Pakistan have been in crisis and occasionally in a position of strength, but Inzamam has always produced. This winter – or summer – world cricket has witnessed Inzamam and Ricky Ponting, two batting captains at their absolute peak. And here too Inzamam will be expected to score; his captaincy leans so heavily on his form that his runs are doubly crucial. A good time to face Anil Kumble, whose low-trajectoried legbreaks have harassed Inzamam traditionally.Shoaib Akhtar
Back in the business of fast bowling and how. Although his recent record prior to the series against England was impressive anyway, with 17 wickets in three Tests, over a hundred overs and stellar batting rearguards, he became literally a new man. A bit like his slower ball; he’s always had a good one but against England, with added flight and dip, it became a superb one. Although he stamped his presence internationally with two deliveries against India at Eden Gardens, spiritually they have become almost a bogey team for him now, after his infamous absence last year and notorious underperformance two years ago. If he can sustain the hostility, then some of his spells to the likes of Sehwag, Dravid, Tendulkar and Laxman promise great things.Danish Kaneria
After his success this past year and his performances in India last year, he has a reputation to uphold rather than establish and that may be one of the more significant challenges. Against England and the West Indies he won matches with swift wickets and he can be thanked, in the age of Warne and Kumble, for making the googly fashionable again. The Indians adjusted to him well last year but never really nullified him and for batsmen used to toying with leggies, it would have grated. Might not be burdened as much this time as he was in the last series but his contributions will be equally as crucial.Wild Card – Rana Naved-ul-Hasan
Completely in keeping with his demeanour, his Test performances against England in the last series were among the most promising and simultaneously among the least celebrated developments. He had said before the series that the imbalance in his ODI and Test performances was a mental rather than skill-based aberration and he finally overcame it, with some help from four-day county cricket. What India saw in the ODI series in India, they might now see in the Tests here. He has become, in two Tests, an exciting and remarkable foil to Shoaib; he experiments, he swings the ball, has bustling pace and various changes of it, he bowls for hours. Additionally, his Duracell-fuelled energy with bat or in the field is a sizeable bonus. An eye, a diligent one, will have to be kept on him.


Sachin Tendulkar: The only player in the side to tour Pakistan thrice
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Rahul Dravid
When Dravid has scored big, which has been with monotonous regularity over the past five seasons, India have rarely ever lost. When those lofty standards have dropped, as against Australia last season, India have subsided to defeat. Sehwag may be more flamboyant and Tendulkar more celebrated but, more often than not, it’s been Dravid’s obduracy and sheer bloody-mindedness that has thwarted the opposition. Once defensive and dour, he can now also change gears effortlessly and with cynics pointing to an average of 22 from six Tests as captain, you can be sure that he’s whipping up the eggs to smear on their faces.Record against Pakistan: 9 Tests, 804 runs at 53.6, 3×100, 2×50Virender Sehwag
Until he stuttered in Zimbabwe – and he can rarely be bothered with minnow-bashing – and at home against Sri Lanka, Sehwag had legitimate claims to being the world’s most destructive and effective opening bat. Striking the ball as powerfully as Matthew Hayden in his pomp, Sehwag mined a rich vein of form that included glorious centuries against Australia and Pakistan – 309 at Multan and 203 at Bangalore being the pick of the bunch. He hasn’t really struggled of late, but has kept frittering away starts, which could be absolutely fatal to India’s chances if repeated in this series.Record against Pakistan: 6 Tests, 982 runs at 98.2, 3×100, 2×50Anil Kumble
By relentlessly pushing himself in search of slow-bowling perfection at an age when most think of the comforts of the commentary box, he has been the subcontinent’s answer to Shane Warne – without the nurses and the lewd texts. The last tour of Pakistan was part of an incredible renaissance that included matchwinning displays at Adelaide, Multan and Chennai and while accuracy and persistence remain his calling cards, there is also an enhanced repertoire to worry about. Factor in a matchless attitude, and you know why he remains so dangerous even when the ball’s not turning his way.Record against Pakistan: 9 Tests, 54 wickets at 27.48, Four 5-wicket hauls.Wild card – Sachin Tendulkar
It would be tempting to cite the burgeoning allround talent of Irfan Pathan, but his figures against Pakistan (18 wickets at 41.77, and 128 runs at 18.28) don’t really inspire confidence. Even in Tendulkar’s case, the numbers – 855 runs at 42.75 – are far less formidable than against most opposition, largely the result of the four Tests he played without much success as a kid in 1989. But when was the last time India went through a major series without Tendulkar making some inimitable imprint on proceedings? And when you keep him quiet with the bat, he may just sting you with his spin variations, as Moin Khan discovered to his horror at Multan on the last tour.Record against Pakistan: 13 Tests, 855 runs at 42.75, 2×100, 5×50

Moore the merrier for West Indies

David Moore was a fairly unknown when he took on the role of West Indies coach, but after an eye-opening tour of England he has big hopes for the future if he gets the job full time

Will Luke in Dublin14-Jul-2007


‘An academy will have a massive influence on the future of West Indies cricket’
© Will Luke

It is arguably the most poisoned of chalices, coaching West Indies. Many have tried, few have succeeded and when David Moore replaced Bennett King after this year’s World Cup, the consensus was “who?” Yet although he has only been in power for a matter of months, the effect he is having on West Indies has already been felt.Moore is an uncomplicated character; straight-talking, passionate about his job and speaks fluently (with a strong Australian twang) about the future. He believes in himself and his players. The notion that he was taking on a role widely perceived as a nightmare, or a thankless task, is utterly alien to him and it is palpably clear that he thrives on getting the most out of his players.”I don’t necessarily think it’s a poisoned chalice,” he told Cricinfo at a drizzly Dublin this week, where West Indies were taking on Scotland. “I think it’s a wonderful opportunity. I know the players; I know they’re very good quality players and we’ve just been a bit short of the mark.”Though West Indies turned around their summer, beating England in the one-day series, their decade-long decline has been so stark that the masters of the 1970s and 1980s are still viewed through rose-tinted spectacles. This was Moore’s era – if not as a player (he played once for New South Wales in the 1980s) then a fan – and he witnessed the bulldozing effect West Indies had on the world. They were the top dogs, an accolade now belonging to his native Australia. However, Moore isn’t depressed or weighed down by the hope of reliving the glory days.”It’s very difficult [comparing present to then], yes – but cricket’s very cyclical. I lived through the time where Australia were at the bottom of the table. Look where they are now,” he said. “I remember Australia getting beaten by India, New Zealand – everyone. So I think it’s cyclical but I also think the structure the boards put in place also have an effect.”I think the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) are implementing in the right direction, and they’re trying to implement their new cricket academy. I think one of the very important positions that they’re going to advertise for is the head of their academy. That will have a massive influence on the future of West Indies cricket. I know that they’re moving very quickly to try and get that finalised.”


‘Hard work is the key. Hard work, discipline, energy and commitment’
© Will Luke

Academies – the buzz phrase of the last few years – and their impact on Australian cricket has been plain to see. Quite whether the WICB can manage to build one is another matter entirely. Nevertheless, Moore insists they are the way forward.”It gives them good, hard training to practise and to modify skills – and that can have a massive effect on their development,” he said. “With any academy, it underpins focus to that group of players. They’re playing together, living together – living, breathing and eating cricket, 24 hours a day. It’s a very important institution in every cricket-playing nation or team.”A cricket academy would help create consistency because consistency is formed through hard work. Get them together, build their fitness, build their skills, their mental approach…the raw talent is certainly there.”Raw talent or not, Moore will need the full support of his board if his dreams are to become a reality, and he is quick to insist that an academy alone can’t resurrect West Indies’ glory days.”It takes time to understand and relate success to hard work,” he said, “and some of our guys are realising that. Hopefully they’ll maintain that, and their focus. As head coach…I just like players to be able to express themselves as cricketers and in the way they think. But also to make them realise that hard work is the key. Hard work, discipline, energy and commitment. I’m not saying it’s been lacking before I came on board but I think we’ve got those to work on for sure.”And Moore has joined a growing number of people impressed with the impact Chris Gayle has had on the team.”His captaincy has been very good, yes. His relationship with players and [the coaching staff] has also been very good. Chris is a very good judge of cricket: he identifies points that we can be happy about, but he also recognises points that we can work on, so I’ve been very impressed by his ability to read the game and I hope he gets other opportunities in the future.”The impression you get from Moore is that he lives and breathes West Indies cricket and that he too would welcome further opportunity. He is still not full-time, but clearly the chalice isn’t so much poisoned as precious and promising.

Australia end their century drought

The 308-run partnership between Joe Burns and Travis Head, meanwhile, was Australia’s biggest against Sri Lanka for any wicket

Bharath Seervi01-Feb-2019308- The partnership between Joe Burns and Travis Head for the fourth wicket is Australia’s biggest for any wicket against Sri Lanka. The pair eclipsed a nearly 30-year-old record set by Dean Jones and Steve Waugh, who put on an unbroken 260 in Hobart in December 1989. The Burns-Head partnership is also the highest fourth-wicket stand by any pair against Sri Lanka.ESPNcricinfo Ltd13- Tests without a double-century partnership for Australia before this one. The last such stand came in the Perth Ashes Test in December 2017, between Mitchell Marsh and Steven Smith. In 13 Tests in 2015, Australia’s batsmen put on as many as eight 200-plus stands.1- Centuries by Australia batsmen in their last 11 Tests coming into this match. The lone century was by Usman Khawaja in Dubai.384- Australia’s score at stumps is already their highest total since the last Ashes, in 12 Tests. The previous highest was 362 for 8 in the fourth innings of the Dubai Test in October.1- Travis Head scored his maiden Test century, playing his eighth Test and 13th innings. He had made four fifties. It was Joe Burns’ fourth century and his current score is already the highest by a right-handed Australia opener since Michael Slater’s 219 versus Sri Lanka at the WACA in December 1995. Burns has been involved in three of Australia’s last four 250-plus partnerships.5- Tests played by Sri Lanka’s three fast bowlers before this one. Kasun Rajitha had played three, Vishwa Fernando two, and Chamika Karunaratne was making his debut. Fernando and Karunaratne reduced Australia to 28 for 3 in the ninth over, before Burns and Head dug in for most of the rest of the day.

Liven it up

For two days the batsmen have made a pitch that has been testing look like a disaster area by playing, missing, edging and complaining

Peter English at the Gabba21-Nov-2008

Straight bats are much better in these circumstances than horizontal ones on lively surfaces
© Getty Images

Modern batsmen have forgotten how to play on lively surfaces. Perhaps this
generation never learned, or lost the ability during years of pampering on
flat surfaces that inflated their averages and belief. At least it gives
them something to blame for the failures in this fascinating Test.For two days they have made a pitch that has been testing look like a
disaster area by playing, missing, edging and complaining. Twenty-six
wickets have fallen in two days, including 16 on the second day, the most
in a Gabba Test since the Ashes Test of 1950-51. There is no desperation to call for the
pitch inspector for this is a strip that has coped well with a wet
preparation and made an entertaining contest.If the finance requirements and television stations didn’t prefer that
matches always entered a fifth day, there would be more cause to create
pitches that challenged the game’s most protected species. Australia and
New Zealand have returned from series in India and Bangladesh over the
past month and finally – but briefly – the bowlers have been allowed to
upset the game’s order by embarrassing the batsmen instead of the other
way around. It’s a shame it can’t last, but the final Test of the series
is in Adelaide next week.New Zealand’s inexperienced batsmen mirrored the rashness of Australia’s
by flaying to 156, and by stumps the home side had a lead of 189.
Throughout the second day there were big drives that resulted in bowleds
(Jamie How and Grant Elliott), nibbles that went to the slips (Aaron
Redmond and Matthew Hayden), a shuffle that ended in a lbw (Ross Taylor)
and a horribly misjudged pull from Ricky Ponting, who glared at the pitch
before he left. Straight bats are much better in these circumstances than
horizontal ones, something Andrew Symonds didn’t remember 28 minutes
before stumps when he edged a swipe off Chris Martin.On a day of carelessness the most worrying moment came with the casual
run-out of Michael Clarke, who didn’t bother to reach for the crease and
was beaten by a smart throw from Redmond at backward square leg. It was a
small moment, but it summed up the mood of both line-ups. With the going
tough, the batsmen appeared to give up. Stupid pitch. Great match.Daniel Flynn, the No. 6, looks like the kind of batsman who would be happy
to defend through to Christmas, which was exactly what New Zealand needed.
Unfortunately for Flynn, he was unbeaten on 39 when his team-mates were
dismissed in 240 minutes.Only four batsmen reached double figures before Australia tried their best
to match the effort, reaching 6 for 131 at stumps. The opener Simon Katich
lifted himself above the damage with an unbeaten 67 that was the brightest
and most composed innings of the match. He will be vital to Australia’s
target setting on Saturday.While the rest of the batsmen grumbled at their perceived misfortune – and
ignored the need for grit to replace glitz – the supporters at the Gabba
were cheering. After sitting in the stands at times during the first two
days it quickly becomes clear what the fans want from the players:
boundaries, bouncers and wickets. The people who pay to watch are capable
judges of excitement and seeing them in a hurry to stand when an umpire
raises his finger is moving, literally and emotionally.These types of wickets are good for everybody but the batsmen. In the
commentary boxes there is a gentle debate about whether this pitch should
be called a greentop. To anyone who has played club cricket, or Tests
before the 1990s, it looks like a wicket that would test your technique
but is far from impossible. To modern batsmen, the ones who have to go to
work on it, the strip carries more demons than an episode of Buffy the
Vampire Slayer. For the rest of the summer they will have the advantage,
so it is fun watching them struggle for a few days.

An axe waiting to fall

The dissolution of SLC’s interim administration under Arjuna Ranatunga was widely expected following a constant difference of opinion with the sports minister

Sa'adi Thawfeeq24-Dec-2008

Relations between Arjuna Ranatunga and the Sri Lankan national team weren’t always as cordial
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The dissolution of Sri Lanka Cricket’s interim administration under Arjuna Ranatunga was widely expected following a constant difference of opinion between the former World Cup-winning captain and the sports minister, Gamini Lokuge. The decision comes in the backdrop of a tumultuous year that featured more controversies than cricket.The situation, which was constantly deteriorating, eventually came to a head after Ranatunga decided to sack 16 employees of Sri Lanka Cricket last week. The aggrieved employees approached the Minister, who ordered that no decision should be taken without first consulting him.Ranatunga was appointed to the post in January 2008 after former chairman Jayantha Dharmadasa decided to step down. Ranatunga said then that he was taking over to set things right in cricket but he leaves having done more wrong than right.Ranatunga tried to run Sri Lanka Cricket in the same autocratic and ad hoc way he captained the cricket team. But the circumstances are different, and what worked for him as captain has clearly backfired in his term as administrator. He has come across as obstinate and impulsive, and his refusal to involve his committee members in the decision-making process has earned him constant criticism. Worse, most of his decisions have turned out to be counter-productive.Incredibly for a player-administrator, he has managed to alienate the majority of Sri Lanka’s international players. The relationship, already rocky, virtually broke down when he unilaterally committed Sri Lanka to a tour of England in April-May 2009 despite being fully aware that a majority of the Sri Lankan players were contracted to play in the IPL in the same period. The England tour was not part of the ICC’s Future Tours Programme but hastily organised to fill a gap in the English summer that arose due to Zimbabwe’s withdrawal.Ranatunga justified his decision saying that the cash-strapped Sri Lankan board badly needed the US$2 million guarantee money the tour would bring. But the tour fell through when the sports minister sided with the players.

Ranatunga, who began his tenure by appealing to the Indian cricket board to bail out Sri Lanka Cricket, is now seen as the biggest obstacle in the relationship between the two boards.

Ironically, Ranatunga, who began his tenure by appealing to the Indian cricket board to bail out Sri Lanka Cricket, is now seen as the biggest obstacle in the relationship between the two boards. The Indian administrators haven’t taken kindly to the Ranatunga’s constant jibing – he has emerged as a strong opponent of Twenty20 cricket and in fact blamed India’s loss in the first Test against Sri Lanka earlier this year to the after-effects of the IPL – and made it clear there could be no relationship between the two boards as long as Ranatunga was in charge. Consequently, the Indian board withdrew an offer of a US$70 million bailout package for Sri Lanka over a ten-year period in return for a commitment to Twenty20 tournaments organized by the BCCI.It is speculated that Ranatunga – who met President Mahinda Rajapakse after his removal – will be offered a ministerial post; those in the running to replace him include a former cricket board president, a former interim committee chairman and a current interim committee member.Whoever takes over the job, though, is likely to inherit a mess.

Captain Kumble calls the shots

Bangalore’s turnaround has much to do with Kumble’s appointment as captain following the departure of Kevin Pietersen

Sriram Veera in Johannesburg19-May-2009The tale of today’s two captains can’t be more contradictory. Anil Kumble has almost taught this team to win while Delhi have sailed along without Virender Sehwag’s contribution with the bat. Bangalore hadn’t won much before Kumble took over and led from the front with his bowling; Sehwag has been almost anonymous through a mix of poor form and injury but Delhi – still comfortably top of the table despite today’s defeat – haven’t missed him.On a flat night at the Wanderers – the crowd was out of it till Ross Taylor biffed a few sixes – Bangalore cruised through a game they had in control from the dramatic first over. They were in top form – they had to be given their must-win situation – and, though clinical and professional, displayed a hunger to win.Bangalore’s turnaround has much to do with Kumble’s appointment as captain following the departure of Kevin Pietersen. Even Ray Jennings, the coach, admitted as much, noting that Kumble’s tenacity and hunger to win – qualities that served the Indian team for almost two decades – have spread across to the team. Not too long ago they were languishing near the bottom of the table, the players pessimistic about the fate of their campaign.Kumble changed all that – he set the example and the seniors followed. Last year, they failed to put up their hand. This year, though, Jacques Kallis, Rahul Dravid and Mark Boucher have shone and Ross Taylor has begun firing at the right time. Kallis, the man whom Kumble pipped to the captaincy post, has especially supported him superbly with the bat. As witnessed tonight in another typically serene Kallis knock; he batted on calmly with Dravid and dropped anchor to allow Taylor a cameo before finishing the game.The seniors’ performances have started to rub off on the youngsters; Praveen Kumar, Vinay Kumar and Virat Kohli have chipped in with vital contributions to keep the team afloat in the competition. It’s a team that has worked really hard in their preparation. At times, they have had a strenuous workout in the morning before playing a practice game in the afternoon. Kumble hasn’t had to worry about reckless late-night partying, unlike last year when Martin Crowe had to impose a curfew mid-tournament.For all the preparation and practice, though, the wins weren’t coming. Till Kumble entered. He has led superbly with the ball in the last few games. Today, he didn’t have to do much as Praveen and Kallis had done the damage first up with the new ball. He simply had to ensure that Delhi didn’t get away in the middle-overs and he did it without much fuss. There was one Kumble moment, though, that evoked memories of his younger days when he would feast on the non-Asian and non-specialist batsmen with his pace.The mind went back to a home series against England when Kumble haunted, harrassed and made a mockery of Richard Blakey. The bat would go up and, in the blink of an eye, the stumps would be in disarray. Or the ball would crash against the pad or produce a hurried fatal prod. Today, Andrew McDonald found out what Blakey must have felt like. Anyone could have predicted Kumble giving him the yorker. Yet when it came McDonald was helpless; the bat was late and the furniture was disturbed. It was akin to watching one of those wildlife films where the tiger stalks the deer before pouncing; the brutality loses none of its beauty in the absence of surprise.Even in the earlier games, Kumble has bowled like a champion that he is. Not many have collared him and when some, like Yuvraj Singh, have tried, they have had to admit defeat pretty quickly. Kumble has been his fierce old self and his team has flourished under him.In contrast, Sehwag has seen his team win without his contribution. It’s a sign of a settled team and Sehwag could actually be pleased with it. He would know, though, that he’ll have to fire in the pressure games ahead to support his middle-order which has stood up valiantly so far. Last year, the top-order used to fire and the middle-order struggled. So far, it’s been the reverse. Sehwag’s best could come in the knockout games. For Delhi it would be well worth the wait.

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