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Wayne Gretzky scored 894 goals in 1,487 career NHL games. Alex Ovechkin is poised to shatter that record, having scored 872 times in 1,451 games through Wednesday night.

That's a combined 2,938 career games played between the two players, sharing the ice with hundreds of teammates, spanning from Hall of Famers to one-night wonders. Yet there's only one player in NHL history that was a teammate to both Wayne Gretzky and Alex Ovechkin.

His name is Mike Knuble, a winger who played 16 hardscrabble seasons in the NHL. And he was as surprised as you are to learn he's the unexpected link between two hockey legends whose careers didn't overlap.

"I get to be one of the funny trivia answers! Got to put that in Trivial Pursuit or a bar game or something," he told ESPN recently, with a laugh.

As Ovechkin neared the Gretzky record, Knuble started wondering whether he was the only player to have skated with both the Washington Capitals star and The Great One as a teammate.

"I kind of was spitballing with somebody: 'Well, who's played in Washington and with the New York Rangers that's also about my age?' I'm like, 'There's nobody really. So maybe it's just me,'" he said.

Knuble was a 26-year-old forward with the New York Rangers in 1998-99, the final season of Gretzky's career. He played three seasons with Ovechkin in Washington (2009-10 through 2011-12) before finishing his career at age 40 with the Philadelphia Flyers.

"The fact that Ovi is nipping at Gretzky's heels is just crazy," Knuble said.

Gretzky was in his elder statesman era with the Rangers, and Knuble got to witness the mania when it was announced he was retiring after 20 seasons. But Knuble was the elder statesmen when he arrived in Washington to find a 24-year-rock star in Ovechkin, who had just won his first Hart Trophy and scoring title, as the face of the Capitals' "Young Guns" resurgence.

"I just felt so fortunate to play with them. They're both such superstars," he said.

In the process, Knuble became someone uniquely qualified to compare, contrast and analyze the two greatest goal scorers in NHL history as teammates.


KNUBLE WAS DRAFTED 76th overall by the Detroit Red Wings in 1991. After four seasons at the University of Michigan, and some time in the AHL, he joined the Red Wings as a rookie in 1996-97.

Knuble was no goal-scoring slouch, tallying 278 times in 1,068 NHL games, but he had a different approach to that art than Gretzky or Ovechkin did: He was famous for parking himself inches from the goaltender's crease and scoring short-distance goals while being mauled by opposing defensemen.

"[Hockey Hall of Famer] Dino Ciccarelli was the pioneer of that. He was undersized, under-gunned and got the s--- beat out of him all the time," Knuble said. "He scored 600 goals back when they could be really mean to you. I went [to the crease] when they weren't as mean."

Knuble chuckles when he sees goal-scoring heat maps in coaches' offices that show an intense crimson around the crease.

"I'll be talking to young players and I draw the East Coast of the United States. I draw Florida and then I draw Cuba and then a draw a big shark further away," he said. "And I'm like, 'If all the fish are right here between Florida and Cuba, why would you be swimming all the way over here if you're a shark and you're hungry? All the fish are right here! Go to where the fish are!'"

For most of the 1980s and 1990s, the fish were wherever Wayne Gretzky had the puck on his stick.

Knuble had never met Gretzky before, but he was a fan -- not just as a kid growing up in Toronto, but as an adult playing in the NHL.

Before the 1998 Olympics, he cornered Red Wings captain Steve Yzerman in the weight room to sheepishly ask if he might bring home a signed Gretzky stick from Nagano, Japan. Knuble was stunned when Yzerman returned with a personalized autographed stick, the butt end burned with an Olympic logo that incorporated Gretzky's initials into it.

A few months later, the Red Wings traded Knuble to the Rangers for a second-round draft pick. Which meant the guy asking for Wayne Gretzky's autograph was now Wayne Gretzky's teammate.

"You see his jersey and you see your jersey, and it's the same color as his. And you're just like, 'Holy s--- here we go,'" Knuble said. "I remember saying my hellos and then just sitting in my stall, not talking to him for a couple of weeks. I was quiet on the bus with him, too. I'd just sit and listen to his recollections about his time in Edmonton, dropping names and telling stories."

Time with Gretzky away from the rink was fleeting. There were cities on the road where Gretzky could grab dinner with his teammates and not get mobbed -- mostly "non-traditional" hockey markets, according to Knuble -- but everywhere else, fans would swarm the most famous hockey player in the world.

"He'd give the time, but it wasn't going to be too much time. He knew how to handle that balance," he said.

Gretzky wasn't a boisterous presence in the Rangers' dressing room. That's partially because the Rangers had other leaders to whom he would defer, such as captain Brian Leetch. "He wasn't trying to outshine anyone. But everyone knew that when he wanted to say something, the floor was his," Knuble said.

Knuble wasn't a primary linemate for Gretzky during his time with the Rangers. He'd watch from the bench as The Great One operated from his office behind the opponent's net, and wait for his chance to join the Gretzky scoring ledger.

"You're just hoping that he scored and you got a point with him. You just want to hear your name linked with him," said Knuble, who scored two goals assisted by Gretzky in 1998-99.

Those goals by Knuble were some of the final points collected by Gretzky in his legendary career. That season would be his last.

The Rangers weren't going to make the playoffs that season. As the games dwindled on the schedule, the speculation about Gretzky's future grew louder. Knuble remembers the Rangers players purposefully avoiding the topic inside the room, but then it happened: It was officially announced very late in the season that Gretzky would be retiring.

The Rangers' next game after that announcement was at the Ottawa Senators on April 15, 1999.

"We were in Ottawa and the Canadian National Guard surrounded our hotel because it was his last game in Canada," Knuble recalled. "I'll never forget coming out of the hotel for the game and seeing guys with rifles."

The hotel restricted access to guests only, having people show some form of ID to get into the lobby, which was still jam-packed with people trying to find Gretzky. The Rangers' bus would park in front of the hotel, drawing all of the attention from fans as Gretzky found another exit.

"Wayne was always really good about going out the back door, sending diversion out in the front, and then he'd slip out," Knuble said. "And I'm sure Alex got good at playing those games, too."


KNUBLE CURRENTLY COACHES teenage hockey players in Michigan. They know about his NHL career. They'll ask whether he has Alex Ovechkin in his phone contacts list.

"I'll show it to them and tell them that he's probably changed his number like eight times. But go ahead and call him. Go knock yourselves out," he said, laughing. "But I'm super proud to have it. The kids appreciate that. It's a good cocktail party conversation, too."

Knuble was in his third NHL season when he became Gretzky's teammate. He was entering his 13th season when he signed with the Capitals as a free agent in 2009, having previously battled against Ovechkin & Co. as a member of the Flyers.

As much as he knew about Gretzky before becoming his teammate, Knuble knew little about Ovechkin before joining him.

"There was a little bit of mystery," he said.

Ovechkin had scored 219 goals in his first four NHL seasons and would add another 50 goals to that total in Knuble's first season in Washington. He skated fast, blasted more shots than anyone in the league and hit like a truck. He was a force of nature. Knuble said one of his biggest challenges as a teammate was not to be in awe of Ovechkin's abilities.

"As a player you had to be very careful that you didn't defer to him too much. You knew what he could do, but it wasn't like 'force it, force it, force it' to him all the time," he said. "I think you had to get him the puck when you could and do some of the legwork. But when you had a chance -- and you were in a high-end, high percentage scoring area -- you had to shoot the puck. You couldn't defer all the time."

Knuble assisted on 14 goals by Ovechkin during his 220 games with the Capitals.

"I think the biggest thing is you didn't want to slow him down. He's trending to be a hundred-point guy, and now you're playing with him, you're linked to him, you don't want his percentage go down," Knuble explained. "If he's down to an 80-point pace, well, who are they going to point the finger at? It's not because of him, it's because of me. So you didn't want to be that guy."

Off the ice, the two didn't spend much time together. Knuble was older and had children. Ovechkin hung with younger players, a crew who all grew up together on the Capitals. Knuble understood the dynamics.

"When I was in Detroit, it wasn't like I was hanging out with Yzerman. You're with your peers," he said. "Maybe there's the odd time you end up at the same restaurant or you have a team event where you hang out, but your boys are your boys."

As he watched Ovechkin continue to pile on goals, playing with a variety of teammates -- Knuble, for the record, thinks Ovechkin might already have the record if Nicklas Backstrom could have remained healthy -- he figured Ovechkin had a shot at catching Gretzky if his body cooperated.

"If he stayed healthy, with the way he finishes ... could he be second or third all-time? And then he stayed really healthy and kept playing well," Knuble said. "He's always been blessed with great health on the ice, where nothing super fluky happened to him. The most impressive thing about him is his longevity."

Ovechkin's maturity was a factor in that longevity, according to Knuble.

"I think Alex has just stood the test of time a little bit. You're a young guy, you kind of live hard on and off the ice, and then when you're older you realize, 'I can't be doing this as much,'" he said.

Finally hoisting something other than an individual trophy also helped.

"I think winning a Stanley Cup was really big for him, too. I think that was a big feather in his cap. You don't want to be a golfer that's never won a major, you know?" Knuble said. "I think him winning the team thing was just basically the last box he needed to check."

Ovechkin is now older (39) than Gretzky was (38) when Knuble played with him in New York. The Capitals captain has matured, but Knuble still sees that spark of youth in his game as he chases Gretzky's record.

"It's fun to see him just happy, see him in his joy," he said. "I think when he was younger, the joy that carried him was the most noticeable thing. Eventually you get older and the joy settles down a little bit, but still he plays with so much of it."


KNUBLE ADMITS THAT Ovechkin and Gretzky are "different in the way they do their things," but share one key similarity: the way the understood their responsibilities in selling the sport they love.

"Wayne was very good at being an ambassador of the game. He knew that it's super inconvenient for him, but he's going to do it with a smile on his face. He's not going to bitch about it. It's his job to move the game forward," he said. "Alex is pretty good about that stuff too. And it was hard for him. He's not a North American, but certainly Alex has been a great ambassador of the game here."

Part of being an ambassador of the game is inspiring subsequent generations to pick up a stick or watch a game. Knuble said both players accomplished that during their careers.

"They've both been so good to the game, to the NHL and great role models for kids," he said. "Wayne revamped the game in his way. And then Ovi revamped it again with his way -- a little more flash, a little more flare. We all copied Wayne and then kids today copied Ovi."

There have been other all-time players who starred in their respective eras, from Mario Lemieux to Sidney Crosby to Connor McDavid. But Knuble believes there's something different about the way Gretzky and Ovechkin have broken through as sports celebrities.

"People coast to coast in the United States know who [Ovechkin] is, and what more can you ask for, especially as a hockey player?" he said. "You go to California and you can be on the beach there playing volleyball and be like, 'Who's Alex Ovechkin?' And they'll be like, 'Oh, that Russian dude in D.C., right? Hockey player?' If you can get that kind of thing, then that's a successful athlete."

As Knuble watches the Ovechkin record chase unfold, his thoughts are with Gretzky. He believes The Great One has shown exemplary class in watching an all-time mark potentially fall. Like Gordie Howe did when Gretzky chased his records, Gretzky has blessed Ovechkin's own record pursuit.

"Wayne's such an ambassador, saying, 'Hey, I can't wait to see this come to fruition. I can't wait to see him chase it down. I'm going to be there and be thrilled for him when the time comes.' And that's not a lie. That's not bulls---. And it's just great," Knuble said. "The league is thrilled that another generational player has come through. It's just crazy that this even remotely had a chance to happen."

Almost as crazy as an NHL veteran who kicked around with five different franchises being the only player to have called the top two goal scorers in league history as his teammates.

"I was on the ice with both. Got sticks signed by both. Got to say that I spent with each of them," he said. "Again, I just feel so fortunate."

VAR won't be used in any FA Cup third round ties

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 09 January 2025 04:09

The FA Cup third round (stream all games live on ESPN+, U.S. Only) gets underway on Thursday -- but VAR won't be used in any of the ties.

VAR was introduced into the FA Cup in the 2017-18 season starting in the third round -- but only in ties when a Premier League club was at home "due to the infrastructure, workforce and costs that are required for its operation."

It meant that over the course of the next seven seasons, the competition effectively had a two-tier approach, and where a tie was played determined if a refereeing error was corrected. Also, if a lower-league team earned a replay at the ground of a Premier League club, different conditions would be in place for the two fixtures.

In the 2023-24 season VAR was used in only 10 of the 32 third round ties, and seven of the 16 matches in the fourth round.

The Football Association has now made a crucial change which "ensures that there is a consistent refereeing approach for all clubs taking part in the same stage of the competition."

There will be no VAR in any game in Round 3 and 4, but all matches will have VAR from the fifth round onwards, regardless of where the game is being played.

Sources: Man City chase Brazil teen Vitor Reis

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 09 January 2025 04:09

Manchester City are interested in Palmeiras centre-back Vitor Reis, sources have told ESPN.

The club are exploring the possibility of a January deal for the 18-year-old Brazilian youth international. Reis is valued at around 40 million ($41m).

It is unclear at this stage if he would immediately join Pep Guardiola's first-team if an agreement is reached with Palmeiras or whether he would be included in the senior squad at a later date.

City are also in talks with RC Lens over a deal for 20-year-old centre-back Abdukodir Khusanov. Strengthening the defence has become a priority after injuries to Rúben Dias, John Stones and Nathan Aké this season.

Sources have told ESPN that City are also stepping up their efforts to sign Omar Marmoush from Eintracht Frankfurt this month.

Frankfurt, who are third in the Bundesliga table and well-placed in the Europa League, want to keep the Egypt international. They have been informed of City's interest and are expecting a formal offer in the January window.

Marmoush, who has 18 goals this season, is valued at around 50m ($61m).

City also hold an interest in Brazil midfielder Ederson, but do not believe Atalanta are willing to negotiate in January while they're in the race to win the Serie A title.

Snow puts Everton, P'borough clash in doubt

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 09 January 2025 04:09

Icy conditions have put Everton's FA Cup third-round match against Peterborough on Thursday at Goodison Park in doubt.

Snow has battered large parts of Merseyside in recent days and weather warnings are in place.

Everton fan safety services confirmed a meeting will be held at 1 p.m. GMT (8 a.m. ET) to determine if the game can go ahead safely.

"A safety meeting involving the club and relevant authorities will be held at 1pm to assess the weather and travel conditions for tonight's FA Cup fixture against Peterborough United," the group said on social media.

"At this stage the match is planned to go ahead as normal and every effort is being made to ensure that remains the case.

"We will continue to keep fans updated, and will provide more information following the meeting."

Barça face fury after Olmo registration boost

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 09 January 2025 04:09

Barcelona are facing criticism from Athletic Club after Dani Olmo and Pau Víctor were granted temporary playing registrations by the country's top sports court.

The players had been denied registration by both LaLiga and the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) after the Catalan club missed a Dec. 31 deadline to prove it was compliant with the league's financial fair play rules.

Barça successfully appealed to Spain's Sports Council (CSD) for Olmo and Victor to be temporarily allowed to play before a definitive ruling is made.

Speaking before his team's 2-0 defeat to Barcelona in Wednesday's Spanish Supercopa semifinal in Jeddah, Athletic Club president Jon Uriarte called the decision "grotesque."

"It is a provisional measure taken by a political body," Uriarte said.

"Now it is LaLiga and the [Spanish Football] Federation that will have to defend the decision they took.

"Maybe if I draw a conclusion, it is that we are eight days into the new year and we are experiencing something that is incredible.

"We, clubs, are asked to make an effort to grow, to make our competitions bigger on the one hand, and on the other hand to make efforts to come here [to Saudi Arabia], to a country far from our fans, to play these [Supercopa] games but then we experience situations of this type that are grotesque.

"A situation like that cannot happen because it is very bad for football."

Athletic is the only club in Spain's top two divisions to have publicly reacted to the CSD's decision on Olmo and Victor.

Barcelona's sporting director Deco defended the club in response to Uriarte's comments.

"Every club has their own issues and their own problems and should focus on themselves," Deco said.

"We're doing things well at Barça, trying to do things in the best way possible.

"Everything else is in the hands of the governing bodies or the courts. And if they have given [the players registrations] for the moment, there is a reason for that."

Athletic forward Iñaki Williams said he thinks Spanish football may be "tarnished" by the ordeal.

"In the same vein as all football fans, I'm surprised. It seems that the rules are not the same for everyone, but we are not the ones who have to decide," Williams told reporters.

"If those who decide have decided this, there must be a reason. It never ceases to surprise us, the image of Spanish football may be a little tarnished because there is a lot of division because many things are not understood.

"We have to close this chapter for the good of Spanish football.

"I am happy for Dani Olmo and Pau Victor because I think it is a very difficult situation for them and all they want is to play football. As a football professional, I'm happy for both of them."

LaLiga president Javier Tebas weighed in on the matter, expressing surprise at the CSD decision. He also took the opportunity to ask why there has been a "complicit silence" from Real Madrid TV.

"CSD president [Jose Manuel Rodriguez Uribes] seems to hear a single voice, which does not represent Spanish professional football," Tebas said on social media.

"And that voice, curiously, maintains a complicit silence in this case. Where is Real Madrid TV now?"

Real Madrid TV has been a critic of some of LaLiga's actions and especially comments by Tebas.

Olmo, a 60 million ($62m) summer signing from RB Leipzig, and Víctor, who joined in August on a permanent transfer from Girona, will be available to play in Sunday's Spanish Supercopa final after missing Wednesday's game.

Ian Darke's Premier League Team of the Season so far

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 09 January 2025 02:05

We're just past the halfway point of the Premier League season, and shocks and surprises continue to reverberate across the competition. Wasn't this supposed to be a transitional year for Liverpool under new boss Arne Slot? Yet they are in first place, six points clear of Arsenal with a game in hand, and look like champions elect.

Who would have believed last season's strugglers Nottingham Forest would be in the top three? Or that champions Manchester City would implode? Or that Manchester United would languish in 13th while AFC Bournemouth and Fulham challenged for the qualifying places for Europe.

Likewise, some surprising players have emerged as the stars of the season after 20 games. With that in mind, here is my half-term team of the campaign.

Goalkeeper: Jordan Pickford, Everton

Where would the Toffees be without the heroics of their long-serving keeper? Probably in the bottom three. His remarkable defiance earned an unlikely point at Arsenal. And he saved penalties from Anthony Gordon and Erling Haaland to ensure his team managed draws against Newcastle United and Manchester City respectively.

For a team that has failed to score in eight of their past 10 matches, Everton are lucky the England No. 1 has been as good as he has.

Right-back: Trent Alexander-Arnold, Liverpool

Despite his off day against Manchester United, he remains a unique talent -- a right-back who is among Europe's elite as a creator and striker of wonderful passes. He makes my midseason starting XI because I'm focusing on what he can do and not on some of his deficiencies. Real Madrid's overtures to sign him in the summer transfer window are understandable, and they are a hard club to turn down.

Whether Alexander-Arnold sticks or twists, we'll know soon enough.

play
1:44
Marcotti defends Alexander-Arnold after struggling vs. Man United

Gab Marcotti defends Trent Alexander-Arnold's performance in Liverpool's 2-2 draw vs. Manchester United.

Centre-back: Murillo, Nottingham Forest

His central defensive partnership with Nikola Milenković is a big reason Forest are surprisingly (and, to most, inconceivably) third in the table, behind only Liverpool and Arsenal. They have kept a league-high nine clean sheets while racking up 12 wins in their first 20 games.

Athletic and aggressive, Murillo also tops the Premier League charts for clearances (117). It's only a matter of time before he signs for a bigger club.

Centre-back: Gabriel Magalhães, Arsenal

He's rock solid in the league's best defense (18 goals conceded) and a key player in the Gunners' set-piece successes. His three league goals include a winner against arch-rivals Spurs, and another in a 2-2 draw against Man City.

Left-back: Antonee Robinson, Fulham

At left-back, the pacy and dangerous United States international has more assists (13) than any other defender over the past two campaigns and seven this season alone. He also tops the stats for interceptions (37). Fulham will do well to hold on to him, as he looks a perfect fit for any big club wanting a left-back or wing-back who can operate high up the pitch.

play
1:46
Does Antonee Robinson deserve to win U.S. Soccer male player of the year?

Herculez Gomez explains what Antonee Robinson brings to the table after Robinson beat out Christian Pulisic for 2024 U.S. Soccer male player of the year.

Central midfield: Moisés Caicedo, Chelsea

Perhaps overburdened by the 115 million transfer fee when he first moved from Brighton & Hove Albion to Chelsea, he has settled to become the midfield strong man he looked on the south coast. Only Crystal Palace's Daniel Muñoz (71) has made more tackles than Caicedo (62), who will be vital to Chelsea's chances of finishing in the top four and qualifying for next season's UEFA Champions League.

Central midfield: Ryan Gravenberch, Liverpool

After being a bit-part player for former Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp, the Dutchman has made the problem defensive midfield position his own under Arne Slot. Gravenberch mixes steel and silk, providing an ideal foil for Alexis Mac Allister.

Right-wing: Mohamed Salah, Liverpool

Almost beyond dispute, Salah has been the player of the season so far with 31 goal involvements, scoring 18 times in 19 games, with another 13 assists. He's always likely to produce a match-changing moment and, at 32, still in terrific condition. Surely, Liverpool will find a deal to keep him at Anfield beyond this summer when his contract expires.

Attacking midfield: Cole Palmer, Chelsea

Ice cold, but red hot! With 13 goals and six assists, Palmer is demonstrating that his 2023-24 breakthrough season was no flash in the pan. Languid and deceptive, his vision and eye for goal lend him a touch of genius. He carries his extraordinary talent -- not to mention his team -- with a what's-all-the-fuss demeanor.

play
1:17
Do Chelsea have a problem when Cole Palmer isn't firing?

Luis Miguel Echegaray reacts to Chelsea's frustrating 0-0 draw at Everton which prevents Enzo Maresca's men from going top of the Premier League.

Left-wing: Bryan Mbeumo, Brentford

Matching Palmer with 13 Premier League goals, Mbeumo and his teammate Yoane Wissa (10 goals) are making sure the Bees do not miss former poster boy Ivan Toney, who left for Al Ahli this season.

Brentford will continue to punch well above their weight if they keep Mbeumo happy and manager Thomas Frank in charge.

Striker: Alexander Isak, Newcastle United

The Sweden international has scored in each of the last seven games to lead a Newcastle revival. Quick and almost balletic in his movements, Isak's all-round contributions to Eddie Howe's team makes him the best No. 9 in the game right now. He scores all types of goals -- 13 in the league -- and, with the club valuing his transfer fee at 150m, most clubs won't be able to afford signing him. It's Newcastle's way of saying "hands off!"

Substitutes

GK, Emiliano Martínez (Aston Villa), Virgil van Dijk (Liverpool)
CB, Nikola Milenkovic (Nottingham Forest)
LB, Milos Kerkez (AFC Bournemouth)
CM, Carlos Baleba (Brighton & Hove Albion)
CM, Dejan Kulusevski (Tottenham Hotspur)
FW, Alex Iwobi (Fulham)
FW, Morgan Rogers (Aston Villa)
FW, Luis Díaz (Liverpool)
FW, Cody Gakpo (Liverpool)
FW, Bukayo Saka (Arsenal)
ST, Liam Delap (Ipswich Town)

Ankle problem makes Cummins a doubt for Champions Trophy

Published in Cricket
Wednesday, 08 January 2025 23:19
Australia captain Pat Cummins is in doubt for the Champions Trophy after it was revealed that he had been managing an ankle problem during the Test series against India.
It was confirmed on Thursday that Cummins would miss the two-Test tour of Sri Lanka (paternity leave) and will undergo scans on his ankle in the coming days to determine whether he will be able to lead the team in the Champions Trophy, which will be held across Pakistan and the UAE next month.
"We'll have to wait and see when that scan comes back and see how it's tracking," chair of selectors George Bailey said. "There's a little bit of work to do. We'll probably get a bit more information around where that's at."

Cummins sent down 167 overs during the five Tests against India, the most by an Australian bowler, taking 25 wickets at 21.36.

Australia's opening game of the Champions Trophy is against England on February 22, and they have a one-off ODI in Sri Lanka on February 13 after the Test series, which is part of their preparation.

Cummins captained Australia to the 2023 ODI World Cup title in India but has only played two games in the format since amid workload management.

Australia have used a variety of stand-in captains in that period. Steven Smith led the side last season against West Indies before Mitchell Marsh had the role in England, with Smith again deputising for the deciding game of that series. Earlier this summer against Pakistan, Josh Inglis led the team in the final ODI in Perth.

Josh Hazlewood, meanwhile, is being earmarked for a return in the Champions Trophy after the selectors took a cautious approach to his recovery from the calf injury that ended his India series after Brisbane, which in itself was a comeback game after a side problem.

"Josh is working really hard and all the news of how he's responding to his recovery from the calf injury is coming along really well," Bailey said. "It's just probably a little bit tight, given the amount of time that he would have missed and also with how we may structure up and the loads those quicks may be put under."

Mitchell Starc, Scott Boland and Sean Abbott are the three frontline quicks heading to Sri Lanka. Abbott could earn a Test debut on the tour, and it was his durability that earned him the nod.

"In Sean's favour, given outside of the conditions that we expect to face, he's just robust," Bailey said. "We know he can put a heavy body of work in should he be required."

Rain cuts into Healy's prep as Filer slips and slides

Published in Cricket
Thursday, 09 January 2025 00:59

Governor-General XI 183 for 8 (Voll 57, Healy 38, Ecclestone 3-27, Dean 2-20) vs England
Match abandoned

Alyssa Healy was prevented from testing herself in the middle with the wicketkeeping gloves as the Governor-General match against England was abandoned after less than 29 overs due to rain in Sydney, while quick bowler Lauren Filer endured a difficult start to her Ashes tour with the ball as she repeatedly lost her footing in delivery.
Australia captain Healy was using this match to test her readiness to return with the gloves after playing as a batter only against New Zealand late last year, but was only able to have a hit as she made a crisp 38 in a rapid opening stand of 91 with Georgia Voll who again impressed with a 38-ball half-century.

After the game had been called off due to frequent stoppages, Healy had a 20-minute keeping session on the outfield with Australia's coaching staff ahead of Sunday's first ODI.

Rain delayed the start after the toss had taken place and when play did begin, Filer struggled to keep her footing from the Scoreboard End and slipped four times before rain took the players off again.

On resumption, Filer did not complete her opening over with Nat Sciver-Brunt bowling the final delivery. Filer later returned from the Fig Tree End but again kept slipping over in her delivery stride and finished with figures of 2.5-0-33-0.

However, England coach Jon Lewis was not overly concerned by Filer's difficulties saying it was something she often did at training as she powered through the crease and that the damp conditions made it additionally challenging.

"It's a very similar thing to what Mark Wood does," Lewis said. "When your front foot lands, you are trying to get your front leg and to do that you pull your leg backso if there's nothing for you to grip against when you pull your leg then you tumble. It was little bit greasy out there so wasn't ideal for her, but we hope the wicket on Sunday will be a little less grassy and a bit drier."

While groundstaff were working on the take-off area during Filer's opening over there was a lengthy chat between the England players at the umpires and Lewis conceded conditions had not been ideal.

"There's always a risk when it's a little bit wet," he said. "Was I uncomfortable, probably not, was I comfortable probably somewhere in the middle between the two things. Again, it was important to try and get some overs into our bowlers in this game."

Lewis was confident Filer wouldn't be affected by the struggles of her first bowl in the middle on a tour where her pace had been viewed as providing a cutting edge to England's attack

"She's pretty confident with where she's at," Lewis said. "She bowled well down pace there for what she would normally bowl because it was quite hard to stand up. When you are a bowler and it's hard to stand up it's not easy to put the ball where you want it because you are running in at 20kph an hour and trying to land a ball in a really small space."

Whether Filer plays the opening ODI may come down to the fitness of Kate Cross, who didn't featured in the warm-up game and instead bowled out at Cricket Central, following the back spasms that curtailed her tour of South Africa. Lewis said they would have a clearer picture of her availability in the next couple of days and also played down the significance of the warm-up match being truncated.

"We'd have liked to have played more cricket, [but] we can't control the weather," he said. "We'll front up on Sunday, the players are ready, we've played a lot of cricket over the last four or five months since the World Cup, through South Africa...so they've come here and it feels like they've hit the ground running so we feel like we're in a pretty good space."

The forecast for the next couple of days in Sydney is for further showers which may impact the preparations of both sides.

Andrew McGlashan is a deputy editor at ESPNcricinfo

Australia hope to have Cameron Green back available for the World Test Championship final, while preparing for him to return as a batter only.

Green posted a video of himself running on social media on Wednesday, almost three months after undergoing season-ending surgery on his back.

Chief selector George Bailey confirmed on Thursday he was "very hopeful" Green would be available to play at Lord's against South Africa.

Green is due to undergo further post-operation scans next month and is expected to be back batting in May. He will have to wait longer to bowl, potentially after Australia's three-Test tour of West Indies in June and July.

While Beau Webster retained his spot after an impressive debut in Sydney, Marsh will be left to wonder when his next Test will come at age 33.

But Bailey suggested there was still potential for Marsh to return to the team in next summer's Ashes, after his impressive return to the team against England in 2023.

"I don't necessarily see it as the end of the road for him," Bailey said. "I think Mitch at his best and with a longer-term view of potentially what the Ashes may look like and what England may throw at us there.

"He's got a skill set that suits there, not taking away from the fact that at some stage clearly we're going to have the return of Cameron Green as well into the team. But unlike some, I'm probably not as glass half empty around where that leaves Mitch."

Webster's selection comes after he hit 57 and an unbeaten 39 in Sydney, but his ability to shoulder a heavy workload with the ball could also be crucial in Asia.

He also bowled offspin for the majority of his career before turning to medium pace during Covid, but Bailey said it was unlikely his tweakers would be called upon in Sri Lanka.

Instead, Travis Head can provide support to Australia's spinners Matt Kuhnemann and Todd Murphy, who could both feature as frontline spinners in the XI alongside Nathan Lyon.

"[Webster's spin] probably wasn't something that came up as a factor in selection," Bailey said."I think we've got plenty of spin options there. It's a nice fourth or fifth bow for Beau to have up his sleeve, but I don't necessarily think that we'll be heading down that path."

Melbourne Stars 156 for 5 (Maxwell 58*, Webster 48, Abbott 3-29) beat Sydney Sixers 140 for 9 (Vince 53, Steketee 3-14, Mir 2-19, Siddle 2-26, Stoinis 2-30) by 16 runs

Glenn Maxwell's heroics have inspired the Melbourne Stars to a crucial 16-run upset of the ladder-leading Sydney Sixers at the MCG, keeping their slim BBL finals chances alive.
On the same day his Test ambitions likely ended for good, the veteran allrounder belted a game-high unbeaten 58 and took two important catches in the deep.
Marcus Stoinis (4) was out cheaply, but the Stars captain claimed 2 for 30 in a valuable contribution with the ball as the hosts kept the Sixers to 140 for 9 in their chase of 156 for 5.
Englishman Ben Duckett appeared to have cost the Stars dearly when he dropped countryman James Vince on 36. It was only two weeks ago Vince smashed an unbeaten century in a thumping Sixers win against the Stars at the SCG on Boxing Day.

But Maxwell made no mistake when he hung on to a high catch in the deep, leading to Vince departing for 53 on Thursday night.

The 36-year-old almost spilled the chance, too, and stayed on the ground for a long time in pure relief.

Just two balls later, Maxwell was in the action again when he took a catch to dismiss Sixers captain Moises Henriques, sparking passionate, animated celebrations with Stoinis and other Stars players.

Maxwell was overlooked for Australia's Test tour of Sri Lanka on Thursday, with selectors preferring younger options in the squad.

Numerous replays were needed to decide on a return catch to Stars spinner Usama Mir (2 for19), with Sixers allrounder Jack Edwards eventually given out by the TV umpire.
Stuck in a deep hole at 64 for 4 at the halfway mark of their innings, the Stars were rescued by an 88-run stand between Maxwell and Test hero Beau Webster (48).

After a fairytale debut for Australia, Webster's golden run continued when he was out off a no-ball and was called back, then was dropped by Vince.

During Maxwell's blazing 32-ball knock, he became the fifth player in BBL history to reach 3000 career runs, joining Chris Lynn, Aaron Finch, D'Arcy Short and Henriques.

Play was stopped for about two minutes after a seagull was taken down by a powerful shot from Vince.

After starting the season 0-5, the Stars can still qualify for finals if they beat the Melbourne Renegades and Hobart Hurricanes in their remaining two games and other results go their way.

The Sixers (4-2, one no-result) missed a golden opportunity to consolidate their position on top of the table ahead of a clash at the SCG on Saturday against the Perth Scorchers.

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