
I Dig Sports

CONCORD, N.C. – Everyone loves playing in front of their home crowd, whether it’s a high school baseball game at your school’s home field or a professional golfer teeing off on the hometown links.
Hometown advantage matters so much that certain professional sports leagues schedule their championship games in a neutral stadium as often as possible.
Professional race car drivers very rarely get the opportunity to race at the track where their careers began, because few professional racing sanctioning bodies schedule races at local short tracks. But once you make it up the stock car racing ladder you get to race in front of the home of the entire industry.
Whenever they open the gates at Charlotte Motor Speedway, those who strap into the cars that take to the speedway’s 24-degree banked turns are racing in front of their families, their friends, the people who build and maintain their racecars, and thousands of other industry insiders.
It can mean a lot of pressure, especially for young drivers.
With the entire industry paying attention, everyone wants to perform. The edge between a great day and a bad day can be razor thin, and that can mean a stressful day for those behind the wheel.
Last year, it was a great night for Brandon Jones as he earned his fifth career series victory. He took advantage of the misfortunes of Todd Gilliland, who had a great night going until the final round of pit stops changed the handling of his car and he was forced to settle for fourth at the finish.
Jones, who will be in the booth as a driver analyst for the FS1 broadcast of the General Tire 150, believes racing in the ARCA series gives drivers like himself plenty of relevant experience to succeed in the upper levels of NASCAR. He currently drives the No. 19 Menards Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing in the NASCAR Xfinity Series.
“I give the ARCA Menards Series a lot of credit for my success over the years and helping me get to the NASCAR Xfinity Series today,” Jones said. “I’ve gained so much confidence in that series, winning with multiple teams and at different tracks; it really helped build me up as I prepared to take the next step in my racing career. I’ve always felt that getting track time in the ARCA Series helps a lot when preparing for my Xfinity Series races.”
A couple of drivers that are prospects to join Jones as ARCA graduates who have gone on to success in the upper levels of NASCAR include Travis Braden and Christian Eckes.
Braden won in his ARCA Menards Series debut at Lucas Oil Raceway in 2015 and was included in ESPN’s list of drivers to watch for 2019. He is from Wheeling, W.Va., and a graduate of West Virginia University with dual degrees in aerospace and mechanical engineering. His team is located in Brownsburg, Ind., just outside of Indianapolis, so the Charlotte race isn’t necessarily a home game for him but he does see the value of a strong performance in the sport’s epicenter.
“Charlotte is still the capital of stock car racing and probably always will be,” Braden said. “To win at this venue is arguably as sought-after as an event like Daytona or Homestead, but for a little different reason. Obviously the opportunity to perform, and hopefully win, in front of the eyes of the majority of the sport’s leadership is of similar value to each of us. For myself and RFMS Racing, and any other non-southeastern-based team, I think you have an extra piece of motivation here. To go down there and beat those guys means a ton. It’s impressive in the eyes of any. You definitely won’t hear the typical “well he’s in the highest-budget ride and got all of the backing, he should have won” response if we were able to pull it off.”
Eckes is making his first run at the series title in 2019. Racing a part-time schedule in 2018, he won three times and has already collected one win so far in 2019 at Fairgrounds Speedway Nashville. Eckes, a native of Middletown, N.Y., races for Venturini Motorsports, which is located near the race track in Concord, North Carolina. He will be making his first appearance at Charlotte and knows a good run will impress his other boss, Kyle Busch, who he drives for in the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series.
“It’s going to be really cool to race at Charlotte for the first time,” Eckes said. “It’s going to be my first mile and a half race as well, so I’m really looking forward to it. We tested a few weeks ago and our No. 15 JBL Camry showed a lot of speed. My Venturini team is based about five minutes from the track so it’s important for us to go have a good run. We will be ready.”
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INDIANAPOLIS – Two teams have three drivers each starting in the top nine of the 103rd Indianapolis 500.
One is expected, it’s the powerful Team Penske as Simon Pagenaud starts on the pole, with defending Indianapolis 500 winner Will Power sixth and Josef Newgarden eighth.
But the other is Indiana’s own Ed Carpenter Racing, with three of its drivers starting second, third and fourth in Sunday’s race.
Carpenter, a three-time Indianapolis 500 pole winner, barely lost the pole to Pagenaud, who ran a four-lap average of 229.992 mph. Carpenter’s speed was 229.889 mph. Carpenter lost the pole by just .1 of a mile per hour.
“Simon was just more consistent,” Carpenter said. “I think I had the fastest lap of qualifying and usually that’s a good sign for the pole, but I’ve also won a couple of my poles and not had the fastest lap. So, he was just a little more consistent than me, and that’s why he deserves to be on the pole.”
Pagenaud won his first Indianapolis 500 pole on Sunday. Carpenter was attempting to win his fourth and lost it by the narrowest of margins.
“That’s the way this series is now,” Carpenter said. “Everything is just thousandths and hundredths of a second all the way through. The battle that you saw for guys fighting for the 30th spot on Saturday, the ninth spot Saturday and now (Sunday) the strength of this series between the teams and drivers from top to bottom. You’ve got to be perfect to really put it together because if you’re not, everything is so tight you’re going to slide down, and that’s what’s great about being a part of the NTT IndyCar Series is it’s really the best competition in the world.”
Had Sunday’s Fast Nine been rained out, Carpenter’s teammate Spencer Pigot would have been the pole winner because he was the fastest on Saturday.
“Spencer was doing a rain dance, I was wanting to run,” Carpenter said.
Despite the fact he did not win the pole, Pigot was still happy to be starting on the outside of row one.
“Starting front row in the Indy 500 is a real honor, and like Ed said, a testament to our team,” Pigot said. “I wouldn’t say I was doing the rain dance all day. I think as race car drivers we love driving Indy cars at the limit, and you definitely get a chance to do that here in qualifying. Any chance we get to put four laps of qualifying together here is exciting in the car.
“Unfortunately, it was a little short, but like Ed said, great day for the team. 2, 3, 4, and I think all of us were pretty happy with our race cars Wednesday and Thursday, so we have a lot to look forward to and a lot to be confident about heading into next weekend.”
Ed Jones, who shares the No. 20 Chevrolet as the street and road course driver with Carpenter driving on the ovals, is in the No. 63 Chevrolet for the Indianapolis 500. His fourth-place starting position is his best Indianapolis 500 qualifying effort.
“Of course, it’s great to be where we are,” Jones said. “As great as that sounds, I really wanted the pole today. I’m a little bit bummed. I thought we had a good shot at it. It’s just frustrating.”
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The PGA Tour returns to Texas this week, along with one of the most venerable venues in Colonial Country Club. Here’s a look at some of the marquee, early-round tee times to keep an eye on at the Charles Schwab Challenge as Justin Rose defends his title against a field that includes hometown favorite Jordan Spieth (all times ET):
8:55 a.m. Thursday, 1:55 p.m. Friday: Rickie Fowler, Bryson DeChambeau, Max Homa
Fowler has three top-20 finishes at Colonial, including last year’s T-14 result, and he’ll look to add another title after winning in Phoenix in February. DeChambeau will look to rebound from a missed cut at Bethpage while making just his third start since the Masters, while rounding out the trio will be Homa who broke through for his first career win earlier this month at Quail Hollow.
9:06 a.m. Thursday, 2:06 p.m. Friday: Jordan Spieth, Kevin Kisner, Ryan Palmer
Spieth won here in 2016, and he returns to the DFW area on the heels of a T-3 finish at Bethpage that marked his best result in more than a year. Kisner edged Spieth for the plaid jacket in 2017, while Palmer is a Colonial member and local resident who broke a lengthy victory drought last month while claiming the Zurich Classic title with Jon Rahm.
1:55 p.m. Thursday, 8:55 a.m. Friday: Jon Rahm, C.T. Pan, Xander Schauffele
Speaking of Rahm, the Spaniard will anchor one of the marquee groups in the late/early wave as he looks to rebound from an early exit at the PGA Championship. Rahm was a runner-up here in 2017 and finished T-5 in his return last year. Schauffele already has two wins under his belt this season along with a Masters runner-up, while Pan got his first victory last month at the RBC Heritage.
2:06 p.m. Thursday, 9:06 a.m. Friday: Justin Rose, Francesco Molinari, Brandt Snedeker
Rose torched Colonial last year en route to a 20-under score and a three-shot victory. He’ll look to defend his title while playing the first two rounds alongside former Ryder Cup teammate Molinari, whose torrid spring sputtered last week at Bethpage and who will be making his tournament debut. Rounding out the group is Snedeker, whose T-16 finish at the PGA was his third top-25 in his last six starts.
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Raphael Varane will stay at Real Madrid amid reported interest from the likes of Manchester United, a source close to the player has confirmed to ESPN FC.
Sources told ESPN FC in April that the 2018 World Cup winner was seriously considering seeking a new challenge, which alerted clubs throughout Europe including United, Paris Saint-Germain and Bayern Munich.
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However, a source now says the 26-year-old has resolved to stay with Los Blancos and help the team bounce back from a disappointing 2018-19 campaign.
Since returning to the Bernabeu bench in March, Madrid manager Zinedine Zidane has been clear that he wanted his fellow Frenchman to remain at the club -- and the pair have regularly discussed where Varane fits into the new project being planned by Zidane and club president Florentino Perez.
Varane also felt that leaving the Bernabeu after such a poor season was not something he could do, and is instead looking forward to a "new start" after the summer.
Monday saw the announcement of a contract extension for Madrid midfielder Toni Kroos, another player who was reportedly unsettled this season. However, the source said that no discussions had taken place about extending Varane's current deal which ends in 2022.
The former Lens youngster has always had a strong relationship with Zidane, who was instrumental in his arrival in the Spanish capital as an 18-year-old for just €10 million back in 2011.
Varane has won 16 trophies since, including two La Liga crowns and four Champions League titles, but saw his form slip this season.
Madrid have already added a new centre-back to their squad for next season, with 21-year-old Brazil international Eder Militao joining from Benfica for €50 million.
And with Varane now sure to stay, Madrid's transfer decision-makers will likely turn their attention to other areas of the team, with Eden Hazard, Paul Pogba, Luka Jovic, Christian Eriksen and Ferland Mendy among their many reported targets.
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Manchester United are ready to make a formal offer for Newcastle midfielder Sean Longstaff, sources have told ESPN FC.
Manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer is keen to sign at least one midfielder during the summer transfer window and has targeted the 21-year-old.
- Transfer Talk: Man United battling for Benfica's 'New Ronaldo'
Newcastle have no desire to sell Longstaff, who is under contract until 2022, and United are yet to agree a fee although there is hope he could be convinced to move to Old Trafford.
Longstaff, who has had loan spells at Kilmarnock and Blackpool, has made just eight Premier League appearances for Rafael Benitez's side.
Solskjaer is set to undertake an extensive overhaul of his squad this summer after finishing sixth in the table and missing out on a place in the Champions League.
The Norwegian will need to replace Ander Herrera after the Spain midfielder rejected the offer of a new contract to join French Champions Paris Saint-Germian on a free transfer.
There is also doubt about Paul Pogba's future. The French midfielder is being chased by Spanish giants Real Madrid although sources have told ESPN FC that United have no desire to sell the 26-year-old.
Sources also say Solskjaer is set to make 21-year-old Swansea winger Daniel James his first signing of the summer.
The Wales international is expected to move to Old Trafford for an initial fee of £15 million after United beat completion from Leeds, Newcastle, Brighton and Newcastle.
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Frenkie De Jong is ready for the challenge at Barcelona
Published in
Soccer
Friday, 19 April 2019 13:08

Frenkie de Jong receives a back-pass standing still in the Ajax half. Real Madrid's Vinicius Junior and Luka Modric charge at him, but the Dutch playmaker, who seems to have all the time in the world, turns full circle and then accelerates away, leaving Modric chasing helplessly behind him. Vinicius, who has missed him by meters, falls over. The scene is a thing of beauty, like Charlie Chaplin escaping a posse of cops. Ajax won 4-1 in the Bernabeu on March 5.
There are supposedly no secrets in top-level soccer anymore. Everyone has been scouted, it seems, yet opponents are still trying to figure out how to handle De Jong. Last August, the Dutchman, who just turned 22 on May 12, was almost unknown outside the Netherlands. By January, Barcelona had agreed to buy him for between €75 million and €86 million (depending on bonuses or add-ons/incentives). Barcelona's president Josep Bartomeu admitted to me that the signing was "risky, of course, because he's young" but then said "there are players that maybe one or two seasons they are the best, and other players are so talented that they last 10, 12 years like Leo Messi, or [Gerard] Pique.
"We think Frenkie de Jong is going to create an era of Frenkie de Jong. Probably he's going to be one of the three best players [in the world]."
De Jong is a beautiful player, but will he turn out to be a great player? Is Barcelona the right club for him, and how will he change there?
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For now, De Jong is possibly unique in soccer: a playmaker who habitually dribbles out of his own defense. In his first full match against top-level opposition -- vs. France in Paris in September -- he kept going past the French captain Antoine Griezmann. Later Griezmann named him as his best-ever opponent, saying: "I tried very often to put him under pressure, but it never worked."
This makes De Jong the ideal creator for modern soccer. Pep Guardiola believes that as defenses get savvier and quicker, it's becoming hard to pass them apart as his Barca sides did a decade ago. Now you need players who can create numerical superiority by beating a man and then giving the killer pass. That's De Jong. In the Champions League through the quarterfinals, he gave 134 forward passes inside the other team's half -- more than any other midfielder except Madrid's Toni Kroos, according to data providers Opta. De Jong is also a remarkably effective (and elegant) tackler.
It's no wonder that half the big clubs in Europe came in for him. Last summer he turned down Tottenham, who deserve kudos for spotting him first, but this winter the shortlist was another level entirely: Guardiola's Manchester City, Paris Saint-Germain and Barcelona. De Jong would reportedly lay awake at night sometimes, fretting over the choice.
Whatever De Jong's criteria, Barcelona don't appear to have made him the biggest offer. They claim (oddly, given that their annual revenues of over €1 billion are the highest of any sports club in history) that they cannot match City's or PSG's salaries. But De Jong grew up with a very Dutch love of Barcelona. There's a photograph from 2015 of him and his girlfriend posing in the stands of the Nou Camp before a game: just two ordinary teenage fans enjoying their moment.
As a player, he seems made for Barca too. Both Ajax and Barcelona were bequeathed almost identical styles by the same father, Johan Cruyff. De Jong isn't Cruyff, of course, but his long torso, short legs, upright head, and surprising decisions recall the great man.
Bartomeu repeated for me the pitch he made to De Jong and his father. "Whoever is the coach of Barca, the style will be always the same. Now we have Ernesto Valverde as coach. The following coach will be another name, but you don't see too many differences. Other clubs, depending on the coach they choose, change the style or the idea of the football.
"If you look for a coach, go with Pep Guardiola, but when he leaves City, I don't know who is going to be the following coach. If you look for money, go to PSG. You will be a billionaire. But if you want to enjoy your life for the next 12 or 14 years, come to Barcelona."
Bartomeu adds, "Frenkie is 21, but his maturity is older. He knows what he wants. He doesn't want to be the best footballer in the world. The first thing he said was 'I want to enjoy my life with my girlfriend, playing.'"
De Jong's worry was that he wouldn't get enough playing time at Barça "especially because I'm a doubter by nature," he told Dutch magazine Voetbal International. After all, he considers Sergio Busquets the world's best defensive midfielder. Breaking into PSG's team looked more realistic, even if he couldn't imagine spending a decade in the French league. But Barcelona told him that in the short-term, he could fit into either of the two midfield positions in front of Busquets.
Finally, De Jong decided that if he turned down Barca, he might spend his life wondering whether he could have made it there. As he told Voetbal International: "You have to have a bit of faith in yourself." Bartomeu assured him: "If one day you say 'I don't like it,' we will talk. We are not a prison." When Pedro, Alexis Sanchez and Marc Bartra had asked to leave, Barcelona did let them go.
Money isn't De Jong's primary motivation: he drives a Mercedes, but not the most expensive model. Still, at a crucial point during the contract negotiations, Barcelona's kit sponsor Nike agreed to top up his salary. Nike wants to put the name Frenkie on his shirt. The player, named after the 1980s British band Frankie Goes to Hollywood, isn't sure about that, but given what we know about money in soccer, it will happen. When he finally signed a five-year contract, Barca asked him to knock Real Madrid out of the Champions League, so he did. Yet Barcelona's former coach Louis van Gaal believes that perhaps he should have joined PSG first.
"He still needs to go through a whole development," Van Gaal said on Dutch TV. "If [Ivan] Rakitic and Arthur don't leave, it's going to be hard for Frenkie to play them out of the team."
Anyone who watched the Netherlands' 3-2 defeat to Germany on March 24 will have seen Van Gaal's point. Whenever the Dutch tried to build from the back, the Germans filled the spaces around De Jong. He failed to make space for himself, and so the Netherlands, dependent on him and Memphis Depay for creativity, was stifled. His tactical helplessness was surprising for a man capable of providing an acute analysis of a game on live TV moments after walking off the field.
1:16
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At Barca, a team with many creative threats, opponents won't be able to target him the same way, but De Jong does need to learn how a player without much speed can find space. He also knows he needs to register more goals and assists.
Furthermore, no club at the highest level will tolerate his current appetite for risk. Even in the most dangerous situations, he considers it beneath him to give a boring square ball or back pass, so opponents now try to choose the right moment to press him. He gave away a goal against Bayern in December with a bad pass, and very nearly another in Madrid when he lost the ball to Karim Benzema just outside his own penalty area. After the game a Dutch TV presenter told him, jokingly, "Don't do that again." De Jong laughed before replying: "I think: do it, but better."
All his life he has ignored advice to play it safe. He has said, "My quality is my intuition. I can't just ignore that, can I? Then I'd be a player of whom there are a thousand of my age. Often I'd say I understood the coach, then do my own thing on the field."
Still, he will have to learn that sometimes, when there's a Benzema at his back, he needs to be boring. Over the next decade, he might well become as good as Bartomeu and Barca envision, but along the way, he will also become a more normal, less extraordinary player. Something will be lost in translation, so enjoy the untamed version now.
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Steven Mullaney summons Notts response with gritty hundred
Published in
Cricket
Tuesday, 21 May 2019 13:01

Hampshire 310 and 3 for 1 lead Nottinghamshire 239 (Mullaney 102, Barker 3-46) by 74 runs
Steven Mullaney first learned about cricket in Golborne, a town which now lies in the Metropolitan Borough of Wigan. The place is no sort of Orwellian wasteland but neither is it Ambridge. And it certainly has next door to nowt in common with the pastoral glory of Newclose. Yet as we watched Nottinghamshire's captain fight like fury to keep his team in this match it was possible to discern the toughness which still characterises the league cricket he once played. Mullaney's century here was, among its other qualities, a monument to simple defiance and it should be recalled fondly by all those who saw it.
But let us be crystal on two points: firstly, the resolution Mullaney displayed is not some exclusively Northern characteristic; and secondly, Nottinghamshire's skipper long ago transferred his absolute allegiance from Old Trafford to Trent Bridge. It is in the East Midlands that he has won all the honours the domestic game has to offer and his loyalty to the place is very deep. So much is clear every time he strides to the wicket and it was plain again when he walked out with Nottinghamshire on 61 for 3 in reply to Hampshire's 310.
Things became much worse before they got even slightly better. Having beaten Ben Slater outside the off stump and induced a mistimed pull from Chris Nash, Kyle Abbott nipped one back to bowl Joe Clarke for 23. Then Jake Libby was leg before to Keith Barker to leave Nottinghamshire on 72 for 5. And all these ructions, we thought, on almost the first summer's day of the season.
For there was a Blyton-blue sky and so there had to be hampers. The hospitality was corporate and it was familial. The white Burgundy was chilled this afternoon and the beer needed only gravity to get it from barrel to tankard. Most in the crowd cheered happily either side of lunch as Abbott and Barker put Nottinghamshire in the toils. But then they watched in grudging admiration and near-perfect joy as Mullaney and Tom Moores, scrappers both, set about rebuilding the innings. Men under panamas and women in print dresses agreed that fast bowling looked warm work.
Warm but also productive. Having battled away for 101 minutes to stifle his attacking instincts and accumulate 34 out of a 79-run stand with Mullaney, Moores almost waved his bat at a ball from Fidel Edwards and gossamered a catch to a diving Tom Alsop down the leg side. Luke Fletcher and Stuart Broad followed him back to the pavilion in short order and the visitors took tea on 159 for 8 with Mullaney 43 not out. People wondered how much batting Hampshire might have to do before stumps. As things turned out, by the time Mullaney had near single-handedly reduced the deficit to 71 runs Joe Weatherley and Oli Soames needed to survive six overs, something they failed to do, Weatherley falling leg before to Fletcher when only eight balls remained. We are set for two more fine days on the abudant Island.
During the afternoon, though, spectators who craved warmth had sat in the generous sun; many bared their legs and some were badly advised to do so. Those who sought the shade lounged under the scoreboard on the Medina side of the ground and ate their ice-creams in peace as Mullaney continued his innings. One well-spoken chap licking his cornet was even watched by his envious pooch. On the opposite side of the ground Jack Russell sold sketches and prints.
He, perhaps above all spectators at Newclose, would have admired Mullaney's refusal to yield in the evening session. Nottinghamshire's warrior-leader reached his fifty off 113 balls but the deficit was then still over a hundred. So he buckled down again and shepherded Matt Carter through a superb stand of 80 for the ninth wicket. Carter played a fine supporting role as Mullaney took just 52 balls over the second fifty runs of the hundred he reached with a pulled six off Mason Crane.
This was Mullaney's fourth century against Hampshire and it was nothing like a perfect demonstration of batsmanship. He was dropped three times, most noticeably on 25 when Weatherley put down a two-handed slip chance off Abbott. But faultless 30s matter little when set beside the effort Nottinghamshire's skipper summoned at Newclose. When he reached three figures he raised his arms to the pavilion as if to reinforce the message that he requires similar effort from everybody in any team he leads. When he top-edged a return catch to Ian Holland, spectators stood to him and many were wearing Hampshire badges. He had played an innings worthy of the day and worthy of the place in which it was played. But they will read about Mullaney's hundred in places far beyond the Isle of Wight this evening; and they will smile at their warm memories.
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Forecast gloomy for Warwickshire despite Liam Norwell's debut seven-for
Published in
Cricket
Tuesday, 21 May 2019 12:15

Warwickshire 135 and 103 for 6 (Hain 43*) need a further 136 to beat Somerset 209 and 164 (Norwell 7-41)
Paul Farbrace would not be human if just before start of play he did not feel a tiny pang of regret when England's World Cup squad was announced over the PA system. Timing does not always work out perfectly, and to accept Warwickshire's director of cricket role he had to relinquish his job as England assistant coach with cricket's biggest one-day tournament beckoning.
What is more, instead of a chance to share in history, he now knows he has walked into a Warwickshire relegation fight. They are not entirely out of this match at Taunton, but to be 103 for 6 at the close of a hectic second day, chasing 249 on a sporty pitch, identifies them as big outsiders. Much rests with Sam Hain, whose unbeaten 43 is the top score in the match. Few, if any, batsmen in a match where 36 wickets have tumbled in two days have looked as assured. Not that many have even tried to look as assured.
If Farbrace was in search of optimism he found it in the performance of Liam Norwell, a close season capture from Gloucestershire, who took 7 for 41 on his Warwickshire debut with a controlled display of swing and seam bowling. Sporty pitch or not, he has wasted no time in proving he can make the step up to Division One cricket.
Signing Norwell was a bit of a gamble for Warwickshire. He had spent eight seasons at Gloucestershire, though missed the entire 2018 season with recurring hamstring problems, but he has always been capable of hot spells when the conditions are in his favour.
His debut for Warwickshire was delayed when he strained a pectoral muscle while fielding in a practice session at Edgbaston, inviting fears that ill luck had begun to follow a bowler who had previously enjoyed a decent enough injury record, but he felt the sun on his back at Taunton as he hustled in with an open action and revelled in the murmurs of a good crowd as the wickets built up.
"I was quite fired up for it," he said. "Warwickshire have been so great for me since I've been here and it's nice to repay some of their faith. My bowling in the first innings was a bit rusty. I've had quite a long injury lay-off - a dark season in a way last year with three tears on the same hamstring - but today felt like I was back to where I was a year and a half ago. So it's come back quite quickly.
"I think it's a good cricket wicket. Yes, it's low scoring, but if you are going to be highly critical there is a lot of batsmen error as well as good bowling. There is pace in the wicket and a bit of nip, but I'd much rather play on these wickets and I think a lot of people would much rather watch cricket on these wickets than just getting to the third innings and shaking hands."
Somerset have batted in a frenzy in this match, regarding the surface with fatalism. The result of that was scores of 209 and 164 and an average run rate across the two innings of more than four an over. It was primarily down to Norwell that they subsided to 78 for 7 and it was largely in his absence that Craig Overton organised some late-order resistance for the second time in the match.
Azhar Ali and James Hildreth were snaffled in his first two overs, both of them without scoring. Azhar fell to bounce and movement when he edged to the wicketkeeper; Hildreth was wary of something similar when he was lbw to one that held its line.
His new-ball spell then brought wickets in consecutive overs for a second time. Marcus Trescothick released a few square drives, inviting hopes that his measured tread would bring some ballast to Somerset's batting, but he became Norwell's second lbw victim, 23 logged, his highest score to date in his 27th season. Tom Abell fell defensively to a ball that left him.
When Norwell swung one back to bowl Lewis Gregory immediately after lunch and caused Steve Davies to follow a wide one that went wider, Somerset only had a lead of 152 and their hold on the game was tenuous at best. But Overton, who had begun the day by extending his Championship wickets tally to 22 at 14.77, responded with gusto as the last three wickets more than doubled the score.
Tim Groenewald caused most merriment. Disconcerted by Henry Brookes' pace, and struck on the hand, he was dropped at deep mid-on by Oliver Hannon-Dalby, a reprieve he celebrated by hauling a length ball over midwicket for six. "Short or yorker," was probably the gist of the advice given to Brookes by his captain, Jeetan Patel. Brookes went short, and Groenewald was duly on his way, making room for a failed wind-up.
Warwickshire lost two for 26 by tea. Will Rhodes fell in the first over, caught behind of Gregory for a duck and Rob Yates suffered the same fate. Jack Leach was popped on for a while and turned one to have Dom Sibley caught at slip for 26, so ending his run of centuries in successive first-class matches on six. Adam Hose completed an unhappy return to his former club by falling lbw to Overton for 4.
This Somerset side can excel in the field, too, as was shown by the run out of Tim Ambrose. Hain ran the ball through point, the pair went for a quick single, but George Bartlett pounced to hit direct with a single stump to aim at. They will be confident about completing the job on the third morning.
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Gareth Batty's Jedi mind tricks turn tables on Kent after Sean Dickson ton
Published in
Cricket
Tuesday, 21 May 2019 12:19

Surrey 439 and 11 for 0 lead Kent 294 (Dickson 128, Crawley 63, Batty 3-49) by 156 runs
In deciding on the readiness of young players to compete at the highest level, it is often said "if they're good enough, they're old enough". Seldom though do you hear people opining that "if he's good enough, he's young enough". In the 41-year-old Gareth Batty and the 37-year-old Rikki Clarke, Surrey quite definitely possess two of the more mature players on the circuit; yet they are both very much young enough.
With this match drifting listlessly to what already seemed an inevitable high-scoring draw, Surrey's gnarled old pros, longer in the tooth than your average walrus, broke the game open with a pair of interventions after tea.
On Monday, it was Darren Stevens assuming the role of Yoda. This time, with Kent cruising comfortably at 227 for 2 on a placid pitch offering nothing to the bowlers since before lunch on day one, it was Batty to whom Rory Burns turned, much as Princess Leia did to Obi Wan Kenobi.
Batty was, it seemed, Surrey's "last hope". The pitch was offering little by way of turn, but Batty summoned his most seductive Jedi mind tricks in assuring first Heino Kuhn and then Ollie Robinson the very next delivery that "these are the balls you are looking to edge". Two arm balls, albeit with a little more bounce than either batsman was expecting, assisted by two very sharp Ben Foakes catches had suddenly thrown this somnolent, soporific match wide open.
Wiaan "agent" Mulder came in to face the hat-trick ball but knew "the truth was out there", just on a length outside off stump and spoiled the fun with the middle of a stoutly defensive bat.
What Mulder didn't see coming was the leaping left hand of Will Jacks at gully who dived impossibly far to snatch the ball an inch off the ground to an audible collective gasp from this now thoroughly engaged crowd. Jacks repeated the trick in the first over of a new spell from Clarke to remove Alex Blake, and when Stevens, who had survived two mighty close shouts for lbw off Clarke was finally put out of his misery by umpire Graham Lloyd, Kent had lost five wickets for 33 runs.
All the while, Sean Dickson, who scored 318 the last time Kent played a first-class fixture at Beckenham, was looking on aghast from the other end. Just three hours earlier he and Zak Crawley had been busy compiling an untroubled, and often attractive opening stand of 128.
Crawley really does look the real deal. Against a seam attack of Morne Morkel, Clarke, Sam Curran and the distinctly brisk Conor Mckerr, he appeared to have all the time in the world. Granted, there was little happening off the pitch, and neither did it swing, much to the surprise of the odd luminary in the commentary box, but there are few more testing attacks than Surrey's and it came as a surprise when he was spectacularly castled by Clarke for 63, pushing out at a ball he should have been defending and losing his middle and off stumps in the process.
Just as Clarke had sprung that first surprise, it was down to Batty to deliver the second when he too removed the middle stump, this time of Daniel Bell-Drummond who was attempting to run the ball down through third man. It was both too close to him and way too full. An ugly drag back ensued. Those Jedi mind tricks again. Frustration, disappointment and unfulfillment again from a player who has promised so much for years, at least since that terrific hundred against the touring Australians in 2015.
The second new ball was taken as soon as it was available. Curran immediately accounted for Dickson, getting him caught strangled down the leg side to end an unspectacular but highly efficient innings from the opener in rather unfortunate circumstances. The last two wickets soon followed, the final one to another quite brilliant catch from Jacks at short leg to give Morkel his only wicket. Surrey's catching had been exemplary, even spectacular on occasion.
One bad session had produced eight wickets for just 91 runs. What at one time looked like a possible first-innings lead had resulted in a deficit of 145 runs. It is frequently the challenge for promoted sides to maintain intensity across the full duration of a match in this highly competitive top tier. Kent's squad in large part lack Division One experience. Experience, though, is something Surrey have in abundance, and Batty and Clarke were quite simply the difference. Young enough? You bet.
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Glenn Maxwell keen to control with the ball and finish with the bat
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Cricket
Tuesday, 21 May 2019 14:54

Australia and the West Indies will play their first World Cup practice match "behind closed doors" on an out ground in Hampshire on Wednesday. The sides were officially scheduled to play two warm-up games before the start of the tournament but an extra hit-out was agreed between the camps when Stuart Law was West Indies' coach.
Before training on Tuesday, Glenn Maxwell compared the size of the Nursery Ground to Hurstville in Sydney, the venue of many a thumping score in Australia's domestic one-day competition, and as a result this warm-up will likely provide a serious test of both sides' containment bowling.
As a part-time offspinner, Maxwell knows he will have his work cut out for him should he bowl to the likes of Chris Gayle and Andre Russell. But, while it is his batting that is most often discussed, he is clear on his objectives with the ball in hand.
"Try not to get hit for six most of the time," laughed Maxwell. "For me I suppose, a lot of the time that I bowl, I just try to limit the boundary balls. As long as I'm doing that, if they hit some good shots off my bowling I'm not too fazed. If I'm limiting the boundary balls and giving myself the best chance to squeeze a few dot balls, bowl a couple of tight overs, it might create a bit of pressure at the other end."
Maxwell spent time at Lancashire after Australia's tours of India and Pakistan, choosing to prepare for the summer in England and giving himself the best chance of making the Ashes squad rather than playing in the IPL. His stint in county cricket included seven List A games and while he performed modestly with the bat - his top score was 35 - he took wickets in all but one match and eight in all.
"I think it's important for me to just bowl in a partnership with someone. That's probably the clarity I have in my role and it's something I did a bit in Dubai [against Pakistan] and India and started to get a few more overs, a bit more consistency... To have that continue into my time at Lancashire where I got plenty of time at the bowling crease, you get that rhythm, you get that feel of the ball coming out consistently. You need that as a part-time bowler, to have that consistency of time at the crease and get a few of the cobwebs out I suppose."
His bowling may be a handy option but it is Maxwell's destructive batting that has the real potential to dismantle attacks and the Nursery Ground may be just the first on this tour that struggles to contain his powerful hitting. But in this, too, Maxwell has found clarity on how he fits into the Australian side.
"I suppose my role in the team is to adapt to whatever start we have, whether it be we get off to a flyer or we've lost a few early wickets. It's just to adapt to whatever I get thrown into," he said. "I just want to have an impact on games in a really positive way and be able to control the back end.
"I have expectations on myself to finish off games and be the guy who's standing there at the end of the game and making sure that we win the game."
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