Sam Robson heroics in vain as Middlesex narrowly fail to beat drop

Middlesex’s latest stay in Division One of the LV= Insurance County Championship is over, although they at least went down with a fight on a dramatic final day at Trent Bridge.In a match they ultimately had to win, following Kent’s draw against Lancashire, to avoid joining Northamptonshire in Division Two next season, there had looked to be only one outcome as skipper Toby Roland-Jones set Nottingham a target of just 207 in a generous 58 overs.But on a dry, turning pitch on a beautifully sunny last afternoon, spinners Jayant Yadav, Josh De Caires and Sam Robson – who finished with a career-best 4 for 46 with his legspin – gave the home side a real scare before Matt Montgomery (34 not out) held the tail together to drag Nottinghamshire across the line at eight down, with 16 balls to spare.Fittingly, it was No. 10 Jake Ball – in his final appearance for Nottinghamshire – who swept Robson for the winning boundary.Earlier, as Nottinghamshire set fields that allowed Middlesex to set the game up, Robson hit an 109-ball unbeaten 105 that contained only three fours, and De Caires 49 from 47 as the two shared an 83-run sixth-wicket partnership before the declaration came, with Roland-Jones needing to take a gamble if his bowlers were to have any chance of taking 10 wickets on a pitch that, while taking spin, was still essentially a good surface for batting.Brett Hutton’s 2 for 38 had confirmed him as the season’s leading wicket-taker across both divisions on 62 and as Ben Slater added a 49 to his first-innings 140 Nottinghamshire looked to be cruising on 133 for 2.There had been only sporadic glimmers of hope for Middlesex. Haseeb Hameed, without a hundred this year after four in 2022, pulled Tom Helm straight to square leg in the 16th over. Ten overs later, John Simpson executed a sharp stumping to enable De Caires to end Steven Mullaney’s progress at 30 from 34 balls.But then wickets came in consecutive overs twice as the turning ball suddenly became a potent weapon. Joe Clarke was bowled by offspinner Jayant for 22 in the 31st, before Slater was leg before to Robson in the 32nd.Tom Moores was caught at deep midwicket on the slog-sweep off Robson in the 36th and Lyndon James leg before on the back foot to Jayant in the 37th, leaving Nottinghamshire 152 for 6, still 55 short of the target.And the odds looked to be tipping firmly in Middlesex’s favour as Robson bowled Calvin Harrison in the 40th, giving Robson career-best figures with the ball as a bonus. But Montgomery played the spinners well and Hutton brought a calm authority to proceedings, the pair adding 45 for the seventh wicket.There was still for one more scare as Hutton, with just five needed, swiped at Robson to be caught behind.But Ball kept his nerve to get the job done, punching the air as his sweep off Robson beat the infield, achieving for a fourth win of the season and a sixth-place finish for Nottinghamshire, who were promoted with Middlesex as Division Two champions last year.At the start of the day, with just one slip in place as Ball bowled the opening delivery with a ball just three overs old, it was clear that Nottinghamshire were happy to let Middlesex progress at their own pace towards the declaration they had in mind. Quite soon there were no slips and ultimately nine Nottinghamshire players stationed by the boundary rope.The wonder was that Middlesex managed to lose five wickets in taking their total to 177 in the 29 overs up to lunch, although Stevie Eskinazi’s freakish demise capped an unfortunate match for the former captain.His firm drive towards mid-on hit Robson on the foot at the non-striker’s end and rolled gently towards Mullaney, the bowler, who picked up the ball and lobbed it to wicketkeeper Tom Moores with Eskinazi, who had copped one on the helmet on day one, hopelessly stranded.Either side of this moment of comedy – dark comedy from a Middlesex point of view – Mark Stoneman picked out Lyndon James at deep midwicket and Max Holden fell to an excellent catch by Ball at third man as Hutton extended his wickets tally for the season, before Dane Paterson raised his total to 50 – for the third consecutive season – by having Ryan Higgins caught behind off a thin edge and Mullaney removed Simpson via a much thicker edge, a steepler that Moores had to run to backward point to take.A breezy innings by De Caires either side of lunch helped things along, the young allrounder lofting Ball into the Fox Road stand beyond square leg before he was caught at deep extra flinging the bat.It gave Ball his final wicket as a Nottinghamshire player – and the first from the Stuart Broad End, as the pavilion end here will henceforth be known following a lunchtime announcement in the presence of the retired England pace bowler.Moments later, Robson completed his third hundred of the season, Middlesex declared, mindful mostly of how many overs their bowlers might need to have any chance of taking 10 wickets, and Ball led his team-mates off the field for the last time. Another county will surely find room for him next season.

CBF detalha datas, horários e locais das rodadas finais da Série B

MatériaMais Notícias

A Confederação Brasileira de Futebol (CBF) divulgou, nesta quarta-feira, o planejamento das três últimas rodadas da Série B do Campeonato Brasileiro. Dos dias 18 de outubro até 06 de novembro, serão disputadas da 36ª, 37ª e 38ª rodada.

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O Cruzeiro já está garantido no Brasileirão da próxima temporada. Portanto restam apenas três vagas para o acesso à elite do futebol nacional. Por enquanto, Grêmio, Bahia e Vasco formam o G4, com maiores chances de subirem para a Primeira Divisão.

+ Veja a classificação da Série B

36ª rodada
18 de outubro (terça-feira)
19h – Brusque x Novorizontino (Augusto Bauer)
19h – Cruzeiro x Guarani (Mineirão)
21h30 – CRB x Operário-PR (Rei Pelé)

20 de outubro (quinta-feira)
21h – Vasco x Criciúma (São Januário)
21h30 – Ponte Preta x CSA (Moisés Lucarelli)

21 de outubro (sexta-feira)
19h – Chapecoense x Tombense (Arena Condá)
21h30 – Londrina x Sport (Estádio do Café)

22 de outubro (sábado)
16h30 – Bahia x Vila Nova (Arena Fonte Nova)
19h – Ituano x Sampaio Corrêa (Novelli Júnior)

23 de outubro (domingo)
16h – Náutico x Grêmio (Aflitos)

37ª rodada
25 de outubro (terça-feira)
19h – Brusque x CRB (Augusto Bauer)
21h30 – CSA x Vila Nova (Rei Pelé)

27 de outubro (quinta-feira)
19h – Novorizontino x Cruzeiro (Jorge Ismael de Biasi)
20h – Vasco x Sampaio Corrêa (São Januário)

28 de outubro (sexta-feira)
19h – Sport x Operário-PR (Ilha do Retiro)
19h – Londrina x Ituano (Estádio do Café)
19h – Bahia x Guarani (Arena Fonte Nova)
21h30 – Ponte Preta x Criciúma (Moisés Lucarelli)
21h30 – Tombense x Grêmio (Estádio Soares de Azevedo)

29 de outubro (sábado)
19h – Chapecoense x Náutico (Arena Condá)

38ª rodada
6 de novembro (domingo)
18h30 – Guarani x Chapecoense (Brinco de Ouro)
18h30 – CRB x Bahia (Rei Pelé)
18h30 – Náutico x Ponte Preta (Aflitos)
18h30 – Criciúma x Tombense (Heriberto Hulse)
18h30 – Ituano x Vasco da Gama (Novelli Júnior)
18h30 – Operário x Novorizontino (Germano Kruger)
18h30 – Grêmio x Brusque (Arena do Grêmio)
18h30 – Sampaio Corrêa x Londrina (Castelão)
18h30 – Cruzeiro x CSA (Mineirão)
18h30 – Vila Nova x Sport (Onésio Alvarenga)

Southee hopes to 'be right in time' for World Cup as he begins bowling with 'tender' thumb

Tim Southee’s dislocated thumb is still tender and scarred but he has begun bowling and has started to build up his bowling loads, which raises hopes of a swift return at the World Cup. Southee had dislocated his thumb during an ODI against England on September 15, and now has a plate and some screws in his hand to show for it.”It’s still a bit tender where obviously there’s a bit of scarring and a bit of numbness around where the plate is,” Southee said upon arrival in Ahmedabad, two days before New Zealand’s tournament opener against England. “So I guess it’s just [about] getting used to that. And getting back into some bowling. Haven’t done a lot of bowling over the last couple of weeks, so it’s about getting your loads back up as well as managing the thumb.”Related

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  • Greatest ODIs: Elation and despair duel in Auckland

The outlook wasn’t always this optimistic. “It’s been a crazy couple of weeks,” Southee said. “A bit of a race against time to get here, but managed to get here and it’s a great place to come. It’s an awesome place to come and play cricket, let alone being a World Cup.”[The injury was] something new. Haven’t done an injury like this before. I guess when something like that happens so close to a world event, your mind starts to drift towards that. With the limited time we had, I guess sitting down and working out the fastest recovery time, and the route back was to chuck some screws in it and a plate and hope for the best. Everyone I’ve dealt with and the process has been brilliant to get me to this stage. So fingers crossed we can carry on the recovery process and be right in time.”The three World Cups that Southee has played have all been impressive for New Zealand. In 2011, they were the only non-Asian team in the semi-finals, in 2015 they made it to the final but lost, in 2019 they made it to the final, didn’t lose the match but lost the title on a boundary count back.As they hope they can go one step further, the core of the team – injured and bruising right at this moment – might even get a bit emotional looking back at the joys and heartbreak of these campaigns undertaken together. Kane Williamson and Trent Boult have lived the heartbreak of 2015 and 2019 with Southee alongside some sweet memories, including the inaugural World Test Championship final.”Obviously two very good mates and guys I’ve played a lot of cricket with. Not only for New Zealand, but going back through age-group cricket, domestically for Northern Districts as well,” Southee said. “So I think also two of our greatest, greatest players to have played the game. So it’s been a special, I guess 10-12…how many [ever] years it’s been, to play alongside those guys and see [them] grow from kids into two of New Zealand’s greats.”

Steven Mullaney relinquishes Notts captaincy

Veteran allrounder vacates role after six seasons in charge

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Oct-2023Steven Mullaney has announced his decision to step down as club captain of Nottinghamshire after six years in the role.Mullaney, 36, was in charge when Notts won promotion to Division One last year, and oversaw a sixth place finish on their return to the top tier – although his returns with the bat this season were limited to 485 runs from 12 matches, with one half-century.”I’m honoured, proud and privileged to have had this opportunity,” he said. “My main aim in the job was to make a difference – and while the big goal was to win Division One, and we weren’t quite able to do that, I’m proud of the foundations we’ve been able to put down for us to challenge in the next few years.”As captain, I wanted to have an influence on the culture at the club, and the way we went about things. It took us a couple of years, and we had to have some tough conversations along the way, but I really think we got somewhere.”I’ve put my heart and soul into this job, but I think it’s time for someone else to enjoy the ride. Whoever that is, they’ll have my complete support.”Mullaney took over as captain of Nottinghamshire’s Championship and One-Day Cup teams after the retirement of Chris Read in 2017, before picking up responsibility for the T20 side following Dan Christian’s departure. His involvement with Trent Rockets in the Hundred curtailed Mullaney’s time as 50-over captain, with the job going to Haseeb Hameed – a likely candidate for the red-ball leadership – in 2022.The veteran allrounder, who joined Nottinghamshire in 2010, still has a year left on his most-recent contract with the club and can expect to be a sounding board for whoever succeeds him.”Firstly I’d like to say a huge well done to Steve on his six years as captain,” Peter Moores, Nottinghamshire’s head coach, said. “He took over at a time when we needed to rebuild, having lost several senior players the year before, and when we needed to find a new direction as a group.”He led us superbly through that period, and made sure the players never lost sight of their goals by staying consistent with the messages he got across to them.”Our results in red-ball cricket in recent years, and our retaining of first-division status this summer, are testament to the improvements he helped to bring about. The squad is definitely in a better place now than when he took over, which is ultimately the goal of any captain.”It feels like an exciting time for someone to take over, and I know Steve will be the first to offer his support, with that same goal of bringing further success to the club.”

تعديل موعد مباراة الأهلي والبنزرتي التونسي الودية

بات من المقرر تعديل موعد مباراة الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بالنادي الأهلي الودية أمام البنزرتي في معسكر تونس.

ويخوض الأهلي معسكرًا تدريبيًا خارجيًا في تونس خلال الفترة من 18 إلى 26 يوليو 2025، استعدادًا للموسم الجديد.

طالع| خاص | الأهلي يوافق على إعارة لاعبه إلى زد

ويستعد الأهلي لمواجهة البنزرتي التونسي، في ثاني مبارياته الودية بمعسكر الإعداد والتي تقام غدًا الجمعة، بعد الفوز على الملعب التونسي 4-1.

وكان من المقرر انطلاق مباراة الأهلي والبنزرتي في تمام الساعة الثامنة مساء غد الجمعة، قبل أن يتم تعديل الموعد.

وأعلنت قناة الأهلي إقامة مباراة الفريق أمام البنزرتي في السابعة والنصف مساء، بدلاً من الثامنة.

وتنقل مباراة الأهلي والبنزرتي التونسي، على شبكة قناة الأهلي بشكل حصري.

Alexandre Lacazette has found a new club! Ex-Arsenal striker agrees Saudi Arabia move after leaving relegated Lyon

Alexandre Lacazette is set to begin a new chapter in his career with a move to the Saudi Pro League now on the verge of completion.

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Lacazette agrees two-year deal with Saudi club NeomHas passed medical after leaving relegated LyonFinal minor detail remains before move is confirmedFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Lacazette has reached a full agreement with Saudi Pro League side Neom, according to . The 34-year-old former Arsenal and Lyon striker has signed a two-year deal and has already completed his medical with the newly promoted club. Before the move can be officially finalised, a minor detail in the contract needs to be worked out.

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Lacazette became a free agent after his contract with Lyon expired following the club’s relegation from Ligue 1. Despite Lyon’s poor campaign, the forward remained a consistent performer, scoring 43 goals across two seasons since returning to the French side from Arsenal in 2022. His transfer to Neom is part of a larger trend of experienced European players choosing the Saudi Pro League.

DID YOU KNOW?

Lacazette leaves Lyon with a total of 184 goals in 326 appearances over two spells. He was also club captain and top scorer during the 2023–25 period, despite their relegation.

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AFPWHAT NEXT FOR LACAZETTE?

Lacazette is expected to finalise his transfer to Neom once the last contractual detail is settled. He will play in the Saudi Pro League for the 2025–26 season. The club could make him public within days, as long as both parties confirm it officially.

Javier Mascherano 'proud' of Lionel Messi & Co despite PSG 'bloodbath' as Inter Miami boss claims MLS side 'accomplished goals' at Club World Cup

Inter Miami boss Javier Mascherano hailed his team's performance in their Club World Cup round of 16 clash against Paris Saint-Germain but labelled the first half as a 'bloodbath' as the MLS side went down 4-0 against the European champions. Joao Neves led the way with a brace and Achraf Hakimi was also on target, while Tomas Aviles scored an own goal as Inter Miami were decimated before the interval.

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  • Mascherano praised Messi & Co
  • PSG beat Inter Miami 4-0
  • Miami still accomplished their target
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Despite the goal fest for PSG in Atlanta, Mascherano claimed that the David Beckham-owned side accomplished their target for the competition. Inter Miami became the first American club to reach the knockout stage of the Club World Cup after they finished second in Group A behind Palmeiras, with a Lionel Messi-inspired win over Porto the high point of their campaign.

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  • WHAT MASCHERANO SAID

    Speaking to reporters, the Argentine manager said: "My take on the tournament is we have accomplished the goals we set for ourselves. It was crystal clear that when we are competing, we would be able to do so to a certain level. It’s right in your face, we see it clearly. We have met the expectations set on us. Regrettably, when they scored a goal so early, it was difficult… it was just too easy the way it was scored. The first half was kind of like a bloodbath, but the second half was a bit slower, and we showed everything we are doing in MLS. I reiterate I am proud of what my team has accomplished. Going forward, we will focus on the future and leverage our entire experience for domestic competitions."

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    Mascherano added: "PSG are full and fraught with so many tools. You cannot cover the entire field. I wanted to be on the pitch with my players, supporting them. The message at half-time was that we have to live with this.

    "It’s difficult when it’s 4-0 and you know you don’t have much chance, you don’t expect to change the result, but it was important to show a good image to people. The players did really well in the second half; they tried to do their best. This is the way we want to play."

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    WHAT NEXT FOR INTER MIAMI?

    Lionel Messi and Co will have to dust themselves down quickly for a return to MLS action on July 6, as they take on CF Montreal.

Perry may not bowl during West Indies series following knee injury

The allrounder is still building up to full capacity but Australia are never short of options with the ball

AAP and ESPNcricinfo staff29-Sep-2023

Ellyse Perry will start the summer against West Indies as a batter only•Getty Images

Ellyse Perry’s knee injury could keep her from bowling for the entire white-ball series against West Indies that kicks off the women’s home summer.Perry hurt her left knee playing the second one-day international of Australia’s series against Ireland in July. The injury forced her out of the final match against the Irish, as well as England’s franchise tournament the Hundred.In early September, Cricket Australia (CA) named the 32-year-old allrounder in the squad for the white-ball series against West Indies that begins with a T20I at North Sydney Oval on Sunday.CA said at the time Perry was expected to be “fully available” for the six-match series, and on Tuesday she had her first competitive hit-out since July in a one-dayer for Victoria against Western Australia.Related

West Indies women mix experience with youth for upcoming Australia tour

Megan Schutt: 'I didn't have the skill or work ethic, I just happened to be able to swing a ball'

Perry did not bowl in that match and said she may not do so again until after the West Indies series finishes in mid-October.”Nothing’s wrong, it’s just building workloads back up again so I’m fully prepared for the summer,” she said. “In terms of my full fitness, bowling will probably be something that I still work through across this series.”It might mean that I’m not available to bowl until late in the piece or perhaps towards the start of the WBBL.”Australia used Perry’s bowling sparingly during the white-ball legs of the women’s Ashes that preceded the Ireland tour and she has not sent down more than two overs in a T20I since the 2020 T20 World Cup.Australia are rarely short of bowling options in their limited-overs teams. Fellow allrounders Ash Gardner, Annabel Sutherland, Tahlia McGrath, Jess Jonassen and Georgia Wareham have all been selected in the squad to face West Indies.Perry shrugged at criticism of CA’s decision to schedule the first match of the women’s summer on the same day and in the same city as the NRL grand final.”The summer scheduling, and how much cricket we need to fit in, you can’t always get things 100 percent in a clear window,” she said. “Given the time of the match, being played early in the day, at a wonderful venue, there’s plenty of value in this fixture. I’m sure we’ll get a good crowd.”Perry played alongside Meg Lanning as Australia’s captain made her return to cricket this week following a four-month medical absence.Lanning hit a half-century in the first of two matches and CA is hopeful she will return to the national side later in the home summer. Perry heralded Lanning’s return to state cricket as a big step towards an Australia comeback.”That’s absolutely significant,” she said. “At the same time, it’s just significant that she’s back and she’s enjoying playing her cricket. She really just picked up where she left off in terms of her batting.”

Aston Villa reject Marcus Rashford deal as Manchester United forward aims for move abroad

Aston Villa have officially rejected the chance to take up their option on Marcus Rashford, who wants to leave Manchester United for an overseas club.

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  • Aston Villa reject Rashford deal
  • Forward due to return for Man Utd pre-season
  • Wants a move abroad
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Villa had the chance to sign Rashford for £40 million as part of the loan agreement that brought the forward to the club in January, but the club have confirmed his departure, thanking him for his "amazing efforts and contributions".

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    It has now been reported that Rashford is seeking a move away from the Premier League this summer. Journalist David Ornstein claims the England international is keen to win titles overseas.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    The same report states that Rashford is open to another loan move from Old Trafford, with a swap deal also a possibility. It has been claimed that Barcelona is his dream move, with the La Liga champions giving some thought to the idea.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR RASHFORD?

    Rashford may have to wait until late in the summer to seal a transfer to Barca. The club are intent on signing Nico Williams as a first-choice winger but could make a loan move for Rashford once they know their financial situation at the end of the window. For now, he is due to report for pre-season at United on July 7.

In-form South Africa face serial winners Australia with history on their shoulders

Echoes of the past abound in re-run of 1999 and 2007 semi-finals, with South Africa sweating on Temba Bavuma’s fitness

Andrew Miller15-Nov-20231:55

Cummins: Recent record against SA ‘doesn’t count for too much’

Big picture: Baggage handlers Can you feel the ghosts in the machine yet? Creeping out of the nooks and crannies of Eden Gardens, the most perfect venue imaginable for a contest that can barely move for historical baggage. It’s Australia versus South Africa in a World Cup semi-final. And if the mere thought of what’s to come hasn’t got your spine tingling in anticipation, then you’re surely dead inside.Forget everything you think you know about form and fortune, and the fallacy that the best team will always win on the day. Embrace instead a scenario in which every twitch of South Africa’s muscle memory (because, let’s face it, this is all about them) will feel as though it is attached to invisible strings, dragging their efforts backwards through space and time … through 2015, through 2007, through 2003. Through 1999 and 1992 … and back into the formless void from whence all of their World Cup agonies first sprung.It’s grotesquely unfair. It is history written as premonition. It’s a thousand “I told you sos” chanting in unison at the inevitable moment when South Africa’s dream of World Cup glory dies another ugly and undignified death. But make no mistake, that’s the baggage that Temba Bavuma’s team will be obliged to drag with them to the middle on Thursday. In this contest, of all contests, they don’t get the luxury of tuning out the doubts and the doubters.Related

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For facing them down will be cricket’s most storied champions, Australia, the acid test that every contender seems obliged to pass if they hope to lay claim to the crown. With five titles to their name, and just four knockout losses in 18 such matches since the very first semi-final in 1975, Australia’s presence on these occasions comes almost to them as a birthright.Since 1992, no team has won a World Cup without eliminating them first – and even Pakistan’s group-stage victory that year proved to be a de facto quarter-final. Sri Lanka denied them in the 1996 final, before India and England dethroned them in 2011 and 2019 respectively. Come through this one and, notwithstanding India’s runaway form in the other side of the draw, South Africa will be entitled to believe that their name is on the trophy.That is not to say that South Africa should be considered rank outsiders, far from it. Uniquely among Australia’s opponents across the entire history of ODI cricket, they boast a positive win-loss record (55 to 50), which includes 15 victories in their last 18 meetings and a group-stage thumping in Lucknow, only last month.They won seven of their nine group games here (the same as their opponents) and racked up four totals in excess of 350 – more than any other side, including a market-leading 428 for 5 against Sri Lanka in Delhi, which is also the highest score ever made at a World Cup. And, if they win the toss and bat first, they will be able to lean into a formula for batting dominance that no team – not even India – has yet surpassed.South Africa wait on Temba Bavuma as he attempts to prove his fitness•AFP/Getty Images

They’ve got form, they’ve got confidence … but they’ve also got history, as their opponents will be only too happy to remind them. Even South Africa’s happiest memories of Eden Gardens – from their redemptive tour in November 1991, when Clive Rice released doves into the Calcutta air to mark South Africa’s return from sporting isolation – seem to have been man-marked by Australian one-upmanship. Four years prior to that occasion, and almost to the day, Allan Border had been hoisted onto his team-mates’ shoulders and paraded across the same turf, after laying claim to the first of Australia’s five titles.What South Africa would give for their first … instead, their barren cabinet is feeling all the more sparse right now, in light of the knockout magnificence that took place in Paris only last month. Since their own return to the international stage, South Africa’s rugby team has endured none of the angst that has stalked their cricketers – winning four World Cups in eight since victory at the first attempt in 1995 – and in holding their nerve across three consecutive one-point wins in this year’s quarter, semi and final, they proved with unhelpful clarity just what it takes to show bottle in the clutch moments.As with so many other aspects of this unfeasibly vast occasion, the dream for South Africa is only ever a tick away from becoming a living nightmare. All things being equal, Bavuma, their first black cricket captain, is two matches away from emulating his rugby counterpart Siya Kolisi, and providing the Rainbow Nation with the most joyous photo pairing since Nelson Mandela embraced Francois Pienaar at Ellis Park.But Bavuma, already under scrutiny due to a fallow run of form, is labouring with a hamstring strain that, through no fault of his own, raises agonising echoes of South Africa’s subplot in the 2015 semi-final, when an unfit Vernon Philander was forced into the line-up ahead of the in-form Kyle Abbott. And as if that spectre of past failings wasn’t enough to have weighing on the players’ minds, it might also rain on Thursday … it’s all a bit too spooky if you ask me.Usual suspects: Australia prepare for another semi-final•ICC via Getty Images

At this point, it’s only polite to point out that there will, in fact, be two teams competing for progression to Sunday’s final in Ahmedabad, and such is Australia’s enduring quality on the world stage, it might not be sufficient for South Africa to simply vanquish their internal demons.From a stuttering start, with two losses on the bounce, Australia’s march to seven wins in a row has been ominous in the extreme. David Warner has unfurled his full stage presence as he enters the final weeks of his one-day career, producing a body of work that matches up even to the four-times centurion Quinton de Kock, while Mitchell Marsh and Glenn Maxwell’s top notes of destruction have secured Australia each of the two highest individual scores of the tournament, and the fastest century too – trumping the previous marks set by de Kock and Aiden Markram.They carry an air of entitlement into this contest that is surely worth a hundred-run start, not to mention the sure knowledge that, in each of their two previous semi-final clashes, in 1999 and 2007, they marched past their bereft opponents and all the way to glory. As if they didn’t know it already, South Africa need to produce the game of their lives on Thursday, and then some. It may seem cruel, but those are the rules of this particular engagement. And they were written long before many of these players were born.Form guideAustralia WWWWW (last five completed matches, most recent first)
South Africa WLWWWIn the spotlight: Heinrich Klaasen and Adam ZampaUntil it was trumped by the most extraordinary ODI innings of all time, it was hard to imagine how Heinrich Klaasen’s blistering century against England at the Wankhede could possibly be bettered in this tournament. Much like the Maxwell masterpiece that surpassed it in the wow stakes, Klaasen’s 109 from 67 balls was characterised by riotous hitting in the face of physical debilitation, with the air in Mumbai that day thick enough to “eat” as Joe Root evocatively put it after England’s agenda-setting rout.More important than the runs he scored, however, was the statement that Klaasen’s display made. He had come into the World Cup as the most talked-about batter in ODI cricket, particularly after the smackdown he laid on Australia in Centurion in the weeks leading up to the tournament. His 174 from 83 balls that day included – alongside David Miller – an eye-watering 173 in the final ten overs of the innings. That Mumbai innings, and his follow-up 90 from 49 against Bangladesh, was early evidence that South Africa’s build-steady-charge-hard style would not be cowed on the big stage. If his returns have tailed off a touch since, the threat he poses has not.It’s easy to forget now, amid the stellar returns that have come Adam Zampa’s way, that the Australia legspinner endured a deeply uncomfortable start to his campaign. After a wicketless opening match against India, he was belted for 70 runs in ten overs during South Africa’s group-stage victory in Lucknow, with the solitary scalp of Rassie van der Dussen coming in his 15th over of the tournament. Since then his returns have gone into overdrive – 21 further wickets in 61 subsequent overs across seven consecutive wins – with his superb control of line, length and variation making any attacking motive fraught with danger. Nevertheless, South Africa had his number once before. They’ll have to believe they can find it again.Team news: Labuschagne over Stoinis, SA wait on BavumaNeither Marnus Labuschagne nor Marcus Stoinis made it to the middle in Australia’s crushing victory over Bangladesh in their final group game, but only one of them will feature in Kolkata, given the inevitable return of the game-changing Maxwell. The explosive success of their batting in recent outings means that Labuschagne’s Test tempo should be trusted to do a job, and offer ballast to the middle order alongside Steve Smith, thereby freeing up the men around them to keep blazing as they’ve seen fit.Australia (probable): 1 David Warner, 2 Travis Head, 3 Mitchell Marsh, 4 Steven Smith, 5 Marnus Labuschagne, 6 Josh Inglis (wk), 7 Glenn Maxwell, 8 Pat Cummins (capt), 9 Mitchell Starc, 10 Adam Zampa, 11 Josh HazlewoodLungi Ngidi will hope to be passed fit•AFP/Getty Images

A decision will be made on Bavuma prior to the toss, as he sweats on a hamstring strain that has quietly overshadowed his team’s entire build-up. Reeza Hendricks is a very capable understudy, of course, and made 85 against England when Bavuma was once again absent, but the optics of the captain’s potential absence from a World Cup semi-final transcend the nitty-gritty of mere sporting matters. The team’s equilibrium is not helped by similar concerns surrounding Lungi Ngidi, who twice failed to complete his overs against India and Afghanistan while struggling with an ankle issue. He has been passed fit, but could yet make way for Gerald Coetzee, with Tabraiz Shamsi seemingly inked in for what is expected to be a turning pitch, alongside Keshav Maharaj, whose ascension to the ICC’s No. 1 ranking is a pre-match vote of confidence. Andile Phehlukwayo is also in contention, potentially in place of Marco Jansen, whose devastating impact when on song has been offset by two notably off-days against Sri Lanka and India, in which he was twice taken for more than 90 runs.South Africa (probable): 1 Quinton de Kock (wk), 2 Temba Bavuma (capt)/Reeza Hendricks, 3 Rassie van der Dussen, 4 Aiden Markram, 5 Heinrich Klaasen, 6 David Miller, 7 Marco Jansen/Andile Phehlukwayo, 8 Keshav Maharaj, 9 Kagiso Rabada, 10 Lungi Ngidi/Gerald Coetzee, 11 Tabraiz ShamsiPitch and conditionsAnother black-soil surface at Eden Gardens promises turn for the spinners and sluggish but true bounce for the quicks, if the events of England’s group-stage win over Pakistan are anything to go by. The X-factor on this occasion could be the weather, with rain potentially entering the equation, depending on which app you use for your radar. There is, at least, a reserve day, so South Africa should be spared some of the permutation-based agonies that have chequered their World Cup history. “We’ll turn up expecting to play a 50-over match tomorrow,” Pat Cummins, Australia’s captain, said. “If that shifts on us, we can adjust as needed. It feels like it hasn’t really rained here for the last couple of months, so to see the weather looking like that for two days is not ideal.”Stats and triviaAustralia and South Africa have played each other on seven previous occasions at World Cups, and their recent is, on the face of it, an even split. Three wins each and one infamous tie, at Edgbaston in 1999. However, in their two World Cup knockout encounters, the semi-finals in 1999 and 2007, Australia have come through on each occasion, and gone on to lift the trophy each time. In their overall head-to-head in ODIs, South Africa have a slight edge – with 55 wins to Australia’s 50, including their very first meeting at the 1992 World Cup, and 15 wins in their last 18 meetings, dating back to September 2016. Maxwell needs 108 runs to reach 4000 in ODIs, while Warner needs 104 to reach 7000. With 22 wickets to date, Zampa needs six more in a maximum of two games to set a new record for a single World Cup, beating the 27 that his team-mate Mitchell Starc claimed in 2019.Quotes”It’s hard to speak on their behalf, but I do know each World Cup, it does seem to be the story that South Africa haven’t quite achieved, obviously, what they set out to do.”
“There’s a sense of calmness within the team and obviously the normal level of anxiety that you would expect of going into the game tomorrow. But I think we’ll take a lot of confidence with our performances up until this point. But yeah, I don’t think I’ll be going around giving guys hugs.”

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