Coach claim threatens to knock USMNT stars Weston McKennie & Tim Weah back to square one at Juventus

Weston McKennie and Tim Weah may be heading back to square one at Juventus, with Massimiliano Allegri reportedly ready to quit his post.

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Allegri prepared to end Bianconeri contract earlyCould walk away in the summer of 2024American stars would need to prove themselves againWHAT HAPPENED?

According to , Allegri is mulling over an early end to his contract in Turin. His current deal is due to run through to the summer of 2025, but said agreement could be brought to a close in 2024 if the 56-year-old opts to walk away.

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Allegri is said to have attracted interest from Saudi Arabia, with teams in the Middle East ready to “cover him in gold”, while a well-earned break could also be taken in if the Serie A title-winning coach decides to wait on another challenge in Europe.

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Allegri is said to be growing disillusioned with life at Juve following the departure of former chairman Andre Agnelli – the man who re-hired him in 2021. He reportedly feels that the club are heading in a different direction to the one that he would favour, leading to questions being asked of his future.

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Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT?

Any departure for Allegri could hit USMNT stars McKennie and Weah hard. The former has worked his way back into favour this season – seeing a new contract mooted along the way – but his situation could change were a new boss to be brought in. Weah was snapped up in the summer transfer window by Allegri and the versatile United States international is another that may have to prove himself all over again in 2024-25.

Champions League: Ranking the African stars still standing

Which of the continent’s players still featuring in the UCL has the best chance of winning it?

Getty Images7Adel Taarabt

Benfica are the dark horses in the Champions League, but cannot be underestimated after eliminating Ajax in the Round of 16.

One-time wonderkid Taarabt, now reinvented as a central midfielder, remains a glittering talent on his day, and is enjoying a late-career revival at Benfica even if he’s dropped out of the international reckoning.

After his previous stints with Tottenham Hotspur, AC Milan and Queen’s Park Rangers, Benfica’s showdown with Liverpool may be the biggest match of his career.

AdvertisementGetty6Samuel Chukwueze

The last Nigerian still standing in the Champions League, Chukwueze won’t be going to the World Cup, but will surely be targeting another European trophy this season after last year’s Europa League triumph.

They have to get past Bayern Munich next, but after eliminating Juventus in the last round, the Yellow Submarine will fear no one as they look to reach the final four.

Chukwueze has had a limited impact in the UCL so far this season—starting just one match—although he could still have a big role to play during the latter stages.

Getty Images5Geoffrey Kondogbia

Atletico Madrid certainly have their work cut out against Manchester City, but could Diego Simeone be the man who inflicts the latest UCL heartbreak on Pep Guardiola?

Certainly, the Spanish giants have the resources to frustrate the Prem leaders, not to mention experience of reaching the Champions League final.

Kondogbia will have a major role to play in the heart of the park, having established himself as a key player at Atleti, while Mozambique’s Reinildo has settled quickly since signing from LOSC Lille in January.

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Getty.4Edouard Mendy & Hakim Ziyech

Chelsea will need to improve dramatically this week following Saturday’s humbling at home against Brentford.

The 4-1 loss was one of the low points of Thomas Tuchel’s time in charge of the Blues, where various failings were exposed against their lowly local rivals.

It was a game to forget for Mendy, who was defended by Tuchel after the match, while Ziyech was one of the West Londoners’ better performers during a tricky outing.

The German coach will be expecting from a big response from all of his team when they face Real Madrid on Wednesday.

Shastri calls for winning starts from India

India team director Ravi Shastri has urged India to start off series with wins instead of playing catch-up after early losses

Alagappan Muthu23-Feb-2016There is theatre in a counterattack and India have played the protagonist for a while now. They went down to Australia in the five-match ODI series but came back with T20I wins to square the eight-match limited-overs tour. Against Sri Lanka at home, they lost the first match before wrapping up a 2-1 scoreline and another trophy. Team director Ravi Shastri, however, has had enough of that. He prefers India buck up and begins series with wins as well.”We don’t want to always come from behind. Sometimes we want to start also well. So hopefully we’ll be looking to do that in this tournament,” he told reporters in Fatullah where the Indian team trained ahead of the opening match of the Asia Cup’s main round. “Like I said, every game from now is important before the World Cup. Yes, we are playing the Asia Cup but the momentum is good so it’s important to keep that momentum going.”Shastri has been the man the BCCI have turned to to help the Indian team come back from unfavourable results. He was appointed the team’s cricket manager in 2007 in the wake of a first-round exit at the World Cup. His current and rolling post of team director was created in August 2014 as a response to India’s poor form on overseas tours. A few winning starts and the ability to build on them can be the best outcome for Shastri and the team going into a World T20 at home.India’s first challenge in the Asia Cup will come from the Bangladesh, who were near unstoppable during the last meeting between the two teams. Mustafizur Rahman claimed five wickets on ODI debut and then six more in the next game to spearhead a 2-1 victory. Shastri, however, appears quite comfortable a repeat of that will not happen.”That was eight months ago, I’ve already forgotten about it,” he said. “There’s been plenty of cricket since. Ask about what’s been going on in the last two months. Anything before that, I don’t have in my memory.”Shastri is more than aware of the hosts’ threat though, after a breakout 2015 when they reached their first World Cup quarter-final and secured maiden series wins over Pakistan, India and South Africa. “I’ve seen cricket in Bangladesh grow, I’ve come here right through the 90s as a broadcaster. I’m happy to see the way cricket has developed and I’m happy to see the Bangladesh has evolved as a team. No team can take them lightly as they showed last year playing one-day cricket and tribute to them. So they have the respect of every opposition and India will be no different.”

Revealed: Real Madrid sensation Jude Bellingham may need surgery on shoulder injury but is attempting to play through the pain

Jude Bellingham reportedly may need surgery on his injured shoulder but the Real Madrid star is attempting to play through the pain.

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Bellingham struggling with shoulder injuryReal Madrid star may need surgeryBut midfielder could play through the painGetty ImagesWHAT HAPPENED?

The 20-year-old dislocated his shoulder against Rayo Vallecano in early November and was forced to withdraw from England's recent Euro 2024 qualifiers as a result of the problem. The midfielder has been playing through the pain of late and scored in Madrid's 4-2 Champions League win over Napoli on Wednesday, meaning he became the first player to score in each of his first four appearances for Los Blancos in the competition. Now, The Athletic claim surgery 'is an option to completely resolve the issue', however, there are no plans at present for him to go under the knife. The report adds that if he were to have the operation, it would likely take two months to recover.

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Bellingham has been nothing short of remarkable for Madrid since joining the Spanish side in the summer from Borussia Dortmund and his goal against Napoli was his 15th in 16 appearances for the European giants. Madrid are top of La Liga on goal difference ahead of Girona and four points ahead of Barcelona, so losing Bellingham, who is wearing shoulder protection during games, could be a huge blow for their silverware-chasing chances. Madrid's next top scorers behind the England international are Rodrygo (eight), Vinicius Junior (six) and Joselu (six).

GOALWHAT CARLO ANCELOTTI SAID

Following Madrid's win over Cadiz at the weekend, manager Carlo Ancelotti said: “He had and has the problem. But with the protection, he is fine. So he played a very good game today (Sunday).”

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WHAT NEXT FOR JUDE BELLINGHAM?

Madrid take on Granada in La Liga on Saturday. It remains to be seen what course of action Los Blancos will take with Bellingham's injury.

‘Too many now!’ – Erling Haaland sent humorous message by Man City team-mates tired of signing hat-trick balls

Erling Haaland has been sent a “too many now” message by Manchester City team-mates that are tired of signing hat-trick balls.

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Norwegian striker netted five times vs LutonNow has 20 career hat-tricks to his nameNo sign of slowing down from prolific forwardGetty ImagesWHAT HAPPENED?

The prolific Norwegian striker added another to his collection after facing Luton Town in FA Cup fifth round action. He found the target on five occasions in that contest, as City swept to a convincing 6-2 win at Kenilworth Road.

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Haaland now has 20 hat-tricks in his senior career, and is still just 23 years of age. He has posted trebles for City on a regular basis, with five registered in the Premier League, and makes a point of getting his team-mates to scrawl on every match ball that he collects.

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Some of those at the Etihad Stadium have poked fun at how many balls Haaland now possesses, with one colleague spotted penning “too many now” on the prize picked up at the end of a destructive display against Luton.

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WHAT NEXT FOR HAALAND?

Haaland, who hit 52 goals across all competitions last season, is up to 27 in total for the current campaign and will be hoping to provide inspiration in the attacking third once again when City take in a derby date with arch-rivals Manchester United on Sunday.

Former NZ batsman James Marshall retires from all forms

Former New Zealand cricketer and Northern Districts’ batsman James Marshall announced his retirement from first-class cricket after a 16-year-long career

ESPNcricinfo staff25-Mar-2013Former New Zealand cricketer and Northern Districts’ batsman James Marshall announced his retirement from first-class cricket after a 16-year-long career. Marshall, who played for New Zealand between 2005 and 2008, led Northern Districts for the last two seasons of the Ford Trophy.”These are never easy decisions to make, and after 16 years it’s going to be a big change for me,” Marshall said. “But it’s the logical one for myself and my family at this point in my life. Having done a 44-day stint away from home this season, [with] my wife looking after our young son, it was time for me to re-evaluate.”Marshall played seven Tests, 10 ODIs and three T20Is for New Zealand, scoring his only ODI hundred against Ireland in his last limited-overs match. His brother, Hamish, also played for New Zealand between 2000 and 2007.Marshall, who made his first-class debut in 1997-98, became the first batsman to score 6,000 runs for Northern Districts. He is the leading run-scorer for Northern Districts at the one-day level, having scored 3,755 domestic runs. He also holds the record for most first-class appearances by a domestic player for a single province in New Zealand, with 126 appearances for Northern Districts in the Plunket Shield.Northern Districts Cricket CEO, Peter Roach was all praise for Marshall and the commitment and longevity he demonstrated at the club.”James is one of the leading players of his generation,” Roach said. ‘We will miss him after such a long and loyal association with Northern Districts and we wish him all the very best in his new career.”

Tendulkar likely to play in Australia ODIs

Sachin Tendulkar is likely to return India’s ODI set-up for the tri-series in Australia, which begins on February 5 and also involves Sri Lanka

N Hunter14-Jan-2012Sachin Tendulkar is likely to return India’s ODI set-up for the tri-series in Australia, which begins on February 5 and also involves Sri Lanka. The selectors will meet in Chennai on Sunday to pick the squad for the series and, reportedly, Tendulkar has made himself available for selection.India won the tri-series on their last trip to Australia in 2007-08 and Tendulkar had been India’s best batsman then, scoring a vital century in the first of the three finals in Sydney. He last played an ODI on April 2, the World Cup final in Mumbai that India won. He is currently India’s top run-getter in the ongoing Test series against Australia.Tendulkar’s comeback would offset the absence of Yuvraj Singh, who is still convalescing from a non-malignat lung tumour.Seamer Praveen Kumar, who was originally picked for the Test-leg of the Australia tour but was later withdrawn after he picked up a rib injury, is another player on the way back into the national squad. Praveen was India’s leading wicket-taker during the Tests in England last year, but an ankle injury ruled him out of the one-dayers. Praveen had played two limited-overs practice matches in Bangalore on Thursday and Friday, to prove his fitness.Irfan Pathan, who was picked for the final two matches of the home ODI series against West Indies in December, could find a berth in the squad as a second allrounder. Ishant Sharma, in all probability will not play the series. While he has been an integral part of India’s Test set-up, he only played two ODIs – when India fielded a young team during the tour of the West Indies – in 2011. Previous to that, he had last played international 50-overs cricket in August 2010, and has more often than not struggled in the format. Zaheer Khan is likely to stay on for the ODIs, with R Vinay Kumar and Umesh Yadav completing the pace department.In the spin department, the selectors are happy with the pair of offspinner R Ashwin and legspinner Rahul Sharma. Harbhajan Singh, who is recovering from shin injury owing to which he could only play three Ranji Trophy matches for Punjab this season, is once again likely to be ignored.Parthiv Patel, has been India’s preferred reserve wicketkeeper in ODIs for a while, but his batting has been questioned after he has repeatedly failed to convert starts. In the series against West Indies, he managed only 56 runs from five matches. The selectors could be tempted to try Wriddhiman Saha, who has usually been preferred for the Test legs of tours, in place of Parthiv.Saha’s Bengal team-mate Manoj Tiwary, who scored his maiden ODI century in the final match of the West Indies series and had a strong Ranji season, could be involved in a tussle with Ajinkya Rahane, if the selectors opt for an extra batsman.In addition to picking the tri-series squad, the selectors will also decide on names for the two Twenty20 internationals against Australia, which will be played ahead of the one-dayers.Squad (likely): MS Dhoni (capt/wk), Sachin Tendulkar, Virender Sehwag, Gautam Gambhir, Virat Kohli, Suresh Raina, Rohit Sharma, Ravindra Jadeja, Manoj Tiwary/Ajinkya Rahane, R Ashwin, Rahul Sharma, Wriddhiman Saha/Parthiv Patel (reserve wk), Zaheer Khan, Ishant Sharma/Irfan Pathan, Praveen Kumar, Vinay Kumar, Umesh Yadav

England boss, but India avoid follow-on

Fifteen years and 153 Tests later, Rahul Dravid returned to Lord’s to make it to the honours board and help India avoid the follow-on

The Report by Sidharth Monga23-Jul-2011
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were outAtypical celebrations after a typical hundred•Getty ImagesFifteen years and 153 Tests later, Rahul Dravid returned to Lord’s to make it to the honours board and help India avoid the follow-on. On a day that belonged to England, on a day when everybody willed Sachin Tendulkar to get his 100th hundred, Dravid, 38 years and 193 days old, stole the spotlight. Only Alec Stewart has scored a Test century with a longer tooth in this millennium. India were still behind by 193, looking at having to bat about four sessions to save the match. Had India followed on, though, it wouldn’t have been that straightforward.Smart stats

Rahul Dravid, in the course of his hundred, surpassed Ricky Ponting to become the second-highest run-scorer in Tests. Only Sachin Tendulkar, with 14,726 runs, is above Dravid.

Dravid’s century is his first at Lord’s and 33rd overall. His 33 centuries is third on the list of Indian batsmen with most Test centuries.

Dravid’s century is the tenth instance of an Indian batsmen scoring a century at Lord’s. Dilip Vengsarkar has achieved the feat on three occasions.

When Dravid passed Ponting’s tally, it became only the second instance after 1912 when the two top run-getters in Tests have played in the same team in a match. The last such instance was when Victor Trumper and Clem Hill played for Australia in 1912.

In Tests since 2000, Dravid is the second-oldest player to score a century behind Alec Stewart, who was a little over 39 years when he scored a century against Sri Lanka in 2002.

Sachin Tendulkar’s jinx at Lord’s continued when he was dismissed for 34. His highest score in eight innings at the venue is 37.

Stuart Broad’s 4 for 37 is his best performance against India and his best bowling performance since the 4 for 38 against Pakistan at Edgbaston in 2010.

VVS Laxman’s problems in the first Test of a series continued with his dismissal for ten. In 73 innings played in the first match of a Test series, he has scored 2256 runs at an average of 36.38 with just one century.

The spotlight could easily have belonged to Stuart Broad alone. On notice and the subject of “enforcer” jokes, he responded with lovely, controlled outswing and should have removed all of India’s top five, but watched as Dravid and VVS Laxman were dropped in the slips in the same over. Broad’s figures would have read 5 for 25, and India 159 for 5, had those catches been taken. While England recovered fairly well from those lapses, Dravid added 61 to his score after he was reprieved, 23 of them with the tail.Implored to bowl fuller in the lead-up to the match, Broad did so, bowling the best lengths among all the English quicks, three times breaking burgeoning partnerships. First he separated Abhinav Mukund and Gautam Gambhir when the new-ball bowlers looked unthreatening. Then he ended the sublime partnership between Tendulkar and Dravid when they were racing towards safety. The 35-run stand between Praveen Kumar and Dravid threatened to eat substantially into the lead but once again Broad returned to dismiss Praveen.Chris Tremlett, not at his best against the left-hand openers, came back superbly to build up the pressure, helping Broad with the wickets. He was the one who brought the follow-on into the picture, removing MS Dhoni and Harbhajan Singh in the same over after Dhoni had added 57 with Dravid. India needed 34 then to avoid the follow-on, and Dravid 20 to get to the century. Praveen came out and swung merrily, and the 35-run stand helped Dravid achieve both the landmarks.The way the first two sessions began, it didn’t seem England would bowl themselves to a position of such strength. James Anderson and Tremlett failed to engage the openers, who left alone 45 of the 134 deliveries they faced. Abhinav had the odd loose moment but whipped off the hips in a manner reminiscent of India’s other Tamil Nadu left-hand opener, S Ramesh.Broad interrupted that state of affairs, getting Gambhir in his third over with a perfect outswinger. Half an hour before lunch, Abhinav’s nerves consumed him when he played on for 49, but Broad contributed to the dismissal, too, by changing the angle and going round the stumps.The afternoon session was worth every penny spent by the 30,000 to be at Lord’s today. In the first hour of that session, Tendulkar and Dravid scored 48 of the most couth runs in seven overs, taking India to 150 for 2. Then England made a rousing comeback. Tremlett sowed uncertainty in the minds of the right-hand middle order, and Broad delivered the big blow with an outswinger that took Tendulkar’s edge for 34, three short of his best at Lord’s.For a while after that England showed they were very much the gracious hosts, matching India’s tally of drops in one Broad over. It was neat outswing bowling, but Andrew Strauss missed Laxman at first slip, and Graeme Swann reprieved Dravid at second. Strauss redeemed himself through superb bowling changes in the rest of the innings. Like Broad did Tendulkar, Tremlett claimed Laxman in the first over of a new spell. Swann somewhat made up for his miss by trapping Suresh Raina 20 minutes before tea. England had upped their game in that session of play: Broad, Tremlett and Swann probed persistently; the final 23 overs of that middle session brought 43 runs and three wickets. Not to mention the drops.Dravid, though, remained classy. Putting the drop behind him, he covered the swing, played late, and didn’t let the occasional miss affect him. The way he read the Anderson inswingers, keeping every single one of them out, summed up his watchfulness. He was equally good against the low bounce from Swann. Having scored 42 off the first 80 balls, he went through a period of 50 balls for just 17, but when the wickets fell, he was urgent in hitting three boundaries in the 80s and 90s.With the injured Zaheer Khan for company, he clipped Tremlett past midwicket to bring up the hundred, celebrating emotionally. He raised one arm even as he scrambled back for the second, punched the air, and then let out a scream. The crowd, the balcony, and Strauss applauded generously.Anderson showed up then, claiming Zaheer and Ishant Sharma with late swing, gently serving a reminder that England were still on top, and that India will need to defend grimly to get away with a draw. Mini-reassurance for India – and they can do with some – is that only one of Dravid’s 33 centuries has come in a defeat.

Australia's spin struggle exposed by CA study

A study commissioned by Cricket Australia has revealed how the art of spin has withered on the vine since the retirement of Shane Warne

Daniel Brettig15-Dec-2011As offspinner Nathan Lyon strengthens his claim to be Australia’s No. 1 slow bowler, a study commissioned by Cricket Australia has revealed how the art of spin withered after the retirement of Shane Warne.Lyon’s emergence is made to look all the more remarkable by the study’s findings, which expose a crippling lack of genuine opportunities afforded to graduates of junior cricket, and a poverty of patience and understanding for spin’s subtleties.The study, conducted this year and obtained by ESPNcricinfo, was done by CA and the Australian Institute of Sport (AIS) to better understand why spinners struggled to make a lasting impact in Warne’s wake.Following Warne’s exit from Test cricket in the first week of 2007, Australia’s selectors tried 11 spin bowlers in search of the right practitioner at the national level.In the Sheffield Shield competition, opportunities for spinners have diminished with time, their roles often limited to defensive commissions. Lyon, the most recent spin bowler to be tried for Australia, made a promising start, benefiting from a longer-term approach to his development in the team and the sympathetic captaincy of Michael Clarke.The study involved 24 Australian spin bowlers of a variety of ages, including 10 international representatives, another five first-class players, and nine state junior cricketers. Research was undertaken by CA spin coach John Davison, CA/AIS analyst Wayne Spratford and University of NSW professor David Mann.Its conclusions relate that spin bowlers were given fewer chances to grow and develop their skills relative to batsmen and fast bowlers, when the background of most spin bowlers dictated that they should be given more.”Spin-bowlers should be given more time to develop than other cricketers,” the study’s authors wrote. “In general they have played five-six years of cricket before they start to bowl spin. It is commonly acknowledged that a certain volume of practice is required to develop an expert level of performance in any given type of skill (often cited to be 10,000 hours), and as a result spin bowlers will be older than their peers by the time they have acquired a sufficient volume of practice.”Slow bowling is commonly arrived at as a cricketer’s skill of choice after other options have been tried. The study points out that spin requires more complex skills and ideas that are more easily reached and understood in adulthood.”Cricketers generally need to develop a general motor-program (‘muscle-memory’) for bowling before they can progress to bowling spin,” the study said. “This is much like a swimmer should learn to do free-style before they can specialise in other strokes.”Many of the ligaments and muscles in the shoulder, wrist, and fingers may need time to sufficiently grow and develop before children are ready to bowl spin. Junior cricketers, generally, have a preference to ‘make-it’ as a pace bowler first, and may only take up spin as a ‘default’ if they are not good enough, fit enough, or sustain injuries when bowling pace. Several of our key first-class/international spin-bowlers did not start bowling spin until they were 17-18.”Significantly, the study found that spin bowlers commonly experienced a 25% drop in the amount of overs they bowled in matches when they made the transition from junior cricket to first-class competition.”Opportunities to bowl in games diminish considerably when players transition out of junior cricket,” the study said. “Spin bowlers generally decrease their bowling by 25% when they finish junior cricket, typically at a point when they should be increasing their volume of bowling.”As spin bowlers develop in Australia, their opportunities to bowl further and gain a greater level of skill are limited by a combination of unhelpful captains, conditions and 21st century leisure habits. The study suggests that in general, young slow bowlers do not practice on their own often enough, as previous generations had done.”Many of our spin bowlers do not perform the volume of bowling that we observe performed by other sportspeople that reach high levels of achievement,” the study said. “Spin bowlers tend to be practising less by themselves and restricting most of their practice/play to official team training and games. This may be an effect of a changing society where there are less opportunities for backyard/informal play, and more distractions such as computer games and television.”

We're no one-man team – Vettori

Daniel Vettori, the Royal Challengers Bangalore captain, is not concerned that the side is becoming a one-man team

Siddarth Ravindran at the Chinnaswamy Stadium03-Oct-2011How closely are Royal Challengers Bangalore’s fortunes tied to those of Chris Gayle? Since he joined them midway through the IPL and revitalised a moribund campaign, he has made 25 or less in five matches – Royal Challengers have lost all five. His other ten games have been Royal Challengers wins and he has been Man of the Match in seven of them, and a plausible candidate for the award in one other match as well.Aren’t those numbers pointing to a one-man team? Royal Challengers’ captain Daniel Vettori wasn’t too concerned about the side’s reliance on the West Indian after yet another Gayle-inspired demolition job at the Chinnaswamy Stadium. “At least not as long as he’s scoring runs,” Vettori said with a chuckle, before striking a more serious note. “We’ve got a batting order that complements Chris and his ability to strike the ball so well. We saw guys come in today, [Tillakaratne] Dilshan took some pressure off Chris, Virat [Kohli] played very well, [Saurabh] Tiwary is starting to come into form, Mayank [Agarwal] came out and played his natural game, he looks like a sensational player.”Despite their captain’s nonchalance, Royal Challengers have reasons to worry. With AB de Villiers injured and out of the tournament, only Kohli remains as a reliable batting performer to support Gayle. Dilshan, bought for $650,000, has a couple of half-centuries though he is yet to put in a match-turning contribution after a dozen outings.Gayle’s extraordinary success has starved Tiwary of time in the middle but in the chances he has had, Tiwary hasn’t been able to replicate the form of IPL 2010, which bumped up his price tag to an astronomical $1.6m. Agarwal, 20, has sparkled briefly on several occasions but a headlining effort has eluded him while Mohammad Kaif hasn’t convinced too many people he can cut it in the Twenty20 format.Chris Gayle starred in another victory for the Royal Challengers•Associated PressThose thoughts won’t be occupying the minds of the Royal Challengers fans who turned up on Monday, expecting more fireworks from Gayle. They were treated to a typical Gayle innings, as Somerset were flattened, in that it was a combination of vigorous hitting and lackadaisical running – his 86 has eight sixes and only two twos.It wasn’t the usual blast-from-the-start Gayle innings though. He began with a carve over cover for four but tempered his approach after a reprieve off his third ball and nearly being run out soon after. By the end of the Powerplay he was on a sedate 15 off 14 balls. “The wicket was a bit damp, the ball was doing a bit, you want to try and get set on this sort of wicket,” he said after the match. Unusual words from Gayle, especially in a Twenty20 match.Regular programming swiftly returned though as Gayle unleashed a barrage of sixes, most of them in arc from the sightscreen to long-on, propelling the Royal Challengers to the first 200-plus total of the tournament. Somerset’s armada of left-arm spinners were clueless against the onslaught, with 19-year-old George Dockrell pummelled for three sixes in an over.Somerset’s captain Alfonso Thomas said they were thrown off by Gayle’s watchfulness at the start. “Usually in the first six overs he goes all guns blazing but he kept himself back, which was not part of our our game-plan,” Thomas said after the match. “We thought he will come hard at us in the first six overs and that one of our seamers will knock him over before our spinners could come in. When he starts going, he will make sure that he is hitting all over. Well done, that’s what he is paid to do.”The latest Gayle tour de force has lifted Royal Challengers’ net run-rate so much that a win over South Australia on Wednesday is likely to be enough to take them to the semi-finals. Vettori said in preparation there would be an optional training session on Tuesday. “Some guys will train, some guys will have a pool session,” he began to explain, only to be interjected by Gayle, who said “and some guys will sleep”. If Gayle is caught napping against the Redbacks, the Royal Challengers need their other batsmen to take up the slack.

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