Celtic: Talks "ongoing" for Carter-Vickers

Journalist Pete O’Rourke has provided an update on the future of on-loan Celtic defender Cameron Carter-Vickers…

What’s the word?

Speaking to GIVEMESPORT, the respected insider has revealed that talks are “ongoing” regarding a permanent deal for the USA international, although the player is believed to be “happy” in his current surroundings.

Asked about the 24-year-old’s future, O’Rourke revealed that: It’s still ongoing, this one. Celtic want to get it done and I think Carter-Vickers is quite happy. He’s enjoying his time up at Celtic as well.”

The on-loan Tottenham Hotspur man joined the club on a season-long loan deal back in August, with the Scottish Premiership outfit including a buy option as part of that switch, which could be worth as much as £10m.

Celtic coup

That news would seemingly represent a major coup for the Glasgow side, with it looking as if they have managed to fend off Premier League interest in the player, as a permanent deal edges ever closer.

A recent report named the likes of Southampton, West Ham United, Everton and newly-promoted Fulham among those potential interested parties, although it looks as if Ange Postecoglou has got his man, with Carter-Vickers finally appearing to have found a settled home.

The Spurs academy graduate has failed to make a single top-flight appearance at his parent club, having been forced to endure a further six loans prior to his move to Celtic Park, although has more than shown his worth in a fine campaign north of the border.

Dubbed “immense” by pundit Chris Sutton, the 6 foot 1 centre-back has been a colossal presence in the Hoops’ backline, proving a pivotal asset in their surge towards the league title.

In his 30 league outings this season – all of which have come as starts – the Southend-born ace has kept 16 clean sheets and averaged 1.2 interceptions and 4.2 clearances per game, while also winning an impressive 72% of his aerial duels.

His average match rating of 7.34 is also the sixth-highest among the Celtic squad, with teammate Greg Taylor acknowledging that both Carter-Vickers – and teammate Carl Starfelt – have been a “huge part” of the club’s success this season.

In such an attacking side, the £2.7m-rated man copes more than adequately as the last line of defence, while he’s also no slouch at the other end of the pitch, chipping in with four league goals this season, including a vital winner in the Old Firm derby back in early April.

The all-round talent looks likely to be able to reproduce the goods next season, all it needs now is for chief executive Michael Nicholson to negotiate the deal.

IN other news, Celtic can unearth a new Giakoumakis after submitting bid for “very strong” £2.5m gem…

Everton plotting move for Lenglet

Everton are plotting a summer move for FC Barcelona defender Clement Lenglet according to reports from Spain.

What’s the story?

A Spanish outlet is reporting that the centre back is one of the players that Barcelona want to sell ahead of next season in order to raise cash to help fund their rebuild.

He’s rated at £12.6m and Everton are reportedly one of three teams interested in him, along with Sevilla and fellow Premier League club Tottenham Hotspur.

The back-four has been one of the weakest areas of Frank Lampard’s team this campaign, and if they do avoid relegation, they will need to drastically improve it to make sure they aren’t in a battle for survival next year.

He’s an upgrade on Keane

It wouldn’t be hard to improve on a defence that has far from impressed the Everton faithful, and signing Lenglet could make all the difference. He’s an experienced player and has lifted La Liga during his time in Catalonia.

He could be the perfect player during the Toffees’ transition, and given the Spanish giants want him gone, they wouldn’t have to break the bank either.

One of the players he would be competing with at Goodison Park, or perhaps sitting alongside, is Michael Keane. The former England international has received a lot of criticism this season, and with Everton’s leaky defence having conceded 56 goals, it seems justified.

If you look at their statistics you can see that Lenglet would be a clear upgrade. The Frenchman has tackled a higher percentage of dribblers at 67% compared to Keane’s 60%.

He’s been described as a “top player” by French national team manager Didier Deschamps and a “monster” by Yahoo France and it would be somewhat of a coup for Everton if he moved to Merseyside.

As well as defending one on one, the Barcelona man is also more reliable with the ball. He has an impressive overall pass completion percentage of 90% which is considerably higher than Keane’s 77%.

If the Toffees survive, then the 26-year old should be high on their list of priorities. They’ll struggle to attract big names out of fear they may be in the same relegation battle again, but he’s a player that would easily be available and would consider a Premier League move.

The pressure will be on Lampard to produce results next season and he needs a quality defender like Lenglet to help him do just that.

IN other news: Lampard must brutally axe £22.5m-rated Everton “danger” who’s just “not that good”…

Crystal Palace: Eagles join the race to sign Pepe

Crystal Palace are just one of several clubs to have joined the race to sign FC Porto winger Pepe during the upcoming transfer window, according to a Portuguese source.

The Lowdown: Pepe’s caught the eye

The 25-year-old first joined the Dragons on a five-year deal from Gremio last summer and has become more of a main feature in Sergio Conceicao’s starting XI since the departure of Luis Diaz back in January.

On the back of committing his future to the club long-term, his current contract with Porto isn’t set to expire until 2026, but nonetheless, his form has been good enough to attract suitors from England’s top flight.

He has already been linked with a move away from the Portuguese giants to Arsenal, but the Gunners aren’t the only ones taking a look…

The Latest: Palace in contention

In a new report published by Portuguese outlet A Bola (via Sport Witness), it’s claimed that Patrick Vieira has already made contact and ‘collected information’ about Pepe, with the Selhurst Park outfit believed to be one of the serious contenders in the battle for his signature.

The source further states that Palace are set to face ‘tough’ competition for their man though, with Premier League rivals Arsenal also closely monitoring the forward.

It’s believed that the player is protected by a release clause of €70m (£59.8m), but Porto would be willing to allow him to leave for €60m (£51.3m), despite the English clubs named only valuing him at €50m (£42.7m).

The Verdict: Perfect competition

Pepe has enjoyed a decent run of form during his first full season at Estadio do Dragao, scoring six goals and registering five assists across all competitions, as per Transfermarkt.

Palace do already have strong options with Wilfried Zaha and Michael Olise currently occupying both flanks, but the Brazilian is an exciting young talent and could improve the quality and competition for places in the first team.

With Vieira possibly looking for a suitable attacking upgrade on Jordan Ayew – who could be set to depart the Eagles in the coming months – Pepe could be the ideal candidate to make the switch to the top-flight and help the English giants aim for a top-half finish next season.

In other news… Palace are already believed to have held contract talks with one of their star players.

Spurs: Romano drops Dybala update

Fabrizio Romano has dropped an update on reported Tottenham Hotspur transfer target Paulo Dybala.

What’s the talk?

In a recent post on Twitter, the Italian journalist revealed that, despite reports to the contrary, Tottenham have in fact not opened talks with the Juventus forward regarding a summer move, before the transfer insider went on to claim that Antonio Conte is set to meet with Daniel Levy in the coming weeks to discuss Spurs’ summer strategy.

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Regarding Tottenham’s links with the 28-year-old, Romano revealed the following twist: “Tottenham have not opened talks to sign Paulo Dybala, as of [Wednesday]. There are no negotiations ongoing – ofc, the situation for Dybala’s future is still open as he’s available on a free transfer. Antonio Conte will meet [the] Tottenham board soon to discuss future plans.”

Supporters will be fuming

Considering just how impressive a signing Dybala would be for Fabio Paratici to get over the line this summer, in addition to the vast number of clubs reported to be competing for the Argentina international’s signature, the news that Tottenham are yet to make contact with the forward concerning a switch to north London is sure to have left supporters fuming.

Indeed, over his 28 Serie A appearances this season, the £36m-rated attacker has been in sensational form for the Bianconeri, scoring ten goals, registering five assists and creating 11 big chances for his teammates, in addition to taking an average of 3.5 shots, making 1.4 key passes and completing 1.6 dribbles per game.

These returns have seen the £220k-per-week forward – who can be deployed in attacking midfield, on the right-wing or up top – average a rather breathtaking SofaScore match rating of 7.43, not only ranking him as Massimiliano Allegri’s best performer in the Italian top flight but also as the third-best player in the league as a whole.

As such, with it being abundantly clear what a coup Dybala would be for Spurs – especially on a free transfer – it would appear highly advisable for Paratici to make a move for the 28-year-old as quickly as possible, or else Tottenham could easily find themselves lining up against the Argentine when facing one of their Premier League rivals next season.

AND in other news: Conte can now axe “pathetic” £43m flop as Spurs plot £30m bid for “important” signing

Mahmudullah happy with 'positive competition' within Bangladesh T20I squad

‘Rankings don’t necessarily show the real picture,’ captain says as he hopes the team would continue to keep the momentum going against New Zealand

Mohammad Isam31-Aug-2021Bangladesh captain Mahmudullah believes healthy competition within the side, which has led to players being more confident, gives a fairer assessment of the team rather than the one based on rankings.Head coach Russell Domingo earlier said that the veteran Mushfiqur Rahim and Nurul Hasan – who impressed in the recent series against Zimbabwe and Australia – will share wicketkeeping duties in the first four matches during the home T20I series against New Zealand. Bangladesh also have four options for the opening slot in Soumya Sarkar, Mohammad Naim, Liton Das and Mahedi Hasan.Related

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“Liton is an outstanding opener while Soumya has been in good form this year,” Mahmudullah said. ” Naim has been one of the top-ranked batter in our side. Mahedi is also an opening option. They are all in good rhythm. We have to make sure those who get the opportunity can contribute for the team. The positive competition within the team is a good sign.”There is some competition in their pace attack, too. Mustafizur Rahman and Shoriful Islam seem to be the preferred pair but Mohammad Saifuddin has grabbed the limited opportunities well in recent times, with Taskin Ahmed and Rubel Hossain lurking around. Bangladesh also have Kamrul Islam Rabbi and Shahidul Islam in the extended squad.”Shoriful bowled well in four matches (against Australia),” Mahmudullah said. “Mustafiz has been outstanding. Taskin has been bowling well but not getting enough opportunities. We have Rubel. Saifuddin made most of the opportunity. There’s good competition going on in every department.”I think the fielding has improved a lot. These are good signs to become a better team. Rankings and a team’s shape doesn’t necessarily show the real picture of a team. Playing well continuously usually takes the team forward.”But Mahmudullah was careful not to call Bangladesh “favourites” even against the under-strength touring New Zealand team.”You can consider yourself favourites in T20s, but if it becomes overconfidence, it can be negative for you. The team that reads the conditions well and has the hunger to do well on the day usually comes out on top in T20s.”Having said that, they are a very disciplined side in their homework and execution level. We must remain focused and hungry, as we did against Australia. I would love to see the continuity.”But he was also quick to point out that the expectation from the home side is justified, especially after their 4-1 T20I series win against Australia earlier this month.”It is a very good opportunity for our team. We are eager to prove that we are good at home. I am hopeful that the boys will be up for it.”There will always be expectations especially when it has built up in our home conditions. We are very competitive and confidence at home. We use our condition well. Every opportunity for the team and individual must be valued. Rest will take care of itself.”

Mandhana: 'It was amazing to watch our bowlers dominate Australia'

Senior India player thrilled with the way the lower-middle order has been contributing for the past two-three series

Annesha Ghosh22-Oct-2021To outperform the Australian quicks on their home soil was among India’s standout achievements on their recently concluded tour of the country. That is the view of Smriti Mandhana, who also singled out the lower-middle order’s contribution in the seven-match multi-format series, which Australia won 11-5 on points, as a reflection of how “we are all working very hard on batting”.”We had so many positives,” Mandhana, the highest run-scorer in the series, said during a Clubhouse session on Thursday ahead of the final of Red Bull Campus Cricket’s first-ever women’s edition. “Everyone did well, especially the bowling. Pace bowling was one department where we were way better than the Aussies, which is a huge thing for an Indian team to come to Australia and outplay their bowlers, outplay their pacers, which was so amazing to watch”Mandhana, who was India’s vice-captain across formats with Harmanpreet Kaur missing the ODIs and the Test, heaped praised on their quick bowlers whose spectacular display of swing and seam kept the pressure on Australia’s vaunted line-up for extended of periods of play in the three ODIs, the standalone Test and the two matches of the three-T20I series India bowled in.”The way Jhulan [Goswami] bowled, Pooja [Vastrakar] and Meghna [Singh] bowled, and Renuka [Singh] and Shikha [Pandey] bowled in the T20 format… It was amazing to watch our bowlers dominate the Australian batters, so for me that was the biggest positive.”Equally significant are the handy cameos that have started to come from India’s lower order ever since their tour of England this June. Champion teams usually have resources all the way down to No. 11 and Mandhana was well aware of it.Smriti Mandhana finished as the top-scorer of the multi-format series against Australia•Getty Images

“Australia have always had good batting depth,” she said. “Big thanks to Big Bash, which has had a huge role to play in that,” she said. “I actually never knew, until I played in the Big Bash, that Sophie Molineux is an opener. Last season (2018-19) when I came over [to play for Hobart Hurricanes] and saw her open for Melbourne Renegades, I was, like, ‘Oh, she bats No. 8 for Australia.’ Then I realised that their batting depth is amazing.”It’s a conscious effort from all of us to have good batting depth. Especially in T20 and ODI formats because in white-ball cricket we might lose a few wickets and it shouldn’t always be top heavy. We should have a lot of contributors. Our lower-middle order is contributing a lot and has done amazingly in the last two-three series. And you could see that [in how] Jhulan finished the match for us in the third ODI, which was really amazing. It showed we are all working very hard on batting, especially getting our Nos. 7, 8, and 9 to bat.”Mandhana finished the tour with a chart-topping 352 runs. Her maiden Test century helped put India in a commanding position to win India first-ever day-night Test before it culminated in a draw partly because of bad weather.”[If] Results would have gone differently for us, it would have been better for the Indian team. Rain played a bit of spoilsport in the Test match and also the first T20I, which we were in a very good position to win. Not blaming the rain, but things would have been maybe different if the rain would have not happened, Mandhana said, jogging her mind back to finishing 20 short of her hundred on day one of the Test in Carrara.”Rarely do we find ourselves remaining unbeaten overnight in Test [because of the rarity of women’s fixtures in the longest format]. Especially knowing me as a batter, for me to be on 80 not out at the end of the day is very rare, in any format,” she said. “It was like a first experience for me to be 80 not out [overnight] because I had no prior knowledge of how to approach the next day: should I start from zero, should I start from 80? How do I warm up, because we are used to starting from zero? So, I barely slept that night. I could sleep maybe till 3:30-4am after which I was just staring at the walls.”Mandhana batted for more women’s Tests, especially if they can be slotted within the multi-format structure, where white-ball games are worth two points and red-ball games worth four.Smriti Mandhana is pleased with the way India are progressing in limited-overs cricket•Albert Perez/Getty Images

“We, as women cricketers, just love playing red-ball cricket and now with the pink ball as well, so, it will be cool to have a lot more of Tests, especially multi-format series, she said. “It will also give a lot of substance to the only Test match because it has four points, which adds a lot of value to it.””We were happy we got two Test matches in the span of three months. It was a good experience of playing one in England and one here. I’m absolutely in love with this multi-format series. I think it gives substance to all the matches we play, whether it is three ODIs, one Test and three T20Is. Sometimes you lose two matches and think the series is lost, but in multi-format series you go into every match thinking there are two points to gain.”Asked about the experience of playing a day-night Test, Mandhana said it was the fulfillment of a long-harboured “dream”.”The best thing about playing a day-night Test was we didn’t have to wake up early to play the Test,” he quipped. “Jokes aside, it was a new challenge for all of us, we really didn’t get a lot of time to practice with the pink ball. We got only two days before the match. It was really, really amazing to get out there.”When I used to watch men’s pink-ball Tests, never did I think I’d get a chance to play a Test, let alone one with the pink ball, day-night. Oh, wow! That was, like, crazy. The experience of playing under lights, in whites, with the pink ball, was a dream come true even though I am in the eighth year on the international circuit.”

Saqlain Mushtaq: 'If India makes it to the final with us, it would be a great thing'

Pakistan’s interim head coach warned that Afghanistan would be dangerous opponents because of their “fearless” approach

Umar Farooq28-Oct-2021Saqlain Mushtaq, Pakistan’s interim head coach, would love it if his team got the opportunity to face India again, and beat them again, in the final of the T20 World Cup. He also feels more meetings between the sides will only improve relations between the two neighbours.Pakistan began their campaign with a 10-wicket win that ended India’s stranglehold over their arch-rivals in World Cups – they had won each of the five previous T20 World Cup meetings between the sides as well as the seven ODI World Cup meetings. That resounding win was followed by a five-wicket victory over New Zealand that has put Pakistan firmly on top of the Group 2 table, and left them favourites to reach the semi-finals. They next face Afghanistan on Friday, followed by matches against Associate teams Namibia and Scotland.Related

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“When you come with a mindset to become a world champion then you don’t think about the opponent,” Saqlain said in a virtual press conference. “You rather think whoever comes in, you do what you have to do and want to do. So we are thinking on the same lines day in and day out that whoever is against us in the next stage we will accept it. If you want to become a world champion then you have to live up to the requirements — being tough, being well-prepared, and playing cricket different from the others, and it shows that you are a genuine World Cup winner. If you want to be a world champion then you should be thoroughly [tested] so that the world actually recognises you.”If India makes it to the final with us, it would be a great thing because I feel — and this is not because we became big-headed after beating them — but because they are a strong team, everyone considers them a favourite. England and Australia always play tough cricket too. What we have in hand is our process, how we plan, our commitment, how we fight and bounce back and things we can control so we don’t focus on results and the opponent. If India comes in the final, then it would be very good for the ICC, fans around the world and for world cricket — everyone will enjoy it. They are our neighbouring country and playing one more match would only improve our relations.”‘They just play a sort of fearless cricket and I think that kind of team can be dangerous’ – Saqlain Mushtaq on Afghanistan•ICC via Getty

On Friday, Pakistan will face a stiff test against one of the best spin attacks in the competition, featuring Rashid Khan, Mujeeb Ur Rahman and Mohammad Nabi. It’s not a test Pakistan have faced too often: they have met Afghanistan only once in T20Is, beating them with one ball to spare back in 2013, when Rashid and Mujeeb were yet to make their debuts.Looking ahead to the game, Saqlain talked up Afghanistan not just for their spin attack but also their fearless batting. “I’ve been hearing about them, that they are actually a key player for Afghanistan,” he said of the spinners. “They’ve been doing really well in different leagues and they are quite confident to do their business on their day. They are very good but obviously we should play and we should execute our plan with the clarity of the mind.”It’s a strong unit. We can’t really say that it’s very easy and you will roll over them. It’s not like that. They have a wonderful bowling attack, especially the spinners. When they bat, they just play, the way they feel it, what’s in their heart, what they think. They just go and execute the plan. They just play a sort of fearless cricket and I think that kind of team can be dangerous.”But you play for your pride and you don’t think that this is a small team and this is a big team. Otherwise your mind will start thinking in that way. So in the World Cup, it’s a mega win. You play all the teams with the same intensity, with the same attitude, with the same sort of mindset and you execute your plan the way you execute the plan against the bigger-name team.”

Eoin Morgan will make decision on his future himself, says Chris Silverwood

“I think he brings so much more than just the batting” – England coach says of white-ball captain

Matt Roller11-Nov-2021Eoin Morgan is the only man who can determine his future as England’s limited-overs captain and he was already making plans for the 2022 T20 World Cup in Australia on the bus back from Abu Dhabi to Dubai after their defeat to New Zealand, Chris Silverwood has said.England lost by five wickets with an over to spare in Wednesday’s semi-final, thanks to a late surge from James Neesham and Daryl Mitchell, after which Morgan insisted that he would continue in the role in spite of his poor form with the bat this year. Silverwood, England’s head coach, gave Morgan carte blanche to stay on, saying that “the longer he is there, the better”.”He’s got to make that decision himself,” Silverwood said on Thursday. “Morgs and I talk a lot. We are always chatting away. Even last night on the coach on the way back, his mind had already gone on to the next [World Cup], what do we need to do, what are we looking for. As soon as those conversations start, in my mind, that is it for us: he’s in. He wants it, and he wants to lead. I think he will make his mind up when he’s ready.”He’s a very strong leader, and has been for many years now. I still think he’s got a lot of years in front of him that he can give to this team, and this team enjoy having him at the front. I think we are a stronger unit for it. We’ve seen that, at stages in the tournament, he has slipped down the order to let others put their mark on the game. I think that’s testament to what a good leader he is. For me, the longer he is there, the better.”He probably hasn’t got the runs he wanted, but the value he brings as a leader outweighs that. That’s how I see it. What he brings to the team from a tactical point of view, a motivational point of view and from the way he gets all the players and staff to buy in behind him and to follow him… I think he brings so much more than just the batting.”Related

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Silverwood said that England were “hurting” after having their place in the final “snatched away” from them but that he took pride in their performances across the World Cup in the absence of three important players in Jofra Archer, Sam Curran and Ben Stokes, with Tymal Mills and Jason Roy ruled out later in the tournament and that the same core would be in Australia next year.”I’m not going to lie – it would have been nice to have had Tymal out there, or bring in Archer. But at the same time we did have strength on the bench,” Silverwood said. “It does show a depth of talent, which is very encouraging. A lot of people will be better for the experience.”At the same time, we have got a group of lads who are hurting, which you can understand as well. To get so close, touching distance, and then to have it snatched away… we had the game under control for a lot of the time, [but Neesham] came in and played some exceptional shots, made life difficult for us.”We have a lot of talent. It [the next World Cup] comes in such a short period of time – it’s not like it’s in three or four years’ time. I don’t think age particularly comes into this one. We have got a good pool of players that we are picking from… I imagine everyone will be throwing their hat in the ring.”England’s multi-format players – Jonny Bairstow, Jos Buttler, Dawid Malan, Chris Woakes and Mark Wood – will fly out of Dubai this weekend on a charter flight with the Australia squad, along with most of the coaching staff at the World Cup. Silverwood, whose appointment in 2019 was intended to signal an increased focus on Test cricket rather than white-ball formats, maintained that he was the right man to coach England’s limited-overs sides.”It does keep me very busy, but at the same time I’m enjoying the role,” he said. “You’re involved in everything, you’re an integral part of it and that’s exactly what you want and you want to have the ability to effect change if you can and try and bring some success and help the players. The big one for me is to make sure that myself, the coaching staff, all of us are helping the players to be in the best place possible to go out there and perform and live their dreams. That’s what I enjoy doing, so for the moment I’m fine.”

MI make three changes and chase in hunt for first points against KKR

KKR made just the one change, with Sunil Narine replacing Moeen Ali

ESPNcricinfo staff31-Mar-20252:58

Cricinformed: Can Suryakumar solve the mystery of Varun, Narine?

Mumbai Indians captain Hardik Pandya won the toss at the team’s first home game of IPL 2025 and chose to bowl against Kolkata Knight Riders.There were three changes to the XI that lost the last game to Gujarat Titans with allrounder Will Jacks, left-arm wristspinner Vignesh Puthur and uncapped left-arm seamer Ashwani Kumar coming into the line-up. Mujeeb Ur Rahman and Satyanarayana Raju were left out of the bowling first XI, and with Rohit Sharma likely to come in as the Impact Player for the chase, it means Robin Minz will miss the game as well.Kumar, 23, has played four T20s for Punjab picking up two wickets at an economy rate of 8.50.KKR captain Ajinkya Rahane confirmed Sunil Narine had recovered from the illness which kept him out of the previous game against Rajasthan Royals. As a result, Moeen Ali missed out. KKR are likely to bring in Vaibhav Arora when they bowl second.Rahane, who plays for Mumbai in domestic cricket, said he was “confused” by the pitch, since it had a little grass on it, and thought it was a good toss to lose.Mumbai are still searching for their first win of IPL 2025, having lost away games to Chennai Super Kings and Gujarat Titans.Kolkata Knight Riders batting-first XI 1 Sunil Narine, 2 Quinton de Kock (wk), 3 Ajinkya Rahane (capt), 4 Venkatesh Iyer, 5 Rinku Singh, 6 Angkrish Raghuvanshi, 7 Andre Russell, 8 Ramandeep Singh, 9 Spencer Johnson, 10 Harshit Rana, 11 Varun ChakravarthyKKR’s Impact Player options: Anrich Nortje, Manish Pandey, Vaibhav Arora, Anukul Roy, Luvnith Sisodia.Mumbai Indians bowling-first XI: 1 Ryan Rickelton (wk), 2 Will Jacks, 3 Suryakumar Yadav, 4 Tilak Varma, 5 Hardik Pandya (capt), 6 Naman Dhir, 7 Mitchell Santner, 8 Deepak Chahar, 9 Trent Boult, 10 Ashwani Kumar, 11 Vignesh PuthurMI’s Impact Player options: Rohit Sharma, Corbin Bosch, Raj Bawa, Robin Minz, Satyanarayana Raju

Carson wins the day with maiden first-class ton

But Sussex squander any advantage by losing 6 for 8 either side of lunch

Alan Gardner09-May-2025The question of who’s winning is often a complicated one in cricket. At Hove, Worcestershire won the toss, before Sussex’s openers jounced along to 80 without loss in the first 90 minutes. Having apparently gained the upper hand, the home side then squandered any advantage by losing 6 for 8 either side of lunch. But just as Worcestershire seemed to have got on top, Jack Carson strode forward to win the day with a marvelous, maiden first-class hundred.Carson’s impassioned celebration on reaching three figures told of personal significance, while the accompanying standing ovation around the ground indicated its importance to Sussex as a collective. Carson had walked out with the score on 88 for 6 but bent his shoulder to the wheel to add almost 200 for the last four wickets – aided in no small part by the dogged contribution of Sussex’s debutant No. 11, James Hayes, who faced 126 balls to finish on 33 not out.While the focus for England selection discussions at Hove has centred on Tom Haines, whose half-century propped up Sussex during the morning as well as extending his lead at the top of the Division One run-scoring charts, it may not be long before Carson is touted as a more rounded alternative to Shoiab Bashir in the Test side. Both Haines and Carson are likely to come into contention for the England Lions matches against India A at the end of the month.Hayes, a last-minute loan signing from Nottinghamshire, was only in the side due to an injury suffered by Sussex’s West Indies international Jayden Seales. The 23-year-old, with just three List A appearances to his name, survived a tough chance to third slip before he had scored, as well as a more straightforward stumping that Gareth Roderick couldn’t collect when he was on 27, but showed a solid technique and impressive fortitude throughout.Carson’s pugnacious innings was chanceless, although he got off the mark with a fence wide of the slip cordon that went for four. He found support all the way down the order, adding 49 with Ari Karvelas for the ninth wicket and then 73 with Hayes, as Sussex wrestled the initiative back on a topsy-turvy day. Worcestershire showed character during their mid-innings fightback, Tom Taylor playing the pub landlord with a five-for to restore order, but they will have to dig deep with the bat to put winning this game back on the agenda.Tom Taylor made a dent in Sussex’s top order•Getty Images

After the high-rolling start, Sussex’s top order went bankrupt, in the words of Ernest Hemingway, “gradually, then suddenly”. Haines and Daniel Hughes raised 46 without loss from the first 10 overs (40 of those in boundaries), to leave Worcestershire fans wondering quite what Brett D’Oliveira had been thinking at the toss. Ben Gibbon’s introduction had seen him cuffed unceremoniously for three consecutive fours by Hughes, but he followed up with back-to-back maidens, while Matthew Waite made a similarly thrifty start from the Sea End.Ever so steadily, Worcestershire began to get a grip on the scoring, and Waite made his frustrations clear as Haine twice edged him for four in the space of three balls. Another brace of fours in Waite’s next over bore a more authoritative stamp, as Haines whipped through midwicket and behind square to bring up a 67-ball half-century. At the end of the 22nd over, Sussex were 80 for 0 and perhaps envisioning a bountiful day of run-harvesting beneath clear blue skies.Then came the crash. Taylor found Hughes’ outside edge as the Australian aimed a lavish drive to be caught at second slip, before removing Tom Clark in the same over, the Sussex No. 3 padding up to a ball that looked like it would have troubled middle and off. The scoreboard was still stuck on 80 when Tom Alsop feathered a catch behind to give Taylor his third; and with only one run added, James Coles perished attempting to drive the final ball of the morning through cover, a thick edge off Ben Allison ending in the hands of fourth slip.In the Spen Cama Pavilion, suddenly there was only one thing on the menu. “You should never give your wicket away before lunch,” one Sussex member lamented, though more in sorrow than in anger. On Clark, who had received his county cap before play, the verdict was more damning: “He should give it back!” Worse was to come for Sussex, though sadly the view on John Simpson’s even more disastrous leave went unrecorded.In the first over back, Haines edged Taylor into the hands of Allison at first slip, whose attempted juggle was taken by the sub, Rob Jones, at second. With the score still on 81, Sussex had now lost 5 for 1 in the space of 6.4 overs. Simpson, so often the bulwark at No. 6, then tried to let one go only for Taylor to bring the ball back to hit the top of off stump. Having been 0 for 15 from his opening spell, Taylor now had 5 for 20 from 10.3, Sussex almost single-handedly halted in their tracks by his 33-ball rampage.In the end, Sussex’s stuttering progression to 284 represented a significant recovery. Although Fynn Hudson-Prentice and Ollie Robinson both departed to soft dismissals off Gibson and Ethan Brookes respectively, Carson was adroit in marshalling the lower order, moving to a 69-ball fifty during his stand with Karvelas and then continuing to pick off boundaries, including one flicked six over midwicket, as he pushed on past his previous first-class best of 97, in the process securing Sussex a batting point that had not looked likely when he walked in.

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