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Heavy rain ruins one-off Twenty20

The one-off Twenty20 between West Indies and Bangladesh was called off after heavy rain hit Warner Park 17 minutes into the match

The Report by Mohammad Isam28-Aug-2014Match abandoned
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
The trophy was shared after rain and power failures allowed less than five overs of play•AFPThe one-off Twenty20 between West Indies and Bangladesh was called off after heavy rain hit Warner Park 17 minutes into the match. The match officials held a final inspection more than two hours later after which they decided conditions weren’t good enough even for a shortened game.Besides the downpour, the groundstaff had to battle strong winds, which left them struggling to control the covers early on. The extra time they took to cover the surface allowed the deluge to drench the pitch. There was also trouble with the floodlights which hampered the groundstaff in their work after the rain stopped.Before the rain, Bangladesh batted and got to 31 for no loss in 4.4 overs. Tamim Iqbal struck one over mid-off and Anamul Haque got a four and a six but the visitors’ brightest start on tour was cut short.The two-match Test series begins on September 5 in Kingstown, before which Bangladesh will play a three-day practice match in Basseterre against St Kitts and Nevis.Mashrafe Mortaza, who is not part of the Test squad, suffered a groin injury in the first one-dayer and had been rested for this game. He is set to head home to gear up for the Asian Games next month.

Greenway stars as England reclaim Ashes

Lydia Greenway was England’s hero as they regained the Ashes with a five-wicket victory in the second Twenty20 at the Ageas Bowl

Andrew McGlashan at the Ageas Bowl29-Aug-2013
ScorecardLydia Greenway’s innings was full of sweeps and paddles, as England secured the Ashes with a five-wicket win•Getty ImagesLydia Greenway was England’s hero as they regained the Ashes with a five-wicket victory in the second Twenty20 at the Ageas Bowl. The chase of 128 was wobbling badly on 9 for 3, but Greenway showed all her experience with a magnificently paced innings full of deft touches as England secured the two Ashes-winning points with six balls to spare.For the second time in two days the record for England’s highest individual Twenty20 score was broken, with Greenway’s unbeaten 79 overtaking Sarah Taylor’s 77 at Chelmsford. Fittingly it was Greenway who sealed the match with two reverse sweeps in the final over then a scampered single, which was the signal for an invasion from the England bench.Australia’s 127 for 7 – built around Meg Lanning’s 60 – was initially made to look more daunting when three wickets fell inside the first three overs. Heather Knight played around a straight one from Julie Hunter then Sarah Coyte produced a superb over to remove Sarah Taylor – brilliantly held, one-handed in her follow through – and Danni Wyatt.Then, however, came the moment that could well have decided to the Ashes when Greenway was given a life on 10, a missed stumping off Erin Osborne, which would have left England 25 for 4. Together with captain Charlotte Edwards the pair – who hold 121 Twenty20 caps between them – firstly steadied the chase and then increased the tempo.Edwards played the anchor role while Greenway dominated the scoring. Laps and sweeps, a hallmark of her batting, featured regularly as she kept finding the gaps in whatever field Jodie Fields tried to set. It was one such delicate sweep – from a delivery around middle and off – which took Greenway to her fifty from 45 deliveries.By then she had lost Edwards, who found mid-off trying to go over the top and spent the rest of the innings living every delivery in the dugout. Natalie Sciver offered sensible support in a stand of 40 in 27 balls until sacrificing herself for a tight single, leaving Greenway to finish the job, which she did in style.Australia’s innings had struggled for early impetus against accurate bowling from Katherine Brunt, who delivered her four overs straight, while Jess Cameron was run out by a direct hit from Jenny Gunn as she chased the ball in her follow through.Lanning and Alex Blackwell gave the innings backbone with a stand of 57 in seven overs, Lanning collecting the one six of the innings when she cleared deep square leg off Gunn to go to fifty at a run a ball. Her eagerness to try and get back on strike ended her stay when she was run out backing up when a fierce drive from Blackwell clipped Holly Colvin’s fingertips.The innings closed in rather chaotic fashion with England claiming a team hat-trick in the final over – Danielle Hazell’s two wickets sandwiched either side of Fields’ run-out by Greenway, who would go on to have a far greater impact on the match.

Justin Kluivert becomes just the second player this century to score in each of the big five European leagues after netting for Bournemouth

Justin Kluivert became just the second player ever to score in each of the big five European leagues after netting for Bournemouth on Saturday.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

Kluivert scored against Sheffield UnitedSet a unique scoring record with BournemouthPowered the Cherries to a 3-1 winWHAT HAPPENED?

After joining Bournemouth in the summer, Kluivert became the first Dutch player to play in each of the top five European leagues. Now, the 24-year-old became just the second player, after Stevan Jovetic, to have scored at least once in each of the top five domestic leagues in Europe in the 21st century after getting on the scoresheet against Sheffield United.

Just before the half-time whistle, Kluivert doubled Bournemouth's lead after dispossessing Wes Foderingham outside the box. After the keeper was pickpocketed, the forward passed the ball into an empty net to silence the home crowd.

AdvertisementGettyTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Despite being just 24, Kluivert has been a journeyman. After starting his professional career with Ajax, he moved to AS Roma in Serie A in 2018. After two seasons in the Italian capital, he was sent out on loan at RB Leipzig, Nice, and Valencia in the next three campaigns. After joining the Cherries in the summer, he scored his first Premier League goal, and second across all competitions, which helped him achieve the unique feat in European football.

DID YOU KNOW?

Florin Raducioiu was the first player in history to find the net in Germany, England, Spain, Italy and France but he did that in the 20th century. In 2021, Jovetic became the second player to match the feat after he scored for Hertha Berlin against Cologne, and the first to do it in this century.

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Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT FOR KLUIVERT?

Kluivert played a crucial role in Bournemouth's 3-1 win over Sheffield along with Marcus Tavernier who scored the other two. It was a much-needed three points for Andoni Iraola's troops which propelled them to the 16th position in the league table. They are set to host Aston Villa in their next match on December 3 in the Premier League.

Pietersen won't be back – Stewart

Kevin Pietersen is unlikely to play cricket in England again, according to Alec Stewart

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Apr-20163:12

‘I don’t think we’ll see KP play in England again’

Kevin Pietersen is unlikely to play cricket in England again, according to Alec Stewart. Pietersen was released by Surrey at the end of last season and Stewart, the club’s director of cricket, said there was little chance of him appearing in England’s T20 competition, the NatWest Blast, in the foreseeable future as he pursues franchise deals around the world.Pietersen featured for Surrey at the start of their 2015 Championship campaign – scoring a majestic, unbeaten 355 against Leicestershire – as he attempted to revive his chances of playing for England once again, but appears to have now settled on life as a T20 freelancer. Over the last 12 months, he has played in the Caribbean Premier League, Australia’s Big Bash League, the Ram Slam in South Africa and the inaugural Pakistan Super League.He has previously expressed his dissatisfaction at the Blast schedule, which sees teams by and large playing once a week, and Stewart believes Pietersen will no longer grace the English summer, describing him as a “southern hemisphere player”.”From the conversations I’ve had with him, we won’t see him play in England again, which is sad,” Stewart told ESPNcricinfo. “He’s now, as I call him, a southern hemisphere player. Our off season is very much his cricket season.”So he’s now going to have downtime with the family, he’s going to be in the IPL, he’s not going to go to the Caribbean Premier League, he’s going to have a three-four month break and then he’ll go off to the Bangladesh Premier League, I think. So he’s got enough cricket around but sadly, no, we won’t see him.”Surrey must step up a level in Championship cricket this year, having been promoted as Division Two champions, and they have faced some criticism for their winter recruitment, which involved bringing in two South African bowlers and former West Indies international Ravi Rampaul as a Kolpak signing.Stewart defended the decision to recruit Rampaul, Mathew Pillans and Conor McKerr, saying it was important to strengthen their squad. Surrey saw three fast bowlers – Chris Tremlett, Tim Linley and David Balcombe – retire during the close season, while Jade Dernbach and Stuart Meaker are currently unavailable due to injury.”We lost three experienced bowlers at the back end of last year and we looked to see who was available,” Stewart said. “We looked around England, because obviously that’s where we should look, but there was no one – unless you can tell me otherwise – who was available and who would have fitted the bill.”Our academy, which has produced good players, currently hasn’t got the number of bowlers coming through ready to play and that’s why we did what we did.”We still want to produce players through our system, that’s what we have been doing, and not just be successful here but go on and play for England. That’s what we’ll continue to do – at times you do have to go outside what your processes are. This year, because of the three retirements – two came as a little bit of a surprise – we had to act pretty quickly. We’ve taken a bit of a punt, hopefully it will prove the right decision, in the fact we’ve now got numbers in our squad.”

Rain washes out Gabba match

Torrential rain washed out the Ryobi Cup match between Queensland and Tasmania at the Gabba without a ball being bowled

ESPNcricinfo staff27-Jan-2013
Scorecard
Torrential rain washed out the Ryobi Cup match between Queensland and Tasmania at the Gabba without a ball being bowled. Brisbane and the surrounding areas suffered exceptionally heavy rainfalls on Sunday as ex-tropical cyclone Oswald moved down the coast.The abandonment could be significant in shaping the final points table, with the Bulls sitting third and the Tigers fourth with two matches each remaining. Victoria and South Australia are at the top of the table.

Murtagh lifts Middlesex again

English cricket would love to see Steven Finn bowling Middlesex to victory, but on the final day at Lord’s it was Tim Murtagh who put in the defining performance to leave them third in the table

Andrew McGlashan at Lord's14-May-2014
ScorecardTim Murtagh was once again Middlesex’s inspiration•Middlesex CCCEnglish cricket would love to see Steven Finn bowling Middlesex to victory, but on the final day at Lord’s it was Tim Murtagh who put in the defining performance to set up a 10-wicket victory, their third home win of the season to leave them third in the table.At one stage before lunch, with Lancashire 45 for 5, it appeared Middlesex would be reflecting on a job well done sooner rather than later, but it was not until shortly before the final hour that they were able to wrap up a 10-wicket victory.Ashwell Prince and Jos Buttler had given Lancashire hope of salvaging a draw, adding 117 for the fifth wicket to show that conditions were still perfectly good for batting, but Murtagh refused to yield during lengthy spells from the Nursery End in an exemplary display of swing and seam to finish with 6 for 60.It led to glowing praise from his captain, Chris Rogers, who lauded him as one of the best bowlers he has led. “I thought that was outstanding in the second dig,” Rogers said. “To get six, and when the game looked like it was drifting to get three in a spell that’s outstanding. It showed why he is one of the best bowlers I’ve ever been lucky enough to captain.”Just to be able to give him the ball and they tell you when they are done: it’s exceptional to have and I’m very privileged to have him. We missed him when he went to play for Ireland last week which was disappointing but that’s the way it goes.”Murtagh already had one wicket to his name overnight and resumed Middlesex’s task of taking nine more when he removed nightwatchman Simon Kerrigan with a beauty early on. However, it was two wickets in the space of four balls moments before tea which revived the victory push when he had Buttler caught a first slip, three balls after he was dropped by John Simpson, and then found Tom Smith’s outside edge, leaving Lancashire seven down at the interval.Another frustrating stand began to form between Prince, who had been given a tough time by Finn in the afternoon but attacked the same bowler after tea when he dropped repeatedly short, and Glen Chapple which took Lancashire into the lead and ate up valuable time.Again it was over to Murtagh, who was not rested before the second new ball, although his fifth wicket was given a considerable helping hand by Prince’s horrid slash outside off which undid nearly four hours of concentration. When Chapple played across a full delivery from Toby Roland-Jones, Lancashire’s chances of salvaging a draw had all but vanished and Murtagh’s sixth wrapped up the innings leaving Middlesex 19 overs to complete the formalities.Apart from a few dropped catches, Rogers could not pick holes in the performance. “This was almost a perfect game for us; win the toss, put them in and bowl them out then go a long way past them then bowl then out again – that’s a perfect game,” he said. “But we can get better, we dropped a few chances, and I do expect a lot of the guys.His more immediate concern, however, was ensuring Middlesex improve their away record when they travel to Northamptonshire on Sunday, after twice being heavily beaten on the road, and also juggling the rapid change in formats which will now come with the start of the NatWest T20 Blast.”It’s a tough job and I don’t know how it’s going to work to be honest. There’s a lot being asked of these guys and we’ll need to be quite understanding of their loads.”Overall, it was a familiar tale for Lancashire. Their top-order batting is a serious threat to their chances of staying in Division One. Their average total at five wickets down this season has been 99 and while on some occasions, such as at Wantage Road, there were some mitigating circumstances, having the top order fail on a warm, sunny day at Lord’s highlights the weakness.They did have to contend with some fine bowling in the morning, and not just from Murtagh. Roland-Jones trapped Karl Brown for a duck and Finn earned an lbw against Paul Horton although the ball may have been sliding. There was no doubt about Luke Procter’s wicket, brilliantly caught low down to his left by Simpson during one of Finn’s more impressive spells of the match.For Buttler it at least allowed him another backs-to-wall situation in which to show his ability to grind out an innings with his second half-century of the match, although if he walks in too many more times with his side in strife he may pine for the days of watching team-mates at Somerset pile on the runs.When his footwork let him down, playing away from his body against Murtagh, only for his opposite number to palm away a regulation chance it just started to appear that he may help Lancashire escape, but Middlesex’s perseverance held sway.

Tomlinson can't beat the weather

Division Two leaders Hampshire were left frustrated after being unable to close out victory against bottom side Derbyshire on a rain-hit final day at the Ageas Bowl.

Press Association04-Jun-2014
ScorecardJames Tomlinson ran through the Derbyshire top order on the final day•Getty ImagesDivision Two leaders Hampshire were left frustrated after being unable to close out victory against bottom side Derbyshire on a rain-hit final day at the Ageas Bowl. But with Worcestershire also drawing against Surrey at The Oval, Hampshire remain four points ahead at the top of the table.With the morning session a wash-out, play was not able to start in Southampton until 2:30pm when Derbyshire resumed on 31 without loss chasing an improbable 346 for victory. Led by some fine bowling from left-armer James Tomlinson, the hosts ripped out eight wickets before finally being checked by the weather just before 6pm.When the players were able to get out onto the field, there was a swift breakthrough as Tomlinson had Paul Borrington caught behind from the first delivery. Fellow opener Stephen Moore, adding just three to his overnight 22, and then Marcus North both swiftly followed as Tomlinson struck again to leave Derbyshire 40 for 3.Matt Coles trapped Scott Elstone leg before without troubling the scorers and the visitors were five men down when captain Wayne Madsen was caught in the slips. Wicketkeeper Gareth Cross and Alex Hughes managed to steer Derbyshire to 51 for 5 at tea.In the first over of the final session, Kyle Abbott had Cross lbw for 5 as the visitors’ tail were left with some 32 overs to try to navigate safely.Left-arm spinner Danny Briggs, who claimed 5 for 50 in the first innings, chalked up another wicket when he trapped David Wainwright lbw for 22 to leave Derbyshire holding on at 94 for 7. Briggs struck again when Tony Palladino went the same way, adding just 2, leaving a potential 20 overs left to wrap things up.But cruelly for the rampant hosts the weather returned to hamper that victory bid, with the players taken off at just after 5:15pm when Derbyshire were 104 for 8. Hampshire looked to then have 8.4 overs to finish off the visitors, but bad light finally called an end to proceedings.Hughes was unbeaten on 18, which came from 85 balls and just shy of two hours in the middle, while tail-ender Tim Groenewald had made four in Derbyshire’s 107 for 8 off 52 overs.Tomlinson finished with an impressive 3 for 16 from his 11 overs, which included seven maidens.

Can Pune build on Chepauk success?

Preview of the match between Pune Warriors and Sunrisers Hyderabad in Pune

The Preview by Nikita Bastian16-Apr-2013Match factsApril 17, 2013
Start time 1600 (1030 GMT)Pune Warriors will hope for another Steven Smith special•BCCIBig PicturePune Warriors against Sunrisers Hyderabad might not be one of the most high-profile matches of the IPL, but both teams have played better than expected already in this competition. While Sunrisers have already recorded wins against Royal Challengers Bangalore (holding their own in a Super Over) and (a much-fancied but underperforming) Delhi Daredevils, Warriors pulled off a huge upset on Monday, beating Chennai Super Kings at Chepauk.The biggest plus for Warriors is that, ever since they broke their 11-game losing streak with a seven-wicket win against Rajasthan Royals on April 11, their batting has managed to put together moderate totals at least. After being bowled out for 104 and 99, they’ve scored over 140 in their next three games. There is still a lot of work to do though; against Super Kings, they looked on target for a lot more than the 159 they ended with, but the middle order, bar Steven Smith, could not build on Aaron Finch’s blitz at the top. Sunrisers will draw confidence from the fact that one of Warriors’ batting flops came against them: when the teams met three days into the tournament, Sunrisers managed to defend 126 at Uppal, with Amit Mishra causing trouble with turn and loop, and Dale Steyn making short work of the lower order.Both teams have decisions to make about their playing XIs. Warriors’ Yuvraj Singh had to sit out of the Super Kings match due to a recurrence of a back problem, and will not be fit in time for Wednesday’s match either. Full-time captain Angelo Mathews – who had to sit out in Chennai due to the ban on Sri Lankan players there – should return, but with Finch, Smith and Mitchell Marsh all doing well, it could be at the expense of stand-in leader Ross Taylor. Warriors must be mulling whether they want to disturb their winning combination at all. Sunrisers have the option of playing the West Indies captain, allrounder Darren Sammy, who arrived from the Caribbean a couple of days ago after the birth of his daughter. However, with Kumar Sangakkara and Dale Steyn being sure starters, they would have to pick between Thisara Perera and Cameron White if they want to play him.Players to watchApart from taking that spectacular boundary catch against Kolkata Knight Riders last season, Steven Smith was one of Warriors’ few bright sparks, scoring 362 runs at 40.22 in an otherwise forgetful 2012. After being made to sit out Warriors’ first four games this season, he produced what turned out to be the match-winning innings against Super Kings. After Warriors had inexplicably slowed down after Finch’s assault, Smith provided the final surge: his unbeaten 39 came off 16, going after Dirk Nannes and Dwayne Bravo. The shot of the game was a reverse-flick for six over third man. If Warriors are to improve on their record this season, Smith will have to play another central role in their campaign.Compared to some other teams in the tournament, Sunrisers have quite a solid bowling line-up: Steyn, Ishant Sharma, Amit Mishra … The same cannot be said of their batting. There’s Kumar Sangakkara and Cameron White, with Parthiv Patel playing the supporting role, but not much else – at least on paper. Hanuma Vihari, Akshath Reddy, Ravi Teja and the other local batsmen, while they have had their moments, are yet to contribute defining innings. At some point, Sunrisers will need them to play a winning hand and it is left to be seen whether they can step up.Stats and Trivia Parthiv Patel needs one more run to get to a 1000 IPL runs. His runs have been spread across stints with Chennai Super Kings, Kochi Tuskers, Deccan Chargers and Sunrisers Hyderabad. In Warriors’ previous game, against Mumbai Indians, Ashok Dinda went at 15.75 runs an over – that equaled the record for the most expensive spell in IPL cricket, alongside Varun Aaron’s in the second qualifier in 2012Quotes”They can make the last four. They have some big hitters in Uthappa, Finch, Taylor, Smith and Marsh, who can win on their own.”
“Yuvraj is not going to be playing in the next game but hopefully he is ready for the game after that. Obviously he is a big part of our team and it affects the balance of our team when Yuvi doesn’t play.”

PSG are finally trying to show Kylian Mbappe who's boss – but how long can his exile really last if he won't leave?

The forward insists he won't depart the club this summer, while the Parisians have frozen him out of the squad – who will break first?

In France they call them the 'loft.' In English, it roughly translates as 'bomb squad.' They're Paris Saint-Germain's outcast group, forced to train separately from Luis Enrique's first-team group. They have little chance of playing for the club this season, and are simply kicking a ball about, awaiting a loan move or permanent transfer. There are many familiar faces here: Julien Draxler, Gini Wijnaldum and Leandro Paredes have been there for a while; it seems Neymar and Marco Verratti have since been added in the final week of pre-season.

There's also Kylian Mbappe. Once vice-captain, superstar, and assumed Parisian for at least the next 10 months, Mbappe has been assigned to PSG purgatory, well away from the team he was supposed to lead to a Ligue 1 title this year.

The reason for his exile is clear. Mbappe has informed the club that he won't renew his contract that is due to expire in June. PSG, in return, have put him up for sale, and might be forced into letting one of the world's best leave. For his part, Mbappe has turned around and insisted he is going nowhere.

This kind of thing has happened before, though. The Parisians have been publicly pushed around by Mbappe for much of his six-year stay in the French capital, a string of events in which PSG have eventually caved to his demands. But it looks different now. PSG have taken a stand, and are at least trying to demonstrate that no one — not even Mbappe — is more important than the club.

It's an admirable show of strength for a nation-state marketing tool whose footballing prowess is admittedly limited. They are entering new territory here, and taking a stand against one of their star players, silencing one of the most desirable assets in their portfolio — suggesting that, for once, there might be other, more practical, sporting priorities in Paris. How long it lasts, though, remains to be seen.

GettyHometown kid with unlimited power

Mbappe has always been aware of his power in Paris. Here was a hometown kid, returning to the city of his birth, the Parisian in a team full of global stars. PSG ultras coveted a world-class French footballer to be the face of the team. Mbappe was that — and he knew it. Whatever perceived pressure of the role didn't get to him, either.

Mbappe has scored at least 25 goals in each of his last three seasons at PSG. He has five Ligue 1 Golden Boots to his name, and seems set to be at least a Ballon d'Or finalist this year. Throw in a World Cup win — claimed at just 19 — and there arguably isn't a more successful footballer who so easily embodies his club and country.

This was particularly clear last summer. Mbappe was on the verge of leaving PSG, and, depending on which of the multitude of stories you believe, had all-but agreed to fulfil a childhood dream and join Real Madrid. But the Parisians realised they couldn't afford to lose him, so they caved to every single financial and symbolic demand. Mbappe was made the highest-paid player in history, and anointed de-facto footballing adviser. Mbappe even received a phone call from the French Prime Minister, begging him to stay.

Mbappe accepted the terms. His contract gave him the option to leave in 2024, and included a 'loyalty bonus' for every additional season he played. Mbappe could, theoretically, become immensely wealthy for two years — before bolting for a new project.

But there was also a more sinister, implicit element to the deal. Mbappe had won the negotiations and carved out a very specific role in Paris. He was now the most powerful person at the club, and could, both publically and privately, dictate decision making.

AdvertisementGettyA series of failures

Whether Mbappe was entirely aware of the extent of his influence remains unclear. It is also difficult, and perhaps unfair, to accuse a 24-year-old of being some sort of insidious supervillain dictating the moves of an organisation. There are, presumably, no evil lairs or secret meetings here. But he certainly knew how much weight his words would carry.

So, Mbappe has gone about the last year moulding club storylines, and having a material impact on both public relations policies and footballing decisions. The list of perceived grievances is lengthy.

First, it was his desire to sign a striker to play alongside him, something he made clear in a passive-aggressive interview. The club swiftly entered negotiations for Goncalo Ramos, but were barred from signing him due to Financial Fair Play restrictions. A few months later, it was revealed that Mbappe was unhappy at the club, and wanted to leave. It dragged manager Christophe Galtier and Luis Campos into a media storm, the two giving conflicting statements in the days after the story broke. Mbappe flatly denied the rumour — not that many believed him.

Then, in February, Mbappe took issue with a PSG season ticket promotional campaign. The video, encouraging fans to renew their seats for the 2023-24 season, featured Mbappe — but made no mention of either Lionel Messi or Neymar. Once a few keen eyes noted their absence, Mbappe released a statement, claiming 'it isn't Kylian Saint-Germain' and denying that he had any role in the video that he himself narrated. PSG quickly removed it.

There have been other incidents, too. Mbappe criticised PSG's squad depth following their Champions League exit to Bayern Munich. He took on the vice-captaincy, something that Presnel Kimpembe, vice-captain at the time, was not made aware of. He called the club "divisive" while on international duty.

And then, it was leaked that he would not be taking up the one-year option in his contract to stay until the summer of 2025. PSG claimed that he had only made it clear in early June;Mbappe said he had told them months ago.

web psgScrubbed from the club

The PSG of old would have done everything to keep their superstar. They would have thrown even more money at him, allowed him to train with the first team, and shared pictures of him smiling on social media. Every Mbappe goal would be met with the public adulation of the club. The posters would remain up; the media campaigns would continue to circulate; the kits would still fly off the shelves.

Except, they haven't. None of those things have happened. Mbappe has been silenced, cast aside. The giant billboard on the side of Parc des Princes, a massive picture showing Mbappe in celebration, has been taken down. He is no longer on the club's website homepage. His kits and sponsored products can no longer be bought at PSG stores. He did not appear at the club media day. He has only made one pre-season appearance, a 10-minute cameo in a training-ground friendly with Le Havre (inevitably, he scored).

Mbappe was once the face and soul of this project. Now, he's been expertly scrubbed from the club's fabric. He is not entirely forgotten — Mbappe is far too big for that — but his association with PSG is steadily being removed. Meanwhile, the club have been active in the transfer market in their attempts to sell him. Mbappe, they have admitted publicly, is allowed to leave the club. As expected, there are numerous interested parties for a 25-year-old superstar who will arguably only get better.

PSG have already accepted a bid from Al-Hilal — although Mbappe turned the Saudi Pro League club down. They are reportedly in active negotiations with other parties, too. There has been faint Premier League interest, while an offer from Real Madrid seems likely to arrive before the end of the transfer window.

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GettyA team trying to move on

Elsewhere, a team has been assembled without him. PSG's transfer business is overblown and over-analysed every year — mostly because the new signings tend to cave to the desires of Mbappe and whichever megastars the club employs at the time. But this is a planning for an Mbappe-less future, and something vaguely interesting is happening.

The Parisians have addressed numerous areas of need with sneakily good deals and promising prospects. Manuel Ugarte and Lee Kang-in won't sell many shirts, but both are under 24, and appear to be a good fit for this new iteration of PSG, overseen by Luis Enrique. Milan Skriniar and Marco Asensio, brought in on free transfers, will add valuable experience. Ousmane Dembele and Lucas Hernandez are risky additions, given their injury history, but the potential is certainly there.

And the summer's big signing, Ramos, will certainly provide some of the goals missing due to Mbappe's absence. There could be some more activity to come. Verratti wants out, and will likely seal a Saudi Pro League deal soon. Neymar has also been told to find another club. Both will certainly need replacing.

Pieced together, it looks very much like a well-assembled side, with a good mix of youth and experience. Perhaps more importantly, though, PSG look nothing like the series of squads that pandered to Mbappe for years. There is a clear balance, an obvious system, and a manager to lead it all. Mbappe, now, would be a luxury addition, not the focal point of an imperfect side.

Cricket Australia launches review of Hughes' death

Phillip Hughes’ death is to be the subject of an independent review, commissioned by Cricket Australia in order to “see what could be done to prevent a similar accident happening in the future”

Daniel Brettig14-May-2015Phillip Hughes’ death is to be the subject of an independent review, commissioned by Cricket Australia in order to “see what could be done to prevent a similar accident happening in the future”.Having flagged the possibility of a review in the days after Hughes’ death in November last year, the CA chief executive James Sutherland on Thursday announced the measure, which will be helmed by the QC David Curtain, a former chairman of the Victorian Bar Council and president of the Australian Bar Association.”When this tragedy happened, I said that it was a freak accident, but it was one freak accident too many,” Sutherland said. “Never again do we want to see something like that happen on a cricket field. We have a deep responsibility and obligation to look into the events of that awful day to understand everything that occurred and then see what could be done to prevent a similar accident happening in the future.Terms of reference for review

The causes and circumstances which led to the injury and ultimate death of Phillip Hughes

The policies, practices or systems in place to prevent a similar accident from occurring including those in relation to the prevention of traumatic injuries to the head and heart

CA’s approach to mandating, and enforcing the use and wearing of personal protective equipment in order to protect the head and heart

CA’s approach to the provision and use of cricket helmets, including consideration of helmet certification standards and suitability

CA’s approach to the medical screening of contracted players – especially those players with particular vulnerabilities

CA’s approach to the provision of a safe working environment at venues for both matches and training, including management of participants who suffer (or may be perceived to have suffered) head and heart injuries, and specifically the extent and appropriateness of CA’s concussion and head trauma policy and reporting mechanisms

The extent and appropriateness of the medical support and coverage afforded to players and on-field support staff, including match officials, at matches and training

“This is not an exercise designed to apportion blame on any individual for what took place. It is about making sure that as a sport we are doing everything in our power to prevent an accident of this nature happening again. David Curtain QC is one of Australia’s leading law practitioners and is highly qualified to lead the review which is being undertaken with the support of the Hughes family.”Hughes’ death, when felled by a routine bouncer in a Sheffield Shield match at the SCG on November 25 last year, caused an unprecedented outpouring of emotion across Australia and the world, as many struggled to come to terms with the loss of one of the game’s most promising players.At the time there were some questions raised over various elements of the day’s events, from the time it took for an ambulance to arrive at the SCG to the model of helmet Hughes was wearing – though no helmet currently in production would have covered the spot where he was hit.Sutherland said that while numerous steps had already been taken to avoid a repeat of the awful scenes witnessed that day, the review would seek to determine whether more could be done between now and the start of the next Australian season.”There were certain measures put in place soon after Phillip’s passing such as increasing the medical presence at all CA matches and working very closely with our helmet supplier to investigate the suitability of protective head equipment offered to all players,” he said. “This review will help determine whether we need to implement further measures before the 2015-16 season.”We fully recognise that undertaking a process such as this may be a traumatic experience for some and we will be as respectful and understanding as possible throughout that time. As such Cricket Australia and all states continue to make available counselling and support to any players and staff who feel they need help at any time.”CA have indicated that once the review is complete, its findings will be released to the public.

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