Glenn Phillips: 'Sometimes my speed gets me in trouble'

Glenn Phillips knows he’s got incredible natural ability and works hard to keep his skills razor sharp

Andrew McGlashan07-Nov-2022There are many elements in the coming week that could decide who lifts the T20 World Cup. It may come down to plain luck too. But it could also be a sprinted single. Or an exceptional piece of fielding.There have been plenty of spectacular catches during the tournament (there have also been a few spectacular misses) but high on the list of instant classics was Glenn Phillips’ gravity-defying running dive to dismiss Marcus Stoinis at the SCG in the opening match of the Super 12s.That game set the tone for both teams involved: it put New Zealand on their way to the semi-finals, allowing them the breathing space to soak up a loss to England, and left Australia so far behind that they could not make up the ground.Related

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  • Glenn Phillips is Superman once again

  • 'It was very much spur of the moment' – Phillips

New Zealand are back in Sydney for their semi-final against Pakistan, an unlikely match-up until the extraordinary drama of Sunday. It is also the ground where Phillips left his mark with a masterful century against Sri Lanka. But while he is only an occasional bowler, it’s his value as a fielder which makes him worth being classed as an allrounder. He pushes himself to the limits, and sometimes beyond.”There’s certain things where I know if I haven’t got there, it’s okay, because there’s probably not many other people who would have,” Phillips told ESPNcricinfo. “I try to look at it that way for myself to not get too down. The chances are that, if you are getting to balls you aren’t meant to, then you are going to mess up quite a bit. But the odd screamer will come off. If you get it, you pull off something amazing. If you don’t, well you never had the right to be there anyway. So you may as well at least try.”Sometimes my speed gets me in trouble as well. Sometimes I over-run it. I went through a stage when I was younger where guys tried to get me to slow down, but it got to the point where I’d actually fumble just as much or stuff up probably more often than I would, if I was going 100%. I realised if I have the chance to be that little faster, or jump a little higher, it then becomes your responsibility to use it. Because if you don’t, then what’s the point having it?”Glenn Phillips practices fielding like Superman•ICC/Getty ImagesPhillips has always had his natural athleticism, but the enjoyment of fielding goes back to childhood when he and his younger brother Dale would practice with their dad in the nets, rather than just focusing on batting and bowling. He is also quick to acknowledge that others in the team also set high standards. There were some rare blunders against England, with Kane Williamson and Daryl Mitchell missing catches, but overall, New Zealand are one of the world leaders in the field.”I’ve always loved fielding,” he said. “It wasn’t just because you had to do fielding. It’s because we wanted to do it. Fielding these days can become a third string. If you have the ability to make a difference somehow in the field, it doesn’t necessarily matter if you’ve had a good day with bat or ball because fielding is an attitudinal thing and that’s what we [New Zealand] all try and bring.”From the genetic side of things, it has always been there but without working and keeping it growing, you lose it. So definitely, it’s something that I’ve worked on. I’ve tried to get stronger, tried to get faster, tried to get more agile, to be in positions where I have the right to at least have a go at making a catch that maybe no one else is going to get.”It is equally possible, though, that Phillips plays a decisive hand with the bat against Pakistan as New Zealand seek their first major piece of global limited-overs silverware. His 104 off 64 balls against Sri Lanka lifted them from 15 for 3 and featured superb acceleration, having been 22 off 22 deliveries. Against England at the Gabba Phillips was giving his team a chance of chasing a tough target, having been given a life by Moeen Ali, before falling just short of clearing long-on. It is those sorts of narrow margins involved in the format that Phillips tries to keep in perspective.”[It’s about] trying to find something in a game of such high failure that you can succeed at more often,” he said. “Sometimes it just takes one mis-hit. Say I didn’t mis-hit that [against England], you never know. I’ve done things similar on other occasions and it’s having that experience and banking on myself on being able to do it. It’s a game of small margins so sometimes it’s not going to come off, but if you have the belief that you are the one that can do it at least you have a chance.”Phillips has enjoyed the different challenges created by the various grounds during this tournament. This will be New Zealand’s third match at the SCG and the previous two have provided opposite short and long boundaries.Phillips outscored Sri Lanka all on his own in Sydney•ICC via Getty Images”It’s actually quite cool to try come up with unique ways of getting balls into areas that create high-scoring opportunity for lower risk,” he said. “[Bowlers] will always try to take it away from the small boundary and we will always try to hit it there, so how can my mind games play against their mind games.”It’s about looking at the field and deciding what my high risk, high-value shots are, then I understand I’ve got all my other shots as well which happen naturally as you’ve been trained to do for years on end. You’ve got a split second to react and will get it wrong sometimes, but if the idea in your mind is to be as positive as possible, then I have the chance of going both sides of the field.”Away from matches, Phillips thinks extensively about his batting and the various scenarios being at No. 4 or 5 can provide, but once he gets to the crease – whether it’s setting a target or chasing one – he wants to have as few thoughts as possible in his mind.”I’ve always been a deep-thinker, but in the middle I try to leave all the deep thinking back in the sheds,” he said. “At training I’m thinking about how I can get balls in different areas, and if I’ve trained [that way] then going into the middle, the less thinking that’s possible the clearer I’m going to be to make the right choice to the right ball. For me, when you’ve got a split-second to react, if my mind is filled with anything other than watching the ball then I’ll be in trouble.”

Ed Pollock is faster than Andre Russell but how far can he go?

He has the top strike rate in the game but needs to play “smarter” if he is to fulfil England predictions

Matt Roller22-May-2020If you were asked to close your eyes and picture the fastest-scoring batsman in T20 cricket, you’d probably think of a Jamaican with a mohawk, bulging biceps and shiny gold helmet rather than a slight, 5ft 10in Englishman with a side parting and an economics degree. But incongruous as it might seem, it is Ed Pollock who holds the record for the highest career strike rate in the 20-over game, his 174.93 pipping Andre Russell’s 171.29 in a photo finish.A 24-year-old left-hander hardly known outside of the West Midlands, Pollock has played only 29 games in his T20 career, but his top-order pyrotechnics in a Birmingham Bears shirt have earned him notoriety in the North Group of the Vitality Blast as a star in the making. And yet, despite his eye-catching strike rate, he is yet to earn a franchise gig overseas, or even to pull on an England badge as part of an age-group or Lions team. With his average the wrong side of 25, you could be forgiven for thinking that he is something of a one-hit wonder.Pollock, you might assume, is the sort of player who has emerged as a natural result of the introduction of the Twenty20 Cup in 2003 – the first professional T20 competition in the world, hailed as an immediate success for attracting fans to county cricket. Tom Banton, the Somerset starlet and former team-mate of Pollock’s at Worcestershire club Barnt Green, cites watching Neil Carter as a pinch-hitter for Warwickshire as his earliest cricketing memory. That players of his and Pollock’s generation are such clean hitters surely relates to the fact they have grown up with the shortest format?ALSO READ: How our readers voted in the greatest T20 player bracketNot quite. “You see it talked about, how guys my age have grown up playing T20, but I think it was only in my last year at school that I started playing it as I do now – taking advantage of the powerplay, that sort of thing,” Pollock says. “Growing up, I was quite small, and I was very much a blocker until the age of 15 or 16. At that stage I realised I could start hitting sixes, and I think I got a bit carried away with it from there.”More than a T20 baby, Pollock is part of the generation of English players raised on the 2005 Ashes. After playing primarily as an offspinner who batted at number seven or eight in Worcestershire’s academy, he was released soon after his 18th birthday, at which point he was thought he “nowhere near good enough to be a professional cricketer”.

“I wasn’t necessarily one of those kids who always dreamed of it because I didn’t think it was a particularly realistic place for me to end up,” he says. He ended up at Durham – one of the UK’s top universities – with the primary aim of “getting a degree to keep my options open”, and registered few eye-catching scores in his first two years on the MCCU programme as he struggled to strike a balance between his degree, cricket, and a social life.But in the summer of 2015, at the end of his first year at university, things suddenly fell into place. In the middle of a purple patch for Barnt Green, he hit an unbeaten 227 for Herefordshire in his first minor counties appearance of the season, and soon had four counties keeping tabs on him. A week after scoring a hundred for Durham’s seconds, Warwickshire asked if he would be keen to play for their second team on trial.Pollock stalled on a decision, though he knew the head coach at the county, Dougie Brown, from Barnt Green. A few days later, he had another call. “It was Dougie, saying, ‘We’d like to offer you a contract.'” Despite Warwickshire’s faith in him, Pollock failed to make meaningful strides in 2016, and went into his end-of-year appraisal sweating over his contract status – only afterwards did he realise he had signed a multi-year deal at the club.After graduating in 2017, Pollock’s clean hitting for the second team won him a surprise call-up to the Bears in the Blast. He had made a calculated judgement that T20 would be his quickest route into the first team, and studied the world’s best short-form batsmen on YouTube to try and work out a common theme in how they swung the bat: “almost like a golf swing – I set myself up on a bowling machine and tried to copy it.”

His challenge is to get his thinking to marry his game. When the calm mind marries the fast hands, then he could achieve anything. There is no ceiling for himPaul Farbrace on Ed Pollock

He soon found himself opening the batting at Edgbaston against Derbyshire, with free rein to play his shots. “I just got thrown in against Imran Tahir, Matt Henry, Hardus Viljoen – I was a bit naïve at the time and didn’t realise it was three international bowlers. I just went out there and all that was said to me was ‘Play your game.'” An innings of 66 off 40 balls on debut was the result.After dropping out of the side so that new signing Adam Hose could fit in, Pollock returned in time for a hot streak in a series of must-win games. He struck 52 off 25 against Durham then 49 off 24 against Lancashire to finish the group stage. The latter was his favourite innings of the season, including a six into the second tier off Ryan McLaren that left him “completely surprised, I had no idea what had just happened”. That was followed by 24 off ten against Surrey in the quarters and 50 off 27 in the semi against Glamorgan. He ran himself out for 14 in the Bears’ final defeat, but had made enough of a mark to have Michael Vaughan – captain of the 2005 side he had admired – tweeting that he would be a future England player.”For that period I was very clear on where my game was,” he says. “There were no real technical thoughts, but in terms of playing near my best and understanding my game, I was in a really good place at that time. It all clicked for Finals Day.” That came as no surprise to him, following four and a half hours in the nets the day before.One shot was particularly eye-catching: the slog sweep off the seamer, which immediately drew comparisons with Sanath Jayasuriya. “It is something that confuses me daily. I don’t know where it comes from,” he says. “I’ve never practised it, and if I actively try to hit it in a match, I will guarantee you I’ll miss it. I’ve tried to hit them against the bowling machine and I miss it, I get hit. The only thing I can ever link it to – and I think it’s clutching at straws – is that I’ve played a lot of golf.”He tracked down Mal Loye, the most high-profile Englishman to have played the shot regularly, during a game against Derbyshire’s seconds, but found their approaches were the polar opposite. “He said his was entirely premeditated, and mine is completely the other way – I’m almost looking not to play it and it just kind of happens. I studied economics at uni and was always told to think about stuff, and then all of a sudden I’m doing something that I’ve got absolutely no control over.”

But for all the success of 2017, the following two years proved more difficult. He was thrown into the 50-over team both years, making flashy starts but averaging in the low 20s, and despite maintaining an impressively high strike rate in the Blast, his returns have dipped.In particular, he found himself targeted by teams who had previously been caught unaware. Word went round that Pollock was susceptible against offspin. “Some people came back with a plan, and then all of a sudden, you’re trying to counteract stuff,” he says. “You tend to see people go through cycles, don’t you. The ability to hit a clean ball was still there. But it was a mixture of guys having a plan and me searching for what I had to do. I think I slightly went away from thinking ‘This is my method.'”I definitely wouldn’t change the way it went in 2018, because if it had all gone great, I don’t think I’d have learned half the stuff I have now about my game and what I need to do to put myself in the right place to perform. There’s an appreciation that while it’s my role to get quick runs, and a quick 30 can be really helpful, you want performances to win games really.”Paul Farbrace has worked closely with Pollock since joining Warwickshire as director of sport last year. “He could be sensational,” Farbrace says. “The next step for him is about playing more thinking cricket, smarter cricket, and not just having the big shots – does he have the cricketing intelligence and the game plan to go with his striking ability?Ed Pollock was left out after four games of last season’s T20 Blast•Getty Images”We spoke about the fact people have bowled a lot of offspin at him. My thought was that he had to learn to slog-sweep the offspinner: the chances are that teams will start with a long-on and a deep square leg against him, so could he slog-sweep into that gap at deep midwicket? Can he reverse-sweep, so they have to bring a man up from the leg side to plug that gap? It’s not just about hitting boundaries, it’s whether he can get a single and get down the other end.”Last summer proved particularly frustrating. Despite leading the run charts in the 2nd XI T20 competition, Pollock was left out of the first team after scores of 27, 0, 0 and 3 in the Blast. He returned to the side once the Bears were effectively out for the last two games, making his highest professional score of 77 in the penultimate fixture at Durham.”When you come from outside the first team environment, you put a lot more pressure on yourself to perform,” Pollock says. “So it wasn’t necessarily that teams had sorted me out or that I didn’t know what was going on, it was just that I really wanted to do well and felt myself getting a bit tense, trying to force everything a bit too much.”I got dropped, told to go and play in the second team, and I thought I’ll see what I can fix here. I went to the indoor centre, one of the self-feeding bowling machines, and had a net for four and a half hours by myself, just hitting balls.”ALSO READ: Tim Seifert likes to go bam bamFarbrace suggests that it was “a mistake” to have left Pollock out. “There would be people around the team who would say it was the right call because he was frazzled at that point, and he probably was. It’s really easy as a coaching group to say: ‘Play with freedom, there will be no recriminations.’ But as soon as you leave someone out who plays in that way, I think you put doubt in everyone else’s mind.”Jason Roy is the best example of that. Against New Zealand in 2015, he didn’t score a run in the ODI series at home, but because he kept attacking, kept playing in the right way for his role in the team, he was kept in, started to get his runs later that summer, and has never really looked back. His mentality was about the team and playing with purpose, instead of playing for himself if he had a couple of low scores.”Pollock is one of the game’s fastest starters – his strike rate barely changes throughout his innings. He says that he is “just as likely to middle my first ball as my 100th ball – I’ll look to net a lot around games, and just play as many games as I can so I get lots of time in the middle. So it means I can drop in and bat straight away how I want to.”That said, being one of the few batsmen capable of fulfilling the cliché of going hard from ball one does lend itself to volatility – not easy to take with the territory as a young pro trying to hold down a first-team place. “Brendon McCullum was at the Bears the year before I arrived and the guys said he told them, ‘If I come off one time in seven then I’m happy,'” Pollock says. “I think I’ve only very occasionally not gone out full of intent, and they’re the games that I’ll get really pissed off with myself – the ones where I don’t go out and play my game. If I’ve played the way I want to play and I get out, I can deal with that.”

The challenge for Pollock is working out how much to think about his game and when. He plays his best innings with a clear mind, and recalls a net with batting coach Tony Frost when he struggled to hit the ball because his focus was on technical thoughts; and yet he talks at length about his willingness to learn. He has read “baseball books, and a few neuroscience-type things” and is two months into a mindfulness course to help understand himself better, and what puts him in a good headspace.”At school, it was always like you do one school year, you learn something, and then you turn up the next school year and it’s, ‘Right, you’ve done this, this is the next thing, and then this is the next thing.’ And I had that kind of attitude in life. But in cricket, it’s almost going down the opposite way. You almost get simpler and simpler. You get down to: what’s your method? What’s your approach?”The pandemic has come at a frustrating time for Pollock. He was looking forward to the Hundred, and the opportunity to pick the brains of his Manchester Originals team-mate Jos Buttler. He had planned how his season might look, beginning with a run of red-ball second-team games to stake his case for inclusion in the Championship side, and then hoped to turn “flashes in the pan” in the Blast into the sort of performances “that make someone go: ‘We want him.'”While there are no suggestions that he has any desire to leave Warwickshire, he is one of the 134 pros whose contracts are up at the end of the season, adding to a sense of uncertainty. But if Pollock is concerned by what Farbrace might say in his appraisal, he can rest assured that the verdict is likely to be positive. “He’s absolutely got the game to become an international cricketer,” Farbrace says. “His challenge is to get his thinking to marry his game. When the calm mind marries the fast hands, then he could achieve anything. There is no ceiling for him. I think he could then travel the world and be sensational.”

Kobbie Mainoo reportedly attracting interest from 12 clubs as his Manchester United role remains uncertain

Out-of-favour Manchester United midfielder Kobbie Mainoo has picked his favourite destination after as many as 12 clubs made transfer enquiries for the young English star. Mainoo is desperate for an escape route from Old Trafford after failing to accumulate enough game time under Ruben Amorim this season as the Portuguese coach prefers Bruno Fernandes in the central midfield role alongside Casemiro.

  • Mainoo picks favourite destination

    According to the, a dozen top European clubs have shown interest in signing Mainoo on loan in the January transfer market, however, the midfielder has picked Serie A champions Napoli as his preferred next destination. The England international's move to Italy is now dependent on whether the Red Devils give the green light to the transfer in the upcoming winter window.

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    Napoli a perfect destination for Mainoo to revive career

    Napoli, who are currently fighting to retain their Serie A crown, have seen their midfield dismantled by a cruel run of injuries. The latest blow was the high-grade lesion to Frank Anguissa's thigh, sustained on international duty, which will keep him out for the foreseeable future. This fresh setback comes on top of the long-term absence of Manchester City legend De Bruyne, who suffered a serious muscle tear in October. 

    With Stanislav Lobotka also working on his fitness issues, manager Antonio Conte is left with a skeleton crew in the middle of the park. The Italian coach is aware that relying solely on Scott McTominay and fringe players like Michael Folorunsho is not sustainable if the club are to compete on multiple fronts, making a January reinforcement an absolute necessity.

    With the scarcity of quality midfielders, Mainoo will surely enjoy a lot of game time in Italy and will also benefit from playing under a seasoned head coach like Conte, which could prove to be a huge learning opportunity for the youngster.

  • Scholes feels Mainoo getting ruined at United

    With Mainoo growing 'deeply frustrated' with his lack of game time, Amorim recently addressed the media to speaking about the 20-year-old's situation at Old Trafford as he said: "I see him as a starter like the other players. I just have to make a choice and then in the end, it's not been Kobbie. In the future, I don't know. Again, I always think the same thing with Casemiro. (He) was not playing and then he plays. I just want to win games. I don't care who is playing.

    "I see it. I just want to win, I try to put the players, I don't look who it is, I don't care about that, I'm just trying to put the best players on the pitch. You have Manuel Ugarte that played two games. One of them, Casemiro, was out, Bruno Fernandes, he's always fit, he's the guy that is doing his position, so maybe it has to do with that."

    In response, though, club legend Paul Scholes slammed the Portuguese as he came to Mainoo's defence and said: "Bullsh*t. The kid is being ruined, not being played in a team that can't control a game of football. Hate seeing homegrown players leave but it's probably best for him now, enough is enough."

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    What next for Mainoo?

    The Africa Cup of Nations this winter will see several top African players leave to play for their respective national teams. This could be the perfect time for Mainoo to get as much game time as possible and win back Amorim's trust, but the coach has offered no guarantee of minutes.

    "I don't know, I don't know," he said. "It's the same question, I don't know what is going to happen. It depends. I've seen the training. If it's the best thing for the team, I will put (him in), that is the only way I know how to respond to that. Of course, I understand, and my job is to answer, but I'm trying to answer always the same thing, and you ask me always the same thing. I understand what you are saying. You love Kobbie, he starts for England. But that doesn't mean that I need to put Kobbie in when I feel that I shouldn't put Kobbie in, so it's my decision."

Shami: 'My rhythm is back to where it used to be'

“I can clearly feel there’s still a lot of cricket left in me,” says fast bowler after guiding Bengal to a second straight win in the Ranji Trophy

Shashank Kishore28-Oct-2025Mohammed Shami served a reminder of his fitness on Tuesday with a match-winning spell to deliver Bengal’s second consecutive win in the 2025-26 Ranji Trophy.At Eden Gardens, Shami finished with 5 for 38 – his 13th first-class five-for – as Bengal beat Gujarat by 144 runs. He finished with eight wickets in the match across 28.3 overs. Shami currently sits third on the Ranji season’s wicket-taker’s leaderboard, with 15 wickets at an average of 10.46 after four innings.”When you perform like this, it feels good both mentally and physically,” Shami said. “Coming out of a difficult phase and performing well gives a lot of satisfaction. The time after the [2023] World Cup was tough and painful.Related

Shami five-for leads Bengal to second win

“But then I played the Ranji Trophy, white-ball cricket, the IPL, Champions Trophy, Duleep Trophy [since his comeback late last year]. Now my rhythm is back to where it was before. I can clearly feel there’s still a lot of cricket left in me.”Shami has been open about his hurt of missing out on India selection for the England tour. When asked during the squad announcement for the West Indies Tests about Shami’s availability, chief selector Ajit Agarkar stated that the fast bowler hadn’t played enough cricket.Since then, there have been a few back-and-forths in the media between the two, even if not directly at each other. It’s perhaps with all this in context that Shami was asked if this felt like another comeback, a suggestion he dismissed.”This was not a comeback match for me,” he said. “If you had said that last year, maybe it would have made sense. But yes, in terms of this match, what we did was a special comeback.”We decided to bat for 8-10 overs today, we had already taken three points [first-innings lead]. The situation was tough, but the boys put in their full effort. To turn the game in this manner is rare, especially on this kind of wicket. It’s a great job by the boys.”Amid chatter that this sets him up well for the South Africa Tests, Shami chose to distance himself from social media speculation, while reiterating he was focused on delivering his best wherever he plays.”Yes, I knew this question would come,” Shami said with a wry smile. “Controversy follows me. What else can I do or say? In today’s world, social media twists everything. My job is to perform well. Wherever I get an opportunity, I’ll give my best. The rest is up to god. Bengal is my home. Every match I play for Bengal is special.”Coach Laxmi Ratan Shukla was effusive in his praise for Shami’s discipline, underlining he was fully fit and in great rhythm.”You all saw how Shami bowled. There’s nothing for me to add,” he said. “His performance said it all. There’s no question about his commitment. The entire world knows what Mohammed Shami is. He doesn’t need a certificate from anyone, his bowling is the certificate. He’s completely fit.”That said, Shukla also wanted to tread a cautious path in terms of Shami’s workloads. “We can’t make Shami play all seven matches, though he keeps saying he’s fit and wants to play every game,” he said. “The way he’s running in is unbelievable.”If you compare his run-up and rhythm from when he played for India with now, you won’t find any difference. Even after 500 wickets, he’s in fantastic rhythm. He’s playing with complete calmness now.”

Nottingham Forest set sights on 'one of the greatest talents' in his country's history

Nottingham Forest are on the lookout for solidity under Sean Dyche and could now be set to make an intriguing move courtesy of owner Evangelos Marinakis.

The Tricky Trees had a fairly ominous start to the Premier League campaign that culminated in the departure of Nuno Espirito Santo, which was followed by Ange Postecoglou’s short tenure at the City Ground that ended under acrimonious circumstances.

Now, Dyche is the man at the helm and there is a feeling that improvement is starting to take shape on the River Trent, characterised in clear fashion by their convincing victory over Leeds United before the international break.

Ultimately, Forest are still in the relegation zone and have their work cut out to ensure they survive in the top-flight this campaign, though the fact that players such as Elliot Anderson are earning rave reviews from Thomas Tuchel is a reason for some optimism in the East Midlands.

Paying tribute to the Three Lions midfielder, the England coach labelled him as ‘one of the best midfielders in the Premier League’ before a routine victory in World Cup qualifying over Serbia, emphasising the value of his services that the Tricky Trees have at their disposal.

Even then, a tricky fixture at Anfield awaits for Forest on the other side of the international break before a quickfire double header against Malmö and Brighton, requiring squad rotation to make sure Dyche has fresh options to choose from.

Stability is something that hasn’t always been easy to come by at the City Ground, and club owner Marinakis doesn’t wait around when it is time to make a decision, something he could again demonstrate in January.

Nottingham Forest set for intriguing Christos Mouzakitis pursuit

According to Tuttosport, Nottingham Forest are among a clutch of clubs that are keen on Olympiacos star Christos Mouzakitis, who is also wanted by Arsenal, Manchester United, Aston Villa, AC Milan and Napoli.

Intriguingly, the Greek giants are owned by Marinakis, and he is said to be the one who will have the final say on his next destination amid their £30 million asking price for the 18-year-old midfielder.

Mouzakitis is described by Tuttosport as a player who’s ‘already one of the greatest talents in Greek football history’, with a clutch of Premier League sides taking notuce.

However, Forest may well have an edge given their close ties to the teenager via their owner.

Known to idolise AC Milan veteran Luka Modrić, Mouzakitis is a recipient of the TuttoSport Goldenboy Web Award and has registered two assists in 13 appearances this season across all competitions.

Nevertheless, he is under contract until 2029, and Olympiacos will hold the cards should a bidding war start to take place for his services, making it a tough ask for any suitors to land their man for anything less than a premium.

Either way, Marinakis could be the defining factor for Nottingham Forest in this one, and it may be worth keeping an eye to see what developments occur over the coming weeks and months.

Nottingham Forest could also be set to allow a surprise departure

Amorim slammed £120,000-p/w Man Utd star in front of teammates at Carrington

Ruben Amorim had some strong words for a £120,000-a-week Manchester United star in front of the rest of the squad at their Carrington training ground, it has been revealed.

Amorim says Man Utd “have a lot to do” after Tottenham draw

The Red Devils boss bemoaned United’s inability to kill off Tottenham and insisted they still have “lots of problems” after a dramatic 2-2 Premier League draw.

Matthijs de Ligt struck deep into stoppage time to rescue a point for United, who faced a first loss since a difficult September following Spurs goals from Mathys Tel and Richarlison.

“We have a lot of problems. We are just in the beginning. I know that sometimes the results show to people that we are improving. We are improving but we have a lot to do,” Amorim reflected candidly.

“You can divide the game into the final 10 minutes and also when we have to take out Harry Maguire, then suffer two goals and then losing Ben. To overcome everything and manage to score is a good thing.

“If you look at the rest of the game, I think we were comfortable in the game but we should do better. Be more aggressive, feeling the environment in the stadium that the three points were there, the space was there and I think we felt too comfortable during the game.

“We need to expect that in one play anything can happen and change the mood of the stadium. Today was that. I think we control well the game, but we need to do better because the game was there to take.”

It was the first time United faced Spurs since the Europa League final, and it has now been revealed that Amorim was fuming with one of his players after the defeat in Bilbao.

Man Utd slammed Ugarte in front of teammates during Carrington meeting

The Athletic’s Laurie Whitwell wrote an in-depth story on Amorim’s first year in charge at Old Trafford.

He revealed that Amorim wasn’t happy with Manuel Ugarte following the 1-0 defeat to Tottenham and let him know in front of his Man Utd teammates during a Carrington meeting.

Amorim felt that Ugarte ‘had let his work rate slide from their time together at Sporting’ adding that the midfielder ‘had gotten comfortable and said he did not recognise him as the same player from their first stint together’.

Whitwell added that ‘criticising a former player in front of his team-mates certainly caused a ripple of reaction among those in the squad’ and ‘showed them that Amorim was hard, but broadly fair, when it came to assessing application’.

Ugarte’s Man Utd stats

Total

Games

55

Goals

2

Assists

6

Yellow cards

15

Red cards

0

Minutes played

3,239

The Uruguay international, on £120,000-a-week in Manchester, is yet to be fully trusted by Amorim during the 2025/26 season, considering that he’s started just two Premier League games so far.

Playing under 350 minutes in all competitions, Ugarte has been preferred to Casemiro and Bruno Fernandes in central midfield, so by the looks of things, he still has plenty of work to do to get back in Amorim’s good books.

Casemiro's stance on new contract as Man Utd make U-turn and contact his agent

Kieran McKenna ranks Celtic's big club status amid links to Parkhead

Kieran McKenna has delivered his verdict on Celtic following recent reports that the Scottish giants could look to land the Ipswich Town manager to replace Brendan Rodgers.

It’s been quite the week at Celtic Park. Chaos unfolded on Monday when Brendan Rodgers made the decision to resign and since then, the Hoops have travelled back in time – appointing Martin O’Neill on an interim basis.

The veteran manager has instantly got the Scottish champions back to winning ways, overseeing a 4-0 victory over Falkirk on Wednesday evening before telling reporters: “I’m really pleased to win in the manner we did, and we played some delightful stuff. Could have scored a couple more, too.

“My anxiety has calmed somewhat. When you get a few goals in front you can perhaps enjoy the last 10 or 15 minutes, and it kind of brought me back. I’ve not seen Celtic often, not live, to make criticism of this side. A restoration of confidence was great.”

Leaving O’Neill to turn things around on the pitch, Parkhead chiefs have commenced their search for a new manager and already faced their first blow thanks to Ange Postecoglou.

The Australian has reportedly chosen to take a break from football after getting the sack at Nottingham Forest just 39 days into the job. This shuts down any rumours that he could be making a sensational return to Scotland in the coming weeks.

Forced to search elsewhere, Celtic could yet turn towards Wales boss Craig Bellamy or Club Brugge’s Nicky Hayen, who has refused to rule a move out.

Meanwhile, another option is McKenna. The Ipswich Town boss has quite the reputation and has reportedly made Celtic’s shortlist as a result. Whether he decides to call it quits at Portman Road is another question, however.

Kieran McKenna delivers fresh Celtic verdict

Asked about the vacant job in his latest press conference, McKenna revealed where he ranks Celtic as a club whilst also speaking about his verdict on the position in Scotland.

Despite holding them in high regard, it looks as though Celtic will have a tough task on their hands if they want to lure McKenna away from Ipswich.

The former Manchester United coach has done an excellent job in Suffolk, taking Ipswich to as high as the Premier League following back-to-back promotions before suffering relegation last season.

Former Irish League star Thomas Stewart is one of many ex-players and pundits to have praised McKenna, previously telling reporters: “He’s well-educated, an intelligent man and I always felt that when we had conversations when we were younger.

As good as Kenny: Celtic star who won 10 duels is already undroppable

This Celtic star who was as good as Johnny Kenny is now undroppable for Martin O’Neill.

By
Dan Emery

Oct 30, 2025

“I think we were the only two from the U16 Victory Shield team that got left out and went on to play for the U21 team. I’ve full respect for him and he’s doing an amazing job.”

For now, though, Celtic may be forced to miss out on their managerial target.

Celtic to contact Craig Bellamy

Bavuma: Picking Ngidi over Paterson 'tactical'

At Lord’s come Wednesday, Lungi Ngidi will play his first Test in ten months, and only his third under coach Shukri Conrad. Ngidi was confirmed in South Africa’s XI for the WTC final ahead of Dane Paterson, preferred for the extra pace and bounce in an attack that will also feature Kagiso Rabada, Marco Jansen, Wiaan Mulder and Keshav Maharaj.”It was probably one of the tougher decisions that have been made,” South Africa captain Temba Bavuma said at his pre-match press conference. “We’ve seen what Patto [Paterson] did for us at the end of last season. But from a tactical point of view, there’s a little bit more pace from Lungi. He is taller as well.”On the Lord’s slope, a bowler’s height is considered a major asset. All of Australia’s quicks are at least 1.90m tall, while Jansen stands at 2.06m and Ngidi at 1.93m. Mulder, at 1.85m, is the shortest of the quicks across both sides, and his bowling style – medium pace with the ability to move the ball – was considered too similar to Paterson’s to include both of them in an attack looking for variety.Related

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“Lungi has the experience. He’s played here before – not that Patto hasn’t, but Lungi complements that bowling attack a little bit more,” Bavuma said. “We have a guy like Mulder as well, who kind of gives you something similar to what Patto can do. But I think that was probably one of the difficult decisions that we had to make.”Ngidi’s inclusion could still be considered a risk. While he has played at Lord’s before, against England in 2022, he bowled 12 overs across two innings, with figures of 1 for 27. Ngidi has also only played two Tests in the last 18 months, and no red-ball cricket last summer. He trained with Rabada, Jansen and Mulder under the watch of Stuart Broad on Monday afternoon.Ngidi’s last first-class match was South Africa’s Test against West Indies in August last year, where he bowled 16.5 overs with a haul of 1 for 51. Since November 2022, Ngidi has only bowled a combined ten-plus overs twice – both times in Tests – as he has battled a series of injuries. The latest was a groin concern that ruled him out from mid-November last year to January this year.Ngidi played five games in the SA20 this year and all of South Africa’s matches at the Champions Trophy and two games at the IPL. He bowled two overs against Zimbabwe in Arundel in a rain-affected warm-up match, but it remains to be seen how he will perform in long spells – or in third, fourth and fifth spells if required.Wiaan Mulder will form South Africa’s core for the next few years•AFP/Getty Images

Paterson is proven in that regard, and delivered 68 overs in the two Tests he played over the home summer in 2024-25, when he took 13 wickets at 16.92, South Africa’s best average. But Paterson has only once played in a Test with Mulder, in Bangladesh last October, where both had a light second-innings load as the spinners took control.South Africa’s desire to lengthen their batting line-up and balance their attack has ultimately cost Paterson the chance at a perfect farewell. He has not been named in their squad for the Tests against Zimbabwe later this month, and at 36, is in the twilight of his career. Ngidi and Mulder, meanwhile, at 29 and 27, respectively, will be part of the core for the next few years.Mulder has also been given the responsibility of batting at No. 3 in the WTC final, something he has only done twice before in his career – and both times for South Africa.The first was in Durban against Sri Lanka last year. When Tony de Zorzi was dismissed in the 12th over, Mulder offered to come in to try and take the shine off a new(ish) ball. But he suffered a broken right middle finger and was ruled out of cricket for the rest of 2024. Mulder returned for the New Year’s Test against Pakistan, where he again batted at No. 3, and scored 5.Tristan Stubbs has been South Africa’s go-to No. 3 batter in recent times•AFP/Getty Images

His most successful batting position in the top seven in all first-class cricket is No. 5, where he averages 39.20. But South Africa have chosen to use Tristan Stubbs, who was originally given the No. 3 spot, in that position. The other batter in the squad is opener de Zorzi, who has lost his spot to Ryan Rickelton and has not been considered at No. 3 – for now.”Mulder is quite young obviously in that position. But having played with Mulder, [and] having seen the way he has grown in the last two years within red-ball cricket, it’s about giving him a lot more confidence, backing him, and allowing him to do what he does best,” Bavuma said. “He has an opportunity in a pressure situation. But I think he can take comfort from the fact that the guys are backing him. We just want him to go out and play his game.”If Mulder is looking for advice, he could find some from Hashim Amla, South Africa’s most successful No. 3 among all those to have batted at least 20 times there.Amla averaged 49.95 in that position, and scored 25 hundreds. He was inducted into the ICC’s Hall of Fame on Tuesday evening, alongside former captain Graeme Smith, and his first tip to Mulder was to make sure he was ready to bat as early as possible.”You have to be able to handle a new ball. That’s because most of the time at No. 3, you end up coming in pretty early – so you’re always prepping for that,” Amla said. “You’ve got to have a good technique, and you’ve got to have the experience of batting in the top order for a long time. That makes the quality of a good No. 3 batsman for a long period of time.”Like Mulder, Amla was not a natural No. 3, but thinks it’s a role players can grow into.”When I first started at three, I was not a No. 3 batter. I actually preferred [batting at] four and five, and batting at three for South Africa was the only gap at that stage,” Amla said. “They asked me to do it, and I did it. I had a season of doing it with the Dolphins, and then going to the national team. In this current team, you may not have guys who have batted [at] three domestically, but there’s a time for them to start. And if Wiaan bats at three, it might be his time.”You have to be real that you need time to learn the position, and although it’s a big final, it’s tough to be in the deep end like that. But he can make it work. He’s technically sound, and the style of cricket that South Africa look to be playing is a little bit more attacking. So in many ways, your technique is not tested as much. You’re playing a bit more shots than normal, so it might fit into the way that South Africa are playing.”Of the two contenders for No. 3, Stubbs could be considered the more aggressive. But after trying him at No. 3 for five Tests in which he averaged 44.71, albeit on fairly flat tracks, South Africa decided to move him down, where he can play with more flair. Bavuma will bat at No. 4, between Mulder and Stubbs.With Bavuma as South Africa’s leading Test run-scorer in the last five years, Mulder and Stubbs’ fortunes are as, if not more, reliant on their captain’s performance.

Meg Austin lays platform as Bears hold off Hampshire

Millie Taylor, Georgia Davis share four wickets as hosts make it three wins from last four

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay15-Jun-2025Birmingham Bears continued their strong form in the Women’s Vitality Blast as they beat Hampshire by 13 runs at Edgbaston to record their third win in four games.Put in, Birmingham totalled 178 with Meg Austin making a polished T20-best 51 from 38 balls. Daisy Gibb took 3 for 25, her wickets all coming in the space of four balls in her third over to put a crucial brake on the Bears when they appeared to be heading for 200.It was still a testing target for a Hampshire side missing the injured Ella McCaughan, scorer of a match-winning century against Essex on Thursday. They came in short at 165 for 7 as only captain Georgia Adams, with 32 off 31 balls, and Mary Taylor (31 not out off 17) passed 30 against a disciplined attack led by Millie Taylor.Hampshire chose to bowl but found early breakthroughs elusive. Austin and Davina Perrin added 70 from 48 balls and, after Perrin was well-caught by Charli Knott at mid-on off Adams, Perrin and Stere Kalis took the score to a promising 112 for 1 after 12 overs.The 13th over, however, changed the flow as Gibb took wickets with its first, second and fourth balls. Austin fell to another smart catch by Knott at long-on and Laura Harris tried to cut a ball that was too far up and played on. Charis Pavely survived the hat-trick ball but was bowled by the next. Kalis watched from the non-striker’s end as the trio departed but soon joined them in the pavilion when she top-edged a sweep at Bex Tyson to short fine leg.Four wickets having fallen for 20 in 18 balls, Birmingham needed to reboot and Nat Wraith (38 not out off 24) and Issy Wong reintroduced some impetus. They added 42 in 28 balls before Freya Davies dismissed Wong and Millie Taylor with successive balls in the last over.Hampshire’s reply started frenetically – after 20 balls they were 35 for 2 with Knott and Maia Bouchier having struck six fours and got out. Phoebe Graham, signed on loan from Lancashire, ousted Knott, caught behind, and Bouchier pulled Georgia Davis straight to midwicket.When Freya Kemp chipped Hannah Baker to extra cover, Hampshire were three top batters out and already behind the required rate. Adams and Rhianna Southby added 46 from 36 balls but Birmingham’s spinners kept the pressure high.Southby chipped Davis to extra cover and the 15th over, from Baker, cost just two runs to leave Hampshire needing something spectacular. In search of it, Adams and Naomi Dattani both charged at Millie Taylor and were stumped, setting up the rare spectacle of twin sisters in competition as Mary Taylor came in to face Millie.Mary survived to unfurl some pleasant strokes but in a lost cause as the required rate escalated. Hampshire required 26 from the last over and two singles left Taylor needing to hit the last four balls, from Wong for six. It didn’t happen.

Priyank Panchal retires from all forms of cricket

Panchal finished as Gujarat’s second-highest run-scorer in first-class cricket

Shashank Kishore26-May-2025Priyank Panchal, a Ranji Trophy winner with Gujarat, has called time on a professional career that spanned over 17 years.The 35-year-old finishes as Gujarat’s second-highest run-getter in first-class cricket, 19 short of Parthiv Patel’s tally of 7011 runs. The 2024-25 Ranji Trophy season was his last, in which he made two centuries. The 148 he made against Kerala in the semi-final turned out to be his last innings.Panchal finishes with 23 centuries, the most by a Gujarat player, during the course of his first-class career that spanned 127 matches in which he made 8856 runs in all. He also featured in 97 List A games and 59 T20s.”Playing for India was the ultimate dream, but I realised that chance may have bypassed me,” Panchal told ESPNcricinfo. “Once that clarity was there, it didn’t make sense carrying on.”I could’ve played for another season or two, but what would I achieve doing that? It wasn’t a sudden call, I’d been thinking about it for a while and felt this was a good time to officially announce.”Having broken through in 2007-08, Panchal played a significant role, along with Parthiv, in transforming Gujarat from a middling team to champions across formats. He eaves with the distinction of being part of the winning squads of all domestic tournaments – Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy (2014-15), Vijay Hazare Trophy (2015-16) and Ranji Trophy (2016-17).

Panchal’s career high was his tally of 1310 runs, including a career-best 314 against Punjab, during the course of that title-winning season with Gujarat. At the time, this tally was second-best to VVS Laxman’s tally of 1415 runs, the most in a single Ranji season.That season helped Panchal break into the India A squads, which he captained. He remained in the conversations for the Test squad for a number of years – the closest he got to being part of it was in 2021-22 when he was named as Rohit Sharma’s replacement for the South Africa tour.

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