Celtic: Dembele heading for Parkhead exit

Ange Postecoglou has dropped an update on the future of Celtic winger Karamoko Dembele.

What’s the latest?

In recent comments cited by Football Scotland, the 56-year-old Bhoys boss revealed that, despite the 19-year-old’s current deal at Celtic being set to expire this summer, he is yet to have a discussion with the England U18 international regarding the extension of his contract at the club.

Speaking about the situation of the forward, Postecoglou said: “With the contract side of things, it’s kind of a two-way thing. That’ll depend on Karamoko himself and where he sees his future.

“We’ll sit down at the appropriate time with him and try to map out what’s best for him and what he thinks is best for him, then we’ll come to a decision.”

However, in a recent report for The Athletic, Kieran Devlin suggested that, at present, it looks unlikely that Dembele will put pen to paper on a new deal in Glasgow, something that would see the teenager depart at the end of the season.

In his piece, Devlin wrote: “At the moment it is looking unlikely that Karamoko Dembele will sign a contract extension.”

Supporters will be devastated

Considering just how highly-rated Dembele is both at Celtic and by the wider footballing world, should the winger go on to leave the Hoops on a free transfer at the end of the current campaign, the Parkhead faithful will undoubtedly be devastated.

Indeed, the £225k-rated prodigy was named on the shortlist for the 2020 European Golden Boy award, while Postecoglou himself has previously stated just how high his hopes for the 19-year-old are.

Speaking earlier this season, the Greek-Australian manager said of the £2k-per-week forward: “He is obviously a hugely talented boy. He has been here for a while and I guess he gets an opportunity now. I think the way we play will suit him.”

However, after fracturing his ankle in pre-season, Dembele has so far featured just twice for Celtic this term, playing a mere 20 minutes of first-team football under the management of the 56-year-old Hoops boss.

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And, with the likes of Liel Abada and James Forrest ahead of the youngster in the Bhoys’ right-wing pecking order at present, it would appear the 19-year-old’s path to a regular spot in Celtic’s matchday squads is somewhat blocked – something that will be unlikely to convince the player who Brendan Rodgers dubbed a “special talent” that he does have a future at Parkhead.

As such, unless Postecoglou can convince Dembele that he will be guaranteed a decent amount of game time at Celtic, the winger could very easily leave the club at the end of his current deal – something that would mark a very sad day for everyone involved with the Hoops.

AND in other news: Kieran Devlin drops early Celtic team news ahead of County, supporters will be buzzing

Players will obey board – Gilchrist

James Sutherland says Cricket Australia would not have a problem with its players signing up with the Indian Premier League, provided the terms were satisfactory © Getty Images

Adam Gilchrist and Cricket Australia’s chief executive James Sutherland have dismissed reports that there is a rift between the players and the board over the Indian Premier League (IPL). The printed a letter in which Sutherland expressed his disappointment that 11 Australian-contracted players had not consulted Cricket Australia before signing a memorandum of understanding (MOU) that would let them play in the IPL.However, Gilchrist said there was no substance to suggestions that the players could choose to play in the IPL ahead of Tests or ODIs for their country. “No one will play [in the IPL] without consent,” Gilchrist told . “We’re not trying to be rebels here. It’s a new opportunity for cricketers and it’s a very exciting one that I know Cricket Australia are endorsing and encouraging.”We’re not looking for a moment to bend the rules or our contracts with Cricket Australia. They are our employer, as simple as that. We’ll abide by their rules at all times and we’re not trying to bend those rules what so all. If the opportunity comes up to play IPL, which a lot of us have signed a MOU to allow us to do, (we will play) but that will always be secondary to international cricket and playing for our country.”Sutherland said although Cricket Australia supported the officially-sanctioned IPL, he would have preferred the players to consult Cricket Australia before signing the MOU. “There was an element of disappointment there that players and/or their managers didn’t think to advise us of that,” Sutherland said.However, he echoed Gilchrist’s sentiment that no player was likely to turn down the chance to play for his country. “I haven’t seen any intent on the part of the Australian players that is going to compromise international cricket and their commitments to Cricket Australia,” he said. “No-one has signed a binding contract, and they can’t until they have clearance from Cricket Australia.”Because of Australia’s hectic Test schedule next year and beyond, the chances for Australian players to take part in the IPL could be limited. Next year the tournament is likely to clash with Australia’s Test tour to Pakistan and Sutherland said that would mean only a few fringe players might be free to join IPL teams.”The workload and the timing of when the Indian Premier League is, in spite of perhaps players looking to sign contracts, it might be over the course of the next three years that Australian players are only able to play one of the next three years. In terms of that conflict, or players choosing to play in the Indian Premier League instead of their international commitments, it’s just not going to happen.”Gilchrist, Ricky Ponting, Brett Lee, Matthew Hayden, Michael Clarke and Michael Hussey are among the stars believed to have signed MOUs. Sutherland said Cricket Australia had no problem with the players signing binding agreements provided the terms were satisfactory.

South Africa win at a canter

South Africa A 161 for 2 (A Peteren 87*, van Wyk 60) beat Zimbabwe A 160 (Mazakadza 46, Thomas 3-26) by eight wickets
ScorecardIt might only have been a A-team match, but the manner of today’s eight-wicket win by South Africa over Zimbabwe at Bulawayo would have further deepened the gloom inside the already worried Zimbabwe camp weeks before the World Cup.South Africa’s batting stars of the first match – Alviro Petersen and Morne van Wyk – again shone, both notching up easy half centuries as Zimbabwe A failed to impress with bat or ball. The pair put on 139 for the second wicket as South Africa chased down a target of 161 with 12 overs to spare.Both sides made two changes. Zimbabwe brought in allrounder Keith Dabengwa and opener Vusi Sibanda in for Chamu Chibhabha and fast bowler Anthony Ireland, South Africa offspinner Thandi Tshabalala and Vernon Philander for Charl Langerveldt and Johan Van der Wath.After winning the toss, Zimbabwe’s batting again looked frail from the second over when Stuart Matsikenyeri was trapped leg-before by Albie Morkel for 4. Sibanda followed when he was clean bowled by van der Wath for 2 and the slide continued when left hander Friday Kasteni, who looked destined for a big score, had his leg stump uprooted by Morkel.Sean Williams and Hamilton Masakadza put on 63 for the fourth wicket, but the stand ended when Williams miscued a pull shot off Langerveldt to the towering Justin Kemp at midwicket who clung on to a difficult catch. Masakadza and Brendan Taylor briefly looked damgerous before Alfonso Thomas nailed Taylor leg-before for 13 and then dismissed Masakadza in a similar way.Elton Chigumbura, who scored an aggressive unbeaten 61 in the first match, could not reproduce that same form and only managed 15 before he became Thomas’ third victim, caught at long-on by van der Wath as he tried to clear the boundary. Roger Telemachus had earlier on dropped him in the same place off the same bowler.Needing just 3.22 an over, South Africa did not get off to a great start when Bosman fell to Trevor Garwe, brilliantly snared at midwicket by Utseya after he had been dropped off the same bowler by Keith Dabengwa when yet to open his account. From there, South Africa A took firm control of proceedings with van Wyk and Alviro Petersen scoring freely.A huge mix up saw van Wyk run-out attempting a single – his partner sent him back but Sibanda threw in the ball from point in the ball for Taylor to complete the dismissal.But the result was by then a certainty, and Zimbabwe will do well to avoid a whitewash in the final match tomorrow.

Hodge hands Victoria the first Twenty20 title

Scorecard

Victoria were powered by Brad Hodge’s hurricane hundred © Getty Images

A thrilling hundred from Brad Hodge and some disciplined bowling earned Victoria a crushing 93-run win over New South Wales as they became the first Twenty20 champions. Cameron White’s decision to bat was promptly rewarded as Victoria, who were powered by Hodge’s 106 from just 54 balls with seven sixes, raced on to an imposing 7 for 233 in their 20 overs before dismissing NSW for 140.Hodge, whose only Twenty20 innings this season was a 15-ball 26 against South Australia on January 8, needed only 54 deliveries to post his maiden Twenty20 hundred, and it proved far too much for NSW. Hodge hoped the innings would increase his chances of returning to the Australian one-day team.”It is a very hard side to get into, whether it be the Test or one-day side,” he said. “I have just got to try and score runs and if they [selectors] are up there seeing me striking the ball cleanly, it can’t do any harm.”Hodge added 60 for the second wicket with Michael Klinger and 91 for the third with David Hussey as he battered the NSW attack. While Hodge punished the opposition with 18 boundaries, White was brutal in his final-overs assault, clubbing six sixes in his 46 from 16 balls. Aaron Bird, with 3 for 39 from his four overs, was the most successful NSW bowler, while Moises Henriques had figures of 2 for 38.NSW were given a positive start from Craig Simmons and Jarrad Burke, who added 64 before Simmons was bowled by Shane Harwood for 39. NSW then lost the plot as the remaining nine wickets collapsed for 76. Victoria’s bowlers were impressive in their ability to apply the pressure, with Peter Siddle (2 for 43) and Harwood (2 for 18) serving decisive blows before White ran through the tail with 3 for 8.The tournament was such a success that James Sutherland, the Cricket Australia chief executive, said it would be expanded next season, although he confirmed the current reluctance to introduce more matches involving Australia. “We don’t want to expose it at the international level and our plan is to play one international match a season and expand this [domestic] competition,” he said. “Each state has only hosted one home match apart from the final and we will look at doubling that next year.”

Warne turns on New Zealand's pitches

Shane Warne has appealed for a venue change after too many wickets fell at Hamilton© Getty Images

Shane Warne believes Australia’s one-day match against New Zealand at Hamilton in March should be moved after he played on the “terrible” pitch there for the FICA World XI yesterday. Warne, who captained the guest side as they were dismissed for 81, said New Zealand’s pitches in general were not up to the required limited-overs standard.”You couldn’t play a one-day international out there,” he said after his side’s four-wicket loss to New Zealand. “I think the authorities are probably going to have to look and see if the [Australia] game can be moved already.” Warne also criticised the surface at Christchurch, and said the series against Australia would be “hard work” for New Zealand on pitches providing too much assistance for the bowlers.Martin Snedden, the New Zealand Cricket chief executive, admitted that the Hamilton pitch was “not ideal”, but did not confirm if the venue’s international status was in jeopardy. “I don’t think the players were in danger,” Snedden said. “Until you talk to the people involved in the game … you can have thoughts, but I’d like to test them a bit on their thinking.”

Batsman head-butts fielder

A club match in Christchurch, New Zealand, turned ugly last Saturday when one player allegedly head-butted another before being punched himself.According to the Australian Associated Press (AAP), the incident occurred in the match between the Old Boys and Sydenham cricket clubs. An Old Boys batsman was dismissed, and was sledged by a member of the opposition as he walked off. The batsman reportedly then took matters into his own hands and head-butted the fielder. During the scuffle another Old Boys player ran onto the field and hit the Sydenham fieldsman from behind.Old Boys officials were unavailable for comment, but Sydenham’s vice-president Glenn Hooper thought the incident was appalling. He said, "This sort of thing has no place in what’s supposedly called the gentleman’s game." He added: "We are in the process of setting up a disciplinary hearing for the people involved from our side, and I would expect the Old Boys club to be doing the same."The Canterbury Cricket Association will conduct their own investigation into the incident, and may well ban the players involved. In England, the Surrey Championship recently imposed a three-year ban on the Hampshire offspinner Shaun Udal after he was found guilty of "physical violence on and threats to an opposition player" during a club game.

Zimbabwe in India: this is orange county

India plays host to the visiting Zimbabweans and the capital of the citrus fruit is the first venue for the Test match. For reasons beyond one’s comprehension the BCCI have allotted the same venues for the Tests as the previous year when the Zimbabweans visited India. So once again Nagpur, the Orange city, and New Delhi will witness the two teams as they fight it out on the 22-yard pitch.As the month of the Pisceans begins, Zimbabwe will be looking to swim out of the still waters that they are in at the present moment. After an educative tour of Sri Lanka, they would have sharpened their skills. Whether theory can be put into practice – time will tell.The Indians are fresh from a relatively satisfactory home series with the English. There will always be room for improvement. There are youngsters in the team who need to be nurtured, who need to be told that the art of performing on the international stage requires a resolute mind. There has to be constant interaction with the senior, more settled, players and the results will show automatically.Zimbabwe have their share of insecurities. A crucial election is just around the corner for them. The result of the national election could decide the fate of many of the national cricketers. Therefore to be playing a series away from home for them must be unsettling. But the fact of the matter is that the show goes on and cricket has no season any more. The games must be played and the series will go on, and matters of the mind must not matter.The Vidarbha Cricket Association pitch will be the stage for the next five days. Batsman will try to get the better of the bowlers and vice versa. Will the Sachins and the Souravs got on a run blitz? Or will the Flower brothers bloom and the Streaks strike the Indian batting? Questions that will be answered over the next few days.Andy Flower and Sachin Tendulkar have feasted on runs in Nagpur as both have scored double hundreds at this ground. Expectations run high, and so will the runs that will flow from the willow. So what if the oranges are not feasted on instead?

Amit Pagnis holds Railways innings together

The first day of the Ranji Trophy Central Zone League match beingplayed at KL Saini Stadium, Jaipur on Wednesday, saw Railways finishat 208/5 in 90 overs. Amit Pagnis steered Railways out of trouble witha steady innings of 86 studded with 11 fours. South paw Amit Pagnisadded 74 for the first wicket with S Bangar (24) in 24.6 overs. He wasalso associated in a 60 runs partnership for the third wicket in 32.4overs with Yere Goud who made 37. At the close of play PS Rawat with13 and S Sahu with 5 were at the crease. For Rajasthan, Sanjeev Sharmawas the best with the ball with figures of 25-11-41-2

West Ham dealt major blow before Sevilla

West Ham United manager David Moyes has been dealt a blow ahead of tonight’s crunch clash with Sevilla in the first leg of their Europa League last 16 tie.

The Lowdown: West Ham without key men…

The Hammers have had to cope without some influential figures in recent weeks/months as Moyes seeks to maintain his side’s push for Champions League qualification.

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West Ham are still in contention for a top-four place in the Premier League and take on La Liga giants Sevilla tonight as they also eye a run in Europe.

As the Irons fight on two major fronts, players who have proven integral over this last year have been absent recently, including defenders Angelo Ogbonna and Vladimir Coufal.

Both men are sidelined and unavailable tonight with there being plenty of fears in this last week surrounding another star player in Jarrod Bowen.

The Englishman was forced off in West Ham’s 1-0 defeat to Liverpool on Saturday, and despite the club confirming his knock isn’t a serious one, it appears Moyes will also be without his star player for Sevilla alongside the likes Coufal and Ogbonna.

The Latest: Bowen blow…

Speaking to the press, via football.london, West Ham’s manager confirmed Bowen won’t be playing at the Ramon Sanchez-Pizjuan Stadium this evening.

“It [missing Bowen] will limit us as Jarrod has an X factor,” he said when asked about the winger.

“He has been in good form the last two to three months, it will not change us a great deal but we are missing an important player.

“We hope Jarrod can make it for the second leg. He has had three or four scans and there is noting severe but we are hoping to find the cause and to get him back as he is important.”

The Verdict: Huge miss…

Bowen is undoubtedly a contender for West Ham’s player of the season so missing him for tonight is a major blow.

As consistently reiterated by Moyes, Bowen has been ‘really important’ for the club this season, as evident by his WhoScored statistics in the Premier League.

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Not only is the 25-year-old West Ham’s top provider of goals and assists combined (8G, 8A), he’s also averaged the highest overall match rating out of their entire squad (7.23) and an even better number than big name star Declan Rice (7.17).

Completing more dribbles per 90 (1.6) than any man in Moyes’ squad, Bowen is consistently the Hammers’ most potent threat and his absence could well be detrimental.

Labelled ‘incredible player’ by Noel Whelan, West Ham will sorely miss him tonight.

In other news: Chief sports writer says West Ham have opened talks to sign ‘out of the ordinary’ £22.5m-rated star, find out more here.

Baffling omission of Simmons and Pollard

“Lendl Simmons had limited success in spasmodic appearances that did not allow him to establish himself.” © Getty Images

The West Indies selectors have always been a contrary lot. The present generation has maintained the reputation with some confusing choices among the 23 called to the High Performance Centre at Cave Hill to prepare for the imminent tours of Zimbabwe (for five ODIs) and South Africa (three Tests, five ODIs, two Twenty20s).The most baffling are the omission from the group of Lendl Simmons and Keiron Pollard, the two young Trinidadians who had been seemingly identified as among those for the future but have quickly been shunted aside.Over the past year, Simmons, the slim, 22-year-old opener, was in the ODI teams in Pakistan, the World Cup and England. Pollard, 19, was picked for the World Cup on the evidence of his spectacular power-hitting in both Carib Beer Series and KFC Cup in his debut season.Simmons had limited success in spasmodic appearances that did not allow him to establish himself. Pollard has not been called again since his solitary opportunity against South Africa in the World Cup, a decisive contest in which he achieved nothing.Both did no less than most in the recent KFC Cup and Simmons’ ability as a back-up wicket-keeper and Pollard’s stiff medium-pace might have added to their credentials.While they are excluded, all of the “incumbents”, as Andy Roberts calls them, are retained, even the several with little to recommend them. It is a sad reflection on the present state of West Indies cricket.

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