Predicted Leeds XI, team news v Chelsea

Leeds United return to Elland Road for the third outing of the new Premier League season this afternoon as they host Chelsea.

Both teams remain unbeaten on four points after their opening two matches, so we’re in for a good encounter in west Yorkshire and manager Jesse Marsch has plenty to think about with Patrick Bamford the big story heading into kickoff.

Just like last season, the England international is set for a stint on the sidelines after he picked up an injury during last weekend’s 2-2 draw with Southampton, where the Whites threw away a two-goal lead.

With that in mind, here’s the XI we’re predicting today…

There could be just the one change for Marsch as he looks to cope in the absence of Bamford.

In goal, usual no.1 shot-stopper Illan Meslier is set to keep his place as are the back four in front of him, meaning Pascal Struijk continues at left-back with Junior Firpo also on the treatment table.

Robin Koch and Diego Llorente continue as the central defensive pair, with summer signing Rasmus Kristensen on the right.

Fellow arrivals Marc Roca and Tyler Adams have emerged as Marsch’s first-choice duo in the engine room, so they should remain, though it could be a position change for Brenden Aaronson as he moves into the central no.10 role.

That would push top goalscorer Rodrigo (three) further forward in a bid to cope without Bamford, whether that be as an actual striker or a false nine remains to be seen just yet.

Out wide, Jack Harrison could switch to the right flank, something the £15k-per-week “sensation” has done numerous times throughout his career and that opens up a spot on the left for Luis Sinisterra to make his full debut following his £21m arrival from Feyenoord this summer.

It means the likes of Joe Gelhardt and Daniel James will have to settle for a place on the bench.

AND in other news, Orta could seal “real coup” in Leeds swoop for 30-goal monster, he’s shades of Sadio Mane…

West Ham: Irons eye James Rodriguez move

West Ham United are now eyeing a move for Colombia international and big name player James Rodriguez, according to reports.

The Lowdown: Hammers keep busy…

The Hammers and manager David Moyes have been busy in this summer transfer market as the club set sights on an emergency centre-back signing and the possible addition of a new midfielder.

Having missed out on a place in the Premier League top six last season, West Ham appear determined not to miss out on Europa League/Champions League qualification again.

Nayef Aguerd, Flynn Downes, Alphonse Areola, Gianluca Scamacca and Maxwel Cornet have arrived at Rush Green as news now emerges on a head-turning new target.

The Latest: West Ham eye Rodriguez move…

Indeed, according to reports out of Spain, the east Londoners are now targeting former Everton playmaker Rodriguez amid his uncertain future at Al Rayyan in the Qatar League.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/west-ham-latest-news-4/” title=”West Ham latest news!” poster=”” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

Marca claim West Ham, Galatasary and a ‘couple of teams in Greece’ have expressed an interest in the 31-year-old this summer.

The Verdict: Avoid…

Rodriguez’s quality has been evident in the past with footballing legend David Beckham even once tipping him to ‘become one of the world’s best players’ after a ‘spectacular’ game at the 2014 World Cup against Brazil (via Daily Express).

And he backed that form up at Real Madrid, contributing to 78 goals in 124 games,  winning two Champions League and two La Liga titles.

However, his unceremonious exit from the Toffees last summer could indicate an attitude problem which Moyes will be unlikely to try and tame at the London Stadium.

The Scotsman carefully vets transfer targets to pass his personality test and we believe Rodriguez could be a case West Ham will want to avoid.

Leeds target Megrim Berisha ‘up for sale’

Leeds United target and Fenerbahce striker Mergim Berisha is available for a transfer this summer, according to Turkish journalist Kaan Bayazit. 

The lowdown: Bid made

Recently, Omer Celikbasli claimed that the Whites had submitted an offer of €2million (£1.7million) for Berisha as Victor Orta attempts to bolster the attacking options at Jesse Marsch’s disposal.

The 24-year-old former Germany youth international previously played under the Leeds boss during their distinguished time together at Austrian Bundesliga side Red Bull Salzburg and it appears that the American is keen to reunite with the frontman in Yorkshire.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/latest-leeds-united-news-47/” title=”Latest Leeds United news!” poster=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/cropped-2022-03-10T184055Z_1834933207_UP1EI3A1FW561_RTRMADP_3_SOCCER-ENGLAND-LEE-AVA-REPORT-1-scaled-1.jpg” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

Now, a fresh update has emerged suggesting that whilst Berisha could be an attainable target, it will take more than the current bid in order to make the deal happen…

The latest: ‘Up for sale’

Talking to MOT Leeds News, Bayazit – a journalist for WSD Net and Number Web – has claimed that the 13 times capped Under 21 star will cost ‘north of £5million’.

He revealed: “He’s been a bit of a disappointment at Fenerbahce but they paid close to £4.5million for him so they’d like a bit more than that which would take this north of £5million.

“He is up for sale and I imagine if Marsch worked with him before then it’s down to that. He did do decently at RB Salzburg. At RB Salzburg he often played as a second striker, at Fenerbahçe he was expected to function alone up top more, but that didn’t really work out.”

The verdict: Pay up

Whilst an apparent inability to lead the line singlehandedly should come as a concern to Marsch and Leeds moreover given the American’s preferred 4-2-3-1/4-2-2-2 formation, this is a potential deal that retains plenty of positives, particularly after another reported striker target, Arnaud Kalimuendo, opted to remain at Paris Saint-Germain.

Holding a perceived market value of £5.4million and under contract in Turkey until 2025 (Transfermarkt), paying anything close to that would have to be regarded as a shrewd piece of business from the Elland Road hierarchy.

Last season, Berisha – who was described as a ‘clinical finisher’ by Football Chatters on Twitter – scored seven times and provided three assists in 33 appearances across all competitions, a major drop-off from the 33 direct goal involvements achieved in 2020/21 and 16 a year earlier.

However, despite the obvious decline in output and the heeded warning from Bayazit, the German’s pre-established relationship with Marsch, ability to play across the frontline and in deeper positions, as well as now having gained additional experience outside of Austria, could prove invaluable and therefore this should be a no-brainer for Andrea Radrizanni to sanction the extra funds.

West Ham target Lingard signs for Forest

West Ham United have long been linked with re-signing Jesse Lingard after his exit from Manchester United but the Englishman finally chose his new club on Thursday, signing for Premier League returnees Nottingham Forest.

What’s the word?

The Hammers were among the frontrunners to sign the 29-year-old after his Old Trafford exit but couldn’t agree on a new contract, and he has now signed for Steve Cooper’s side on an eye-watering deal.

According to Sky Sports journalist Dharmesh Sheth, West Ham did make a bid to sign the midfielder but weren’t willing to match Forest’s offer.

He tweeted: “I’m told West Ham United made what they felt was a fair & competitive offer for Jesse Lingard – but weren’t prepared to get involved in a bidding war with other clubs & are focusing on other targets.”

Supporters will be buzzing

While Lingard became a fan favourite during his loan spell at the London Stadium, this transfer saga has dragged on for far too long, and many Irons supporters may well be glad to see the back of it. Indeed, some fans have already grown weary of his preference for bigger wages at the City Ground.

The former England international contributed nine goals and five assists in just 16 appearances for the east London club on loan in 2020/21 but then opted to sit on the bench at Manchester United over a return to the Hammers last season.

Reports have suggested that Lingard could earn as much as £150,000 per week during his time at Forest, which again arguably suggests that he has prioritised money over football.

Sheth’s suggestion that West Ham will now focus on other targets will also surely delight Hammers fans, as they will be desperate to see deals for the likes of Armando Broja and Gianluca Scamacca prioritised now.

Considering that David Moyes already has a lot of depth in the attacking midfield and wide areas, Lingard arguably wasn’t needed and his wage could definitely be better spent elsewhere, with a new striker surely the main focus ahead of the new season.

It is disappointing that the 29-year-old hasn’t chosen West Ham, but considering his huge wages and his tally of just two goals and one assist for United last season, Irons supporters may well be delighted that this transfer saga is finally over.

AND in other news – “It’s true…”: West Ham target drops huge transfer hint, supporters will be buzzing

Crystal Palace: Journalist makes big Cheick Doucoure claim

Imminent Crystal Palace arrival Cheick Doucoure has got ‘a bit of everything’, Sky Sports journalist Michael Bridge has told GiveMeSport.

The lowdown

The Lens midfielder is poised to become the Eagles’ third signing after the summer, following goalkeeper Sam Johnstone and winger Malcolm Ebiowei through the door at Selhurst Park.

Journalist Charlie Parker-Turner tweeted on Friday evening that the 22-year-old is merely awaiting a work permit before finalising his move to south London.

The transfer, which will be worth £18m, should be announced next week.

The latest

Bridge has said that Palace could still move for another midfielder, but told the club’s supporters to be ‘very excited’ about the signing of a complete option in Doucoure.

He told GiveMeSport: “They’re replacing Cheickhou Kouyate and Conor Gallagher with one player. And that’s not to say they’re only going to just bring him in, they’ll probably want to bring in another midfielder.

“But I’m hearing this guy is a bit of everything, and he’s good at everything, and he’s a nightmare to play against. So, Palace fans should be very excited.”

The verdict

Do the statistics support Bridge’s claims? To a large degree, yes.

Doucoure ranks quite highly for a wide variety of midfield metrics. He is in the top 30% in all of the following categories among positional peers in Europe’s top five leagues (as per FBRef): assists, passes attempted, pass completion, progressive passes, progressive carries, tackles and interceptions.

He does indeed look like a ‘nightmare’ for the opposition. For instance, he left Nice and their manager Christophe Galtier ‘totally overwhelmed’, in the words of one journalist, by ‘destroying everyone who got in front of him’ in a Ligue 1 game in April.

Therefore, you’d imagine that many Palace fans are eagerly awaiting the announcement of Doucoure’s seemingly imminent signing.

Leeds: Orta plotting Arteaga bid

Leeds United are interested in a deal to bring Gerardo Arteaga to Elland Road this summer.

What’s the talk?

That’s according to a report by Spanish publication MARCA (via Sport Witness), who claim that Victor Orta is now keeping a very close eye on the situation of the KRC Genk left-back ahead of a potential move in the coming weeks.

However, the Whites are not the only player linked with a move for the 23-year-old, with fellow Premier League sides Brighton & Hove Albion and Fulham also said to be keen on the Mexico international, while the likes of Salernitana, Real Betis, Villarreal, Celta Vigo and Getafe are thought to be interested in bringing the defender to Spain ahead of 2022/23.

Marc Cucurella 2.0

Considering the sheer amount of talent Arteaga quite clearly possesses, in addition to the fact that left-back was something of a problem position for Jesse Marsch last season, the news that Orta is now keen on a deal to bring the Mexican to Elland Road this summer is sure to be news the Leeds faithful will love to hear.

Indeed, over his 25 Jupiler Pro League appearances for Genk in the season before last, the £3.6m-rated defender highly impressed, scoring one goal, registering five assists and creating one big chance for his teammates, in addition to making an average of 0.6 key passes, taking 0.4 shots and completing 0.6 dribbles per game.

[snack-amp-story url= “https://www.footballfancast.com/web-stories/read-the-latest-leeds-united-news-transfer-rumours-gossip-and-much-more-2″ title=”Read the latest Leeds news, transfer rumours and more!”]

The 14-cap international also impressed in metrics more typical of his position, helping his side keep six clean sheets, as well as making an average of 1.6 tackles, 1.2 interceptions, 1.3 clearances and winning 3.4 duels per game.

The £7.2k-per-week full-back once again returned decent numbers over his 32 league outings in 2021/22, providing four assists, creating two big chances and helping his side keep six clean sheets, as well as making an average of 0.9 key passes, 1.2 tackles, 1.3 interceptions, 36.8 passes and winning 4.1 duels per game.

As such, it is easy to see why Brighton are thought to view Arteaga as a successor to Marc Cucurella – the Spaniard who is reportedly a £50m target of Manchester City after highly impressing last season – on the left of their backline, as the 23-year-old very much looks to be an incredibly exciting young prospect.

Indeed, should Orta manage to get a deal over the line for the 23-assist machine this summer, he could well have unearthed Leeds’ very own Cucurella – something that is sure to be an extremely exciting prospect for the Elland Road faithful and Marsch alike.

AND in other news: “We can say that..”: Italian journo drops big Leeds transfer update, Orta surely livid

Liverpool: Hutson drops Jones exit claim

Newly-promoted Nottingham Forest are interested in signing Liverpool midfielder Curtis Jones this summer, according to Midlands-based journalist Trent Hutson. 

The lowdown: Liverpool prodigy

A product of the thriving youth system at Anfield, the youngster captained the club at numerous age groups whilst making his way through the ranks on Merseyside.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the Toxteth native was fast-tracked to the first team and capped off a Merseyside derby debut to remember with a majestic strike in January 2020 whilst on a rapidly upwards trajectory, amassing 41 goals in 80 outings for the young Reds at under-18 and under-23 level.

After 73 appearances for the first-team under Jurgen Klopp, a move away could now be the next step in the 21-year-old’s development…

The latest: Forest keen on Jones

Taking to Twitter, Hutson has claimed that Forest are looking to land the England under-21 starlet on loan this summer.

The reporter stated: “I’m told #NFFC will explore the possibility of bringing Curtis Jones to the club this summer. Caution to be taken given the MAX TWO loan rule in the Premier League. Strong relationship & trust between Steve Cooper and #LFC. Cooper previously worked with Jones at England and #LFC”

The verdict: On one condition

Spending time out on loan and obtaining regular Premier League action would undoubtedly be a huge positive for Jones’ development. However, Liverpool – and Klopp in particular – must ensure that the squad allows for such a departure to take place without having an adverse impact on the playing ranks at the AXA Training Centre.

Last season, the flamboyant ace scored once and provided four assists in 27 appearances across all competitions for the Reds, starting 11 top-flight matches in the process. Those levels of involvement are unlikely to be found from other midfielders within the current squad, as Thiago, James Milner, Fabinho, Naby Keita and Jordan Henderson are already stretched to their very limits of exertion.

Far from an affront to the prospects of the youngster, who is valued at £25.2m and under contract until 2025 (Transfermarkt), the Scouser should remain an integral part of the future on the red half of Merseyside; and any loan move which may manifest itself this summer would very much be viewed as a short-term way of progressing a supremely talented individual.

Held in high regard by Steven Gerrard himself after the Anfield icon hailed Jones as a ‘top player’ during his time in charge of the under-18s, Liverpool should be reticent to sanction any exit for the talented youngster until another genuine first-team midfield option is through the door.

In other news: Liverpool now considering big-money move for ‘world class’ powerhouse, read more here

Forest linked with Gibbs-White transfer

Nottingham Forest are reportedly looking to make a bid to sign Wolves midfielder Morgan Gibbs-White ahead of the upcoming summer transfer window.

What’s the news?

According to a recent report from journalist Alan Nixon in The Sun, Bruno Lage will try and convince the player to sign a new deal at Molineux this summer as Forest and Southampton are “poised with offers should negotiations not go to plan.”

As a product of Wolves’ youth system, the 22-year-old has gone on to make 103 appearances across their U23 and senior sides, scoring five goals and delivering six assists in the process.

The Englishman recently completed his second loan spell away from the Midlands club, this time with Sheffield United after he had a short period with Swansea City between August 2020 and January 2021.

Great news for Cooper

During his time with the Blades, the youngster found the net 12 times and supplied ten assists in 37 appearances, which is why his parent club are keen to secure his long-term future at Molineux and why the likes of Forest and Southampton are reportedly willing to splash the cash to sign him.

To further highlight how deadly he was for the Yorkshire club this season and why he’d be a good signing, Gibbs-White racked up more shots at goal (86) and more shots on target (33) than any other United player.

He also ended the campaign with the joint-highest average of key passes per game in the squad and the highest overall performance rating (7.14/10) according to WhoScored.

This shows the attacking capabilities he has and how he could be a big asset for Forest as they prepare to take on their upcoming campaign as a Premier League team.

Should Wolves fail in their attempt to get the youth talent to sign a new deal with them, it would be great news for Steve Cooper to see his side bring in a young player like Gibbs-White that has proven what he can do in the Championship and has some experience of playing in the top flight.

This situation is certainly one that Forest should be keeping a close eye on and potentially make a bid should an opportunity to do so present itself.

In other news: Huge boost: Exciting NFFC transfer update emerges that’ll leave supporters buzzing

Mumbai's crisis man Mulani won't 'obsess over what you don't have'

“You can’t let it chew you up’ – Shams Mulani has done it for Mumbai year after year and will continue to, whether or not higher honours come his way

Shashank Kishore22-Nov-2025There’s a growing perception in Indian cricket that Ranji Trophy success alone isn’t enough to break into the Test team. IPL performances are seen as proof of temperament under pressure. But what does a player do when the IPL call doesn’t come?Ask Shams Mulani, who has neither been an IPL regular nor made the India A cut, seemingly due to intense competition, with all of Harsh Dubey, Manav Suthar and R Sai Kishore performing exceedingly well.Mulani’s record, though, is mighty impressive. Since 2022, no bowler in the country has taken more Ranji Trophy wickets than him: 198 at 21.92, with 16 five-fors and three ten-fors. The next best, Dharmendrasinh Jadeja, has 157.In this period, Mulani has also been a regular performer in white-ball cricket – most notably in a key role in Mumbai’s maiden Syed Mushtaq Ali (T20) Trophy triumph in 2022-23, where he picked up 16 wickets in ten matches. Yet, despite this unmatched consistency, the IPL door has never really opened for Mulani, who has played all of two matches for Mumbai Indians.Related

  • Auqib Nabi, Prithvi Shaw light up the Ranji Trophy

“You’re providing a service, bringing a skillset, and if there’s no demand, you just keep plugging away,” Mulani tells ESPNcricinfo. “The IPL is a great stage, but if you’re not playing there, you can’t let it chew you up. It’s easy to obsess over what you don’t have. I prefer to take pride in being a Mumbai cricketer, where nothing comes easy and you learn to enjoy the struggle.”It’s this mindset Mulani will carry into the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy next week, joining hundreds of hopefuls vying for visibility ahead of the auction.

****

Mulani wasn’t supposed to get this far. He barely made age-group sides and spent nearly two seasons on the fringes before debuting for Mumbai in all three formats in 2018. “When you don’t expect something and it happens, the happiness is different,” he says. “But playing for Mumbai comes with pressure. That pressure drives me.”Along the way, he has also learned to live with the noise and the scrutiny that invariably follows. “One bad game, even one bad session, and people are talking about you by evening. I’ve heard people say, ‘he’s done’ or ‘he doesn’t have it anymore’ [like in the knockouts phase of 2024-25 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy when he was dropped]. I try to stay calm and stick to my routine. Five-for or failure, nothing changes that.”That routine includes never skipping training. “Big players come with a purpose. They do things like clockwork. I’ve adopted that mindset. First optional session or second, I’m there. I hate missing it even if it’s optional.”Mulani has come through the first leg of the 2025-26 Ranji season with the same relentless sense of purpose. After five games, he is third on the wicket-takers’ list and central to Mumbai’s rise to the top of Elite Group C.

“As I look ahead, winning matches for Mumbai is what I train for. Anything else – any other team, any other setting – will just be a by-product”Shams Mulani

He revels in being Mumbai’s crisis man, and the season opener in Srinagar offered a reminder. After Mumbai’s top order was blown away by Auqib Nabi – 70 for 5 – in the second innings, Mulani’s gritty 41 dragged them to 181 and set Jammu & Kashmir a target of 243. He then produced a career-best 7 for 46 to secure a tense 35-run win, just when a second straight loss to J&K loomed. Amid the euphoria of that dramatic win, his first-innings 91, which set up the game, almost seemed like a footnote.”The main thing for me is getting a feel of the game,” he says. “Once I get that, I start visualising wickets. In Srinagar, the pitch was helping fast bowlers, so I didn’t get much in the first innings. But on the evening of day three, I told my room-mate Akash Anand, ‘I feel like tomorrow I’m going to change the game’. He wasn’t convinced. But I just had that feeling.”Two weeks ago in the fourth round, against Himachal Pradesh, he rescued Mumbai from 73 for 4 with a vital 69 and returned on the final day to take five wickets and finish the job. This ability to wheel away tirelessly is the result of years of work. “I played Ranji for years as a very different bowler,” he explains. “My mentality was simple: don’t give runs, control the game.”

****

Everything changed when he began working with Amol Muzumdar in mid-2021 when Muzumdar was appointed Mumbai coach. “He really challenged me. He said containment alone wouldn’t take me to the next level. We debated a lot. He had his ideas, I had mine, and we found a middle ground. That shift helped massively.”Mulani ended the 2021-22 season with 45 wickets in six matches as Mumbai reached the final. “My mindset changed, and that happened because Amol backed me completely. Even now, Omkar Salvi [head coach] and Dhawal Kulkarni [bowling coach] keep pushing me.”And what changed technically?”I’ve always bowled left-arm around the wicket, running in straight. But most left-armers cut across the crease or go more side-on for angles,” Mulani says. “Before the season, Amol wanted me to try that. I was sceptical. I’d bowled the same way for years. But he told me, ‘don’t worry, I back you’.”They had an agreement: start spells with the new angle, return to his natural method later if it didn’t work.Shams Mulani is someone Mumbai trust to bail them out of tricky situations, even with the bat•PTI “It took a month to convince me. But once it settled, it felt really good. The ball came out faster, with more nip and bite. Being slightly more side-on helps create the angle and makes the ball carry off the pitch. The balance – not fully side-on, not fully straight – has made a big difference.”Another big shift has been fitness.”That’s played a huge role,” he says. “I’ve trained for five years with Vishal Chitarkar. He knows my body inside out. How fatigue affects me, how I should recover. We worked a lot on endurance, especially on the muscles that tire late in the day.”But training only takes you so far. In 95% humidity, in blazing heat, it’s willpower. You can give up and say you’re tired, but then you remind yourself the team needs you. Last year in the [Ranji Trophy] semi-final, I bowled 44 overs in the second innings. After 25, it was pure willpower. That ability to keep going has developed over time.”Over these years, Mulani has also fought to change perceptions. Early on, he was boxed in as a white-ball bowler. Now, his red-ball success has seen him being typecast at the other extreme. The younger Mulani might have been bothered; the 28-year-old version is not.”As I look ahead, winning matches for Mumbai is what I train for,” he says. “Anything else – any other team, any other setting – will just be a by-product.”If bigger doors open, Mulani will walk in. If they don’t, he’ll keep knocking on them the way he knows: one grinding spell, one hard run, one Mumbai win at a time.

Why batting first has almost always made sense in crunch games in long-form cricket

Fielding on winning the toss, as captains did repeatedly at the end of the Sheffield Shield recently, almost never makes for a good strategy

Ian Chappell07-Apr-2024It’s becoming a trend – certainly in Australia – for the captain winning the toss to send the opposition in to bat.It happened on every occasion in the last seven Sheffield Shield matches of the season, including the final. Then, in a rather worrying imitation, it occurred all six times in the Sydney first grade finals. As talented English actress Emma Thompson shrewdly observed in a recent movie, “There are a lot of sheep out there dressed in human clothing.”The idea of regularly winning the toss and inserting the opposition in important matches often lacks common sense and makes one wonder whose decision it is. Is it the captain alone deciding to bowl first or is he being ill-advised by the backroom hierarchy? Or is it a trend that has developed from T20 cricket, where it’s helpful to know the target?Related

Faf du Plessis suggests doing away with the toss in Test cricket (2019)

Why replacing the toss with an auction is the fair thing to do (2021)

Win toss, bat first. Or not. Why the old adage hasn't worked in India this time

Is batting first such an advantage in Tests? (2013)

Win toss, bat first? Not necessarily, say Australia

The decision was exceedingly confusing in the case of the Sydney first-grade finals, where the team that finishes higher on the minor-round table advanced if there was no result in the match. On most occasions this meant the team that advanced in the case of a no-result batted well into the second day to ensure the opposition was shut out of the game.Surely if a lower-placed team bats first on winning the toss and plays well, they can at least determine when to declare. After all, they are the team who to take all ten wickets to win and advance. It’s better to be in a position to declare your first innings to try and win, rather than the match eventually being abandoned because the advantaged team bats well into the second day.Fielding first after winning the toss also suggests a lack of faith in the openers. It should be an accepted fact in cricket that openers are selected because they have the qualities to see you through a tough new-ball period.The definition of insanity is when the same decision is repeatedly taken but a different result is expected each time. That means many captains in Australian cricket have attained the required criteria.Scoreboard pressure, where wickets can be taken because a satisfactory first-innings total has been posted, is a reality.

When South Australia captain David Hookes sent the opposition in on a renowned good batting pitch at Adelaide Oval once, Darren Lehmann grabbed Hookes by the collar and screamed, “I drove to the ground today fresh and prepared to bat”

There are exceptions to every rule but especially in a knockout match it is usually best to post a decent total in the hope of winning the game. Short versions of the game like T20 are an altogether different proposition.A good example of batting first comes from the career of Darren Lehmann, before he went on to represent Australia. When South Australia captain David Hookes sent the opposition in on a renowned good batting pitch at Adelaide Oval once, Lehmann grabbed the skipper by the collar and screamed, “I drove to the ground today fresh and prepared to bat.”The operative word in Lehmann’s sensible lament was “fresh”. Why would you want to field while you are fresh and then bat when weary after having spent hours in the field chasing leather?The old quote by Vic Richardson, my grandfather, is often invoked: “If you win the toss, then nine times you bat first, and on the tenth occasion you ponder the decision but still bat.” It’s worth remembering that grandfather Richardson was a former Australia captain who led in an era of uncovered pitches.It doesn’t make sense in that case to not bat first if you win the toss in dry conditions.However, in the case of covered pitches too, there is still plenty to recommend batting first. In that case a team bats while the players are fresh and can claim a substantial advantage if they post a decent total. Then if they bowl well, that advantage is enhanced.Whatever decision is taken at the toss, you need to play well but there are many reasons why batting first is best. After all, there is only one decision a captain who wins the toss has to make: how do we best go about winning the game?

Game
Register
Service
Bonus