نبيل معلول: مباراة الزمالك أصبحت صعبة على الترجي.. والفوز يضمن لنا التأهل

أكد نبيل معلول المدير الفني لنادي الترجي التونسي، أن مواجهة الزمالك بدوري أبطال إفريقيا، ستكون صعبة بسبب توقيتها الحالي.

الزمالك يحل ضيفاً على الترجي، يوم السبت المقبل الموافق 25 فبراير، في إطار منافسات الجولة الثالثة من عمر مواجهات المجموعة الرابعة.

وقال معلول خلال تصريحات لبرنامج “ملعب أون تايم” المذاع على قناة “أون تايم سبورت”: “مباراة الزمالك أصبحت صعبة، وذلك بسبب توقيتها وليس فنيًا في الملعب”.

وأضاف: “توقيت المباراة بالنسبة للزمالك بعد الخسارة على أرضه وتعادله مع المريخ أصبحت الأمور صعبة عليه، ومباريات الترجي والزمالك لا تقبل القسمة على اثنين”.

طالع | الزمالك يضع خطة لتجهيز لاعبه المصاب قبل مواجهة الترجي

وأكمل: “في حالة فوز الترجي على الزمالك بنسبة 90% سيتأهل، والخسارة ممنوعة للزمالك لأنها ستقلل فرص تأهله للدور المُقبل”.

ويتصدر الترجي التونسي ترتيب المجموعة الرابعة بدوري الأبطال برصيد 6 نقاط من فوزين متتالين على المريخ السوداني وشباب بلوزداد الجزائري.

بينما يأتي الزمالك في المركز الرابع والأخير برصيد نقطة واحدة، ويتواجد في المركز الثاني شباب بلوزداد بثلاث نقاط، وفي المركز الثالث المريخ بنقطة واحدة.

Hogg spins Scorchers to clinical win

A sprightly Brad Hogg incited panic among the Adelaide Strikers to deliver the Perth Scorchers a 42-run victory at the WACA

The Report by Daniel Brettig08-Jan-2012
ScorecardThe Strikers succumbed to Brad Hogg, who took 3 for 20•Getty ImagesA sprightly Brad Hogg incited panic among the Adelaide Strikers with a consummate spell of left-arm wrist spin to deliver the Perth Scorchers a 42-run victory at the WACA. The Strikers were motoring in pursuit of the hosts’ 5 for 184 until Hogg flummoxed Michael Klinger in his first over, and followed up by dismissing the visiting captain and Tom Cooper in his second.Michael Beer chimed in with the wicket of Callum Ferguson, and by the end of the night Hogg had scooped 3 for 20 from his four overs while also knocking Aaron O’Brien’s drive onto the stumps to run-out Cameron Borgas. Ferguson and Klinger were both stumped adeptly by Luke Ronchi, another key contributor to the Scorchers’ defence.Herschelle Gibbs and Marcus North had made attractive runs to lift Perth to their total, despite the parsimony of O’Brien and two wickets from the young spinner James Muirhead, who has a promising leg break but needs to polish his fielding.Daniel Harris and Klinger had begun the Strikers’ chase in a most intelligent and productive fashion, picking off boundaries with neatly lofted strokes, though never resorting to anything too wild. One Klinger straight drive from Nathan Rimmington was as clean as anything struck in the tournament so far, while Harris earned six when his drive off Nathan Coulter-Nile landed on the rope at wide long off.They had added 48 in less than five overs when Harris played inside a Ben Edmondson delivery that flicked off stump. Adam Crosthwaite followed a charge and drive redolent of Dean Jones with an ill-advised hook and a running catch for Hogg, but Klinger continued to pierce the gaps and keep the run-rate around 10 per over.He was held up for the first time in the innings by Hogg, who began with two perfectly-pitched googlies to beat Klinger’s pressing blade and conceded only four runs from his first over. The pressure told on Ferguson, who stumbled out of his crease when Michael Beer drifted one down the legside and was stumped by a yard.Klinger could not make head or tail of Hogg, and the first ball of his second over slipped past the Strikers captain for Ronchi to complete another fine stumping, this time removing the bails with Klinger’s foot judged to be on the line. Tom Cooper then swung Hogg to deep backward square where Edmondson held the catch on the jog. Hogg’s bowling had turned the innings, and Adelaide would not threaten the target.Gibbs has been providing a decent helping of crisp strokeplay at the top of the order for the Scorchers, and here he pinged three boundaries from Brendan Drew’s first over through midwicket, gully and cover, the third from a free-hit after the bowler had overstepped.Daniel Salpietro’s unassuming offspin was greeted with a Gibbs six first ball, and the South African flayed two further boundaries in the over to lift the hosts to 48 from five overs. Harris’ first over was treated with similar contempt, three full tosses put away, though the third might have been stopped by Muirhead, who was struggling in the outfield and had already dropped North at square leg.As such, Muirhead had some compensating to do with the ball, and he duly found a nicely pitched leg break that landed short of where Gibbs wanted it and drew a skied drive to long-off. North by now was getting into stride, cracking a pair of wonderfully clean sixes from the bowling of Muirhead and Salpietro, but he lost Mitchell Marsh when Drew found some extra bounce outside off stump.Paul Collingwood rattled up 18 runs, all of them from the bowling of Muirhead, before another delivery of useful loop and drop fetched a second wicket from an outfield catch. The final overs were suitably hectic, North’s composed innings ended when he was first dropped at long-on then run-out as Drew recovered to fire in a flat return.The Scorchers are now level with the Hobart Hurricanes at the top of the table, while Adelaide are stalled with three other sides on four points.

Walters sets up Glamorgan for victory

Glamorgan will aim to finish the County Championship campaign ona high by securing only their second win on the road this season afterreducing fellow Division Two strugglers Kent to 148 for 5

Mark Pennell at Canterbury14-Sep-2011
Scorecard
Glamorgan will aim to finish the County Championship campaign ona high by securing only their second win on the road this season afterreducing fellow Division Two strugglers Kent to 148 for 5 in theirexperimental day/night match in Canterbury.Having conceded a first innings lead of 186, Kent lost three wicketsfor 13 runs soon after tea to hand further initiative to Glamorganwho more or less dominated third day proceedings. Batting for a second time against a pink Kookaburra ball by 6.18pm, Kent had made a bright start under lights through teenager Daniel Bell-Drummond.The right-hander from Millfield School drove six boundaries in an eye-catching 29 before dragging a Graham Wagg off-cutter onto his leg stump. Soon after tea, Kent’s first innings top-scorer, Joe Denly (17), charged down the pitch solely in defence to Dean Cosker, only to see the ball grip and turn past the outside edge to gift Mark Wallace a regulation stumping.Nick James then struck in successive overs of left-arm spin, trapping both Alex Blake and Darren Stevens leg before wicket. Blake, on ten, shouldered arms, then Stevens played inside the line of his sixth delivery to go without scoring.Fifth-wicket partners Azhar Mahmood and Sam Northeast, with a 93-ball half-century, added 54 before, three overs from the close, Northeast missed a slog sweep against Cosker to go leg before for 51. Mahmood (31 not out) and night watchman Simon Cook survived to take the game into its last day when Kent will face a mammoth task to avoid their ninth defeat of the campaign.Having resumed on their overnight score of 258 for 4 – a modest advantage of 21 runs – Glamorgan set out their stall to build an imposing lead, albeit painfully slowly, as they added only 73 in the two-hour opening session. Fifth-wicket partners Stewart Walters and Wallace limped to a stand worth 106 in 30 overs with Walters posting a painstaking 193-ball century in four-and-a-half hours.Wallace departed soon after reaching his 66-ball half-century. Playingback in defence to an Azhar Mahmood off-cutter the left-hander playedslightly across the line to fall leg before wicket and make it 301 for5.Wagg marched in purposefully only to last five deliveries. Undone by anAzhar Mahmood yorker in the Pakistan all-rounder’s next over, thedismissal sent Glamorgan in for a 4pm lunch on 331 for 6.Walters’ six-hour stay ended in the 124th over of the innings when amiscued pull shot against left-arm seamer Adam Ball just about carriedto Mahmood stooping at mid-on.Though Walters’ 147 represents his best for Glamorgan and the inningswas near faultless, even he conceded it proved something of a battle ona lifeless pitch and against a pink Tiflex ball that had quickly gonesoft.”This is one of the slowest pitches I’ve ever played onin first-class cricket,” he said. “That was a challenge in itself, but throw thepink ball and floodlights into the equation and it made for a difficulttime.”The ball lost its colour and went soft very quickly, so there’s stilla lot of work to be done there. It offered their bowlers nothing, butthey bowled a lot straighter today, so it was more a case of grindingthem down and working our way to a decent lead.”Aneurin Norman (34) fell in the next over when fencing a Matt Coleslifter to point, then Dean Cosker’s belligerent cameo worth 27 endedwhen off-spinner Adam Riley turned one past a defensive push to clipoff stump.Alviro Petersen, the Glamorgan captain, then shook a modest third daycrowd from their slumbers by declaring late in the mid-session, leavingKent to try and survive the 45 overs remaining in the day.

كاراجر يختار أفضل لاعب في ليفربول بعد الهزيمة الكابوسية أمام برايتون

انتقد النجم السابق لفريق ليفربول، جيمي كاراجر، دفاع النادي الإنجليزي بعد هزيمتهم الكابوسية اليوم أمام برايتون.

واستضاف ملعب “فالمر” مباراة الفريقين في إطار منافسات الجولة العشرين من الدوري الإنجليزي، حيث خسر ليفربول بثلاثة أهداف دون رد.

اقرأ أيضًا.. جماهير ليفربول تتوجه بطلب إلى كلوب بعد أداء محمد صلاح أمام برايتون

ويمتلك ليفربول في الوقت الحالي 28 نقطة في المركز التاسع في جدول الدوري الإنجليزي، بعد خوض 18 مباراة.

من جانبه، كتب كاراجر عبر حسابه الشخصي بموقع تويتر: “ليفربول سيء من الناحية الدفاعية مثل أي فريق آخر في الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز في الوقت الحالي”.

وأضاف: “لحسن الحظ لديهم أفضل حارس مما يعني أنهم لن يتراجعوا في الجدول”.

 

Sri Lanka survive jitters to reach World Cup final

Sri Lanka overcame a serious bout of the jitters to book their place in Saturday’s World Cup final in Mumbai, as New Zealand bowed out in the last four for the sixth time in ten campaigns

The Bulletin by Andrew Miller29-Mar-2011 Sri Lanka 220 for 5 (Dilshan 73, Sangakkara 54) beat New Zealand 217 (Styris 57, Mendis 3-35) by five wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsAFP

Sri Lanka overcame a serious bout of the jitters to book their place in Saturday’s World Cup final in Mumbai, as New Zealand bowed out in the last four for the sixth time in ten campaigns, though with their pride fully intact after another fabulous never-say-die performance in Colombo.In a strange amalgam of the one-sided thrashing that Sri Lanka handed out to England in their quarter-final on Saturday, and New Zealand’s last-eight fightback against South Africa in Dhaka, the favourites duly progressed, and by a seemingly comfortable five-wicket margin. However, the closing stages were fraught in the extreme as a raucous home crowd was forced to postpone a party that had been in full swing for more than three-quarters of the contest.Defending a mediocre total of 217 after a spirited batting effort had unravelled in a clatter of late wickets, New Zealand’s lust for a scrap kicked in with a vengeance just when it seemed the match was finally out of their reach. At 160 for 1 in the 33rd over, with Tillakaratne Dilshan and Kumar Sangakkara entrenched in a game-breaking partnership of 120, what little attention had been on this, the less glamorous of the two semi-finals, had already begun to drift towards Wednesday’s epic match-up in Mohali.But then Dilshan, cruising on 73 from 93 deliveries and seemingly destined for his second hundred in consecutive matches, slapped loosely at Tim Southee and picked out Jesse Ryder at point, whose second catch of the innings was a far less breathtaking affair than his earlier one-handed pluck off Sri Lanka’s pace-setter, Upul Tharanga.Three balls later, the new man Mahela Jayawardene was beaten in flight by a beautiful dipping delivery from Daniel Vettori and nailed plumb lbw for 1, whereupon Sangakkara’s habitually cool head deserted him, as he attempted to steer the lively Andy McKay over the keeper for four, but ended up dollying a simple chance to Scott Styris at third man.Sri Lanka had lost three wickets for eight runs in 22 deliveries, and just as had been the case in the throttling of South Africa, New Zealand’s bowlers ramped up the aggro while maintaining supremely disciplined lines and lengths. On the same worn wicket that had been used for the England quarter-final, runs suddenly became excruciatingly hard to come by as Sri Lanka’s untested middle order was fully exposed to the limelight.Chamara Silva and Thilan Samaraweera scraped together nine runs in six overs as the asking-rate climbed to close to five, and it took a message from the dressing room, delivered with a drink from Dilhara Fernando, to persuade them out of their defensive mindset. Silva responded with two fours in consecutive deliveries as Ryder’s seam-up was brought into the attack, but three balls later he tried to get aggressive against the extra pace of Southee and chopped onto his own stumps for 13.Muttiah Muralitharan was chaired off the field after his final match on home soil•AFP

Samaraweera, however, had the experience to see his team home. A short ball from Ryder was fetched over midwicket for four, before a wild throw from Oram gifted him another four as the ball sailed over the keeper’s head. Another error lopped five more precious runs off the total as a McKay wide slipped through the keeper’s grasp, and though McKay responded with a beauty to Angelo Mathews that was sent to be reviewed for caught-behind, the lack of Hot Spot meant there was no evidence available to reverse the on-field decision.And with a smoking six off Southee in the next over, the game was finally relieved of its tension – even though it took two winning shots to seal it, after Mathew’s initial carve through the covers was called a dead-ball due to a firework exploding right at the moment of delivery. Instead, Samaraweera nudged through third man to wrap up the game with 13 balls to spare.Such a nerve-jangling finale could not have seemed further from the agenda while Sri Lanka’s innings was in full flow. From the moment Tharanga launched his third ball, from Nathan McCullum, straight down the ground for six, Sri Lanka were always ahead of the asking-rate. His departure for 30 from 31 balls did change the tempo of the Sri Lankan innings, but neither Dilshan nor Sangakkara had any reason to rush towards a modest victory target.Sangakkara had an early let-off when he edged Oram at a catchable height through the vacant slip cordon, while Dilshan – who had been so combative against England – took 28 deliveries to score the second boundary of his innings, and his 50th of the World Cup to date. But he went on to pass 400 runs for the tournament, en route to overtaking Jonathan Trott as the leading run-scorer, and as Sangakkara finally began to nail his trademark cover-drives, New Zealand looked to have run out of ideas.In hindsight, the Kiwis will look back on the closing stages of their own innings with regret, for a late collapse of 5 for 13, including 4 for 4 in 12 balls, undermined much of the good work they had put into the early part of their innings. The bed-rock was provided by Scott Styris, a centurion against Sri Lanka in the 2007 World Cup, who ground out a responsible 57 from 76 balls. But when he was extracted lbw by the final delivery that Muttiah Muralitharan will ever bowl on home soil, Sri Lanka responded euphorically to scythe through the tail and leave seven precious deliveries unused.Whether a 240 target would have made any difference will remain a matter for conjecture. Though they fared better than any other team in the tournament so far in taking 41 runs off Sri Lanka’s bowlers in the batting Powerplay, they were ultimately undone by the depth and variety of their attack, with Lasith Malinga’s yorkers scalping three key wickets at critical moments.Too many of New Zealand’s batsmen made starts without going on. Martin Guptill flicked Malinga’s fifth delivery through midwicket in a 65-ball 39, only for Malinga to york him superbly when he returned for his second spell, while Brendon McCullum slog-swept Rangana Herath for six, only to be bowled for 13 playing the exact same stroke. Taylor, whose ferocious hitting could have been so valuable at the death, launched a Mendis long-hop straight to deep midwicket just when he looked ready to build on his 36 from 55 balls.But as Vettori takes his leave of the New Zealand captaincy, he can reflect on yet another campaign in which his team rose to the challenge of the big event in precisely the manner that too many of their supposed betters – namely England and South Africa – consistently fail to do. Sangakkara and his men, meanwhile, march on to their second final in consecutive World Cups, where Muralitharan – his broken body notwithstanding – will attempt to complete his career on the highest high imaginable.Match Timeline

Aparecidense x Goiás: times duelam pela primeira partida da final

MatériaMais Notícias

Aparecidense e Goiás duelam neste domingo, às 16h, em Aparecida, pelo primeiro confronto da grande final do Campeonato Goiano de 2018. As equipes vêm com desfalques para partida, mas nada que atrapalhe o bom momento das equipes, que têm peças para reposição. O atacante Nonato, pelo time aparecidense, e Carlos Eduardo, pelo Esmeraldino, são os destaques dos clubes.

Começando pelo Aparecidense: para alegria da torcida e do técnico Márcio Azevedo, o time terá apenas um desfalque para primeira partida da final. O zagueiro reserva Filipe, suspenso pelo terceiro amarelo está fora do. Sem problemas entre os titulares, o comandante deve mandar a campo a mesma escalação usada contra o Vila Nova.

Na final, a equipe conta com o oportunismo e a experiência do atacante Nonato, que já fez história neste ano ao eliminar o Botafogo pela Copa do Brasil, após fazer balançar as redes. O jogador é uma aposta para temporada e já surpreendeu por sua chegada na equipe de Aparecida, de Goiás.

Pelo outro lado, a equipe Esmeraldina também têm desfalques. Otécnico Hélio dos Anjos não poderá contar com o zagueiro Eduardo Brock, que recebeu o terceiro cartão amarelo e irá cumprir suspensão automática. Em contrapartida o meio-campista Léo Sena, que desfalcou o time na última partida, fica novamente à disposição.

Se pelo outro lado tem a experiência, a agilidade e a juventude bate à porta do clube goiano. O meia atacante Carlos Eduardo se destacou no início da temporada e chegou a ser monitorado pelo São Paulo, mas negociação não avançou.

PROVÁVEIS ESCALAÇÕES:

APARECIDENSE: Busatto; Rafael Cruz, Mirita, Thiago Carvalho e Hélder; Thiago Ulisses, Araújo, Washington, Alex Henrique e Uederson; Nonato. Técnico Márcio Azevedo.

GOIÁS:Marcelo Rangel; Caíque Sá (Alex Silva), Rapahel Silva, David Duarte e Jefferson (Breno); Madison, Léo Sena e Giovanni; Carlos Eduardo, Lucão (Júnior Viçosa) e Maranhão. Técnico: Hélio dos Anjos.

Newcastle must brutally drop Joelinton

Eddie Howe’s Newcastle United will be looking to seal their fourth straight win in the Premier League as they face Norwich at Carrow Road today.

The Magpies come into the match off the back of three wins in succession, against Crystal Palace, Leicester and Wolves, and are currently 12 points clear of the relegation zone.

They come up against a Norwich team sitting bottom of the table and 19 points behind the Toon army as it stands and Howe’s men have a terrific chance to move further clear of 18th-placed Burnley.

The head coach may decide to make a few changes to his side to keep things fresh after the match against Palace in midweek and one player who must be brutally axed from the XI is central midfielder Joelinton.

His revival under Howe has been spectacular and he deserves immense credit for the way he has turned his career at St. James’ Park around. He has gone from being a goal-shy striker who was not justifying his £40m price tag to being a combative, energetic, ball-winning, midfield player.

However, he has not been himself in recent weeks after returning from illness. He was out with an ailment in the early parts of March and has averaged a dismal SofaScore rating of 6.42 in the five games he has played since coming back into the side against Everton.

This comes after he averaged SofaScore ratings of 7.3 and 7.1 in January and February respectively and shows that his form has fallen off a cliff since his fitness issues. He was previously accused of “looking lost” on the pitch by Dion Dublin and his statistics suggest that he is in that position again as he has been struggling badly.

Danny Murphy once dubbed his lapse play in possession as “unacceptable” and those concerns have cropped up again in recent matches. In his last five games, he has lost the ball 48 times and lost 44 of his 68 duels as he failed to demonstrate his quality in the middle of the park.

Therefore, the £80k-per-week passenger must finally be axed from the team after five below-par outings. His performances suggest that he is not 100% after his illness last month and Howe must now give him the time he needs to get back to his best so that he can then return to the team and put in the lung-busting, combative, displays that the fans love to see from him.

AND in other news: Imagine him & Bruno: Howe can seal terrifying NUFC duo with gem who’s a “joy to watch”

Fiery Yusuf stars in Reds win

A brutal innings by Yusuf Pathan and some spirited determined batting by the India Reds middle and lower orders helped them upstage India Blues by three wickets in Indore

ESPNcricinfo staff08-Oct-2010
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
A brutal innings by Yusuf Pathan and some spirited determined batting by the India Reds middle and lower orders helped them upstage India Blues by three wickets in Indore. The opening game of the NKP Salve Challenger Trophy was a closely-fought one for much of its duration but Yusuf’s knock and the subsequent consolidation by Monish Mishra and Iqbal Abdulla tilted the scales decisively in India Reds’ favour. The dismissal of Saurabh Tiwary in India Reds’ chase of 252 had reduced them to a precarious 89 for 4 but Yusuf’s counterattack brought them back into contention.Yusuf’s exploits for Rajasthan Royals in the middle order are well known and the crowd in Indore was treated to an air show, with Yusuf smashing five sixes and as many fours in a knock of 63 off just 30 balls. He singled out the spinners for treatment, warming up with a six and a four off Piyush Chawla in the 21st over and then smacking him for 16 in three balls in the 26th. Yuvraj Singh replaced Chawla but he, too, was not spared. Yusuf reached his half-century by drilling the bowler to the straight boundary and launching him for consecutive sixes over deep square leg and midwicket. His stay ended when Ravindra Jadeja trapped him in front but Mishra and Abdulla then took over. With the required run-rate under control, the pair rotated the strike with ease, piercing the gaps to accumulate singles and twos while striking the timely boundary. They added 62 to all but confirm India Reds’ win.India Blues’ decision to bat appeared to have backfired when a couple of run outs at the start of their innings and an early strike by Vinay Kumar had reduced them to 31 for 3. But Ajinkya Rahane, fresh from a big century in the Irani Cup against Rest of India, led the recovery with a well-paced 84, laced with nine fours and a six. He was supported by Manoj Tiwary in a 105-run stand before Jadeja and Wriddhiman Saha contributed some valuable runs at the death to post a competitive score. But their efforts proved inadequate.

Kuhn, Elgar lead South Africa A to victory

Scorecard
Heino Kuhn’s century set up an easy South African victory•Getty Images

South Africa A cruised to a seven-wicket victory against Sri Lanka A at the P Sara Oval on Saturday to maintain their unbeaten run in the triangular A team tournament that also features Pakistan A.Both teams had already qualified for Monday’s final, so South Africa coach Corrie van Zyl took the opportunity to experiment by blooding CJ de Villiers and promoting Heino Kuhn to opener.Kuhn, the 24-year-old Titans wicketkeeper- batsman, responded with a fine hundred, and shared a 102-run partnership for the third wicket with the in-form Dean Elgar, the tournament’s highest run-getter. He eventually fell prey to Sachitra Serasinghe’s offbreaks but Elgar and Colin Ingram made sure there would be no more hiccups as they chased down their target with 17 balls to spare. Elgar’s 79 came off 91 balls, with four fours and three sixes, while Ingram took just 30 balls for his 45 that included six fours and a six.Sri Lanka chose to bat after winning the toss and set South Africa a target of 255. Their innings was built around opener Tharanga Paranavitana’s unbeaten 116, which came off 139 balls with seven fours and two sixes, and Jeevan Mendis gave the selectors another reminder of his usefulness lower down the order with a brisk 43.

Healed Hughes heads to Hampshire

Phillip Hughes is going back to England to state his Ashes case after recovering from a dislocated shoulder. Hughes, the New South Wales opener, has started full-scale training but his time with the local side will be short after he agreed to finish the county season with Hampshire.”I am fully fit and just need time in the middle and this is the best course of action for me now,” Hughes said in Sydney. Hughes, 21, required surgery on his left shoulder after a damaging boxing session in May and the injury ruled him out of the Test tour to England to face Pakistan. He would have been the spare batsman in that squad, but the spot went to Usman Khawaja.Hughes has given up boxing training – for now. “I love it, maybe I will continue it again one day,” he said. “But just not yet.”In his seven-match Test career Hughes has experienced extreme peaks and troughs, including twin centuries in his second game and being dropped after two matches of the 2009 Ashes. He has added a couple of appearances since then as a replacement for Simon Katich and Shane Watson, and blazed to an unbeaten 86 off 75 balls in his last innings.”I want to dominate this season and dominate more than I did last season and the year before,” he said. “I want to make a statement in all three forms of the game. I don’t just want to average 40 or 50, I want to reach the 70-80 mark and if I can do that then everything else is out of my hands.”He could be part of the Ashes series if Watson is shuffled down the order, but that depends on whether the selectors remain faithful to the out-of-sorts Marcus North. Australia’s next Test engagement is in India in October and Hughes should be involved in the squad.Last year Hughes had a short stint with English county Middlesex to fine-tune ahead of the Ashes. The move was criticised by England supporters – especially when he scored 574 runs in five first-class innings – but the experience did not help him during the opening two Ashes Tests.

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