خسر نادي الوكرة بمشاركة اللاعب المصري حمدي فتحي وديًا مساء اليوم الأربعاء، أمام مواطنه الغرافة، في إطار تحضيرات الفريقين لبداية الدوري القطري موسم 2023-2024.
شارك حمدي فتحي في تشكيلة الوكرة بصفة أساسية، بينما لعب التونسي فرجاني ساسي مع فريق الغرافة.
اقرأ أيضًا..بمشاركة حمدي فتحي.. الوكرة يخسر أمام إسبانيول بهدف وديًا
وتمكن الجزائري الدولي ياسين براهيمي، من تسجيل هدف المباراة الوحيد لمصلحة الغرافة، في الدقيقة 26.
وينتظر أن يبدأ الوكرة مشواره في الدوري القطري بمواجهة معيذر يوم 16 أغسطس الجاري.
وكان حمدي فتحي انضم لصفوف الوكرة القطري قادمًا من الأهلي في فترة الانتقالات الصيفية الجارية، مما دفع القلعة الحمراء لتعويضه بضم إمام عاشور من ميتلاند الدنماركي.
Gautam Gambhir and Jaik Mickleburgh got Essex off to a strong start in reply to Glamorgan’s 322 on the second day at Chelmsford, a match they need to win to maintain their promotion challenge
18-Sep-2013 ScorecardJaik Mickleburgh will hope for more runs on day three as Essex chase victory over Glamorgan to keep up in the promotion race•Getty ImagesGautam Gambhir and Jaik Mickleburgh got Essex off to a strong start in reply to Glamorgan’s 322 on the second day at Chelmsford, a match they need to win to maintain their promotion challenge.They put on 95 in 23 overs before Gambhir fell victim to slow left-armer Dean Cosker but the home side steered clear of further trouble before the close to reach 107 for 1.Both openers had punctuated the field with some fine driving and pulling before they were separated with Mickleburgh completing his half-century from 62 balls with the help of eight boundaries. He is due to resume on 68 accompanied by Greg Smith, who was yet score and arrived at the crease on the fall of Gambhir, who had scored 37 when he was caught at extra cover.But with unsettled weather forecast for Thursday, it seems likely that the captains will have to come to some agreement to contrive a positive result. Certainly Essex will be hoping so because this is a match they must win if they are to keep alive their slender promotion hopes.Earlier paceman David Masters claimed his fourth haul of five wickets or more in an innings this season, one of them being against Glamorgan in May.After the visitors had resumed on 103 for 2, Masters was soon adding to his overnight two wickets by trapping Ben Wright lbw for 45 to bring an end a partnership of 107 with Murray Goodwin in 44 overs. He also got rid of Goodwin caught in the slips by Owais Shah as he pushed forward after the Zimbabwean had struck a solid 65 that had taken him nearly four hours. His 169-ball effort contained just five fours.But Goodwin’s departure only paved the way for the most entertaining partnership of the innings which featured Chris Cooke and Mark Wallace who went boldly for their strokes while gathering 95 in 21 overs against bowlers who, apart from Masters, struggled to find a consistent line and length.It was broken when medium-pacer Ravi Bopara breached the defence of Wallace who had scored 38 and eight runs later, with the total on 234, left-arm spinner Monty Panesar claimed an lbw verdict to get rid of Cooke. His 67 came from 106 balls and included eight fours and a six.John Glover struck an unbeaten 39 and Glamorgan reached 300 to claim their third batting point but that total would have been less imposing had Masters received better support. His unerring accuracy was illustrated by his figures of 5 for 68 from 36 overs, during which he collected his 50th Championship wicket of the summer.
ScorecardJames Vince blazed a trail for Hampshire•Getty Images
James Vince hit a brutal 84 off only 49 balls to lead holders Hampshire to the top of the Friends Life t20 South Division with a seven-wicket thrashing of previous leaders Middlesex at Richmond.It looked as though Middlesex had set Hampshire a challenging target when Dawid Malan’s 77 enabled the hosts to reach 164 for 5 on a slow, club pitch but Vince and his opening partner Michael Carberry made a mockery of it by putting on 89 in the first seven overs.They made a relatively slow start but the floodgates opened in the third over when Carberry hit Kyle Mills, the New Zealand fast bowler, for four, four, six, four, four and two.Two overs later, England Lions batsman Vince followed suit by cracking Gurjit Sandhu for five successive fours and when Carberry thumped Neil Dexter for a four and two sixes in the same over Hampshire had plundered 83 from the Powerplay.Middlesex needed a huge slice of luck to break the stand when Vince drove Ravi Patel straight back down the pitch and Patel, the left-arm spinner, deflected the ball into the stumps to run out Carberry, who had made 43 off 16 balls with five fours and three sixes.But there was no respite for Middlesex, as Jimmy Adams helped Vince add another 70 in eight overs before Vince, who had hit 12 fours and two sixes, drove Sandhu to Paul Stirling to deep mid-off. Adams fell for 29 in the same over but Hampshire romped home with 4.5 overs to spare.Hampshire bowler Dimitri Mascarenhas had taken an early grip on the game by having Stirling caught on the midwicket boundary by Adam Wheater and Joe Denly at cover by a diving Adams in a four-over spell that cost only 19 runs.Middlesex were contained to 57 in the first 10 overs before Adam Voges broke the shackles by hitting Liam Dawson for two fours and a six in one over and going on to share a third-wicket partnership of 55 in seven overs with Malan.Voges had made 28 off 17 balls when he heaved Vince to Carberry on the midwicket boundary and Malan found an even more productive partner in Adam Rossington who helped him add another 52 in only four overs.Rossington also hit three fours and a six in his 26 off 16 balls before he pulled a Danny Briggs full toss to Dawson on the square leg boundary and Malan had struck nine fours and a six when he was caught at long on off the last ball of the innings.
حقق فريق الكرة الأول بنادي الجونة فوزًا هامًا على نظيره شباب مسلمين قنا في ختام جولات دوري الدرجة الثانية المصري بهدفين مقابل هدف.
فوز الجونة خارج الديار منحه رسميًا بطاقة الصعود إلى الدوري المصري الممتاز، ليعلن الفريق الساحلي عودته لبطولة الأضواء والشهرة بعد هبوطه الموسم الماضي 2021-2022.
طالع| بلدية المحلة ثاني المتأهلين لـ الدوري الممتاز برباعية أمام دكرنس
ولم يشفع فوز فريق لافيينا -منافس الجونة على بطاقة الصعود- أمام أسمنت أسيوط بثلاثية مقابل هدف، لحصد التأهل لأول مرة في تاريخه، إذ بات يحتل المركز الثاني في جدول الترتيب.
بهذا الفوز يتربع فريق الجونة على عرش ترتيب المجموعة برصيد 69 نقطة، حصدها من 21 انتصار وست تعادلات بينما نال 3 هزائم.
أما فريق لافيينا فجاء في مركز الوصافة برصيد 68 نقطة، حصدها من 21 انتصارًا وخمس تعادلات، بينما نال 4 هزائم.
يذكر، أنه بهذا التأهل يكمل فريق الجونة عقد الفرق الصاعدة إلى الدوري المصري الممتاز، بعد حسم فريقي زد وبلدية المحلة التأهل.
Lisa Sthalekar feels Australia have done some “damage” to their traditional rivals on the psychological front
Abhishek Purohit in Mumbai08-Feb-2013After winning successive tight finishes against England, in the World Twenty20 final and today in the World Cup, Lisa Sthalekar feels Australia have done some “damage” to their traditional rivals on the psychological front. England had fallen short by four runs in Colombo; the margin was two runs in Mumbai, a win the veteran Sthalekar ranked “pretty high” among victories she’s been involved in.”We’d like to believe we’ve done a bit of damage in the tight finish here and the World Twenty20 victory,” Sthalekar said. “I’ve been fortunate enough to play in a few matches where it’s been tight but in a World Cup against the English girls, to win with such a tight finish, it was really important for us as a team, building momentum through to the World Cup. And that probably ranks pretty high.”England have never beaten Australia in an ODI on neutral territory. Today’s defeat was their 14th. Their captain Charlotte Edwards, though, did not think the narrow losses in the World Twenty20 final and today meant Australia had gained any psychological advantage. Edwards said England had a “great record” against Australia but was disappointed with her batsmen’s failure to chase 148.”Two poor decisions [lbws against her and Laura Marsh] definitely doesn’t help when you are opening and then in a key partnership,” Edwards said. “There was also some poor shot selection through our middle order. Nos. 3, 5, 6 and 7 played 12 balls between them. When you are in a position where you are three down you need to stand up. They didn’t today.”There was no reason to fret over the batsmen, though, according to Edwards, who backed her middle order, especially the talented Sarah Taylor, to come good. Taylor has made 35, 0 and 0 so far. “Individually they have all stood up at times. Collectively maybe we haven’t batted as well. I think India is the only game we have collectively batted as we would have liked to. So yes, our bowling is brilliant, our batting is something that we need to improve on but I am not worried.”Sarah Taylor hasn’t scored runs in the competition so far but she is dangerous and hopefully there are big things to come from her so I am not too concerned. She got a good ball the other day. Sarah normally hits them through the covers. I have no doubt she is too good a player to go through too many games without scoring so hopefully with two big games to come she will fire for us.”The England bowling gave no headaches to their captain as they routed Australia for 147 with sustained, controlled swing and seam, especially from Anya Shrubsole. It drew praise from the opposition, with both Australia captain Jodie Fields and Sthalekar lauding the efforts of the England attack. “The English bowlers bowled really well,” Sthalekar said. “You had Anya who was hooping them in. The ball with which she got Jess Cameron was pretty spectacular and then you had Katherine Brunt who was going the other way as well. We’ve got bowlers who do similar things as well and the conditions here really helped the swing bowlers early.”Australia now have six points and are in a pretty safe position in the Super Six while England, with two points, would be under pressure to win both their remaining games against South Africa and New Zealand.
Live scorecard and ball-by-ball details Jonathan Trott dug in for a vital, unbeaten half-century that pushed England towards safety in the match•BCCI
Jonathan Trott helped settle a slightly nervy England as they closed in on a famous series victory in Nagpur, reaching the close of the fourth day with a lead of 165. He and Ian Bell added 67 for the fourth wicket after India had given themselves a glimmer by removing Kevin Pietersen shortly after tea with England’s advantage still less than 100. Now England are a solid morning session away from their goal.While India’s bowlers did a respectable job on a pitch that refused to break up, their approach in the morning session had been bizarre as they plodded along for 13 overs adding just 29 runs before MS Dhoni finally declared with a narrow deficit. Batting so defensively did nothing but take time out of the game, a situation England were quite happy to go along with. Since India lost quick wickets yesterday evening their only hope has been third-innings panic, which has happened in the past when a draw is the favoured result.When Pietersen fell, inexplicably shouldering arms at Ravindra Jadeja as Trott did in the first innings, England were tottering on 94 for 3 and Dhoni’s hopes were far from dead. Due to the scoring rate of less than two an over – England did not break that barrier until the 62nd over – the lead had not been carried far away from India and the one batsman thought most likely to do that was the one walking back.Trott, though, played a superb hand, timing the ball as well as anyone has managed on this docile surface. He was off the mark first ball with a sweep and regularly picked off deliveries through the leg side. There was also a curious route for one of his nine boundaries when the ball slipped out of Jadeja’s hands, during his delivery, and lobbed towards the on side. As Trott was completely within his rights to do he skipped out and smashed the no-ball to the square-leg fence.It was also an innings that created some spice in the match. On 43, Trott went to cut Ishant Sharma and India were convinced there was an edge but Kumar Dharmasena, who had earlier made a mistake in giving Alastair Cook caught behind, was unmoved.Next ball Sharma followed through close to Trott, who responded by blowing a little kiss, and tensions began to grow. At the end of the over there were heated exchanges with the umpires involving Dhoni and Virat Kohli – a likely future India captain, who did not carry himself very well. Meanwhile, a few minutes later, Snickometer (which would not be part of DRS were it in use) did not register any sound.Trott was unmoved and, in fact, probably motivated further. He went to 49 with an off-drive against Sharma, a rare shot on this slow pitch, and next ball had his half-century from 106 deliveries. India, however, were still festering. Towards the end of the day R Ashwin pulled out of a delivery and warned Trott for backing up too far. It belied the growing frustrations.Bell provided solid support following the potentially vital loss of Pietersen. It was an important period for him after a lean series – he will need to continue on the final morning – and he collected runs calmly. There was one moment of fortune when he edged Ashwin through a vacant slip where two balls earlier Virender Sehwag had been stood. The fourth-wicket stand came at almost three an over, a largely unseen rate in this match.The day brought a total of 190 runs, but midway through it did not appear even that total would be reached. After India’s strange approach, Cook and Nick Compton put all their efforts into ensuring against early mishaps for England. Progress was at snail pace but, especially for Cook, there was too much at stake to suddenly try anything too flamboyant.The first boundary of the day did not come until five minutes before lunch, when Compton edged Ashwin to third man, and Cook had reach 5 from 78 deliveries when he slotted away a cover drive.For the second time in the match Cook was removed through an umpiring error from Dharmasena when he played forward to Ashwin and the ball spun past the outside edge. There was a strong appeal, and a noise, but replays confirmed that Cook’s bat had struck the ground and he had missed the ball. It left Cook with a match tally off 14 off 121 balls but it did nothing to dilute the epic nature of his series, which ended with 562 runs.Compton’s solidity alongside Cook has been one of the major plusses to come out of this series. His defence had been firm throughout the afternoon session but in the final over before tea he was given lbw to Ojha. Replays suggested an inside edge but the ball was also caught in the gully so the presence of DRS would only have changed the mode of dismissal.At that point it had been one of the more forgettable days of Test cricket in recent memory, but the final session was far more entertaining for a variety of reasons. There will be debate about how India handled themselves, but at least it showed the passion remained. That has not always seemed the case in this series. England, though, as they had done on Saturday, did not lose their cool and finished the day stronger. They are very close now.
Yorkshire will start favourites against Worcestershire in their Friends Life t20 quarter-final as they target a first trip to finals day
Jon Culley24-Jul-2012Never good enough to reach finals day in nine years of trying, never good enough even to earn a home quarter-final, Yorkshire will at least enjoy that privilege when they face Worcestershire at Headingley. Unless the form that has won them seven from eight completed matches in the North Group deserts them at the critical moment, it is hard to imagine that Yorkshire will not go to finals day in the Friends Life t20 in Cardiff on August 25, and possibly as favourites.The Yorkshire transformation has been by some margin the eye-opener in a competition that has found it difficult to attract attention in a damp and chilly summer amid a congested calendar of sport. Some say it is down to the experience brought together in a management trio teaming Jason Gillespie and Paul Farbrace with the established wisdom of Martyn Moxon, others that the signing of two overseas players at the hungry end of their international careers has been the key.While both of those arguments have their strengths, there is another that can be tossed into the debate, namely the appointment of Azeem Rafiq as temporary captain after Andrew Gale dropped out with a hip injury after the third group match. Aged only 21, which made him the youngest player in the county’s history to captain the senior side, Rafiq’s elevation might be seen as shrewd judgment or a lucky gamble but there is no doubt it has paid off handsomely.Given that he had led England sides and Under-15 and Under-19 level and captained Yorkshire in second XI and pre-season matches the gamble was smaller than some might have supposed, although his senior experience was naturally quite limited.Yet Gillespie claimed “it took about five seconds” to conclude that Rafiq was the right man for the job and after five wins from seven completed matches with him in charge, including a comprehensive six-wicket win over strongly fancied Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge, it is hard to criticise the Yorkshire hierarchy for making a hasty judgment. When the now recovered Gale returns to lead the side against Worcestershire it will be with a fulsome endorsement of his stand-in.”What I like about Azeem is that I see a bit of myself in him,” Gale said of Rafiq, whose heritage also makes him the first cricketer of Asian origin to captain Yorkshire. But it is not only the “aggressive, up-and-at-’em in-your-face” approach that has impressed Gale. His tactical judgment has also met with approval.”When I am out on the pitch, he comes to me all the time suggesting things,” Gale added, in his weekly newspaper column. “Some lads suggest things and you think: ‘No, that’s not right.’ But what I’ve found nine times out of 10 is that what he suggests is what I’m thinking. I think we’re on the same wavelength.”Moxon, Yorkshire’s director of professional cricket, believes keeping to a pre-meditated game plan made it easier for Rafiq but that he took on the responsibility impressively nonetheless. “He’s got a good cricket brain, and he keeps calm under pressure, which you need to do as a captain,” Moxon said. “We’ve got a set plan on how we want to play, which makes it easier for him in the sense of the bowlers knowing what we’re trying to do. But he’s a great motivator in the field.”It is extraordinary to recall now that Rafiq’s debut for Yorkshire in 2008 cost them a Twenty20 Cup quarter-final after his appearance in a group stage win over Nottinghamshire. Then an academy player, he was selected in good faith but questions over his eligibility led to Yorkshire’s quarter-final against Durham being postponed moments before it was due to begin and ultimately their effective disqualification after the result at Trent Bridge was reversed.If that were a controversy not of his making, the same cannot be said of the error of judgment he made two years ago when an outburst on Twitter against coach John Abrahams on being dropped from an England Under-19 side on disciplinary grounds led to a one-month ban from all cricket. Clearly he has acquired some maturity since then.Worcestershire, having qualified as one of the two best third-placed sides from the group stages, are also bidding to reach finals day for the first time in the 10 years of Twenty20. They might appear to have weaker credentials than Yorkshire, but they emerged from a strong Midlands/Wales/West Group headed by Somerset and Gloucestershire, finishing level with Warwickshire on 11 points but with a better net run rate.What’s more, they possess the 2012 competition’s highest run scorer in opener Philip Hughes, who has hit three half-centuries in an aggregate of 322 from seven innings. Yorkshire, on the other hand, have been well served by several players.Opening batsman Phil Jaques has shared two hundred-plus partnerships – 118 with Gale against Leicestershire at Headingley and 131 with Adam Lyth in the concluding group match against Derbyshire, also at the Leeds ground. David Miller, the 23-year-old South African who forms one half of their overseas duo, hit 28 runs in the last two overs against Durham at Chester-le-Street to finish 74 not out from 35 balls and shared a stand of 91 in 7.1 overs with Gary Ballance against Lancashire at Headingley, in front of a crowd of 10,350.The Australian fast bowler Mitchell Starc, 22, meanwhile, is the competition’s leading wicket-taker with 18 and has been particularly effective at the end of an innings. There is a question mark over Starc’s availability for finals day after he was called up to Australia’s one-day and Twenty20 squads for their series against Pakistan in the UAE, which includes a one-day international against Afghanistan in Sharjah on August 25.Nottinghamshire’s surprise home defeat to Yorkshire did not preclude them also securing a home quarter-final with Hampshire in the other Wednesday tie. It was their only defeat in 10 North Group matches and, with Alex Hales, Michael Lumb, Riki Wessels, Adam Voges, Samit Patel and James Taylor presenting as the strongest top six in the country, they will start as strong favourites, although Glenn Maxwell, the batsman named in Australia’s provisional squad for the World Twenty20, could be a dangerous opponent, especially with Darren Pattinson, a key Nottinghamshire bowler in this competition, failing to recover from a groin injury suffered in a CB40 match on Sunday.
Playing on uncovered pitches and incentivising wins by tweaking the Ranji Trophy points system were some of the ideas proposed at a BCCI conclave for domestic captains and coaches
Nagraj Gollapudi22-Mar-2012
Allowing more bouncers was one method suggested of giving the bowlers encouragement•K Sivaraman
Playing on uncovered pitches, incentivising wins by tweaking the Ranji Trophy points system, scheduling Ranji knockouts at neutral venues, increasing the number of rest days between games, increasing the number of bouncers allowed per over in first-class cricket; these were all ideas proposed at a BCCI conclave for domestic captains and coaches, in Mumbai.With team officials from nearly 27 states in attendance, the meeting was chaired by BCCI president N Srinivasan along with Sanjay Jagdale and Ratnakar Shetty, the board secretary and chief-administrative officer respectively. The conclave, a concept that had been discontinued a few years ago, made a resounding comeback according to some participants, who said there had been fruitful discussions.One of most important discussions in this year’s conclave concerned the revamping of the points system in the Ranji Trophy. WV Raman, the former India opener and current Bengal coach, suggested there was a need to encourage teams to win games outright. Under the current points system, once a team takes the first-innings lead they sit back, he said. “My suggestion was if a team gets a first-innings lead then give them the impetus to go for an outright win by allowing them to retain the three points even if they lose the game. The team that wins will get four points.”According to the existing rules, a team that takes a first-innings lead gets three points if the match ends in a draw, with the opponent getting one point. An outright win is worth five points with an additional bonus point available for an innings victory or ten-wicket win. According to Raman’s formula, a team would secure three points once they took a first-innings lead, regardless of the result, and would then chase a further four points for a win.”It will give the teams the drive to challenge the opponents and make sporting declarations,” Raman said.The other topic which saw animated discussion was that of uncovered pitches. Bishan Singh Bedi, the former India captain and current Jammu & Kashmir coach, said playing on uncovered pitches would toughen up domestic batsmen and simultaneously negate home advantage in matches. The idea met some opposition, particularly, according to Hyderabad coach Sunil Joshi, from the batsmen and coaches at the conclave.”In domestic cricket the quality of bowling is bad while the batsmen continue to bat on for days,” Bedi said. “The uncovered pitches will give the bowlers some encouragement.”According to Joshi, a better idea would be to use uncovered pitches at the Under-19 and Under-22 levels. “That would allow the youngsters to negotiate variable bounce, moisture, dew and a variety of other factors. It could be a good learning experience not only for the youngsters but also for the coaches,” Joshi said.During the BCCI’s technical committee meeting last month, Sourav Ganguly and his nine-member panel had struck down the suggestion of playing Ranji matches at neutral venues, an idea that had come out of the BCCI working committee meeting. The technical committee had recommended carrying on with the existing home-and-away format during the league phase.One advantage of neutral venues would be that sides like Tamil Nadu could avoid playing in Chennai, where several matches are affected by rain•ESPNcricinfo Ltd
During the conclave, many coaches and captains supported the idea of knockout matches being played at neutral grounds, saying it would guard against any bias a home-team curator might have while preparing a pitch. However, Raman pointed out that the home team lost in both semi-finals and the final this Ranji season. “So you can’t take it for granted that the home side will tweak things in their favour,” Raman said. Also, Raman said, the fact that BCCI grounds and pitches committee officials were present to overlook pitch preparations during the knockout phase was a good enough assurance that tracks would be fair to both sides.Raman also suggested at the conclave that fast bowlers be allowed to bowl three bouncers in an over in first-class cricket. “It would give the fast bowlers an added weapon and also help batsman counter short-pitch bowling,” Raman said. It was an extension, Raman said, of the technical committee’s decision to allow two bouncers in an over during domestic one-day tournaments.There was also a unanimous opinion among the captains and coaches that a four-day break between matches during the Ranji season was needed as opposed to the prevailing three-day breaks.Ganguly’s committee had suggested that Kookaburra balls continue being used during the Duleep Trophy. That idea did not find favour at the conclave, as members suggested playing with SG Test balls would be better. “What is the point of playing with a Kookaburra ball when the domestic players play the Ranji season with SG balls,” Joshi said. “Also, in the next 18 months India will be playing only at home so it would be much better to use SG during the Duleep Trophy too.”Kookaburra balls are used for the domestic 50-over and 20-over competitions, and it was recommended that teams be given more balls to practise with, well in advance of the tournaments. “Normally we are given a few Kookaburra balls two days before the tournament. How do you expect the bowlers to get used to it?” one of the coaches said. Another idea discussed was the introduction of a league phase in the Duleep and Deodhar Trophy.Joshi and Hrishikesh Kanitkar, the captain of Rajasthan, winners of the last two Ranji Trophies, proposed the idea of having just one group in both Elite and Plate divisions, increasing the number of games each team would play in the league phase, and thus giving them more chances to qualify for the knockouts. “So you play about 14 matches in the Elite division, and 11 in Plate. Then you could have the top four or the top two from each group progress to the quarterfinals or the semi-finals,” Joshi said.That idea, though, was in contradiction to the agreed-upon notion that players needed more rest. “On the one hand people wanted the rest period increased, but at the same time they were requesting more cricket in an already packed calendar,” one of the captains who attended the meeting said.Edited by Dustin Silgardo
A round-up of the second day’s play from the Ranji Trophy Plate semi-finals
ESPNcricinfo staff22-Dec-2011Vidarbha’s lower order made use of the satisfactory platform built on the opening day, crafting a formidable first-innings total by keeping Hyderabad on the field for the entire second day in Nagpur. At the end of it, Vidarbha had reached 467 for 8 and were in control of the semi-final. It had not begun well, though. They resumed their innings on 225 for 5 and soon slipped to 267 for 7, losing Sairaj Bahutule and Shrikant Wagh. But Ranjit Paradkar, who has two centuries this season, provided stability and momentum in the first two sessions with a watchful 75.If Hyderabad sensed an opportunity to polish off the tail after Paradkar departed with the team total on 342, they were in for a surprise as the lower order pair Amol Jungade and Akshay Wakhare raised an unbroken 125-run stand for the ninth wicket. Jungade’s 92 was his best first-class score, and Wakhare’s 50 was his second half-century. Hyderabad were left ruing a missed chance – Wakhare was let off when only on four and the total on 364. Barring that one chance the Jungade-Wakhare combine continued to frustrate the visitors’ bowlers unhindered.Maharashtra claimed three vital wickets after posting a strong first-innings total, to take control of their semi-final against Himachal Pradesh in Pune. Resuming the innings on 232 for 4, Ankit Bawne converted his 56 into a century, finishing on 137 off 375 balls. Bawne found able support in his captain Rohit Motwani, who made 59 before his attempt to cut his HP counterpart, Vikramjit Malik, led to his downfall. The fifth-wicket combine of Bawne and Motwani had added crucial 110 runs.Bawne stayed firm, despite the absence of a stable partner at the other end. The left-handed Bawne had batted for more than seven hours as he hit his second century of the season. He was the ninth batsman out, and Maharashtra’s innings ended on 415. When it was Maharashtra’s turn to bowl, Samad Fallah gave them an ideal start by dismissing HP opener Paul Valthaty lbw off the fourth delivery of the first over. Paras Dogra dominated a half-century partnership for the second wicket but he lost his partner, Abhinav Bali, with the score on 62. Dogra was then involved in the run out of S Sriram, who had once represented Maharashtra, in the final over of the day. At 68 for 3, HP have a mountain to climb.
تحدث محمود شبانة مدافع الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بالزمالك العائد من الإعارة، عن آخر تطورات أزمة قيدة بصفوف الفارس الأبيض، موضحًا سوء حالته النفسية بشأن هذا الأمر.
ويستعد الزمالك لمواجهة قوية ومرتقبة أمام نظيره سموحة، غداً في تمام السابعة مساءً بتوقيت القاهرة، في إطار مواجهات الجولة الثامنة عشر من عمر المسابقة المحلية، على ملعب برج العرب.
وقال شبانة في تصريحات تلفزيونية عبر فضائية “أون تايم سبورتس”: “منذ أن عدت من الإعارة تفاجأت بموضوع القيد، وأنا نفسيًا ليس في أفضل حال، خاصة وأنني في الفترة الأخيرة مع سموحة كنت أسير بشكل جيد، وعدت للزمالك عندما احتاجني”.
طالع..دودو الجباس وإكرامي يخضعان لكشف المنشطات بعد مباراة بيراميدز والجيش الملكي
وأضاف: “حالتي النفسية سيئة، أكاد أكون لا أنام، كل يوم أنتظر قرارًا بشأن القيد، من المفترض أنني في ناد كبير ولا بد أن يكون تركيزي داخل الملعب لكي لا أخطئ، ما بالك أنني أنتظر قرارًا فقط من أجل أن أشارك”.
وأوضح: “المفترض أنني كنت معارًا من نادي الزمالك، وعندما أعود طبيعي أكون مقيدًا في الفريق، من المفترض أن يكون موقفي مختلفًا عن الصفقات”.
وأكمل: “وكيلي تواصل مع مسؤولي النادي ولكن الأمور ليست واضحة، ولاعب الكرة (أكل عيشه الملعب)، وأنا عليً ضغوطات كبيرة”.
واختتم: “لا أعرف موقفي، من المفترض أن موقفي غير الصفقات الجديدة، أتمنى أن يتم حل الموضوع سريعًا، سواء أنا أو أحمد بلحاج أو ناصر منسي، جميعنا نفسيتنا سيئة”.