Leeds now very serious about signing £111k-p/w star, set to make formal bid

Leeds United are now very serious about signing an “imposing” defender, and they are ready to make a formal offer soon, according to a report this week.

Leeds keen to bolster defensive options

Leeds have already made major changes to their 2024-25 promotion-winning squad, with Daniel Farke overhauling his defensive options, having already signed two new centre-backs, while also bringing in a replacement for Junior Firpo at left-back.

New signing

Transfer fee

Position

Gabriel Gudmundsson

£10m

LB

Sebastian Bornauw

£5.2m

CB

Jaka Bijol

£15.6m

CB

As a result, there may be an expectation that the Whites’ next signing will be an attacker, and Farke is certainly keen on strengthening in forward areas, with Tottenham Hotspur’s Manor Solomon and Feyenoord’s Igor Paixao among the potential options out wide.

However, the manager will need to make sure his side are defensively solid if they are to stand a chance of avoiding relegation from the Premier League, and the German remains keen on adding another centre-back to his ranks.

As such, there has now been a new development in Leeds’ pursuit of Fenerbahce defender Diego Carlos, with a report from Turkey revealing they are very serious about signing the former Aston Villa man (via Sport Witness).

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The Whites’ level of interest is underlined by the fact that they are ready to submit a formal offer for Carlos soon, although there could be competition for his signature, with fellow promoted sides Sunderland and Burnley also named as potential suitors.

Previous reports have suggested that Turf Moor is the centre-back’s preferred destination, but Farke’s side are undeterred, and an official bid could be made soon, with Fenerbahce open to a sale due to his persistent injury issues.

"Imposing" Carlos would be risky signing for Leeds

It is no surprise that Fenerbahce are willing to offload the Brazilian, given that he is one of the Turkish clubs high-earners, raking in £111k-a-week, but has been unable to make a real impact, having suffered persistent injury issues since his time at Villa.

Season

Games missed due to injury

2022-23

28

2023-24

3

2024-25

24

It is a real shame the 32-year-old has been unable to put his injury problems behind him, given that the ex-Villa man impressed at times during his time in Birmingham, receiving high praise from journalist Mat Kendrick.

If Carlos were to become available on loan, with Fenerbahce paying a big chunk of his wages, it could be worth Leeds taking a gamble. However, a permanent move wouldn’t make sense, given that Farke cannot rely on the centre-back to be available for selection.

David Warner keeps door ajar for Champions Trophy 'if selected'

He posted on social media that he would be “open” to next year’s tournament in Pakistan

ESPNcricinfo staff09-Jul-2024

David Warner last ODI was when Australia won the 2023 World Cup•AFP/Getty Images

David Warner has again left the door ajar to appear in next year’s Champions Trophy despite announcing his international retirement over the last 12 months.Warner retired from Test cricket in January when he also announced that last year’s ODI World Cup was his final outing in the 50-over format, but talked of being available for the Champions Trophy if he was needed. Last month his international career ended with Australia’s exit from the T20 World Cup.Related

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However, in an Instagram post reflecting on his career, Warner made another reference to the Champions Trophy which will be staged in Pakistan next February and March.”I will continue to play franchise cricket for a while, and I am also open to playing for [Australia] in the Champions Trophy if selected,” he posted.It is a highly unlikely scenario given Warner will not be available for any of Australia’s matches in the lead-up to the tournament. They tour England in September for ODIs then face Pakistan in November when Jake Fraser-McGurk, who Warner has endorsed as his successor, will be one of the frontrunners to come in at the top of the order. Back in January, Test and ODI captain Pat Cummins responded to the prospect of Warner making a one-off return for the Champions Trophy.”I think it’s probably time to give some others a crack [in ODIs], but knowing that he’s going to still be playing cricket,” he said. “So it might be more of a kind of break glass in an emergency option. But, you know, David is going to be scoring runs somewhere in the world. So you never quite know that this is [the end].”Warner finished his ODI career with 6932 runs at 45.30 with 22 hundreds, a tally second to only Ricky Ponting.”Chapter closed!! It’s been an unbelievable experience to play at the highest level for such a long period,” Warner began his Instagram post. “Australia was my team. The majority of my career was at the international level. It’s been an honour to be able to do this. 100+ games in all formats is my highlight.”I want to say thanks to everyone out there who has made this possible. My wife and my girls, who sacrificed so much, thank you for all your support. No person will ever know what we’ve been through. For all the cricket fans out there, I truly hope I have entertained you and changed cricket, especially tests, in a way where we scored a bit faster than others. We cannot do what we love without the fans, so thanks.”Warner will be in action in Canada’s GT20 and a T10 tournament in the Cayman Islands over the coming months while Sydney Thunder remain confident of seeing him return for the BBL although he also has a deal with Dubai Capitals in the ILT20 which overlaps and commentary commitments.

Romano: Aston Villa open talks to sign another "fearless" gem after Redmond

Already closing in on signing Zepiqueno Redmond on a free transfer, Aston Villa have now reportedly followed that by opening talks to sign another teenage talent this summer.

Redmond completes Aston Villa medical

Welcoming their first striker since losing Jhon Duran in the January transfer window, Villa are set to officially sign Redmond at the start of next month after he passed a medical at the club. The 18-year-old will leave Feyenoord at the end of his current deal this summer, before becoming a free agent and arriving in the Midlands in a bargain deal.

Despite his place as a rising star rather than an established mainstay at the top level, Redmond has already earned impressive praise.

Speaking to reporters, the forward’s former coach at Zwervers, Ricardo Veerman, revealed how talented Redmond was at a young age, saying: “What stood out was that he was younger than the other boys around him. You can tell pretty quickly if a kid has something, but he had something truly special.

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“He could dribble past defenders with ease and scored a lot — often three times per match, sometimes even more. He was one of the key players, although that’s a funny thing to say about someone that age. Coaches around us were always asking who he was and how old he was.”

Since then, Redmond has risen through the ranks at PSV to earn opportunities in the Eredivisie and Champions League. Now set to become an Aston Villa player, the young forward could be joined by another emerging attacking talent as the Villans look to go two for two in this summer’s transfer window.

Aston Villa open talks to sign Jesus Rodriguez

According to Fabrizio Romano, Aston Villa have now opened talks to sign Jesus Rodriguez from Real Betis this summer. The 19-year-old winger impressed many in Spain last season and even managed to get on the scoresheet twice to only add to a growing reputation.

Described as “fearless” by U23 scout Antonio Mango, Rodriguez could become an unexpected replacement for Marcus Rashford if he hits the ground running. The latter is set to return to Manchester United now that his loan spell is over and it remains to be seen whether Aston Villa attempt to secure his signature on a permanent deal.

Rodriguez, at just 19 years old, could offer Unai Emery to perfect solution. Having already signed Redmond, it looks as though Villa’s current focus is on welcoming young talent and the Real Betis star is seemingly next on the list.

A talented winger who has already made his mark on senior football, it’s clear to see why the Midlands club are so interested in Rodriguez.

Enzo Le Fee repeat: Sunderland considering deal for "outstanding" star

Sunderland will be playing in the Premier League next season and they know that their recruitment work this summer will need to be spot on to give them a chance of avoiding an instant relegation.

The Black Cats recently confirmed the signing of Enzo Le Fee on a permanent basis from Roma for a club-record fee of £20m as their first addition ahead of their return to the top-flight, after he spent the second half of the 2024/25 campaign on loan with Regis Le Bris’ team.

Le Fee showed quality on the ball, with 1.3 dribbles completed per game, but combined that with 2.5 tackles and interceptions per game in his 11 league starts, which suggests that he could thrive in a relegation battle where plenty of defending will be needed.

The French maestro also heads into the Premier League with plenty of experience in Europe’s major leagues, with 132 games in Ligue 1 and six matches in the Serie A, which means that he is used to playing at the top level and that is why he could be an excellent signing for the Black Cats.

Sunderland eyeing deal for Premier League defender

Sunderland could repeat the blinder that they have seemingly played with Le Fee, who is an experienced top-flight performer who is already settled in and used to playing for the club, by signing another one of their loan stars.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

According to the Northern Echo, the Premier League newcomers are considering a deal to bring Chris Mepham back to the Stadium of Light in the summer transfer window.

The report claims that the Wales international is one of a number of defensive options being weighed up by the board at Sunderland, as they eye up a possible reunion with the Bournemouth centre-back.

It states that there was no obligation for the loan move to be turned into a permanent one this summer, which means that they would have to negotiate a fee with the Cherries.

Why Sunderland should sign Chris Mepham

The Black Cats should swoop to sign Mepham on a permanent basis in the coming weeks because it could be a repeat of their Le Fee blinder.

Like the French star, the 27-year-old colossus would not need any time to settle in because he just played 40 matches on loan at the club in the 2024/25 season.

The Welsh titan also has top-flight experience, like Le Fee, having played 61 times in the Premier League for Bournemouth, which means that he knows the division and could provide vital experience to a young team lacking games at that level.

Mepham, who was hailed as “outstanding” by pundit Carlton Palmer, also delivered solid performances for Sunderland when called upon in the Championship this season.

Appearances

38

Pass accuracy

87%

Tackles + interceptions per game

2.3

Clearances per game

6.1

Ground duel success rate

55%

Aerial duel success rate

63%

Clean sheets

11

As you can see in the table above, the Bournemouth loanee was dominant in his duels and helped the team to keep 11 clean sheets in 38 outings in the second tier.

He also averaged the most clearances per match in the entire squad, ahead of the likes of Luke O’Nien and Dan Ballard, which may be down to his experience and know-how, as he excels at being in the right place at the right time at the heart of the defence.

Mepham was, therefore, an important player for Sunderland in the Championship and that is why they should press ahead with a deal to sign him on a permanent basis, as a star who knows the club and has Premier League experience under his belt.

Like Le Fee, the 27-year-old brute would hit the ground running on Wearside in the top-flight because of his loan spell at the Stadium of Light and because of the top-flight games that he has played.

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It is now down to the club to ensure that they can strike a deal with Bournemouth to bring him back to Sunderland, to join Le Fee as their second signing.

Leeds have been handed fresh boost in pursuit of "extraordinary" 26 y/o

A positive update has emerged regarding Leeds United completing the signing of an “extraordinary” new defender in the summer transfer window.

Leeds plotting to strengthen spine after promotion

The Whites are expected to sign an upgrade on Illan Meslier between the sticks this summer, with Chelsea goalkeeper Djordje Petrovic mentioned as a possible option – Wolves stopper Sam Johnstone is seen as an alternative target.

Another goalkeeper who has been linked with a switch to Leeds is Liverpool ace Caoimhin Kelleher, with an enquiry reportedly made about his availability. With Giorgi Mamardashvili joining the Reds from Valencia, now looks like the right time for him to depart.

Indeed, 49ers Enterprises want to strengthen the team’s spine this summer, with reports suggesting Leeds will happily spend around £30m each on a new goalkeeper, centre-back, centre-midfielder and striker.

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Kalvin Phillips was once a hero at Elland Hero, arguably standing out as the best player at the club, and a return to the Whites has been rumoured recently. The 29-year-old has had a tough time of things in recent years and may feel that going back to his former club could be best for him ahead of next season.

Manor Solomon is of course a top target for Leeds, as Daniel Farke looks to sign him on a permanent basis after an impressive season on loan at the club from Tottenham. He scored 10 goals and registered 12 assists in the Championship in 2024/25.

Leeds boosted in pursuit of "extraordinary" Balerdi

According to The Sunday Mirror [via MOT Leeds News], Leeds’ pursuit of Marseille centre-back Leonardo Balerdi has received a boost ahead of the summer window.

The report backs that the Whites are set for a “major” summer of spending and the 26-year-old defender has now refused to rule out an exit at the end of the season: “I’m happy in Marseille and I’d like to bring something back here, so I have to focus to the last match. After that, I don’t know. I’d like the team to be in the Champions League, then I’ll ask myself about the future.”

Balerdi would be a fantastic signing for Leeds in the summer, boosting their defensive options significantly ahead of what promises to be a tough season back in the Premier League.

The Marseille captain has been a rock-solid presence at the heart of his team’s defence this season, making 26 appearances in Ligue 1 and averaging 2.7 clearances per game. He has also completed 94% of his passes, showing that he is strong in possession.

Manager Roberto De Zerbi has heaped praise on him: “Balerdi? I hope that the big European teams don’t realise that he exists. I say every night before going to sleep that I am happy that he is going under the radar of the big teams. He is an extraordinary player.”

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Balerdi is also a six-cap Argentina international, which is no mean feat considering they are World Cup winners with the likes of Cristian Romero and Lisandro Martinez in their team, and Leeds should do all they can to sign him.

Ivory Coast star likely to move in summer amid Everton and Wolves interest

Everton and Wolverhampton Wanderers have ventured down a relatively similar path this season and could now fight it out to sign an Ivory Coast international this summer, per a report.

Everton and Wolves both looking forward with optimism

Not so long ago, Everton and Wolves looked certain to be involved in a prolonged relegation dogfight after their respective poor starts to the Premier League campaign.

Gary O’Neil and Sean Dyche were both relieved of their duties, and it is fair to say their replacements have made a world of difference at both Molineux and Goodison Park as the two clubs look forward to next season in the top-flight.

Everton manager David Moyes

David Moyes has added a tactical flexibility and change of style at Everton, while Vitor Pereira is becoming a heroic figure in the West Midlands due to his infectious desire to improve their fortunes.

For now, the rest of the campaign takes priority for both sides. However, history will reflect fondly on the defining moment either hierarchy decided a change in the dugout was necessary to preserve their league status.

Loyalty goes a long way in football, and it could always be Moyes or Pereira on the chopping block in months to come, but you would struggle to find too many people harbouring scathing criticisms of either manager.

David Moyes’ record since arriving at Everton

Wins

5

Draws

6

Losses

4

Vitor Pereira’s record since arriving at Wolves

Wins

10

Draws

2

Losses

7

Exciting times could be on the horizon for Everton and Wolves, with the former set to enter a new era at Bramley Moore Dock after so much anticipation over their stadium move.

Nevertheless, the pair mentioned may now lock horns in the pursuit of a talented defender to bolster their ranks ahead of the new season.

Everton and Wolves go head to head for Auxerre defender Clement Akpa

According to Foot Mercato, Everton and Wolves are fighting it out to sign Auxerre defender Clement Akpa and it has been made clear that he is almost certain to leave the Ligue 1 outfit this summer. Eintracht Frankfurt, Hoffenheim and Stuttgart are also keen on the 23-year-old, who has registered one assist in 27 appearances across all competitions in 2024/25.

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No talks have taken place as of yet, but there is every chance he will be available for a modest fee due to Auxerre’s need to boost their financial situation. Intriguingly, he could become part of a current of French top-flight defenders set for moves to either England or Germany, which also includes the likes of Everton target Facundo Medina.

Becoming an imposing presence for Auxerre, Akpa has won 114 duels this season. Primarily a centre-back, he has also been used in a berth on the left-hand side of their defence, earning 2 caps for Ivory Coast this year.

Versatility is key for any club with aspirations of staying in the Premier League, so it will be intriguing to see the battle commence between Everton and Wolves to land the France-born defender.

"Unbelievable" £5m manager now Southampton's top target to replace Juric

An “unbelievable” manager with a release clause of £5m is now Southampton’s first-choice target to replace Ivan Juric, according to reports.

Saints' new manager search underway after Juric departure

It was always going to be a difficult task for Juric to keep Southampton in the Premier League, given the very poor start Russell Martin made to the campaign, but things couldn’t have gone much worse for the Croatian coach.

The 49-year-old oversaw just one win in the Premier League during his time with the Saints, a 2-1 victory against fellow strugglers Ipswich Town in February, and his dismissal was confirmed following the 3-1 loss to Tottenham Hotspur at the weekend.

With relegation to the Championship also confirmed, the board’s most pertinent task will be to bring in a new manager capable of winning promotion back to the top flight next season, and a number of targets have already been identified.

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The likes of Frank Lampard, Steven Gerrard, Liam Rosenior and Danny Rohl are all under consideration, with the latter two managers the front-runners for the role. Rohl is eager to leave Sheffield Wednesday, and he could have the opportunity to do so if Southampton are willing to pay the £5m release clause in his contract.

Sheffield Wednesday manager DannyRohl

According to a report from GiveMeSport, the Wednesday boss is the Saints’ number one choice to replace Juric, with chiefs starting the new manager search weeks ago.

Rohl has impressed at Championship level with Sheffield Wednesday, and sporting director Johannes Spors is believed to be a big fan, potentially making it more likely the Saints will pursue a move.

"Unbelievable" Rohl could be excellent appointment

The 35-year-old is clearly held in high regard at Sheffield Wednesday, with Josh Windass describing his manager as “unbelievable”, while also claiming he is the “best head coach” he’s played under.

It would be fair to say the German has done a stellar job with the Owls, securing Championship survival on the final day of the 2024-25 campaign, despite his side’s second-tier status looking perilous when he first took over.

Since then, the Zwickau-born manager has stabilised Wednesday in the Championship, with his side currently sitting in 13th place, indicating that he could now be ready to manage a side with aspirations of gaining promotion to the Premier League.

Rosenior is another intriguing option for the Saints, given that his Strasbourg side are on course to qualify for the Champions League this season, but Rohl could be a more attainable option, given the £5m release clause, and there are plenty of indications he could be a success at St. Mary’s.

BPL 2024: Comilla eye title hat-trick as Bangladesh's big five take centrestage

Big overseas names in the spotlight once again as BPL begins on January 19 in Mirpur

Mohammad Isam18-Jan-2024

Can Comilla make it a hat-trick?

Four-time BPL champions Comilla Victorians once again look like overwhelming favourites after claiming the title in 2022 and 2023. Last year’s finalists Sylhet Strikers and Rangpur Riders are also among strong contenders this time with strengthened squads while the likes of Chattogram Challengers, Khulna Tigers and Fortune Barishal are also expected to pose a threat. New franchise Durdanto Dhaka will look to put up a challenge.Comilla base their strength on top overseas players, particularly Andre Russell, Moeen Ali and Sunil Narine who were part of Comilla’s previous two title runs. They have added Iftikhar Ahmed from Barishal and Towhid Hridoy from Sylhet, which adds to their middle-order strength. Litton Das and Mohammad Rizwan are top-order gems and can share wicketkeeping duties. They have Rashid Khan on their roster although his participation is subject to fitness. Mustafizur Rahman remains a key part of the attack, with Zaman Khan and Naseem Shah as the overseas bowling firepower.

Who are the big names in other teams?

Shakib Al Hasan is Rangpur’s main enforcer, with Babar Azam, Nicholas Pooran, Brandon King and Wanindu Hasaranga among their big names. Azmatullah Omarzai and Matheesha Pathirana are also part of their set-up, while local boys Nurul Hasan, Mahedi Hasan, Hasan Mahmud and Rony Talukdar have done well in the recent past.Mashrafe Mortaza will captain Sylhet, and Najmul Hossain Shanto and Yasir Ali are the big-name batters among the Bangladesh players. Harry Tector, Ben Cutting and Ryan Burl will add to their firepower, while Tanzim Hasan, Richard Ngarava and Nazmul Islam are part of their bowling group. Sylhet will rue missing out on Towhid Hridoy who has now moved to Comilla.The senior trio of Tamim Iqbal, Mahmudullah and captain Mushfiqur Rahim will bolster Barishal, who also have Mehidy Hasan Miraz, Paul Stirling and Fakhar Zaman in their squad. With Mohammad Amir and Dunith Wellalage also part of their bowling attack, Barishal can be a tough proposition for the better teams in BPL.Shai Hope, Dasun Shanaka and Evin Lewis are some of the leading players for Khulna. Faheem Ashraf should be able to do a job as an allrounder until he has to join his PSL franchise in mid-February.Chattogram have Curtis Campher and Oman’s Bilal Khan in their squad, alongside Mohammad Haris, Najibullah Zadran and Stephen Eskinazi as their batting mainstays.Newcomers Durdanto Dhaka have also opted for a young side. With Mosaddek Hossain as captain, they also have Saim Ayub, Mohammad Naim and Saif Hassan as their top-order batters while Taskin Ahmed and the in-form Shoriful Islam form the core of their bowling unit. Sadeera Samarawickrama is also in their squad, although his availability depends on him getting an NOC from SLC.Andre Russell is among the big international names at the BPL•BCB

Locals away from centre-stage

BPL has long relied on foreign acquisitions, with overseas players handed important roles in the teams. As a result, the local players are hardly in the spotlight.Defending champions Comilla have brought in Towhid Hridoy but the presence of Mohammad Rizwan, Johnson Charles and Iftikhar Ahmed makes it harder for the locals to take on central roles. Sylhet and Barishal have a few big Bangladesh names that can take the batting responsibility but teams like Chattogram have only a couple of local batters of future promise.

The big five turn up again

The tenth edition of the BPL is another occasion for Bangladesh’s five superstars – Shakib, Tamim, Mashrafe, Mahmudullah and Mushfiqur – to entertain the home crowds.Shakib, who will play for Rangpur, remains the kingpin. He is still one of the leading names in the T20 circuit. Tamim has teamed up with Mahmudullah and Mushfiqur at Fortune Barishal. Tamim had earlier said he would wait till January 2024 to decide his future in international cricket. Mahmudullah will be eyeing a T20I comeback after his ODI resurrection in the World Cup last year. Mortaza, who will lead Sylhet Strikers, will be looking to work through his injury struggles.

How big is the BPL, really?

The BPL loses out on big stars and stature due to the presence of other T20 leagues during the same window. The BPL starts from January 19 and goes on till March 1 but tournaments like the SA20 and ILT20 are also running in parallel. The PSL too has a two-week clash with the BPL. Several Pakistan players are part of the BPL and won’t be available during the business end of the competition – the qualifiers and final.

What Shane Warne's greatest deliveries tell us

The ball is the fundamental unit of cricket, and with Warne, each one was a universe of possibilities

Osman Samiuddin10-Mar-2022If Shane Warne never took another wicket after Mike Gatting’s, he would still live on. Not in as many minds, and certainly not as rich a figure, but a ball like that has its own life. It does not go forgotten. The reason it endures and that it was so instantaneously acclaimed is for what it did in the milliseconds of its existence, the mad physics around it, but also because it was legspin as a platonic ideal.This is, of course, a truism. How else do all the great deliveries become great if not by doing something great? But that ball speaks to a fundamental often overlooked in cricket, which is that, broken down, the game is only the sum of the self-contained vignettes each of its individual deliveries represents. Only when stitched together do we then have a match, unto a series, unto a career. Each ball is a world by itself, of limitations and possibilities, and when you walked into the world of a Shane Warne delivery, you walked into a world with no limitations, where possibilities abounded. In this world the ball could, and did, behave in ways unlike any before Warne existed.Think of the circumstances leading to that ball. It was Warne’s first in a Test in England. Hardly anyone at Old Trafford that day would have seen him before. They might have heard of a new blond leggie who had helped win a Test in Colombo and run through West Indies, but few would’ve seen him. Then, without warning, he did .Related

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And if he could do that, then what couldn’t he do every time he walked up to bowl?In the days since his passing, scouring YouTube for his best moments has been a comfort. Quite likely this has been a universal response. A connoisseur will argue that 90-second videos of only wickets falling is to miss the point of Warne. That experiencing Warne without what Gideon Haigh calls the pageant of Warne is to know of Warne but not to feel Warne.That theatre essential. That walk back to his mark, the occasional pause to fix the field or to let doubts fester in the batter, to make them think something is amiss when nothing is. Then the amble in, so utterly lacking in foreboding it was as if Jaws was coming to shore to the title music of . Then there were the traps, with ball but also with manner. The appeals, the gradual massaging of an umpire into his decision; the bluff of the oohs and aahs and smirks and sneers when he beat a bat, but especially when he found the middle of one. As much as Warne’s wickets, everything before and around them is the eulogy.But these videos make two points, the first a complementary one, that these grand and elaborate ploys and plots needed denouements to match and Warne delivered them with truly freakish quality and consistency. But second, that even as one-off deliveries that may never be bowled again, with no build-up or backstory or history, that only ever exist in bite-sized social media clips, these deliveries work. And how.Look back and weep: MSK Prasad is bemused at what has befallen him in Adelaide in 1999•Hamish Blair/Getty ImagesNot long after Gatting at Old Trafford, Warne would bowl Graham Gooch behind his legs at Edgbaston, coming in round the wicket. It is less iconic but notable because it became a leitmotif in the Warne canon: which other bowler, before or since, has bowled as many batters around their legs as Warne?In a way this dismissal is a legspinner’s ultimate flex. Sneaking in behind a batter is peak deception. And to do it, the ball must do what all leggies are supposed to make it do: spin leg to off and preferably big. The conceit is in treating the batter as if he is not there as an opponent: he’s there as a marker, an obstacle around which to find the best route to the stumps. The calibration needs to be so precise, it’s unfathomable: the angle, the spot where it must land, the degree of turn, all so that it misses pads, bat, and backside. In this instance the angles are even more outrageous because Warne, unusually, runs in from between the umpire and stumps.There’s an over to Craig McMillan that is priceless for how Warne sets his trap (Adam Gilchrist’s cackling provides an assist). But the wicket ball is an absolute WTF for the lengths to which McMillan has gone to prevent being bowled behind his legs. Ultimately, as he bat-pads to short leg, he appears to be playing a forward-defensive to a delivery bowled by the square-leg umpire.In no other sport is there an obvious equivalent to what is happening here. A fleeting kinship with football’s nutmeg? There’s greater consequence and a more acute geometry here, as when Warne famously nutmegged Basit Ali. Typical Warne that the tease – chatting with Ian Healy about whether to have pasta or Mexican for dinner (as if he wanted anything other than pizza) to stretch out the tension of the day’s last ball – is as sweet.Something of this mode, of the wrong-way-round-rightness, is elicited by the epic Roberto Carlos free kick against France in 1997. Carlos eschewed the obvious angle for his left foot by swerving the ball like an outswinger round the outside of the defensive wall, rather than curling it like an inswinger round the other side. That free kick was a one-off: Warne did it repeatedly.The best of the genre isn’t strictly of the genre. Poor MSK Prasad receives a Warne delivery from the wicket that doesn’t drift as much as get caught in a late and sudden patch of violent turbulence, pushing the ball down and to the leg side.A quandary. Prasad has taken leg-stump guard and instinct is telling him to pad this away. Training and tradition are telling him to get real, because balls delivered from there are not padded away. That’s not how cricket works. From flight, fight or freeze, Prasad chooses the last.Even as the ball then hits the stumps behind him and Healy is starting to celebrate, Prasad is unmoved, staring at the spot the ball landed on – around a sixth-leg-stump line. How did it land there, his mind is failing to process, and where has it gone, it is asking. And how did it get spun the ball. Somebody who had never seen cricket could watch a big legbreak from Warne and understand immediately it was an elite athletic feat, sexy and dangerous, compelling and superior, unique and evolutionary. A single Warne legbreak was the game’s gateway drug.As time passed that spectacle became rarer, though not extinct. The most vivid occasions were against left-handers, where, because Warne was at them from round the wicket, and that TV cameras mess up depth perception, some of those balls looked like they were breaking at right angles.Like with Andrew Strauss at Edgbaston, which nearly made it as the ‘s ball of the (21st) century. It would have done, probably, had Strauss not appeared as discombobulated as Prasad had been. Granted, Strauss did not freeze, but in displaying the worst footwork since Elaine Benes hit the dance floor, he tarred the delivery a smidge with his own cluelessness.Not that better positioning helped, as Shivnarine Chanderpaul once discovered at the SCG. He understood the ball’s intentions from the line, so preposterously far outside off that Chanderpaul would need a visa to play it. He knew this was going to spit back into him. Having figured out the length and leaned forward, he changed plans and nimbly shifted his weight on to his back foot. Until this moment – 71 off 67 balls – Chanderpaul’s plans against Warne had worked. Until ball 68, when Mike Tyson’s famous musing about plans came to mind: “Everybody has a plan until they get hit.” Or bowled by Shane Warne.This was a central truth about Warne. Not only did he always have a ball that punched through the opponent’s plans, he had one that punched through his own. As when he pulled off a near-exact replica of the Chanderpaul delivery in bowling Saeed Anwar in Hobart three years later.Like Chanderpaul, Anwar was set. Like Chanderpaul, Anwar knew as soon as the ball left Warne’s hand what it was going to do. Like Chanderpaul, he half stepped out but smartly leaned back, with aspirations to cut. Like Chanderpaul, those aspirations were swiftly turned to crud. Like Chanderpaul, he was bowled. Unlike Chanderpaul, this was the one time Anwar looked inelegant with bat in hand.Hobart heist: in 1999, Saeed Anwar was bowled by one that torpedoed in at a right angle almost, after pitching way outside off•Getty ImagesThere’s an even more cartoonish quality to this ball, an unreal defying of natural laws. For starters, it breaks the width of the Thames to hit leg stump. And ordinarily, when a ball lands on a pitch, it loses speed. This is science and we all signed up to science to understand how the world works. All except this ball. This ball springs off the pitch faster than it landed, so fast that it doesn’t hit leg stump, it knocks it clean out of the ground. A ball produced by a spinner, with the consequence of one produced by a fast bowler.What elevates this ball, though, is Richie Benaud. Prior to it, there’s a commentary preamble from Mark Taylor about the plans Warne might be working on against Anwar. Those plans are binned as Warne switches to round the wicket and bowls this ball. Only Benaud can process and articulate: “Whatever Warne was planning, he has suddenly produced a ball entirely different from the others he has bowled and it has ripped back.”Which is to say, whatever else you had been watching, or not, whatever Warne plan you might have intuited, however much you knew about the game, if you watched this one ball, then you saw everything you needed to and you didn’t need to know anything else.Except this last thing: the flipper. In later years when Warne stopped bowling it, he started relying on the bastardised slider. Not the legbreak that didn’t turn – let’s call that the bluffer – which did for poor Ian Bell at Lord’s and fooled even Benaud. The real slider got Andrew Flintoff later that same innings.Neither was a patch on the flipper, which seemed a hellish delivery to bowl, let alone bowl well. The flipper, Warne would explain, required the ball to be released from an actual snap of the fingers, which was difficult but totally apt because it was presaging magic. Unlike Warne’s big, showy legbreak, this was proper illusion. Batters saw that Warne had dragged it down, except he hadn’t. Batters saw a long hop, or one short enough to cut or pull, except it wasn’t. Batters saw it go straight and it did, except straight never felt so pretzelian.It would be cruel to pick any of Daryll Cullinan’s malfunctions; candy from kids Benaud said of one. It would also be impossible to pick just one. The one that got Richie Richardson, the world’s introduction to it? Cullinan one, two or three? Ian Bishop, ’96 World Cup, a place in the final on the line? Let’s go Alec Stewart, usually such an expert judge and executor of the cut, getting it so wrong at the Gabba. Not as short as he saw, not the legbreak he saw, not as slow as he saw.The flipper also didn’t care for science, such was its acceleration on landing. This question sounds wrong, but it isn’t: has a ball ever beaten batters for pace so comprehensively and so consistently as Warne’s flipper?Nothing does justice to the world of Shane Warne – to the world of a single Warne delivery – as watching these deliveries again the last week has made clear. Maybe they bring some succour. Maybe from them we see that even if Warne had lived long beyond last Friday, these deliveries could not be bowled again by anyone other than him. That even if he is now no longer of this world, we live on gratefully, eternally in his world. Rest in Peace, King.

Aaron Judge Passes Lou Gehrig on Prestigious Yankees List With Multi-HR Game

Aaron Judge crushed two home runs during Sunday's 12-5 New York Yankees win over the Athletics. This bumped up his season total to 30 home runs, putting him in second place in MLB behind Cal Raleigh.

Sunday marked Judge's 44th career multi-home run game. In terms of Yankees players, Judge now sits in third all-time for this achievement. He passed Lou Gehrig, who had 43 multi-homer games in his career, with Sunday's game, via Sarah Langs. Judge now trails Babe Ruth—who is the all-time leader in MLB history—with 68 while he was on the Yankees, and Mickey Mantle's 46. It's very possible Judge could pass Mantle this season.

On top of that, Judge's 44 multi-home run games gives him five more than any other player accomplished in the first 1,200 games of their career, Langs reported. Judge is at this mark after just 1,076 games.

It's no surprise that Judge stands out above the rest when it comes to many MLB stats and historical marks, and these two notes are just more examples of how Judge continues to dominate the sport.

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