Leeds man Orta could be off to sort deal

Victor Orta has been spotted at Manchester airport heading to Belgium, suggesting that he could be sorting Leeds United’s move for Nicolas Raskin.

The Lowdown: Leeds linked with Raskin move

The 21-year-old has impressed for Standard Liege in the last 12 months, making 29 Jupiler Pro League appearances in 2021/22, chipping in with four assists from his defensive midfield role.

Raskin has been linked with a move to Leeds in recent days, as Jesse Marsch looks to fill the potential void left by Kalvin Phillips this summer.

Now, a fresh development suggests the Whites could be closer than ever to snapping up Raskin imminently.

The Latest: Orta’s airport trop hints at transfer

On Thursday, Leeds fan @Nathaniel2471 posted a photo on Twitter of himself and Orta at Manchester airport, with the Whites’ sporting director taking a flight to Belgium.

“Victor Orta in Manchester airport going Belgium”, the tweet read, accompanied by an all-important suggestive eyes emoji!

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The Verdict: Great summer addition

While there is no proof that Orta was flying to seal the signing of Raskin, it certainly seems like a coincidence at a time when Leeds are strongly linked with one of the Belgium top-flights stand-out performers.

If a deal can get over the line, the youngster could be an excellent signing by Jesse Marsch, providing a new combative presence in the middle of the park, particularly with Phillips possibly leaving and Stuart Dallas out with a long-term injury.

Raskin averaged 2.6 tackles per game in the league last season, a number higher than every Leeds player except Phillips, Dallas and Luke Ayling, and that all-action approach is needed in a team that leaked goals last term and could be without all three of those names come game-week one.

In other news, Orta is also believed to have stepped up his chase for another Leeds signing. Read more here.

Celtic must secure Mohanad Jeahze transfer

Celtic ended their 2021/22 SPFL season with the best defensive record in the league having conceded just 22 goals in 38 games.

To further highlight their defensive strength, the Hoops faced fewer shots on target (76) than any other side in the top flight.

One figure that played a big part in Celtic’s title winning campaign at the back was Carl Starfelt.

Signed during the previous summer transfer window from Rubin Kazan on a four-year deal for a reported fee of £4m, the centre-back quickly became a prominent figure for Postecoglou.

Throughout his debut campaign, the Sweden international made 49 appearances across all competitions and played more minutes in the league than any other outfield player.

With the second-highest number of interceptions (42) and tackles won (30) to his name, Starfelt also had the joint-second highest average of clearances (3.5) and joint-highest average for aerial duels won per game (4.2) in Celtic’s ranks.

This highlights just how much of a capable defender he is and how significant he was for the Hoops this term.

Now that the campaign has drawn to an end, the summer transfer window will give Postecoglou the chance to potentially make some more changes to his squad so they can progress.

One figure that could potentially fit in the side well and possibly make a formidable defensive duo with Starfelt is Mohanad Jeahze.

The Hoops were linked with a reported £2m move for the Hammarby left-back, who has been labelled as a “class” player by Darijan Bojanic, last month.

With eight league appearances to his name this season, the defender has racked up the highest number of interceptions (18) and second-highest number of tackles (13) in Hammarby’s squad.

This shows how much of a tough defender he is and how he could be a solid fit next to Starfelt to make Celtic stronger on the left side of the defence.

Despite the current Celtic defender already showing his defensive talents, having another defensive full-back next to him, such as Jeahze, could make Postecoglou’s side an even tougher side to play against.

Taking into account how the Hoops will be facing off against some of Europe’s top teams in the Champions League next season, having some extra defensive reinforcements would not be a bad thing for the Parkhead club as they’ll be aiming to regain the SPFL title as well.

In other news: Better than Edouard: Celtic eyeing “feisty” 51-goal dynamo, supporters surely buzzing

Pep won’t be’ fulfilled’ without UCL crown

Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola will reportedly not be ‘fulfilled’ at the club until he has made them Champions League winners, according to Sky Sports pundit Alex McLeish.

The Lowdown: New deal almost complete

The 51-year-old is said to have reached an agreement with the club’s hierarchy over a new contract which would keep him at the Etihad Stadium until 2025 at the very least, but fans of the Sky Blues will have no doubt felt concerned by what the Spaniard had to say following their recent European exit.

After crashing out of the Champions League following a 6-5 aggregate defeat against Real Madrid last week, Guardiola admitted that he might not be the right man to help City get their hands on the trophy for the first time in their history, and the former Scotland manager has suggested that time is ticking in the club’s hunt for European glory.

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The Latest: Pep wants Champions League crown

Speaking to Football Insider about Guardiola’s ongoing pursuit of a Champions League triumph with City to add to the two he won at Barcelona, McLeish said:

“Guardiola’s been a phenomenon all over the world. But the one thing that will be eating away at him is this Champions League trophy. It’s escaped him over these last six or seven years.

“The loss against Real Madrid will have been devastating for the mentality at the club, but there’s no way the boardroom at City will be saying: ‘Pep’s got to go’.

“They’re rightly rewarding him with a new contract. I believe he won’t be fulfilled at the club unless he goes on and wins that first Champions League.

“How long can they keep this incredible team they have together?”

The Verdict: Best man for the job

Guardiola came to City back in 2016 and has since gone on to enjoy plenty of success with the club, having guided them to multiple Premier League, FA Cup and Carabao Cup triumphs in that time.

They are currently in a title race with Liverpool, and if they continue to win all of their remaining matches between now and the end of the season, they will be crowned top-flight champions once again by the end of May.

The ex-Barcelona boss, who was once hailed as “inspiring” by Reds manager Jurgen Klopp, might be experiencing some self-doubt regarding what more he could achieve at the club in the future.

However, he has already transformed City into one of the best teams in the world during his six-year spell in charge and definitely has the potential to keep accomplishing great things with them in years to come, having already become the most successful manager in the club’s history.

In other news… Man City are said to have registered interest in this surprising new transfer target

Mission Improbable: Capitals' obstacle course through the IPL playoffs

Capitals will have to match one of the all-time great IPL performances to win the tournament. Will they do it?

Varun Shetty and Dustin Silgardo10-May-2019In the history of the IPL, only two teams have reached the final after having won the eliminator, and just one of them have gone on to win the tournament. Since the implementation of the playoffs system, Sunrisers Hyderabad are the only team to win the trophy after winning the eliminator. They did this in 2016, when they beat Royal Challengers Bangalore in the final. Chennai Super Kings are the only other team to start in the eliminator and make the final, which happened in 2012.Batting collapses caused Delhi Capitals to lose points in the league stage and drop to third in the points table after they were on top for a while. Now, for them to make the final, a mighty task lies ahead.Two knockouts in a weekCapitals will basically have to win their third game in seven days to win the tournament, and will have won four in nine days if they do pull it off.Once again, only Sunrisers have achieved anything comparable at the back end of a tournament when they won four games in 11 days in 2016, before winning three in five days to seal the title. In the same season, Royal Challengers had a streak of five wins in 11 days, which was snapped in the final, even though they had three days off before that game.Other teams have had comparable streaks. Kings XI Punjab won five away games in a row in the middle of the 2014 season, Rajasthan Royals had five wins in nine days in 2015, and Delhi Daredevils got four in eight days in 2012. All of these streaks had 50% or fewer games at home, so they were commendable feats, but none of them involved the pressure of the playoffs. In essence, Capitals will have to match one of the all-time great IPL performances to finish on top.ESPNcricinfo LtdThe tight schedule and travelWhat makes Capitals’ task even harder is that the playoffs are a packed affair, which could well leave them struggling by the end of it. Their run-chase against Sunrisers on May 8 was tense, but they only have around 44 hours to recover and prepare for the second qualifier. At least that game is at the same venue, Visakhapatnam, so they will not have to travel. If they beat Super Kings, though, they will have to board a flight the next day to Hyderabad, which will leave them just one evening and the next morning to prepare for the final. Meanwhile, Mumbai Indians, who qualified for the final after winning the first qualifier, would have had five full days in between their last game and the final.Only 11 times in IPL history has a team gone on a three-match winning streak over five days or fewer when they played one game or less at home. So Capitals are trying to do something that is done less than once in a season.They are punching upWinning three matches in five days is tough enough, but it’s even tougher when you are facing the toughest opposition. Capitals have already beaten Sunrisers, the fourth-placed team. Now, they have to beat the top two sides in the competition – Super Kings and Mumbai – back to back. Those two sides have proven themselves to be the best two teams in the league not just this season but also historically. Capitals lost both the matches against Super Kings in the league stage this year. With all this, they are up for a tough challenge going into the second qualifier.

Getting started with a six (or a couple of blobs)

Also, who has the most international hat-tricks? And is Misbah the oldest Test captain ever?

Steven Lynch11-Apr-2017Has anyone hit his first ball in Test cricket for six? And how about his last ball? asked Julian Metcalfe from England

The only player so far to hit the first ball he received in Test cricket for six was the New Zealand offspinner Mark Craig, who cracked Sulieman Benn of West Indies over the long-off boundary in Kingston in June 2014. In the field that day, probably nodding approvingly, was Chris Gayle, who remains the only man to hit the very first ball of a Test match for six – from the debutant Sohag Gazi of Bangladesh in Mirpur in 2012. The only man known to have hit his last ball in Test cricket for six was another West Indian, Wayne Daniel, against Australia in Port-of-Spain in 1984.Lasith Malinga took a T20 hat-trick the other day, to go with three in ODIs. Does he hold the record for international hat-tricks? asked Mahinda Villarayan from Sri Lanka

Lasith Malinga’s hat-trick against Bangladesh in Colombo last week was only the fifth in T20 internationals so far. Malinga has also taken three hat-tricks in one-day internationals – against South Africa in Providence during the 2007 World Cup (when he uniquely claimed four wickets in four balls), against Kenya in Colombo during the 2011 World Cup, and against Australia in Colombo later in 2011. The only other man to take four international hat-tricks is Wasim Akram – two in Tests (in successive matches against Sri Lanka in 1998-99), and two in ODIs (both in Sharjah in 1989-90).I noticed that India’s openers Gavaskar and Srikkanth were both out for ducks against England in 1981-82. How often has this happened in ODIs? asked Harshad Patel from India

That match in Ahmedabad in 1981 was actually the first case of both openers being out for a duck in a one-day international innings. It happened again to Sunil Gavaskar and Kris Srikkanth not long afterwards, against Zimbabwe in Tunbridge Wells during the 1983 World Cup, in the match in which Kapil Dev’s stunning 175 not out rescued his side from 17 for 5. There have been a total of 38 such instances now, the most recent by Peter Moor and Chamu Chibhabha for Zimbabwe against Afghanistan in Sharjah in 2015-16.Hats off: Misbah-ul-Haq is poised to become the fifth-oldest Test captain of all time•AFPI was sorry to see that Misbah-ul-Haq is going to retire. Will he be the oldest Test captain of all? asked Khalid Iftikhar Ahmed from Pakistan

Assuming Misbah-ul-Haq leads Pakistan in the Tests in West Indies as planned, he will become – at almost 43 years of age – the fifth-oldest Test captain of all time, and the oldest for nearly 70 years. The top three are all English: WG Grace was 50 in 1899, Gubby Allen 45 in 1947-48, and Wally Hammond 43 in 1946-47, while Warren Bardsley was also 43 when he stood in as Australia’s captain in some of the Tests in England in 1926. Misbah also has the chance to move up from sixth to fourth on the list of oldest Test century-makers. He’s already the oldest captain to make a hundred, doing so against England at Lord’s last year.Has anyone umpired Tests in all ten possible countries, plus the UAE? asked James Armstrong from England

I think there are four men who fit the bill here. Steve Bucknor’s record 128 Tests included appearances in all ten Test-playing countries, plus two matches in Sharjah, while Billy Bowden (84 Tests), Asoka de Silva (49) and Daryl Harper (95) all stood in the ten traditional countries and the UAE as well. Note that for these purposes I’m considering the West Indies as one country: if you count the Caribbean nations separately, then Bowden stood in Tests in 17 different countries.Which Test player was nicknamed “Mystery”? asked Brian Hanagan from Australia

I think there may have been more than one player who acquired this nickname, but the one I first thought of was the former New Zealand batsman John Morrison, who later became a TV commentator. He played 17 Tests between 1973-74 and 1981-82, his 656 runs including 117 against Australia at the SCG in his second match, in 1973-74. Morrison had a mysterious grey streak in his hair when he was playing, but the nickname owed more to his slow left-arm bowling, which looked innocuous from the boundary but which nonetheless claimed a few victims – only two in Tests, but 51 in all first-class games. “There was also a bit of a mystery as to my whereabouts after play was over,” admitted Morrison with a smile.Post your questions in the comments below

Super Over provides thrilling end to T20 series

ESPNcricinfo staff30-Nov-2015Joe Root helped England recover with a rapid 32…•Getty Images…but Shahid Afridi’s star man celebration came out as he struck twice in an over inside the Powerplay•AFPJames Vince was struggling for timing but he was still at the crease•AFPHe was rapidly losing partners, however, as Mohammad Rizwan ran out Jos Buttler…•AFP…and Umar Akmal clung on to a high catch to remove Sam Billings and leave England 86 for 6•AFPVince found an ally in Chris Woakes and they put on 60 in quick time•AFPWoakes smashed three sixes in his 37, helping get England’s total up to 154•AFPDavid Willey bowled an eventful first over, featuring a wicket, four wides and then, from the last ball…•AFP…another run-out involving Mohammad Hafeez•AFPWilley then added another wicket when he removed Rafatullah Mohmand lbw•AFPShoaib Malik took Pakistan to the brink of victory with a superbly controlled innings•AFPBut Anwar Ali and Sohail Tanvir could only scramble a bye off the last ball•AFPEoin Morgan and Jos Buttler celebrate England’s Super Over success•AFP

Chasing the sun

Brisbane is a city that makes room for all comers, offers plenty of bright light, and a variety of paths to jog down

Firdose Moonda24-Dec-2014First light, short shadows, the westward flying plane. Only another sun chaser would understand the true value of those things. The idea of going to a place named after the golden ball of goodness itself appealed to me more than most. Fortuitously, Queensland was the first serious stop on South Africa’s tour of Australia in late 2012.The schedule took us to Sydney for a practice match but Brisbane, in the Sunshine State, was where the real Tests would begin. The locals called it Bris-Vegas in a disparaging reference to tackiness, but I was not going to be swayed so easily. Even if the city lacked soul in the way I imagine the one it is nicknamed after does, it would have warmth of the literal kind, which was fine with me.Sunlight bounced from the streets, complete with bicycle lanes, glistened on the water, and reflected off the mirrored modern structures that made up the Eagle Street Pier. The mall by the water was my introduction to Brisbane and it was every bit as expensive (because it just cannot be called cheap) and nasty as it sounds. The restaurants were flash, the patrons were flush, but it was not just good times that were flowing; the Brisbane River was too and it would prove central to my experience of the city.A river usually comes with a guarantee of an opportunity for exercise and I had previously made use of many. On the Thames’ South Bank, sightseeing was included; on the Zambezi, I shared space with baboons and a pair of elephants, and along the Waikato, moving became a form of meditation. But Brisbane was completely different because the focus was on the physical activity of running and the many interesting ways of performing the seemingly mundane task of putting one foot in front of the other over and over and over again.Walkways at Eagle Street Pier, and the Story Bridge•Getty ImagesNo matter where you start – I began at the aforementioned shopping area – over the course of two weeks, every run can be different because of the 15 bridges that connect the two sides of the city. Some routes meander through the Botanical Gardens, others force you to jostle with cyclists in narrow shared spaces. And then there is the floating walkway between the wonderfully named Story Bridge and Merthyr Street. In glorious sunshine, your eyes are treated to light of a brightness they may not have enjoyed before, footsteps and whirring wheels are the soundtrack, and the sense of community from the many other people doing exactly the same thing was more welcoming than I expected Australia to be.Without delving too deeply into the love-hate relationship between South Africans and Australians, let’s just say there is a level of aggression shared between us. It is evident on the sports field where contests between the two nations often come with some extra needle, but it also exists beyond the boundary. There are almost 150,000 South Africans living in Australia, many of whom moved there when South Africa’s transition into a democracy threatened to become violent, and there is a tension between those who stayed behind and those who left. Of course, we are not the only country that has a significant expat community in Australia because people have been flocking there for generations.My first encounter with an “Australian,” was actually with a Lebanese man, then an Italian, then a Chinese person. All that makes Australia a much more diverse place than it can come across as being.Brisbane has a significant Greek influence. My childhood was spent among people of Mediterranean heritage, so I was intrigued enough to visit the West End. Apart from the fact that it shares a name with what I regard as one of the best part of London, it was where the Greek community settled initially.Restaurants spilling over onto pavements and delicatessens that open up into massive grocery stores stand as a testament to that legacy. One of them, Delta Continental, is located on Vulture Street. The only reason I remember that is because the same road leads to the Gabba. With red and yellow seats, the ground looks like it is trying to be the sun, never mind have people sit in it. I was underwhelmed by it as a venue.The Gabba: more sin than soul•Getty ImagesThey say it used to have much more character before the revamp, which has since swallowed other Australian venues like Adelaide Oval, and I hope they are right. The Gabba I saw had the same garishness as some parts of the city it is in do. There’s too much Vegas and not enough Bris. The most interesting thing about it was an anecdote we unearthed about why the street it sits on has its name: not named after a group of birds that nested there waiting for a carcass, or even a pack of dodgy businessmen, but rather a Royal Navy warship that was in operation during the Crimean War in the 1850s, called the .What was talked up to be a fiery pitch – so much so that South Africa fielded an all-pace attack – turned out to be the opposite. Brisbane was not all sunshine and… well sunshine, either. The second day of the match was washed out, effectively forcing the draw, but that did leave me with more time to explore some of the more charming parts. The Library Bar, the old government house, the Brisbane wheel.Beyond Brisbane’s borders are attractions including a koala sanctuary, the Australia Zoo, which was home to crocodile hunter Steve Irwin, and much further afield, the Gold Coast. The schedule meant I could not get to any of them, and I was particularly disappointed not to be able to bask in the rays of a place that sounds made for nothing else. But that’s just another reason to keep chasing the sun.

A third Root appears at Lord's

ESPNcricinfo presents the plays of the day from the opening day at Lord’s

George Dobell at Lord's16-May-2013Family link of the day
Among the trio of young cricketers utilised by England for 12th man duties was Billy Root, the 20-year-old brother of Joe. Billy, who has played second XI cricket for Yorkshire, Nottinghamshire, Worcestershire, Surrey, and Leicestershire, is currently with the MCC Young Cricketers having progressed through the same club, Sheffield Collegiate, as his older brother and Michael Vaughan and, along with two of his MCC YC colleagues, Adam Dobb and Adam Hose, was charged with bringing drinks and gloves to the batsman as required. Joe was actually the third of the family to play at Lord’s this season, with Billy playing against his father, Matt in an MCC vs MCC Young Cricketers match earlier this season.Reward of the day
The wicket of Jonathan Trott was deserved reward for excellent bowling, catching and captaincy. The delivery, a beauty from left-armer Trent Boult that was angled in but then left Trott, would have been dangerous in any circumstances but, coming after a delivery that was slanted across Trott, found the batsman coming forward just a little tentatively. The edge, low and to the left of Dean Brownlie at third slip, was brilliantly held but the fact that New Zealand even had a third slip in the 54th over of the innings speaks volumes for the positive captaincy of Brendon McCullum and the level of control exerted by his bowlers that allowed him to attack throughout so much of the day.Shot of the day
This was not a day littered with pleasing strokes. 30 of the day’s 80 overs were maidens and England only managed 15 boundaries. Only one of them came between mid-on and mid-off. But there were a couple of drives from Ian Bell that were almost worth the admission money on their own. One of them, sent through the covers off the bowling of Neil Wagner with Bell holding the pose with his right knee on the pitch, left Lord’s purring with pleasure. He may not develop into the truly great player some once thought he might, but few can drive as sweetly as Ian Bell.Wicket of the day
Anyone watching the highlights and seeing Ian Bell’s dismissal – bat pushing limply well outside the off stump – may conclude that his downfall was the result of poor batting. But, while this was not a stroke that will fill Bell with any great pride, a great deal of credit was also due to the bowler and his team-mates. As is so often the case, it was not just the delivery that claimed the wicket, but the consequence of many of the deliveries that preceded it. Not only had Martin rendered Bell near to strokeless at one end – he scored off only three of the 50 deliveries he faced from Martin – but Neil Wagner had bowled from over and round the wicket, swinging some back into the batsman and seeing others carry on across them. It does not excuse Bell’s poor shot, but it does explain why he was drawn into the stroke. The timing of the wicket, just 10 deliveries before the second new ball became available, was awful for England.Review of the day
If the introduction of the Decision Review System has taught us anything, it is that the best umpires really are very good indeed. In Aleem Dar this match has one of the best so it was something of a surprise when New Zealand utilised the system after Alastair Cook had been adjudged not out following a leg before appeal off the immaculate Boult. Sure enough, replays showed that, while the ball pitched in line, it would have passed some way over the top of middle stump. It was proof, once again, that it rarely pays to review Dar’s decisions.

The other Gayle and spinners' delights

ESPNcricinfo presents the Plays of the Day from the IPL 2nd Qualifier between Bangalore and Mumbai in Chennai

Abhishek Purohit27-May-2011The nightmare over
After Mumbai had put Bangalore in, the question was how Chris Gayle would fare against Lasith Malinga and Harbhajan Singh upfront. Anti-climax – Abu Nechim opened the bowling. Initially, Gayle was beaten by one that seamed away. Nechim even got the outside edge next up, but Gayle collected a four wide of slip. That was as good as the night got for Nechim. The rest was a flurry of boundaries as Gayle looted 20 off the over. Nechim contributed with seven wides, and Mumbai went downhill after the most expensive opening over in the IPL.The other Gayle
After the torrent of runs at the start, Gayle dug in, determined to hang around for as long as possible. Normally, he does not play out many dot balls. Today, he did; three in a row off Malinga in the sixth over. Just as one felt that the fourth would either get Gayle or disappear out of sight, he showed remarkable control to calmly nudge to square leg for a single. Gayle said later that it was his plan to be cautious against Malinga. Gayle plans, Gayle executes. And collects Man-of-the-Match awards by the half dozen.AB and the reflexes
AB de Villiers has superb reflexes, and displays them regularly in the covers and as a wicketkeeper. He showed them off as a batsman today. In the 19th over, the ball slipped out of Nechim’s hands, and came screaming at de Villiers’ rib cage as a high full toss. The normal reaction of any batsman would be to fend it away, or duck out of danger. de Villiers’ was to go for the hook instinctively. It came on to him so fast though that even as he got bat on it, his eyes closed and he fell on the ground with the impact. What happened to the ball? He had maneuvered it so well that it sailed into the crowd beyond deep square leg.Pollard gets it back
There have been few fireworks from Kieron Pollard’s bat this IPL, and he has mostly been turning it on in the field with acrobatic saves and stunning catches. He was, however, at the receiving end today. When he lofted Daniel Vettori down the ground, the Mumbai players prepared to scatter as the ball came hurtling down towards their dugout. But Abhimanyu Mithun was prowling at long-off and had kept his eye on the ball all along. Just as it crossed the rope, Mithun stretched out his right hand to grab it. He also took care that his back leg remained grounded an inch inside the boundary, and Pollard’s IPL was over.The spinner’s delight – I
Syed Mohammad’s first delivery was lofted to the straight boundary by Sachin Tendulkar. Off the fifth, Tendulkar walked casually down the track, took the ball on the full and twirled the bat to pick up a couple through midwicket. Tendulkar tried to repeat the walk-and-twirl approach off the last delivery, but Syed was wiser this time. He dropped it shorter, so Tendulkar stopped walking and waited. But he was in no position to deal with what happened next. The ball turned a mile after angling inwards, and ended up outside off. Tendulkar was so surprised that he ended up hopping and poking in the air, completely squared up. de Villiers was left with a simple stumping.The spinner’s delight – II
Rohit Sharma is a capable player of spin, as he shows whenever he dances out to loft inside-out over extra cover. Daniel Vettori enticed him to attempt exactly that with a generously flighted delivery. Rohit went for the lofted drive, but to his horror, the ball dipped on him like a stone drops from a considerable height. It was too late to pull out the shot, and Rohit tried to reach out to the dipping ball. More trouble. It turned sharply and took the outer half of the bat to loop to sweeper cover.

Nicole Faltum's rise and impact, one squat at a time

Nicole Faltum has been impressive for Melbourne Renegades in the WBBL, but a way into the Australia national team looks some way away still

Ekanth12-Dec-2025Nicole Faltum is a wicketkeeper’s wicketkeeper. She can break down and put back together elements of her game in detail, be it the technicalities of being behind the stumps or the tactical nuances in front of them. She is also sharp when it comes to rationing her attention for the right elements.Having batted in every position, she has enjoyed promotions in the batting order, and shown the responsibility and the ability to score consistently as it helps her contribute with match-winning performances and have an impact on games. And yet she has had to learn just how good she is from reliable external sources.”I probably still struggle with it now, to be honest,” 25-year-old Faltum tells ESPNcricinfo about her confidence levels, particularly with the bat. “You always know that you can do something, but every athlete, and every female athlete, especially, at times, really struggles with their self-confidence, and probably you don’t realise how talented or how good you are until other people tell you, or you get the backing from other people. I think everybody struggles with it. Probably their whole careers, to be fair.”While batting has made her a mainstay for Melbourne Renegades, it was her wicketkeeping that got her into Melbourne Stars back in WBBL 2017-18. In her first two seasons, she took five catches and effected ten stumpings.She credits her success to the bowlers, like Alana King, whom Faltum kept to in her early days, as well as strength and conditioning coach Richard Johnson, former Renegades assistant coach Adam Crosthwaite and current high-performance manager Wade Seccombe for her evolution.Nicole Faltum has come through the system in Australia, but playing for Australia might be some way away•Getty ImagesOver time, she has honed a customised keeping technique combining Australian and English styles. The English style involves “standing back from the stumps, they’re quite tall,” Faltum says.”They don’t really go into that deep squat and don’t have heaps of footwork, where traditionally [in the] Australian style, [you’re] getting down really low to the floor, getting your hands on the ground in a deep squat, and then having lots of footwork. I’ve tried to hybrid those two techniques, and just try and find one that is really efficient and works for me.”Her technique factors in variables for fingerspinners and wristspinners, and her priority is to make space for herself and let her reflexes do the rest.”The way that I try to approach it is just expecting and wanting the ball,” Faltum says. “When you’re keeping to legspinners, you’re thinking it’s going to beat the outside edge a lot more and probably anticipating the ball [in that direction], but then, to the offspinners, it’s probably more likely to come through the gate or beat the inside edge. So, [you’re] just preparing yourself for all the different scenarios. But, at the end of the day, it’s really just watching and reacting.”A lot of it is reflex, and just being able to react to that bounce. Your set-up and your technique does help a fair bit with that. In my opinion, there’s so many different styles and types of keeping, and there’s so many different ways of doing it. My technique is just all about creating space. So if my set-up allows me to be able to move and create space for bounce, but then it also allows me to get low balls or wide balls, then, yeah, I think that’ll hold you in good stead.”

“My technique is just all about creating space. So if my set-up allows me to be able to move and create space for bounce, but then it also allows me to get low balls or wide balls, then, yeah, I think that’ll hold you in good stead”Nicole Faltum on her wicketkeeping style

It has been a long journey from when she debuted for Stars as a “specialist fielder” in 2017. She batted at No. 9, a fact she recalls with a chuckle. At the time, she was “excited just to play, and finally live out my dream.”Cut to the previous WBBL season, where Faltum scored 136 runs at a strike rate of 134. She backed that up to become the fourth-highest scorer for Renegades this season. She was also promoted to open against Sydney Sixers in Renegades’ final game of 2025 with their season on the line. While she didn’t click on the day, the fact that she was promoted shows the faith her captain and coach have in her.State cricket for Victoria has also helped her find her stride. She got promoted to open the batting, a move that boosted her belief in herself and confidence in her skills.”I love cricket. I love batting. So my theory was, if I can face as many balls as possible, then hopefully that can translate to making as many runs as possible,” she says. “So much of batting does come down to watching the ball and reacting to the ball, but I feel if you’re one step ahead of the game, and you kind of know what the game requires, and what you need to do, it just takes a lot of elements away.”Over the last couple of seasons, just when I’ve been able to really contribute and see some scores, and, especially in one-day cricket, by having a little bit more responsibility at the top of the order, and opening the batting, and being able to consistently score runs. I feel like that’s really helped with my confidence.”The presence of Alyssa Healy and Beth Mooney means there is no role for an additional wicketkeeper-batter in the national team•ICC via Getty ImagesLet go by Stars in 2023 to lifting the WBBL title the very next year with Renegades, Faltum has gained perspective from both experiences. She is as positive as she is pragmatic about her goals – in the short-term, to contribute to every team she represents and win the WBBL again.Faltum’s dream of winning back-to-back WBBLs with Renegades wasn’t meant to be this season. Her journey towards those goals though continues, one deep squat at a time, accounting for turn and bounce along the way.Beyond that, she wants to complete her degree in business and play for Australia. That might still be a little while away with Alyssa Healy the incumbent and Beth Mooney her accomplished back-up. The upside for Faltum is that she has in-game experience thanks to ‘A’ tours, and she has interacted with Healy and Mooney.”Both of them have been amazing with their time and so generous in helping me, which I’m extremely grateful for,” Faltum says. “I had a few rough games at the start of the season in the WBBL and Beth Mooney was one of the first people to reach out and message, and just offered her support. She is such a kind human who is willing to help out.”Sophie Molinuex, Renegades’ captain, also happens to be Faltum’s favourite bowler to keep to. “She’s got such a good cricket brain,” Faltum says. “I feel like she’s one step ahead of the batters, which is really cool when you’re standing behind the stumps to watch, especially when you’re thinking about the game yourself and different situations and scenarios, when you can really tell, ‘yeah, you’re playing under a really good captain’.”

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