موعد والقنوات الناقلة لمباراة الهلال والطائي اليوم في الدوري السعودي.. والمعلقون

تعرف على موعد والقنوات الناقلة لمباراة الهلال والطائي اليوم في الدوري السعودي والمعلقين

يحل فريق الكرة الأول بنادي الهلال السعودي ضيفًا على نظيره الطائي اليوم الجمعة، بمنافسات بطولة الدوري السعودي للمحترفين “روشن”.

مباراة الهلال والطائي من المقرر إقامتها على ملعب استاد الأمير عبدالعزيز بن مساعد بن جلوي، في الجولة الـ16 من عمر الدوري.

ويخوض الهلال مباراته وهو محتلًا المركز الأول في سلم ترتيب الدوري السعودي للمحترفين برصيد 41 نقطة.

مدرب اتحاد جدة يوضح موقف كريم بنزيما من المشاركة في كأس العالم للأندية.. ويبرر الخسارة أمام ضمك

وفي الوقت ذاته يقبع فريق الطائي في المركز الثاني عشر برصيد 17 نقطة، حصدها من 15 مباراة.

وحقق فريق الهلال هذا الموسم 13 انتصارًا وتعادلين، فيما لم ينال أي خسارة منذ انطلاق الدوري، وسجل لاعبوه 46 هدفًا واستقبلت شباكه 8 أهداف.

أما فريق الطائي فقد فاز في 5 مباريات وتعادل في اثنتين وتعرض للخسارة في 8 مواجهات، وسجل لاعبوه 19 هدفًا واستقبلت شباكه 30 هدفًا.

وكانت المباراة الأخيرة التي جمعت بين ناديي الهلال والطائي في الجولة 23 من الموسم الماضي، قد انتهت بالتعادل الإيجابي بهدفين لكل فريق. موعد مباراة الهلال والطائي في الدوري السعودي

ومن المقرر أن تنطلق مباراة الهلال والطائي، في تمام الساعة الخامسة بتوقيت مصر، والسادسة بتوقيت السعودية من مساء الجمعة. القنوات الناقلة لمباراة الهلال والطائي اليوم

ومن المنتظر أن تذاع مباراة الهلال والطائي عبر فضائية SSC HD1 وssc sd1 وqq sports live وتطبيق shahid. معلقو مباراة الهلال والطائي في الدوري السعودي

ويعلق على مباراة الهلال والطائي عبر فضائية ssc 1 sd علي الربيع، وعبر ssc 1 hd رؤوف خليف وخالد المديفر.

ويمكنكم مطالعة مواعيد ونتائج جميع المباريات لحظة بلحظة عبر مركز المباريات من هنا.

Dilshan stars as England thrashed

he full-house crowd might have come to bid farewell to Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara, but it was another member of the trio of senior Sri Lankan batsman, Tillakaratne Dilshan, who led the home side to a crushing 87-run victory in the final ODI o

Report by George Dobell16-Dec-2014
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsThe full-house crowd might have come to bid farewell to Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara, but it was another member of the trio of senior Sri Lankan batsman, Tillakaratne Dilshan, who led the home side to a crushing 87-run victory in the final ODI of the series against England. The result wrapped up the series for Sri Lanka 5-2.The thought of trying to find replacements for Jayawardene and Sangakkara – both of whom may be playing their final ODIs at home – is enough to drive a Sri Lanka supporter to Arrack, so it must have been reassuring to know that Dilshan will be around to help with the transition.Dilshan, playing his 300th ODI, not only made his 18th century in this form of the game and, in the process, became the fifth Sri Lanka batsman to reach 9000 runs in ODI cricket, but he also claimed three top-order wickets to snuff out any chance of a successful England run chase.While Dilshan’s reputation might be as a relentlessly aggressive batsman, here he showed the other facets to his game: the subtly, the calm and the ability to read the match situation. With Jayawardene and Sangakkara falling early, he was obliged to rotate the strike, see off a demanding spell from Moeen Ali and provide a platform from which others could attack in the final overs.For a time it looked as if Jayawardene, who has announced he will retire from international cricket after the World Cup, would reward the spectators with a vintage performance. He cracked the first ball of the innings – a long-hop outside off stump from Chris Woakes – to the boundary with a familiar cut and, in the next over, twice pulled more short balls from Harry Gurney to the boundary.With runs leaking from the seamers, Alastair Cook introduced the offspin of James Tredwell into the attack in just the seventh over. But with only two fielders outside the ring, Dilshan skipped down the pitch three times to drive Tredwell for two fours and a six in an over that cost 15 runs.But it was not to last. In attempting to pull another short delivery from Gurney, Jayawardene instead guided the ball off the top-edge to Woakes on the deep backward square leg fence. The groans from the crowd told the story eloquently. Still, by the end of the mandatory Powerplay, Sri Lanka were 66 for 1 and set for a high score on a pitch that looked full of runs.England’s spinners – and Moeen in particular – began to apply some pressure. Joe Root only conceded one boundary in his five overs, while Moeen did not concede a four until his seventh over and at times found sharp turn.Tillakaratne Dilshan struck nine fours and a six in his 18th ODI century•Getty Images

He also claimed a key wicket. With Sangakkara slightly tied down, his eyes must have lit up when he was presented with a full toss. But instead of punishing it, he picked out the fielder at mid-on and became the second man to walk off basking in the reception of an adoring public. Sangakkara had, when he scored 6, surpassed Ricky Ponting’s record for the most international runs across all formats in a calendar year. Ponting scored 2833 in 2005.Dilshan concentrated on rebuilding for the next dozen overs. He did not hit a boundary between the 15th and 27th overs, instead concentrating on seeing off a demanding spell from Moeen.The Powerplay awoke him. Gurney, unable to take the opportunity he was given to impress ahead of the rested Steven Finn, was hit for successive boundaries when his attempted yorkers came out as full tosses and Dilshan completed his century from a relatively sedate 122 balls with nine fours and a six.It was a full toss that accounted for him, too. Perhaps Chris Jordan was fortunate that the delivery was not called no-ball, but Dilshan swung it to deep midwicket to depart with six-and-a-half overs to go and left Sri Lanka in danger of falling perhaps 35 or so short of the 300 for which they were aiming.But that only allowed Thisara Perera and Dinesh Chandimal more opportunity. Together they thrashed 63 from 29 balls in a blistering fifth-wicket stand and saw Sri Lanka plunder 65 runs from the final six overs of their innings. Twice Perera lashed three successive boundaries – once off Woakes when he was punished for dropping short and once off Jordan whose length temporarily deserted him completely – before he then followed a pulled six off Woakes with a four driven through the covers when the bowler over-compensated.Perera’s half-century occupied only 23 balls – only Sanath Jayasuriya has hit a quicker one for Sri Lanka – while Chandimal drove Moeen for a six and Tredwell for four as Sri Lanka took the game beyond England.It left England requiring a record second-innings total at the Premadasa – Sri Lanka made 301 against India in 1998 and still lost – and not for a moment did they threaten to go close.Moeen Ali, making room to cut, was bowled first ball; Alex Hales, replacing Ravi Bopara in the side for a last chance to impress ahead of World Cup selection, picked out long-on and Cook, having been dropped and been perilously close to leg before, was well caught at slip by Jayawardene. The sight of Cook waiting for the umpire’s decision, even after a pretty clear catch had been confirmed by an illustrious fellow international player, summed up his ever more desperate – and increasingly unseemly – battle for survival in this format.James Taylor was caught off the glove from a good short ball from the impressive Suranga Lakmal and Eoin Morgan, who scored fewer runs in the series than Cook, failed again when he missed a sweep.A seventh-wicket stand of 66 in 12.3 overs between the impressive Root and Woakes narrowed the gap between the sides, but it was never likely to change the result. When Woakes yorked himself off Dilruwan Perera, playing instead of the injured Sachithra Senanayake, and Root was leg before attempting to reverse sweep, England’s chase faded away. It is the ninth time in their last 12 ODIs that England have been bowled out within their 50 overs and means they have lost 10 of their last 13 ODIs.The sight of Jayawardene claiming the final wicket, his part-time offspin luring Tredwell down the pitch, left the crowd in ecstasy. He will be greatly missed far beyond the borders of Sri Lanka.

Sorensen ruled out of tour

Pace bowler Max Sorensen has been ruled out of Ireland’s pre-World Cup trip to Australia and New Zealand while Paul Stirling, the Middlesex batsman, will not travel with the squad due to a back problem that requires further investigation.Scans have revealed that Sorensen, 28, suffered a fractured right wrist in the one-day series against Scotland and will be out of action for six to eight weeks. Graeme McCarter, the Gloucestershire seamer, who was unfortunate to miss out on the original squad has been named as the replacement and now has a chance to make a late bid for a World Cup spot.Phil Simmons, the Ireland coach, said: “It’s obviously bitterly disappointing for Max to miss out on the tour which is so vital to our World Cup preparations, but it gives Graeme a great chance to impress after he just missed out on the initial selection.”Stirling, meanwhile, is causing concern after not responding as well as was expected to treatment on his back after being ruled out of the County Championship match against Somerset. He will not be replaced in the squad which is therefore reduced to 17.”We’ll know more about his prognosis when he sees the specialist, but felt it best that he recuperates in the UK before making a final decision on his involvement on the tour,” Simmons said.Ireland leave for the tour, which includes eight matches across Australia and New Zealand starting on the Gold Coast in Queensland, next Tuesday.

SL snatch victory after defiant Moeen ton

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsSri Lanka won when they had almost abandoned hope. From the penultimate ball of a gripping final day, Shaminda Eranga found a hostile delivery to bring their first series win in England. James Anderson, who could only fend it to the leg side in self-preservation, dropped to his haunches in despair. Moeen Ali’s immense maiden Test century was briefly forgotten, submerged beneath an ecstatic Sri Lankan celebration.An indomitable backs-to-the-wall display by Moeen had come so close to sparing England: an unbeaten 108, unblemished even, made from 281 balls. England’s last five wickets had clung on for all but two balls of the final day. Pride had been salvaged, perhaps a captain had been spared too, but it is Sri Lanka who can celebrate a special moment in their Test history.Sri Lanka’s last pair held out for five balls in the first Test at Lord’s. This time the task was much harder for Moeen and Anderson: 20.2 overs. Even in Cardiff, when Anderson and Monty Panesar famously held off Australia in 2009, they only saw out 11.3. This time Anderson summoned a heroic 55-ball nought, all signifying nothing.Sri Lanka explode in celebration as the wicket of James Anderson falls•Getty Images

Tension slowly seeped into the final day as it only can in Test cricket. The crowd was sparse – Yorkshire had folded its arms in condemnation, convinced like all but the most incorrigibly optimistic that England’s abject collapse to 57 for 5, well adrift of a target of 350, had sealed their fate – but a night’s sleep had cleared muddled heads and Headingley, treacherous Headingley, not the sort of pitch to turn your back on, behaved like an old softie. At only a fiver entrance fee for the final day, Yorkshire had turned its back on a classic.Moeen, a cricketing free spirit, played with such judgment and self-denial that he must have explored parts of himself never visited before. He surely surprised even himself, suppressing the silky ambition of his batting during a strikingly unselfish innings in which his most positive shots were expertly selected. He met the second new ball with conviction and, in only his second Test, he made light of his international experience with impassioned advice to England’s tail.Only with nine wickets down did Moeen seek to steal the strike, only now did his timing begin to go awry as the demands weighed upon him. But his concentration was unwavering. His century came with half-an-hour remaining, flicking Nuwan Pradeep off his pads, but it had always felt like an afterthought in an innings where he appeared entirely consumed by England’s survival. This was not as much an innings as personal growth before your eyes.Even in defeat, there should be no doubt who will be the recipient of England’s annual Beard of the Year award – and, if that is one of the most frivolous awards around, this time it would have a more serious message. There are times when the wider social impact of a performance in sport must also be recognised even in a match report – and this was one of them.A sole spectator earlier in the Test who observed, however unthinkingly, that Moeen’s beard suggested he should be blowing up buildings was rightly reported to stewards and warned. Muslim cricketers have played for England before, but none had been so visibly proud to be a role model. With every stout-hearted block, Moeen made such comments appear ever more ignorant and, for those who questioned as much, integrated himself – and more importantly his beard – deep into the fabric of the England side.There were two umpiring reviews for Moeen to survive along the way, both optimistically sought by Sri Lanka for leg-side catches. On 52, a delivery from Rangana Herath, the left-arm spinner, found its way to leg slip, on 71 Eranga flicked his thigh pad on the way through to the wicketkeeper, but he was confident that his survival chances were 100%.Such was his selectivity that it was hard to recall another blemish. On another occasion, he had an inadvisable flirt when Herath slanted a low-arm delivery across him, but generally he curbed his attacking instincts with great resolve, only occasionally allowing himself to sweep or come down the pitch to Herath, choices he made with impeccable judgment.Moeen Ali reached his maiden Test hundred in a tense conclusion to the match•Getty Images

England set the tone for the final day by making only 26 in nearly 18 overs during a drizzle-interrupted morning. Root clearly relished the chance to produce an innings of Boycottian bloody-mindedness in front of the Yorkshire crowd; strokelessness is no hardship for him when the match dictates it.Not shy of a word or two himself – the innocent countenance is entirely misleading – he predictably became the victim of prolonged sledging from the Sri Lanka captain, Angelo Mathews, who was instructed to curb his behaviour more than once by both umpires, and whose victory celebrations looked bound to be interrupted by an audience with the match referee. He should offer him an arrack and see if he can get away with it.If Mathews was in danger of getting sidetracked, it did not show in his captaincy, which remained well judged. He shuffled his bowlers endlessly in the final hour to try to unsettle England’s last pair and it paid off when he flung the ball to his most aggressive bowler, Eranga for one last effort – although not before he kept Mooen off strike with his own excellent over.Sri Lanka’s bowlers, by and large, were disciplined as the wickets came only slowly. Eranga adopted a short-ball policy in mid-afternoon, but it seemed a legitimate tactic at the time and unsettled Root. Herath lobbed up over after over accurately, but found little turn, a frustration he accepted with placid countenance. Instead Root was unpicked by an outswinger from Pradeep, a leading edge flying low to gully where Lahiru Thirimanne held a smart catch.Prior became a fifth victim for Sri Lanka’s fourth-day hero, Dhammika Prasad, a well-directed ball into his body and a deflection which was expertly snapped up by Kaushal Silva low down at short leg – not the first time he has fallen in such a fashion.It was Prasad’s effort ball and it almost resulted in his first no-ball of the match – the TV umpire requiring innumerable replays before concluding, fairly enough, that he got a sliver of boot behind a wonky front line. The match referee, Andy Pycroft, was quick to advise that if there was any uncertainty – and there was uncertainty – the decision should rest with the bowler as there was not definite proof he had overstepped.That decision, as it happened, was balanced out early in the final session. With the second over of the new ball, Chris Jordan drove loosely at Eranga and edged to second slip, only for another hair’s breadth decision this time to fall in England’s favour; again legitimately so. No balls were the last thing Sri Lanka needed, but they encapsulated how they were straining with every sinew to complete something quite exceptional.There was further encouragement for Sri Lanka when a delivery from Pradeep went through the top and jagged alarmingly away from Jordan. Herath was reintroduced with the new ball seven overs old and he removed Jordan lbw with his second delivery. England’s review had an air of desperation.Indifferent light became Sri Lanka’s next problem as the emergence of a blinking Stuart Broad coincided with the first appearance of the umpires’ light meters. Broad’s departure for a toilet break early in his innings was astounding. Sri Lanka were forced to resort to Mahela Jayawardene’s little-used offspin – six wickets to his name in 145 Tests – but, while the restrictions were in operation, Broad’s 24-ball nought ended when Herath straightened one to have him lbw.Sri Lanka’s recovery had been admirable – England had been 311 for 3 in their first innings at one stage, ahead by 54 – and over-excitability was the only explanation for wasting their second review, with 16 overs remaining, a futile search for an lbw decision for Herath against Anderson. Over-excitability became concern, became desperation, before desperation – at the last – was transformed into utter delight.

Newell spells out Patel's task

Samit Patel claims not to have any thoughts of an England recall but after a stalemate at Taunton his Notts coach, and now England selector, Mick Newell, said it was too early to write him off

Alex Winter at Taunton07-May-2014
ScorecardSamit Patel has a clean slate, according to Mick Newell•Getty ImagesSamit Patel claims not to have any thoughts of an England recall but in this match gave the best impression of the potential that England could call upon in their new era under Peter Moores.Patel breezed his way past fifty on a particularly mediocre final day which brought personal satisfaction for Phil Jaques as he added 95 on the day to reach an unbeaten 150, but which long before his six-and-a-quarter hour stint was over was heading inexorably towards the second tame draw in succession at Taunton.Patel also had a second century in the match laid before him, only to sweep a full delivery from Johann Myburgh and be bowled for 75. But the innings continued a smart run of form that suggests, at 29, he may be approaching his peak. It is only 15 months ago since he last played for England.”I don’t think the door should be shut on Samit,” Mick Newell, the Nottinghamshire director of cricket and new England selector said. “He is a potential international cricketer still. He has been in and around the edges for a number of years. He has to score heavily and he needs his bowling to be of a level where he offers both I think, because of the potential for an allrounder who is a spin bowler rather than a seamer.”He is nearly 30 now, and he’s got to have an opportunity, but he has got to churn out regular scores. He has played very nicely in two innings this year – 90 against Lancashire when it was doing a lot, and the innings here. He’s a very attractive batsman to watch when he’s batting like that.”Newell described the England team as “more of a clean slate than it has been for a number of years” and suggested a number of players should be hopeful of a recall if they perform. Nick Compton being one of them. Discarded before the Ashes last summer, despite two centuries against New Zealand, Compton could be considered again with England requiring a new opener and potentially a No. 3 for the Sri Lanka Tests and India series to follow.”People who have played recently like Craig Kieswetter and Nick Compton will feel they have a good chance of playing,” Newell said. “And they certainly do. But it’s not just about scoring three hundreds to get in, it still comes down to opinion and belief as to who will score the most when you put them on to the bigger stage.”Here, Compton suffered a poor dismissal – caught behind cutting to the gentle seamers of Steven Mullaney for only 25 – but a century at Durham in the second match of the season could be the innings to fulfil the criteria Newell describes. Craig Kieswetter’s three dropped catches – he also put down Phil Jaques on the final day – were disappointing but with Johnny Bairstow not convincing as England’s next-best wicketkeeper and a fitness cloud around Matt Prior, Kieswetter could be one of a number of gloveman to consider.James Taylor, a player Newell has been able to keep a closer eye on, was similarly handled to Compton in being dropped by England without doing too much wrong. Taylor was again part of the England Lions touring party in the winter and enjoyed a strong tour of Sri Lanka including a first-class best 242 not out.”Both of them have had a taste, and both of them will feel they want some more,” Newell said. “That’s the whole challenge. If you want some more, you have to show everyone you really are hungry. You’ve got two blokes there who really love batting, who want to churn the runs out.”For the most part it is going to come down to scoring a volume of runs. Someone like Gary Ballance has pushed himself forward with the runs that he has got this season. The challenge to Nick and James is to make the volume but also to make the important innings, the match winning innings.”Taylor had little chance of a match-winning innings at Taunton on such a tame wicket that only yielded 23 wickets in four days but he was visibly disappointed to be lbw for just 5 three overs into a final day where Phil Jaques made a first century for his new county.”James is 23 going on 47 I think. He’s very mature, and he’s very well organised about how he goes about his practice and training – a pleasure to have in your team. He’s hitting the ball nicely, and I thought he was playing very well in his first innings. He feels he can compete with these guys for that middle order spot that might be going up for grabs.”

West Indies tour is Vettori's fitness deadline

Daniel Vettori’s fitness when the team is selected for the West Indies tour will be critical for him to keep alive his hopes of playing in another World Cup. Former New Zealand captain and their most successful spinner, Vettori, has been battling injuries recently, and last played for New Zealand in June 2013. He met captain Brendon McCullum and coach Mike Hesson on Tuesday to discuss his future, and was told he would have to prove his fitness around the West Indies tour, which begins this May. New Zealand will co-host the World Cup at the start of the next year.Nathan McCullum has proved to be an able replacement in the ODI side even as Vettori tried to stage a comeback through the Big Bash League. He had to struggle with a back injury, though, which negated his claim made through an impressive economy rate of 6.25 in seven matches. Vettori hasn’t bowled a ball since, nor is he expected to anytime soon. He has two to three months to get back to fitness. It has been made clear to him that he won’t be considered for the World Twenty20 in March.”To be fair to everyone at NZ Cricket, I sense from speaking to Hess that they need me to be proving my fitness around the West Indies tour, that’s when they really want to get on and press for the World Cup,” Vettori was quoted as saying by . quoted Vettori as saying: “Mike and Brendon made it clear that if I play for New Zealand again I’ve got to deliver in all three facets of the game, which is completely fair. I can’t just bowl 24 balls, and then expect to be hidden in the outfield [during the World T20].”I’ve also got to consider the deal I’ve signed to coach RCB [Royal Challengers Bangalore in the IPL], which could require me to be there three weeks early. That might create a difficult situation regarding the World Cup.”Hesson said that fitness in non-negotiable. “There’s plenty of water to pass under the bridge,” Hesson said, “but the key is we’re very keen for Dan to still be available for the Black Caps and Dan is still really keen to play. That’s the priority. We’re going to have to be pretty rigorous in terms of what we see from him, and whether we’re going to select him [for the West Indies tour]. Hopefully he can play some cricket before the end of the season.”While Nathan McCullum might have emerged as a good replacement in limited-overs cricket, New Zealand are struggling to find a Test substitute. Before the start of the home international summer, New Zealand were keen to get Vettori back. They delayed naming of the Test squad against West Indies so that they could see how Vettori went in his Plunket Shield match against Central Districts. It was only his second first-class match in 16 months, and New Zealand decided to go ahead without him. Vettori played two more first-class matches before being injured again during the Big Bash League.”It was a little bit worse than the past,” Vettori said of the injury. “Running around was difficult. I’ll just rest up and try and get that ready. If I can then that’s great, and if I can’t then the writing is probably on the wall.”It’s all about bowling and because I haven’t done that for a couple of weeks it’s hard to know. I don’t want to just sit back in February with no cricket for a little while, and just give it away. If I can work reasonably hard and try to push towards it [an international return], then who knows.”

Taylor, McCullum centuries drive NZ

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details0:00

McGlashan: Perfect first day for New Zealand

Fast hands: Brendon McCullum took full toll off an ineffective bowling attack•AFP

Smart stats

  • This was Brendon Mccullum’s first hundred in 26 Tests and 47 innings, and his seventh Test ton. The last time he hit a century in Tests was against India, in Hyderabad in November 2010, when he scored a double-hundred in the second innings.

  • This is only the sixth time four of the top-five New Zealand batsmen have made fifty-plus scores in an innings, and the first since 2001, against Pakistan in Hamilton.

  • New Zealand have scored 350 or more before the fall of their fourth wicket, for first time since the Chittagong Test against Bangladesh in 2004.

  • This was the fourth time New Zealand’s No. 4 and No. 5 both hit centuries in an innings. The last time it happened was against India in Napier in 2009, when Ross Taylor and Jesse Ryder made three-figures.

  • Taylor’s hundred was his ninth in Tests, and his first against West Indies from five Tests.

A power-packed double-act from New Zealand’s experienced duo of Brendon McCullum and Ross Taylor tormented West Indies’ bowlers in Dunedin after Darren Sammy, without hesitation, had chosen to field on a grassy pitch. The two batsmen brought up their long-awaited centuries and added 182 runs at frenetic pace to start New Zealand’s summer in the best possible manner.The last time Taylor scored a century – in November 2012 – he was still the captain of New Zealand, but the search for a triple-digit score in McCullum’s Test stats takes one back by three years when he hit a double-century in India. That was 47 innings ago. In those three years, McCullum continued to feature in the New Zealand Test team, saw the captaincy move from Daniel Vettori to Taylor, then to himself, but despite the added responsibility, his batting form didn’t show any signs of revival. Until today.McCullum joined Taylor just before tea having seen three of New Zealand’s top-order batsmen waste good starts by throwing their wickets away. He brought the customary approach in the third session, attacking anything marginally full or short or, in some cases, perfectly good balls with utter disdain to help New Zealand ransack 173 runs in the 35-over long last session. At least a boundary was hit in 18 of those overs.Shane Shillingford, who underwent testing on his bowling action in Perth recently, was included in the XI by West Indies and he bore the brunt of McCullum’s assault, giving away 39 runs off 38 balls including two sixes and four fours. With no bowler being able to exert any pressure, McCullum raced away to his seventh century in 101 balls, his brutal pull over midwicket and a back foot punch over extra cover, both off Shanon Gabriel, being the two standout shots in his innings.Taylor maintained a good pace as well, reaching his ninth century in 150 balls, but it appeared as if he was just holding an end. His innings was laced with 13 fours, dominated by crisp drives and square cuts.Sammy had gleefully said it was the greenest pitch he had ever seen but his bowlers were not able to extract any help from it. As the day wore on, it became a true batting surface and both batsmen took full toll. It was only the third time in 51 Tests the two added more than 100 together, the current partnership by far their best. The stand ensured New Zealand took the driving position in the Test after they were 194 for 3 at tea.The top three batsmen also had starts, but they failed to cash in on the insipid bowling. The local boy, Rutherford, who hit 171 on debut here, had scored 62, but he fell to a brilliant one-handed catch by Narsingh Deonarine towards the boundary. Fulton had been patient during his stay 228-minute stay, bringing up his sixth fifty-plus score this year, but he was caught at slip while trying to push at a delivery away from his body. Aaron Redmond, the No.3 filling in for the injured Kane Williamson, was also caught off a leading edge early in the second session while trying to clip a short of length delivery. The bowlers did little of credit in the three dismissals.Not much went as per the script for West Indies. The opening bowlers – Tino Best and Gabriel – struggled to find the right length. Best worked up some pace but with a shorter length, the batsmen found it easy to either play it comfortably off the back foot or sway away from the line.Best dabbled with a fuller length briefly in his first spell, but Rutherford used those deliveries as a springboard to his innings. Best’s spell in the second session was a big improvement as he hurried the batsmen. He managed to get Redmond’s wicket and could have had Taylor early too as the batsman fended at a short delivery. The ball ballooned over the slip cordon and, to the bowler’s chagrin, rolled over to the boundary. He bowled tirelessly, but with shorter length and no movement, he was not going to trouble the batsmen.Gabriel, who was preferred over left-arm seamer Sheldon Cottrell, remained ineffective across sessions, bowling benign spells and giving away 98 runs in his 17 overs.Sammy, playing as the third seamer, found the movement that others didn’t. He stuck to one length, getting the ball to swing away slightly and managed to find the outside edge of Fulton’s bat, only to see it fly past third slip. It was Sammy who finally ended Fulton’s innings just after the batsman was switching to a higher gear.However, he too proved ineffective once Taylor and McCullum got going. The onslaught meant there was no respite in the southern hemisphere for West Indies after a month of battering in the subcontinent.

حسم مصير مصطفى شلبي من المشاركة مع الزمالك في البطولة العربية

تحدد مصير الجناح الهجومي لنادي الزمالك مصطفى شلبي، من المشاركة في البطولة العربية للأندية.

ويغيب مصطفى شلبي عن الزمالك خلال الفترة الأخيرة بسبب معاناته من الإصابة بكسر في وجه القدم، والتي تعرض لها في مباراة غزل المحلة في الدوري المصري الممتاز.

وأكد الزمالك في بداية يوليو الجاري غياب اللاعب عن الملاعب لفترة تتراوح بين 4 إلى 6 أسابيع، على أن يخضع لبرنامج تأهيلي وعلاجي كي يتماثل للشفاء بشكل نهائي من الإصابة.

وعلم “بطولات” أن مصطفى شلبي أصبح خارج حسابات المدرب الكولومبي خوان كارلوس أوسوريو في البطولة العربية للأندية.

إقرأ أيضا.. مران الزمالك | عودة 6 معارين.. وأوسوريو يوجه رسالة مهمة للاعبين

من جانب آخر انتظم في تدريبات الزمالك كل من يوسف إبراهيم أوباما صانع الألعاب، ومحمود علاء وأحمد أيمن منصور ثنائي الدفاع، وأحمد عيد الظهير الأيمن، وأحمد زكي الظهير الأيسر، وحمدي علاء لاعب الوسط.

واستأنف الزمالك تدريباته اليوم السبت استعدادًا لخوض البطولة العربية المقرر لها في المملكة العربية السعودية نهاية يوليو الجاري.

ويبدأ الزمالك مشواره بالبطولة العربية بمواجهة الاتحاد المنستيري التونسي يوم الجمعة 28 يوليو ثم الشباب السعودي يوم الإثنين 31 من الشهر ذاته ثم النصر يوم 3 أغسطس.

Clarke decisive in low-scoring tussle

Fast improving Warwickshire registered their third Friends Life t20 victory in a row when beating Midlands/Wales/West group leaders Northamptonshire by three wickets at Edgbaston

20-Jul-2013
ScorecardRikki Clarke was the difference between the sides•Getty Images

Fast improving Warwickshire registered their third Friends Life t20 victory in a row when beating Midlands/Wales/West group leaders Northamptonshire by three wickets at Edgbaston.For a long time it seemed that Northamptonshire’s flimsy-looking total of 111 might be too good for Warwickshire as a tense, low-scoring contest unfolded on a sluggish pitch.David Willey put them on the back foot with wickets from the last two balls of the third over and they were seriously wobbling when William Porterfield was caught on the boundary off Steven Crook.It took the experience of Rikki Clarke – and one bad over – to keep them in contention. Clarke targeted offspinner Matthew Spriegel for three sixes in four balls, twice clearing long-off before lining up a much bigger hit to long-on.Although Willey came back to have Clarke caught at long on for 36, Northamptonshire had run out of seam options when Spriegel had to bowl the last two overs from the pavilion end. That proved to be decisive when Jeetan Patel, a player who thrives on spin bowling, smashed a six over midwicket with three balls to spare.Northamptonshire’s earlier struggle was largely caused Steffan Piolet, first with a brilliant piece of fielding and then with a spell of 3 for 24, a personal-best return in the competition.The 24-year-old all-rounder ran out Cameron White with a direct hit from mid-on when the Australian was backing up at the non-striker’s end. This meant Northamptonshire had lost their two overseas players from the first 15 balls. South African Richard Levi’s off stump was sent spinning by Clarke’s first delivery and the initial six-over power play yielded only 29 runs.A minor recovery was under way before Piolet intervened by taking his three wickets in 10 balls. The dangerous Crook holed out to long off and in the medium pacer’s last over, top scorer Kyle Coetzer fell at mid-wicket and Willey made too much room when he was bowled.Willey targeted the shortest boundary at long on for three of the five sixes in the innings but on a difficult surface for batsmen Northants were able to hit only three fours.

Anunciado pelo Botafogo, Cícero diz: 'Será um ano de muitas vitórias'

MatériaMais Notícias

Depois de um começo de ano turbulento, o Botafogo vai em busca de nomes no mercado para reforçar o seu elenco. Nesta quarta-feira, o Glorioso anunciou a contratação de Cícero, que vestiu a camisa do Grêmio em 2018. O meio-campista assinou contrato até o fim de dezembro. Porém, cláusulas no vínculo permitem uma extensão do acordo por mais duas temporadas.

Nas primeiras palavras pelo Glorioso, Cícero mostrou empolgação e espera que o clube retome o caminho das vitórias no decorrer do ano.

– Estou animado com esse projeto do clube, com esse novo desafio na minha carreira e tenho certeza que será um ano de muitas vitórias para a gente. Vamos dar a volta por cima nessa temporada 2019. Todos juntos, com a força da torcida e dos jogadores. Essa minha chegada é empolgante para alcançarmos o caminho das conquistas novamente. Um grande abraço e até breve – disse.

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Na última temporada, Cícero atuou pelo Grêmio – chegou em 2017, após deixar o São Paulo. Em Porto Alegre, foi campeão da Copa Libertadores. Deixou o Tricolor gaúcho com 50 partidas realizadas e sete gols anotados. O Botafogo é o segundo clube do Rio na carreira do jogador, que atuou por seis anos no Fluminense.

Aos 34 anos, Cícero é visto com bons olhos por conta de sua polivalência. O jogador pode atuar como volante, meia e até centroavante. O setor, com a recente rescisão de Aguirre, só conta com Kieza e o jovem Igor Cássio, que se machucou recentemente.

– Uma coisa que me motivou muito é que gosto de encarar os desafios em minha vida e ao longo da minha carreira consegui ser um cara vitorioso por todos os clubes que passei. E agora não será diferente. Estou empolgado por vestir essa camisa que grandes ídolos já vestiram e espero ao lado dos meus companheiros conquistar grandes coisas para a torcida botafoguense – completou.

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