Sir Jim Ratcliffe copying Todd Boehly?! Incoming Man Utd chief to take key inspiration from Chelsea’s ownership model after investment deal is complete

Sir Jim Ratcliffe could reportedly take key inspiration from Todd Boehly's ownership model at Chelsea after their investment deal is complete.

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Ratcliffe to secure 25% stakeCould mimic Boehly's model of multiple directorsFirm focus on modernising United's recruitmentWHAT HAPPENED?

According to a report in Ratcliffe intends to reshape the club's recruitment structure after taking over football operations of the club following a £1.3bn investment deal that would see him gain 25 per cent ownership. The departure of CEO Richard Arnold is a move in that direction which indicates a significant shakeup at the board level, with Ratcliffe keen to adopt a modern approach to recruitment.

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The INEOS chief plans to take cues from Chelsea and appoint multiple sporting directors, deviating from the initially expected single director. The Chelsea model, led by two sporting directors, Paul Winstanley and Laurence Stewart, which has seen the Blues spend close to £1.4bn in transfers, seemingly serves as a blueprint for a potential resurgence at Old Trafford. This move aims to enhance control over transfers while allowing manager Erik ten Hag to remain focused on managing first-team operations.

GettyDID YOU KNOW?

As part of Ratcliffe's planned overhaul at Manchester United, two notable figures have been linked to permanent roles as director of football – Paul Mitchell and Dougie Freedman. Interestingly, Mitchell, who has worked with clubs like Tottenham and Monaco, was previously overlooked by the club when John Murtough was appointed. Freedman, currently serving as the sporting director at Crystal Palace, is another contender for the director of football role, as his work at Crystal Palace has received widespread praise. He played a crucial role in securing transfers for key players at the London club, including centre-back Marc Guehi and winger Michael Olise, who have been instrumental for the Eagles. Ex-AC Milan player and official, Paolo Maldini, and former Liverpool sporting director Micahel Edwards are other names in the mix.

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WHAT NEXT FOR MANCHESTER UNITED?

The impending completion of the £1.3bn investment deal marks the beginning of Ratcliffe's transformative era at United, focusing on a collaborative leadership approach and strategic recruitment decisions. The confirmation of the takeover could potentially be announced by the end of November.

Top of Mind wins Bangladesh sponsorship rights

BCB has awarded Top of Mind, a media planning company, the team sponsorship rights for Bangladesh’s home series against Pakistan this month

Mohammad Isam07-Apr-2015BCB has awarded Top of Mind, a media planning company, the team sponsorship rights for Bangladesh’s home series against Pakistan this month. The agreement was reached on Tuesday after their contract with Aamby Valley, an affiliate of Sahara India Parivar, was cut short 15 months before it was scheduled to end.It is understood the BCB had hoped for a deal over Tk 2.5 crore (approximately US$ 321,000) and the winning quote was for more than Tk 3 crore (approximately US$ 385,000).BCB revealed last Friday that they had issued an advertisement seeking a new team sponsor after the two parties’ deal ended in March. On April 5, BCB president Nazmul Hassan said that a number of companies had submitted their bids but none of them quoted a price to BCB’s liking on the last day of submission. Top of Mind and Grameenphone, which was the team sponsor for the eight years before Sahara, were the two highest bidders and were asked by the BCB to bid again.”We asked the top two bidders to re-bid,” BCB CEO Nizamuddin Chowdhury said. “They did so and we are pleased to announce that Top of the Mind has won the team sponsorship rights. We cannot disclose the amount but we are more than happy with it.”Their four-year deal with Sahara, which included branding rights for the national team and the national cricket academy, title sponsorship and in-stadia sponsorship for 2012-13, was worth USD$ 14 million.

Harry Kane in 'storage'! Councillors struggling to find home for £7,200 statue of Bayern & England striker after Chingford Overground station rejection

A statue of Harry Kane continues to face an uncertain future having been locked up in storage for years with no sign of finding a home.

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Kane storage funded by Chingford councilImage of striker is locked up in storageCouncillors looking for place to install itWHAT HAPPENED?

Waltham Forest Council in north-east London paid £7,200 five years ago to have a life-sized sculpture of the footballer, who was raised in the area, built. However, the effigy remains locked up after the initial plan to place it at the Chingford Overground station fell through following a risk assessment, reports.

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A spokesperson for Kane said the Bayern Munich and England striker is excited to see the image installed soon, saying: "Especially with Harry being England and Tottenham's all time top goal scorer. It is what he deserves. The location of the statue is really important to us and like Emma said we are having some issues at the moment, but when we get it right, we will be happy to go."

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Kane became a Tottenham and England icon, scoring 278 goals in 430 competitive appearances for his club, while he has struck 62 times in 89 games for the Three Lions. He is off to a flying start at Bayern Munich since joining the German side in the summer, scoring 29 times in 30 games.

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GettyWHAT NEXT FOR KANE?

While councillors continue to look for a new home for the Kane statue, the man himself will hope to fire Bayern to success in Germany and in Europe this season. The 30-year-old and his Bavarian team-mates have a mountain to climb, though, as they sit eight points behind Bayer Leverkusen in the Bundesliga and trail Lazio after the first leg of their Champions League tie. The chaos continued on Wednesday as Bayern announced that head coach Thomas Tuchel will leave the club at the end of the season.

Smith, Badree send Bangladesh crashing

Dwayne Smith’s rapid half-century led West Indies to a total that proved well beyond Bangladesh’s reach, with Samuel Badree leading the defence with figures of 4-15

The Report by Karthik Krishnaswamy25-Mar-2014
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsWest Indies had batted poorly against India in a seven-wicket defeat on Sunday. Their batsmen didn’t look entirely convincing against Bangladesh either, but they scored 171, thanks to Dwayne Smith’s 43-ball 72 and some amateurish work in the field.The target proved well beyond the reach of the hosts, who were bowled out for 98. Dew, which had been a big factor in Mushfiqur Rahim sending West Indies in at the toss, barely played a role as Samuel Badree, Sunil Narine and Krishmar Santokie – a left-arm seamer by definition but a quickish left-arm spinner in reality – had no difficulty in gripping the ball in achieving figures of 12-0-49-8 among them.Badree and Santokie sent back three of Bangladesh’s most dangerous batsmen within first four overs. Tamim Iqbal went first, driving Badree uppishly to a diving Dwayne Bravo at mid-off. Bravo would later throw an even harsher light on the gulf between the two fielding sides by hurling himself to his right at point to grab a low one-handed catch and dismiss Mushfiqur.Before that, though, Santokie struck twice in two balls with his slower offcutters. First, he spun it past the groping outside edge of the right-handed Anamul Haque for Denesh Ramdin to effect a brilliant stumping, then spun his next ball through the gate of the left-handed Shakib Al Hasan. Bangladesh were 16 for 3 in 3.2 overs and the match, as a contest, was over.Smart Stats

Bangladesh’s 73-run defeat was their second worst by margin of runs in T20Is. They had lost to Pakistan by 103 in a one-off T20I in Karachi in 2008.

Dwayne Smith’s 72 is his highest T20 international score, beating the 70 he scored against England at Trent Bridge in 2012.

Chris Gayle’s run-a-ball 48 was his slowest T20I innings in which he has scored 30 or more runs. It was slower than his 33-ball 34 against India in the previous match.

Lendl Simmons was stumped for a duck off a wide ball – the first one he faced – from Shakib Al Hasan. He is the third batsman in T20 internationals to be stumped for a ‘diamond’ duck. The other two were also from West Indies – Kieron Pollard and Narsingh Deonarine.

Al-Amin Hossain’s figures of 3 for 21 were the best in T20 internationals and the best by a Bangladesh fast bowler in World T20s. He has taken eight wickets at 14.12 in five T20Is and has an economy of 6.27.

Samuel Badree’s figures of 4 for 15 are his best in T20 internationals and also West Indies’ best in the World T20.

Mominul Haque and Mushfiqur fought on for the next six overs, but the required rate was always running away from Bangladesh. Once the two were dismissed, Badree – who finished with four wickets – and the rest of West Indies’ attack had no trouble running through the rest. In the end, the margin of victory reflected Bangladesh’s inadequacies rather than anything spectacular from West Indies.Having been sent in, West Indies, for most part, had struggled to put Bangladesh’s bowlers away on a slow pitch. Smith, who had scratched his way to 11 off 29 balls against India, was in much better touch though, and provided West Indies impetus that they never lost despite their two best batsmen – Gayle and Marlon Samuels – facing 70 balls between them for 66.Smith profited from some poor bowling, particularly from Sohag Gazi. Smith greeted the offspinner by sweeping him for two fours off his first two balls, both of which were directed towards leg stump, a dodgy idea with fine leg in the circle.In the 10th over, Smith struck him for four successive fours. He manufactured the first – a reverse-sweep off a decent ball, but the next three came from ordinary deliveries that would have disappeared in any format of the game. The last of these, a flat-batted sweep, took Smith to 50. The landmark had come up in 34 balls.Despite this, West Indies’ run rate, at the end of the 10th over, was still under eight an over. At the other end, Gayle was playing a bizarre innings. It wasn’t a surprise that he was slow off the blocks – he usually is before picking up the rate later. That simply didn’t happen today. Part of this had to do with Gayle struggling to time the ball on a slow pitch, and part of it had to do with intent – unless the ball was in his hitting zone, he simply didn’t go after it. He was slow between the wickets too, and appeared in some discomfort, suggesting he might not have been fully fit.After Smith’s dismissal in the 12th over, Mushfiqur brought on Shakib Al Hasan for the first time, and the left-arm spinner struck first ball getting Lendl Simmons stumped down the leg side as he went off on a strange wander out of the crease.In came Samuels, who added 53 in 37 balls with Gayle even though neither batsman looked particularly threatening, as Bangladesh’s fielding disintegrated despite two blinders from Tamim. Gayle went from 26 from 38 – at that point the second-slowest score of 25 or more in the history of international T20 – to 30 from 39 – the 14th slowest – courtesy Anamul’s slippery fingers at long-on. In the next over, the 17th, Mushfiqur let successive deliveries from Shakib scoot between his legs for four byes. In the last two overs, Bangladesh also dropped three catches – Mahmudullah’s two missed chances at long-off adding eight runs to Darren Sammy’s score.Al-Amin Hossain bowled a tight last over, picking up three wickets, but would have wished the spell had been part of a better team performance.

India A hit back after Faulkner-Forrest stand

Fifties from James Faulkner and Peter Forrest helped Australia A put up 7 for 288 on the opening day of the second four-day game against India in Brisbane

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Jul-20141:51

‘Will try to create a platform for our bowlers’ – Faulkner

ScorecardFifties from James Faulkner and Peter Forrest helped Australia A put up 7 for 288 on the opening day of the second four-day game against India A in Brisbane. The pair put on 133 runs for the fourth wicket but on either side of the partnership, Australia A lost wickets in clusters to Umesh Yadav and Amit Mishra.Mishra, who replaced Pragyan Ojha, was the most successful bowler with four wickets, but he was also the most expensive. Three of his wickets came towards the end of the day. He dismissed Faulkner six runs short of a maiden first-class century after the batsman had hit him for four sixes in the 71st over. In his next four overs, Mishra removed the two batsmen who had rescued Australia A in the first four-day game – Mitchell Marsh was caught at slip for 14 trying to slash, while Sam Whiteman was bowled for 12.File photo – Amit Mishra was expensive but took key wickets towards the end of the day•ESPNcricinfo LtdApart from the knocks by Forrest and Faulkner, the other Australia A batsmen had little to show for, as they failed to build on starts. Australia A won the toss and batted first, but their opening stand was broken in the eighth over when Phillip Hughes was caught behind off Yadav. The fast bowler then accounted for Alex Doolan, who made a 64-ball 18. Chris Lynn’s wicket in the last over before lunch left Australia A on a shaky 3 for 64 but Faulkner and Forrest steadied the innings in the second session and gradually accumulated runs. Faulkner was the first to switch gears, getting to an 80-ball 50 with nine fours, while Forrest reached his fifty a few overs later.Faulkner pushed the scoring-rate after Forrest fell and attacked Mishra. The fifth-wicket partnership between Faulkner and Marsh yielded 51 of which Marsh contributed just 12. Mishra’s late strikes, however, left the onus of a fightback on Australia A’s lower order, comprising Ben Cutting, Cameron Boyce, Nathan Lyon and Chadd Sayers. Lyon, who had joined the Australia A squad earlier this week, replaced Moises Henriques in the XI.India A also made changes. Apart from Mishra’s inclusion, B Aparajith replaced Karun Nair in the batting line-up while fast bowler Anureet Singh came in for Dhawal Kulkarni.

Van Zyl maiden ton and Amla double sink West Indies

A comfortable century on Test debut for Stiaan van Zyl and an imperious double hundred for Hashim Amla extended South Africa’s punishment of a dire, injury-hit West Indies attack on the second day at Centurion

Report by David Hopps18-Dec-2014Close
Live scorecard and ball-by-ball details4:38

West Indies bowlers did not adapt – Holding

An agreeable century on Test debut for Stiaan van Zyl and an elementary double hundred for Hashim Amla extended South Africa’s punishment of a dire, injury-hit West Indies attack on the second day at Centurion. When the destruction was called off half an hour before tea, ahead of rain which washed out the rest of the day, South Africa had sated themselves at 552 for 5.West Indies have rarely looked more bereft. They are at least fulfilling their tour of South Africa, but if they are there in body, they are hardly there in spirit. A weak attack, further broken by an injury to Kemar Roach, looks as if it is already awaiting the end: hopefully the end of the Test, not the end of the series. The left-arm spinner Sulieman Benn bore the burden and resembled a man at the end of a hard shift long before he delivered the last of his 46 overs.Amla’s third double hundred – to add to his 311 not out against England at The Oval in 2012, and an unbeaten 253 against in Nagpur two years earlier – was a peaceable affair, so untroubled that it felt more like an simple arithmetical exercise than a notable Test innings. It was South Africa’s highest Test score against West Indies, outdoing Herschelle Gibbs’ 192 on the same ground a decade earlier, and also the highest score by a South African captain on home soil.He fell on 208 after nearly eight hours at the crease, dragging Benn to long on where Jerome Taylor held the catch a pace in front of the rope. Amla never quite reached the pitch, perhaps deceived by Benn delivering from behind the crease, perhaps momentarily allowing himself an inexact moment with the Test so clearly in South Africa’s grip.Van Zyl could not have hoped for more benefaction than he gained from West Indies’ attack. He needed only 130 balls for his unbeaten 101 but, in truth, even though he is entitled to cherish a Test hundred on debut, fiercer examinations will await him.Tension should have been palpable as he moved through the 90s, floodlights breaking through increasingly menacing dark clouds, but to suggest as much was merely to recognise Test cricket lore. His back-foot drive to the extra cover boundary off Benn to reach 99 was one of his finest strokes. The shot that brought up his 100 – a muscular-armed cut through the off side off Benn – again characterised his strongest scoring region. A limp West Indies had come to recognise his statuesque off side clubs.It would be understandable if South Africa approached the second day with an air of supreme confidence: 340 runs already banked for the loss of three wickets and hundreds for AB de Villiers and Amla long since achieved. On a beautiful, sun-cream morning, they could anticipate some contented batting. The advent of the second new ball did not alter that.Stiaan van Zyl soaks up his debut Test hundred•AFPThere was a moment of optimism for West Indies when they dismissed de Villiers, but it quickly departed. South Africa steadily built a 109-run morning. Almost carelessly, it seemed, they lost de Villiers in the ninth over of the session. The delivery from Benn was lavishly flighted and scientists might have concluded that it turned and bounced just a tad, but there was nothing malevolent in the delivery. De Villiers, seeking to carve it through the off side, could only pick out Jermaine Blackwood at backward point.The fourth-wicket stand, extended by another 25, was worth 308 in 84 overs. West Indies had picked up a wicket but there was no sense that it might change the nature of the day. Four frontline bowlers and Roach, arguably the best of them, already off the field injured with the recurrence of an ankle injury. Taylor bowled within himself, anticipating a long day. Even allowing for West Indies’ decline, they had rarely seemed as impotent as this.Even on such an unflustered morning there had to be nerves. How could there not be with a debutant arriving at the crease? A debutant, too, who had been next in since the 16th over of the first morning. Van Zyl, a left-hander from Cape Cobras, was used to waiting – his Test debut had come relatively late at 27 – and his early reconnaissance was wary.Van Zyl’s Test debut should have come to grief on 2, edgily made from 25 balls, when he turned Benn to the more backward of two short legs but Kraigg Braithwaite could not hold on to a chance which left the bat at pace. The let-off unshackled his mind. The opportunity for van Zyl to prosper could not have been more obvious if it had been adorned with bells and whistles.Alongside him, there was continuity. Amla was marking his first home Test as captain in unerring fashion. He had 141 at start of play; another 37 by lunch, a low-key contribution to the morning. Discussions were heard about how long South Africa would bat before the declaration. This was pop gun Test cricket.Amla was dropped off Taylor on 180 by Blackwood, leaping at midwicket and, on 205, Sheldon Cottreell jagged one back over the top of his off stump, a sight that stirred the interest of South Africa’s attack. His poise was also briefly threatened by a malfunctioning sightscreen. There were many neat moments, too, and when that double hundred came, his wristy flick off Cottrell through square leg could hardly have been seemed more matter of fact.

Kaushal knock as good as a ton – Mahela

Kaushal Silva narrowly missed a maiden hundred on day two in Abu Dhabi, but Mahela Jayawardene emphasised the value of Silva’s 95, which he said was as good as a ton

Andrew Fidel Fernando in Dubai09-Jan-2014Kaushal Silva narrowly missed a maiden hundred on day two in Abu Dhabi, but Mahela Jayawardene emphasised the value of Silva’s 95, which he said was as good as a ton. Silva forged a 139-run fourth-wicket stand with Jayawardene to help consolidate the advantage Sri Lanka’s fast bowlers had earned on day one, and had been the more fluent partner during their association.Silva had also hit 81 in Abu Dhabi – his first Test since 2011 – as he stepped into the opener’s role made vacant by Tillakaratne Dilshan. Silva has been a middle-order batsman for his first-class side, but Jayawardene lauded the work-ethic that has bred his success in a new position.”Kaushal was unfortunate to miss a hundred,” Jayawardene said. “The little guy is batting really well. I’m very proud of him. He’s a clubmate of mine and he works really hard at his game. Good to see that he has shown the same kind of commitment at this level and he fully deserves what he has got. Two good knocks, but although he didn’t get a hundred, today’s knock was as good as a hundred. He batted through the pressure situations and carried the team in that time. He’s quite familiar getting big scores so I’m sure once he gets one he’ll continue to get a few more for us.”Pakistan had only made 165 in the first innings, but Jayawardene joined Silva in a tense period, after Sri Lanka’s third wicket had fallen for 88. The pair scored at only 2.4 runs per over in the first 30 overs of their stand, as Pakistan bowled with discipline.”There was a bit of pressure early on when I was batting with Kaushal. We talked and spoke of batting long, because the longer we batted and the more tired the bowlers got, the better chances we had of getting in the game.”Jayawardene said the pitch also still posed difficulties for batsmen, despite only three wickets having fallen on day two. Sri Lanka finished the day 153 runs ahead, with six first-innings wickets still in hand.”A first day wicket should have a little bit in it, and we were fortunate enough to win the toss and get the first use out of that. If you see, the new ball is still doing a bit. It’s a wicket that you don’t feel that you’re set all the time. There’s a little bit of spin for Saeed Ajmal as well. We had to really fight hard. Batting against Pakistan was not easy – they were not giving us easy runs. They bowled well in patches and we had to ride that through.”Batting with three stitches after splitting the webbing between two fingers on his left hand on the first day, Jayawardene revealed why he had come in at No. 5 – one place lower than his normal position.”Last night, Dinesh Chandimal had been ready to bat at No. 4, so we didn’t want to change that too much this morning. I had already decided I would bat either 4 or 5 and not lower, because with my injury, I can’t go for too many big shots and that doesn’t help when you have to bat with the tail.”

Newcastle should retain Jacob Murphy amid reported loan interest

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West Bromwich Albion are keen to sign Jacob Murphy on loan from Newcastle United in January, per The Express and Star.

Murphy has made 12 appearances in all competitions thus far this season but the Championship club are hoping to take him on a short-term deal until the end of the season.

What’s the word?

According to Sky Sports, Newcastle paid £12million to sign Murphy from Norwich City in 2017.

However, he has struggled for form thus far this season and has yet to score in 2018-19, as per Transfermarkt. Indeed, he has netted just once for the Magpies in 40 games.

He has, however, provided two assists thus far this season, though he has yet to complete 90 minutes in the Premier League.

Check out the video below for Emma Conybeare’s rundown of which clubs need what in the January transfer window…

The Baggies are reported to want Murphy to replace Harvey Barnes, who was recalled by Leicester City earlier in January, reports the BBC.

Murphy, an England Under-21 international, has plenty of Championship pedigree, scoring 10 goals and providing nine assists in 46 games in the second-tier, as per Transfermarkt.

Crazy to let him leave

Newcastle are yet to secure an attacking reinforcement thus far this month.

Sky Sports report that they have agreed a deal to sign defender Jordan Lukaku on loan from Lazio but they have yet to bring in a new forward player.

Thus, it would make little sense for Rafael Benitez to sign off on allowing Murphy to leave for the Championship.

He has yet to prove his worth to the Magpies but is surely an excellent option from the bench as an impact substitute, even with the wing-back system currently being employed by the Spaniard.

Were an attacking signing – Miguel Almiron, perhaps, with whom Newcastle have been linked with an offer remaining on the table according to The Chronicle – to join the club, perhaps that stance would be altered, and for good reason.

But as it is now, Murphy should be kept on the books, in the hope that he will be soon step up at St James’ Park.

Meeting crucial to Srinivasan's future

The BCCI’s working committee meeting today will be crucial in determining whether N Srinivasan is restored as president or whether he will remain on the sidelines

Amol Karhadkar02-Aug-2013The BCCI’s working committee meeting today in Delhi will be crucial in determining whether N Srinivasan is restored to his office as board president or whether he will remain on the sidelines in the wake of his son-in-law’s arrest in the IPL’s betting and spot-fixing scandal.The meeting, which will be preceded by an IPL governing council meeting, was originally supposed to have Srinivasan re-take control of the BCCI’s affairs after the two-member independent probe panel cleared the owners of Chennai Super Kings and Rajasthan Royals, as well as Royals co-owner Raj Kundra, of any wrong doing with regards to betting and spot-fixing in IPL 2013. Srinivasan had announced his decision to attend his first working committee in two months.However, two days after the working committee passed the former judges’ report to the governing council, the Bombay High Court termed the probe panel “illegal and unconstitutional”. The order was a setback not only for Srinivasan’s return but also to the already diminished public image of the BCCI. Following the court’s ruling some BCCI officials such as Niranjan Shah, who has managed to be on the right side of the power equation year after year, called for a fresh inquiry panel to be appointed.However, as has been the case with BCCI politics over the years, it won’t be surprising if the voices making their unhappiness public ahead of a crucial meeting end up being silent during the meeting.Despite the court’s ruling, Srinivasan reached New Delhi for the meeting and can resume office as BCCI president any time. However, a section of the board, including some staunch Srinivasan supporters, is of the opinion that his return as the face of the BCCI won’t do its image any good.If Srinivasan’s supporters convince him not to preside over the meeting and only attend it as a Tamil Nadu Cricket Association representative, it will be a rare incident of a BCCI president attending but not chairing the meeting. In such a scenario, Jagmohan Dalmiya, who has been looking after the board’s affairs for the last two months, will continue to preside over the meeting.Another point of interest will be to see who chairs the IPL governing council meeting, which will recommend the future course of action to the working committee with regard to the probe report. After Rajiv Shukla’s resignation as IPL chairman, the BCCI has not appointed his successor. While Dalmiya said last week that Shukla’s resignation had not been accepted, according to the BCCI website Shukla had been replaced with Arun Jaitley, leader of the principal opposition in Indian politics, in the list of governing council members.

Nicol 61 seals Canterbury victory

A round-up of the HRV Cup matches played on January 12, 2014

ESPNcricinfo staff12-Jan-2014Rob Nicol’s 61 helped Canterbury to a five-wicket victory over Northern Districts in Christchurch, solidifying both side’s position at the second and third spot on the table, thereby entering them into the preliminary final on January 17. Northern Districts batted first, with Anton Devcich and Brad Wilson adding 86 runs for the second wicket. Wilson fell for 40 off 24 balls in the 15th over, and once Devcich went out after a run-a-ball 57, the momentum began to taper off as Northern Districts reached 156 for 6.Canterbury’s reply started well enough, with George Worker and Nicol putting on 64 for the opening stand. Worker and No.3 Dean Brownlie fell in quick succession, bringing Peter Fulton to the crease. Together with Nicol, the pair continued to keep Canterbury on course. Fulton slammed three sixes in one over of Ish Sodhi to make his presence known, but could not sustain the big-hitting, as he fell to Trent Boult in the 14th over, but not before compiling 30 off 17. Although Nicol fell in the 16th over, the opener had done enough to ensure Canterbury were cruising to victory, with Brendon Diamanti and Andrew Ellis at the crease to seal the victory with six balls to spare.The match between Otago and Central Districts was abandoned without a ball bowled due to heavy rain. Each team received two points, with Otago securing their position at the top of the table, and thereby their place in the final on January 18. Who they play will be determined by the outcome of the preliminary final on January 17 between Canterbury and Northern Districts.

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