Klopp ‘hopeful’ over Liverpool injury

Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp is confident that Ibrahima Konate’s knee injury is nothing serious, according to reliable journalist James Pearce.

The Lowdown: Konate picks up knock

A young Reds side lost 3-0 at home to Strasbourg on Sunday evening, in what was their final pre-season game before the start of the Premier League season.

The main negative on the night was Konate’s injury, however, as he limped off during the second half after suffering a knee injury.

It is an undoubted concern for Liverpool, with the Frenchman superb in his first season at the club, starting 11 league games and being preferred to Joel Matip in the Champions League final defeat to Real Madrid.

The Latest: Pearce provides update

Writing on Twitter, Pearce provided a positive update on the situation, saying that a scan will hopefully determine that Konate’s injury is not serious:

“Klopp hopeful of good news as Konate set to undergo scan on his knee after limping out of defeat to Strasbourg.”

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The Verdict: Matip to start vs Fulham?

While this is good news, it would be a surprise if Konate were now available to face Fulham at Craven Cottage, as Liverpool begin what is hopefully another memorable Premier League campaign.

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That means Matip is almost certain to start alongside Virgil van Dijk, giving the defender a perfect chance to make himself first-choice in the opening weeks of the season.

Konate will be desperate to win his place back as soon as possible, however, and this healthy competition at the back can only be a good thing moving forward.

Leeds: Graham Smyth drops left-back update

Leeds United are working on potential left-back signings in total secrecy, Graham Smyth of The Yorkshire Evening Post writes.

The lowdown

With a week to go until the competitive action begins, Leeds do look a little short in the left-back position.

Junior Firpo would likely occupy that role if he was fit, but he picked up an injury against Blackpool earlier in pre-season that could sideline him until mid-September.

Stuart Dallas is capable of playing there too, but he’s also on the sidelines with no prospect of a return in the near future.

After Leeds sold 22-year-old Leif Davis to League One outfit Ipswich Town, Marsch faces the possibility of using centre-half Pascal Struijk or winger Jack Harrison as a makeshift full-back.

The latest

Smyth, the publication’s chief football writer, says Leeds are hopeful of signing a new LB before they kick-off their Premier League campaign against Wolves on Saturday 6 August.

However, they are currently ‘tight-lipped on the identity of targets’ and ‘whatever deals are being worked on are yet to leak out’.

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The verdict

TuttoMercatoWeb (via Sport Witness) report that Leeds are ‘thinking’ about a deal for PSV Eindhoven’s Philipp Max, but in light of Smyth’s piece, that information seemingly hasn’t come from Elland Road.

And regardless, TMW cautioned that it would take a ‘crazy’ offer to land the 28-year-old German, and that may well discourage Leeds.

Perhaps that’s part of the problem they face as they operate under time pressure, with the new season so close and clubs likely reluctant to lose key assets.

Smyth writes that Leeds were always going to need a new LB this summer to provide cover and competition for Firpo, and so you could argue this should have been addressed weeks ago.

Leeds: Romano drops Adams update

Fabrizio Romano has dropped an update on reported Leeds United transfer target Tyler Adams.

What’s the latest?

In a recent post on Twitter, the Italian journalist revealed that, following a number of reports linking Victor Orta with a move for the RB Leipzig midfielder this summer, the Spanish director of football is now preparing a first bid for the 23-year-old USA international having entered into talks with the Bundesliga side.

The transfer insider goes on to state that Jesse Marsch is keen to bring the former New York Red Bulls starlet to Elland Road as a replacement for Kalvin Phillips, with the 48-year-old known to be a big fan of Adams – who is believed to be available for a figure of around €15m (£13m) this summer.

In his tweet, Romano said: “Leeds are preparing an opening bid for Tyler Adams, he’s included in the list of three potential new signings. The plan of Jesse Marsch is to replace Kalvin Phillips with Adams, he’s a big fan of USMNT midfielder. €15m needed, as Florian Plettenberg reports. Talks ongoing.”

ESPN backed up similar claims that Leeds are now closing in on a move for the American this summer.

In a further tweet, Romano also revealed that Leeds are now close to landing Feyenoord winger Luis Sinisterra, with Orta having reached full agreement on personal terms with the 23-year-old Colombia international.

Supporters will be buzzing

While the recent confirmation of Phillips’ £45m move to Manchester City will undoubtedly come as a gutting blow to the Elland Road faithful, Romano’s suggestion that Orta is already in negotiations with Leipzig in order to replace the England international in Jesse Marsch’s squad is sure to be news that will leave Whites supporters buzzing.

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While it is true that Adams found himself slipping down Domenico Tedesco’s midfield pecking order at the Red Bull Arena last season – starting just 12 Bundesliga fixtures in 2021/22 – the 19-cap international nevertheless appears to boast a number of attributes that would suggest he can help plug the Phillips-shaped hole in the Leeds squad next season.

Indeed, according to FBref data, Adams ranked in the top 2% of midfielders in Europe’s big five leagues and European competitions for blocks per 90 mins, in addition to the top 18% for passes attempted, the top 25% for passes completed, the top 20% for pressures and the top 25% for progressive carries over the past 12 months.

In comparison, in the same metrics, FBref rank Phillips in the top 4% for blocks per 90, as well as the top 39% for passes attempted, the bottom 40% for passes completed, the top 2% for pressures and the bottom 4% for progressive carries over the last 365 days.

As such, it is clear to see that the 23-year-old would make a fantastic replacement for the Whites’ academy graduate in the middle of the park next term, leading us to believe that Romano’s latest update is fantastic news for everyone involved with the club – not least Marsch himself.

AND in other news: Leeds given green light for Orta to sign “£30m player”, he’s “getting rave reviews”

Leeds now close to 3rd summer signing

Leeds United are acting early to ensure that a relegation dogfight isn’t repeated in 2022/23 and it appears they are close to sealing yet another signing at Elland Road…

What’s the word?

The Yorkshire giants have already secured a move for RB Salzburg duo, midfielder Brenden Aaronson (£25m) and right-back Rasmus Kristensen (£10m), and now are honing in on a third arrival.

That’s according to Yorkshire Evening Post reporter Graham Smyth, who delivered a short and snappy five-word update to Twitter, where he said:

“One deal being worked on.”

In an accompanying article, it’s claimed that the Whites are working to complete another signing by the ‘end of next week.’

Busy summer continues

Leeds narrowly avoided relegation to the Championship on the final day of the season, thanks to their 2-1 win over Brentford and some fortune as Burnley were defeated. It would have been a gutting twist in their history, having taken 16 years to get back to the big time in 2020.

Evidently, the wretched campaign left a sour taste on those high up in the hierarchy as they have already sanctioned two big-money deals, despite the transfer window only reopening on Friday.

Aaronson is a hugely promising attacking midfielder that fits Jesse Marsch’s system like a glove, whilst Kristensen is another player that has been coached by the American and will offer more threat down that right flank.

The third signing is unknown at this stage but could quite easily emerge to be Bayern Munich’s bit-part midfielder Marc Roca, who is thought to be attracting £10m interest from the Premier League side in a deal that could be a bargain.

Torino wing-back Ola Aina, NYCFC striker Valentin Castellanos, Liverpool’s Takumi Minamino, and long-time target, Huddersfield Town midfielder Lewis O’Brien have all been linked in recent days, too.

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The fact that Victor Orta and co are already lining up another move is certainly thrilling for the Elland Road faithful, any one of those names would add something to Marsch’s squad, on top of the Salzburg duo.

It’s going to make for an exciting summer and one that could see Leeds’ fortunes change drastically heading into the new season.

AND in other news, David Lynch drops Takumi Minamino transfer update…

Celtic must seal Connor Barron transfer

Celtic have seen some prominent midfielders wave goodbye to Parkhead in recent memory, such as Scott Brown and Tom Rogic.

The club also announced that they have released young midfield talent Luca Connell after his recent loan spell with Queen’s Park.

Now that the summer transfer window is set to open, this will give Ange Postecoglou the chance to potentially replace some of these recent departures and strengthen his squad in other areas as well.

One fresh-faced midfielder with whom the Hoops have been linked recently is Aberdeen youngster Connor Barron.

A product of the Pittodrie youth system, the 19-year-old has made 15 senior appearances for the club, 13 of which came during the second half of this latest Premiership season.

This highlights just how much faith Jim Goodwin has in the youngster and how highly he is rated at the club.

In fact, Goodwin said about the teenager in March: “He’s brave on the ball and, for a small lad, he wants to get stuck in as well. Connor is a very good player with great potential. He has so much to learn and improve on which he knows and he is not getting above his station at all.”

In terms of what sort of player he is, Jacek Kulig described the £68k-rated starlet as being similar to Chelsea midfielder N’Golo Kante. The Twitter football scout also listed Barron’s pace, passing, tackling, positioning, work rate, energy, pressing and tenacity as the youngster’s main strengths.

Taking into account how successful Kante has been for club and country in terms of the trophies he’s lifted and individual awards he’s won, the prospect of having their own version of the Frenchman in the shape of the Aberdeen starlet is one that Celtic should not let slip.

While the Dons would presumably be keen to retain their teenage talent and give him the chance to develop his game at Pittodrie, the chance to join the reigning Scottish champions and potentially lift silverware and play in Europe with the Hoops would surely be tempting for Barron.

In other news: Fabrizio Romano drops big behind-the-scenes transfer claim, it’s bad news for Celtic

Numerous clubs monitoring Nya Kirby

Crystal Palace youngster Nya Kirby is set to be released by the Eagles this summer with Bournemouth, Watford and Club Brugge listed as potential new suitors.

What’s the word?

According to the Bournemouth Echo, via the 72, the Palace academy product is a target for the aforementioned clubs who would each offer the 22-year-old something different.

Bournemouth can now provide Premier League football following their promotion back to the top-flight whilst Watford will be a Championship outfit once again following their relegation.

As for Club Brugge, the Belgian club would provide the midfielder with the opportunity to start fresh abroad, something that has proven to work wonders for young, English talents of late.

Palace must axe Kirby

Although there is still time to offer Kirby a new contract, the south London outfit must stick with their decision and allow the Englishman to depart.

Having worked his way up the youth ranks at Crystal Palace, the 22-year-old has made just one first team appearance for Patrick Vieira’s side, coming under former manager Roy Hodgson last season in an EFL Cup defeat against Bournemouth.

However, the midfielder has impressed for the U23s in Premier League 2 this term, scoring seven goals and providing two assists in 20 appearances.

Besides his one first-team appearance for the Eagles, Kirby has played regular senior football with loan spells at both Blackpool in 2018/19 and Tranmere Rovers last campaign, although he didn’t make an impression at either outfit.

Having been limited to just eight appearances for a League Two side in Tranmere certainly wouldn’t have convinced Vieira that the 22-year-old is ready for Premier League football and therefore the only logical step is to release him.

There is an argument for the Frenchman to give the youngster a chance with numerous midfielders set to depart Selhurst Park this summer.

Conor Gallagher will return to Chelsea upon the conclusion of his loan spell whilst both James McArthur and Cheikhou Kouyate are set to be released.

It will be a ruthless move, with the midfielder labelled as “terrific” by former Blackpool boss Terry McPhillips whilst on loan with the Tangerines.

However, there is little evidence to suggest that the £6.9k-per-week Englishman has what it takes to succeed in the Premier League, at least currently.

AND in other news: Vieira now heading for 1st summer transfer disaster, Palace supporters will be gutted

Newcastle could sell Jamaal Lascelles

Newcastle United could be receptive to offers for captain Jamaal Lascelles this summer, The I’s Mark Douglas has reported.

The lowdown

The Magpies paid £4.5m to sign the defender from Nottingham Forest back in August 2014. He has gone to pass the 200-appearance mark for the club (211) and featured in the PFA Championship Team of the Year when they won promotion back to the Premier League in 2016/17.

Lascelles, who still has more than two years to run on his £40,000-per-week contract at St James’ Park, is valued at £9.9m by Transfermarkt.

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The latest

Douglas wrote for The I that Newcastle have a surplus of players, and he named some of those who could be offloaded this summer to remedy the situation.

Lascelles is one of the players who ‘might go’, with Newcastle potentially set to consider any bids for the 28-year-old.

The verdict

An exit for Lascelles may have been unthinkable earlier in the season, with the Englishman starting 20 of Newcastle’s first 24 Premier League matches.

However, he appears to have fallen down the pecking order following the arrival of another centre-back in Dan Burn in January. Indeed, Eddie Howe has selected the 28-year-old Derby native for just two of the last 12 top-flight games.

Lascelles has said that he would ‘run through a brick wall’ for his manager, but with Financial Fair Play requirements a consideration for Newcastle, they may need to make a ruthless decision to offload their club captain.

In other news, Pete O’Rourke says the Newcastle faithful would be ‘licking their lips’ at this mooted signing

You talk, Steven Smith bats

There has been no shortage of words written and spoken about Steven Smith’s comeback, but the man himself cares only about batting

Jarrod Kimber in Bristol31-May-2019″I think he’s got a bit more spare time on his hands. He gets bored pretty easy. That is why he is training for hours on end. He doesn’t like it when he is told he can’t train for the day.”That was Aaron Finch, speaking with a smile on his face, on Steven Smith.Not that long ago that Justin Langer was talking about how Smith shadow batted in the shower. Which seems a perfectly fine and normal thing for any cricketer to do. Langer more recently has been talking about how he doesn’t want Smith and Warner to be booed when they play. Which is an extraordinary thing considering Justin Langer also likes to sledge his daughter when they play Uno.ALSO READ: Australia come to the World Cup singing and dancingThere was also Nathan Lyon talking about Smith’s treatment in the warm-up match at Southampton: “They’re ruthless over here. I’ve had two Ashes tours and a one-day series and haven’t experienced anything else. They’re ruthless and don’t show much love. They haven’t changed their lines in 12 months.” The ‘s chief sports writer, Paul Hayward, wrote a column on the English crowd and Smith and Warner: “Somewhere in deepest England, Steve Smith and David Warner are steeling themselves to hear the same gags every minute of every day on a long summer tour.”Everyone has been talking about Smith, but Smith just bats.A few years ago a team-mate of Smith’s suggested privately that it’s actually hard to talk to Smith about anything not cricket. Obsessed is probably an understatement. Many captains find the extra parts that come with the job – video analysis, strategy meetings, keeping on top of everyone’s form and injuries – boring. For Smith it seemed like the perfect use of his time. Now Smith is only an occasional pariah, constant talking point and professional batsman.”There is no question about his batting ability,” Finch said. “So when you are great, you get the game quicker, things just happen quicker, so there is never any issue about how he’ll bounce back.” And as Finch noted, Smith has spent a season in the IPL against many of the best white-ball bowlers in the world, so he’s been plenty prepared.”I suppose, when you are the captain, there is a bit more stuff that occupies your time at various times,” Finch added. “But he’s been brilliant around the boys, he’s been great for me, talking cricket, talking batting, things like that and lessons he’s learnt from being captain and leading the team. I think he’s been really important for me, and just general conversation.”Some players fill their time watching movies, others playing FIFA, Steven Smith does it training, talking and preparing.Australia underwent a light training session on Friday. Most of the bowlers didn’t turn up, neither did the recovering David Warner, nor Glenn Maxwell, nor Usman Khawaja. But Smith was one of the first in the nets. At first in the spin nets, having some trouble with the legspinner Australia have flown in, and later slogging to leg the left-arm wristspinner. Then he went into the throwdown nets and did some hitting there before moving across to the seam-bowling nets. He spent a long time in each.Then when the other batsmen finished their session, he came back to bat alone for close to 40 minutes. First he was taking throwdowns from Ricky Ponting, whose arm seemed to go numb in the long session, before Sridharan Sriram, the team’s spin consultant, had to pick up the slack.During the entire net session he seemed to work on using his feet to spin, then some power hitting. Against the seam bowlers he was moving around the crease – even more than usual for him – to find new places to score. And against the throwdowns at one stage he was batting against the side of the cut strip outside leg stump, to work on – I mean, who knows, but he didn’t get bowled even when the ball was flung to the stumps.After the entire workout, where he’d batted as long as the other players combined, he was standing outside the nets, shadow batting on his own as the tired net bowlers and assistant coaches went for a well-earned drink.This summer, there will always be someone talking about Steve Smith. And while that happens there will be Smith batting in the middle, the nets, his mind and the shower.

Two vets and a kid

Three promising newcomers in the USA side are hoping to help their team break its Division Three jinx

Peter Della Penna22-May-20173:21

USA cricket welcomes three new faces

Camilus Alexander
Perhaps the coolest cat prowling around the USA squad, 35-year-old legspin allrounder Alexander oozes confidence on and off the field.The Grenada native was a strong prospect for West Indies in his youth, having been part of the squad that went to the 2000 U-19 World Cup. His team-mates then included future Test players Marlon Samuels, Jermaine Lawson, Narsingh Deonarine and Brenton Parchment. However, Alexander struggled to find a regular place in the Windward Islands side once he graduated to senior level. His mentor Rawle Lewis was entrenched as the first choice legspinner, and offspinner Shane Shillingford was a frequent pick.”After a while I decided I wanted to try something new and have a different avenue,” Alexander said. He got a call one day from Clayton Lambert, the former West Indies opener who had migrated to the USA in the late 1990s and wound up playing for the country at the 2004 Champions Trophy, before later going on to coach the US team. Lambert, based in Atlanta, said one of the club teams in the strong local competition was interested in a bowler who could bat. At age 30, Alexander packed up and came to Atlanta, where Lambert, who works as a truck driver, helped him get a job in the same field. As if that wasn’t enough of a helping hand, Alexander also became roommates with Lambert for the first year he lived in Atlanta.”I came over and gave it a shot and it’s just gone on from there,” Alexander said. “I knew him from first-class cricket back in the Caribbean, so it wasn’t too hard to get along, and he helped me a lot. Coaching-wise, he gave me a lot of inspirational advice and how to go about playing different situations. He helped me in a lot of ways.”

“I’m looking to make a name for myself. Try to perform in the best way that I can, try to get at least two or three fifties and get at least 10 to 12 wickets”Camilus Alexander on his goals for the season

Alexander has been piling up runs after shifting to more of an emphasis on his batting than his bowling, which helped put him on the selection radar. He was the top scorer at the most recent selection camps in Houston. Along with Lambert, Alexander says Lewis and Darren Sammy, who captained him at Windwards for a brief period, were also helpful in developing his game.”[Sammy] was always an inspirational guy in the Windwards team so we learned a lot from him,” Alexander said. “He always told me, ‘Nothing comes easy. If you need to achieve something, you need to work hard at it’, and he really worked hard at his game and just moved from one level to the next really quick.”Alexander’s role in the USA squad is to shore up the middle order – a problem area for USA in the recent past – while also offering spin in the middle overs.”I’m looking to make a name for myself,” he said of the Division Three challenge. “Try to perform in the best way that I can, try to get at least two or three fifties and get at least 10 to 12 wickets. Doing that, the team will benefit and it will help the team to go on and win the cup, which is our ultimate goal.”Camilus Alexander credits his erstwhile captain Darren Sammy as a major inspiration•Peter Della PennaIbrahim Khaleel
Though he is new to the USA squad, Khaleel has a distinguished resumé built up over the course of a decade with Hyderabad in Indian first-class cricket. He played for the state, beginning at Under-13 level, working his way up through each junior squad before making his Ranji Trophy debut in 2002, under the captaincy of Venkatapathy Raju.Khaleel was arguably in his prime around 2008, when he took a chance on the rebel Indian Cricket League. He was named Player of the Series playing for ICL’s India XI against a World XI.”ICL changed me as a batsman, as a keeper, the way I approached the game, it just made me better,” he said. “The confidence that Steve Rixon [as coach] gave me was just unbelievable. The work ethic, the way he shows you the drills for wicketkeeping, the way he tells you how to bat, how to approach batting and keeping, it was just unbelievable. He took me to a different level. The confidence level I had was great but he made me a better keeper and a better batsman.”After the ICL folded, Khaleel took the BCCI up on its amnesty offer and came back to the Hyderabad fold, while also trying to find a place in the IPL. He signed a squad contract with Mumbai Indians but never made it into the starting XI, and by 2010 they had cut ties with him.

“ICL changed me as a batsman, as a keeper, the way I approached the game, it just made me better”Ibrahim Khaleel, who played domestic cricket in India, before moving to the US in his 30s

He was still a regular with Hyderabad over the next few years, though, and one of his biggest career highlights came in November 2011, when he set a world record with 14 dismissals (11 catches and three stumpings) in a first-class match against Assam.”I didn’t know it was a world record,” Khaleel said. “We just finished the game and I went back to my room. That’s when my phone starts ringing. ‘What’s going on? I know we won the game but why is everybody calling me?’ You just created a record. ‘What record?’ There was a guy who got 13 [dismissals] and you have 14 now.”In 2013, he married an American doctor, and the couple agreed he would continue to play in Hyderabad, spending the season in India before coming back to Beloit, Wisconsin, where she had established their home near her hospital job. After the 2014-15 season, though, the “commute” was wearing, and Khaleel says he made the decision to stop playing Ranji Trophy cricket for good at age 32.In the USA full-time, he initially played sporadic league cricket casually in Chicago, a two-hour drive from Beloit, a town of 36,000, just over the Wisconsin border from Illinois. But in 2016, ICC Americas organised a regional combine tryout in Chicago, and a fire that had been barely flickering grew strong once again with the prospect of representing USA. Khaleel already had a green card, thanks to his wife, and the Milwaukee, Wisconsin US Customs and Immigrations Services office fast-tracked his citizenship application. He got his passport a week out from the squad submission deadline to be eligible to play for USA at Division Three.Khaleel: “Everybody is a fantastic player in our team. When I look at them as a player, as a team-mate, to me the only thing I look at is how confident they are in their approach”•Peter Della Penna”My wife was like, ‘You know what, we decided that you don’t want to play cricket and you’re gonna chill. Now you’re gonna travel?'” Khaleel laughs. “I told her I’d do that but I always wanted to play for the country.”She’s one of the biggest reasons that I’m here, because she supported me a lot. She knew that I always wanted to play for the country, and when I had this opportunity, she helped me with all my stuff, getting the paperwork done for the citizenship and stuff, and then when I got selected, she was just very happy for me.”Even with worn knees and a sore back from 20 years’ worth of wicketkeeping through the Hyderabad system, Khaleel’s skills with bat and gloves are still undeniable. He was USA’s second-leading scorer – behind USA’s Jamaica Tallawahs allrounder Timroy Allen – on their warm-up tour in Potchefstroom ahead of landing in Uganda, and hopes some of his experience will rub off on his new team-mates.”My experience is all about confidence,” Khaleel said. “Everybody is a fantastic player in our team. When I look at them as a player, as a team-mate, to me the only thing I look at is how confident they are in their approach. The only thing I go and tell them is just back yourself.”

“My wife was like, ‘You know what, we decided that you don’t want to play cricket and you’re gonna chill. Now you’re gonna travel?'”Khaleel on his wife’s reaction to his decision to play for USA

Nosthush Kenjige
The two other USA debutants have more than two decades of first-class cricket between them. Kenjige on the other hand is neon green by comparison, in terms of his high-level cricket experience. But the 26-year-old left-arm spinner’s work ethic goes a long way towards helping bridge that gap.Born in Alabama, where his father worked as an agricultural researcher at Tuskegee University, he and his family moved back to India before he had turned one, to Chikmaglur, outside Bengaluru, where his father runs a coffee farm. Kenjige played university cricket in Bengaluru, as well as for Jawans Cricket Club in the city’s Sir Mirza Ismail Shield competition.The only one in his family with American citizenship (since he was born there), he decided to move back to the US in 2015, first to Virginia and then to New York, where he found work as a biomedical technician. He applied and was granted an invite to the New York Combine organised by ICC Americas in June 2016, where he impressed enough with his left-arm spin to be named in USA’s 30-man training squad ahead of Division Four at the end of July.Kenjige: “To just have stars and stripes on the chest, it’s a dream for anybody”•Peter Della PennaThough he holds a USA passport, a quirk in the ICC’s eligibility criteria for Associate teams below the WCL Championship meant that Kenjige had to fulfill 100 days of “community service” to become eligible. This can consist of playing in matches, coaching players, or undertaking other development activities. So desperate was Kenjige to play for USA that he would commute one to two hours – depending on traffic – from Manhattan to New Jersey after work, three days a week, and again on the weekends, to the CricMax complex in Old Bridge, the nearest indoor facility where he could train and coach.Officially, eight hours equals a day of credit for the ICC 100-day stipulation so if he made it by 6pm and stayed until 10pm, he could log a half-day on weeknights, and then put in two full days on the weekend. The owners gave him a set of keys to lock up if he was the last to leave. After starting his mission in August, Kenjige met the threshold in February, in plenty of time to be eligible for Division Three.”It’s just that I enjoyed cricket and I didn’t necessarily count it as commitments or service of any kind,” Kenjige says. “The fact that I was just enjoying the work that I was putting in every day, even though the commute was bad. I could have given a thousand reasons [to stop] but it was just the passion in me. I just loved to go to the place and get myself working at it and just get better every day. I think everybody in my position would have done it if they loved cricket.”

So desperate was Kenjige to play for USA that he would commute one to two hours from Manhattan to New Jersey after work, three days a week, and again on the weekends, to the CricMax complex in Old Bridge, the nearest indoor facility where he could train and coach

Kenjige took a brief period off work in January to train in South Africa with the Knights franchise before returning to New York. At the team’s selection camps in Houston this March and April, he finished as the leading wicket-taker. That achievement, and his phenomenal fielding – he is often stationed at backward point – made him a shoo-in for the tour to Uganda. He said it was “the happiest day of my life” when he got the selection call.Kenjige’s fanatical quest to give himself the best chance of being selected came at a price, though. Just before leaving for Uganda, he was fired from his job. He says he saw it coming, considering the amount of time he had taken off from work and to go to selection camps, but says without hesitation that he would do it all again.”It was always my dream to play for the US. It was a no-brainer. If they hadn’t asked me to leave, I would have left at some point, because this is where I’ve always wanted to be. Looking back at it 20-30 years from now, I don’t think I’m gonna regret it.”Any sportsperson for that matter, when we start playing cricket, you always dream of playing for the country. To just have stars and stripes on the chest, it’s a dream for anybody. You know that you’re playing for your country, you represent your country. It’s been a dream so I can’t ask for anything more.”

Buttler ballistics drive England to 399

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Feb-2016… but he was frustrated at falling when well set on 48•Getty ImagesAlex Hales took up the cudgels with 57 from 47 balls•Getty ImagesHe became Marchant de Lange’s first international wicket since January 2015•Getty ImagesJoe Root anchored England’s innings with a typically lively 52•Getty ImagesJos Buttler was promoted to No.4 with devastating effect•Getty ImagesHis last ODI innings was an England record 46-ball hundred in Dubai …•Getty Images… and he duly brought up his fourth England hundred, from 73 balls•Getty ImagesBen Stokes carried over his Test form with a hard-hitting 57 from 38•Getty ImagesChasing 400, South Africa lost Hashim Amla early in their innings•Getty ImagesFaf du Plessis found his form with 55 from 44 balls•Getty Images… while Quinton de Kock continued where he had left off with another brilliant display•Getty ImagesHis ninth ODI hundred came from 67 balls to keep South Africa firmly on track•Getty ImagesHowever, a blinding one-handed catch from Stokes extracted the dangerous AB de Villiers•Getty ImagesMoeen Ali picked up key wickets to keep South Africa behind the Duckworth-Lewis par score•Getty Images

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