Liverpool’s Roberto Firmino produced another perfect display vs RB Salzburg

This article is part of Football FanCast’s In Numbers series, which takes a statistical look at performances, season-long form and reported transfer targets… 

Roberto Firmino quietly dropped another master-class on Wednesday evening in the Champions League, including accomplishing something he has never done before at Liverpool.

The Reds suffered quite the scare at the hands of Red Bull Salzburg, surrendering a three-goal lead in the second half. Of course, Mohamed Salah popped up with the goods like he always does, but he couldn’t have done it without Firmino.

Liverpool’s mercurial ‘false nine’ has been lauded by fans and pundits alike this season, and it seems like he is finally getting the recognition he deserves.

For all the talk of the crazy Salzburg comeback, Virgil van Dijk finally looking human and Salah’s brace though, the Brazil international’s two-assist display has somehow flown under the radar.

In typical Firmino fashion, the 28 year-old set up the two most important goals of the game with inch-perfect passes. First, he linked up with Sadio Mane to open the scoring, and then he helped decide the match with a lovely dinked ball for Salah’s winner.

Of course, Firmino is more than just goals and assists, and he fired in two shots of his own, provided an extra key pass that was not converted, and also danced his way past a defender on one occasion, per Sofascore.

The spearhead of Liverpool’s pressing machine did his part defensively too, winning four duels, completing one tackle and making one clearance.

Perhaps most surprising of all, this was the first time Firmino has assisted both Mane and Salah in a single match, per Andrew Beasley.

Considering how often the Brazilian is the glue that holds the front three together – he has assisted both wingers three times each already this season – it seems scarcely believable that he hadn’t managed this feat before.

That said, this has us wondering if there is anything else the enigmatic forward can break his duck on this season. A scorpion kick? A one-two with himself? Rounding the goalkeeper while doing kick-ups? We wouldn’t put it past him…

Barcelona got a solid piece of advice on Frenkie de Jong by Louis van Gaal

This article is part of Football FanCast’s Pundit View series, which provides opinion and analysis on recent quotes from journalists, pundits, players and managers…

Louis van Gaal recently spoke to Fox Sports at a Dutch gala and he talked about some of the awards that were handed out and also particularly about Frenkie de Jong and Matthijs de Ligt, both of whom made big transfers over the summer.

The former went to Barcelona and the latter ended up at Juventus. Van Gaal, however, believes that the Catalans and Ernesto Valverde are not really utilising De Jong the way they’re supposed to be. Mundo Deportivo also states that De Jong himself had to justify his time of adaptation since he found himself playing in some different roles from the ones he had at Ajax.

Here’s what Van Gaal had to say:

“Barcelona are not using [Frenkie] De Jong’s qualities well,”, he suggested and then continued, concluding: “it’s about adapting to it”.

And that statement can especially be applied to Barcelona’s recent ventures in La Liga. De Jong was one of the Catalans’ big summer signings and just his price tag and undeniable quality suggested that he would bring quite a revolution in their midfield. But so far, he’s been uncharacteristically quiet which was mostly due to a simple fact: Ernesto Valverde is not utilising his qualities to the fullest.

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That much was visible in the first couple of games he played so far in La Liga. But that also seems like a pretty common thing in the team, and it’s something that cost Philippe Coutinho his career at Barcelona and judging by the initial games of the Dutchman at the Catalan capital, Valverde might want to rethink De Jong’s preferences once again.

Last weekend, Barcelona drew with Osasuna and De Jong, although pretty solid, was quiet for his standards. He still managed to deploy two key passes with 93.4% passing accuracy but he was subbed off in the second half and even admitted himself at that same gala that he knows he can play better and that he has to grow in this new role.

But would it be too big of a stretch to say Valverde is slightly missing the trick by not utilising his big midfield reinforcement in a proper way and that it, in fact, might be affecting their overall performances?

Maybe there is something in Van Gaal’s words that the Ant should consider going forward.

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Liverpool star Andrew Robertson’s performance slammed by Scotland fans

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Having arrived from Hull in what now looks like one of the best bargain buys in recent memory, Andrew Robertson has firmly established himself as one of the best left-backs in the Premier League.

The 25-year-old enjoyed an incredible campaign last year for Liverpool, racking up 13 assists from 48 games across all competitions.

International duty with Scotland however, has been far less productive in terms of his assists output. The full-back has yet to register a single set-up in any of his 31 caps, and produced a disappointing showing for Steve Clarke’s side on Friday night.

The Scotland captain was unable to prevent the team slipping to a damning 2-1 loss at home to Russia in EURO 2020 qualifying, and fans of the national side certainly didn’t think he did enough to help matters.

Taking to Twitter to vent their frustrations, Scottish supporters revealed their anger at seeing Robertson perform consistently at a high level for Liverpool, but be so abysmal when on international duty.

Some even questioned whether the full-back has ever had a good game for the side, and insisted he is “never a captain in a million years”.

Check out some of the furious reaction of Scotland fans below:

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Shoaib Bashir set to leave Somerset when contract expires

England spinner has struggled for game-time at home county, with Leach and Vaughan ahead of him

Matt Roller02-Jun-2025England spinner Shoaib Bashir looks set to leave Somerset at the end of the summer in a bid to play more regular first-team cricket outside of his international commitments.Bashir has become England’s first-choice spinner in the last 18 months, playing each of their last 15 Tests, and was player of the match in their recent win over Zimbabwe. But he has struggled for gametime at Somerset, who have preferred the left-arm spin of Jack Leach and the all-round ability of Archie Vaughan in their County Championship side.Last year, Bashir played four Championship matches and a single 50-over match for Somerset and went out on loan to Worcestershire ahead of the Test summer. This season, he made a similar short-term move to Glamorgan, where he took two expensive wickets in three Championship fixtures, and he has not been involved in Somerset’s T20 Blast plans.Bashir signed a two-year extension with Somerset in 2023 and ESPNcricinfo has learned that there have been no discussions around a new deal. Bashir has praised Leach’s impact on him as a mentor at Somerset but conceded last week that his situation is “unique”, saying: “It’s hard to fit two of us [in the side], at the start of the year especially.”Sunday marked the opening of county cricket’s effective transfer window, with players in the final year of their current contracts now free to talk to other clubs ahead of next year. While no approach has yet been made, Surrey – where Bashir played his age-group cricket – could be a potential suitor, as could Warwickshire and Worcestershire.Bashir is centrally contracted by the ECB and if his deal is extended as expected, then a prospective new county would not immediately pay him a salary. He would instead sign a ‘shadow’ contract, outlining terms of payment in the event that he loses his central contract, a standard mechanism for England players.Graeme Swann, whose own career took off after he left Northamptonshire for Nottinghamshire, has previously encouraged Bashir to leave Somerset to accelerate his development as a bowler.Swann, who has coached Bashir in the England Lions set-up, told talkSPORT last year: “Long-term, if the ECB can just say, ‘Look, this is bonkers. He’s the best spinner in England. If you’re not going to play him, then you have to let him go and play for someone else.'”Meanwhile, Surrey have lined up Adam Zampa as a potential replacement signing in the T20 Blast. Zampa has previously played for Oval Invincibles in the Hundred – though will not return this year due to Australia commitments – and could act as cover for Mitchell Santner when he captains New Zealand in a T20I tri-series in Zimbabwe in July.Elsewhere, Todd Murphy has lined up a short-term stint in the County Championship. Murphy, who has played seven Tests for Australia but has slipped behind Matthew Kuhnemann as Nathan Lyon’s understudy, was a late withdrawal from Australia A’s squad to tour Sri Lanka and will play four matches for an undisclosed county in June and July.

Liverpool target Samuel Chukwueze ahead of potential transfer move

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This article is part of Football FanCast’s Transfer Focus series, which provides opinion and analysis on recent transfer news…

Liverpool are monitoring Villarreal’s Samuel Chukwueze, according to Goal.

What’s the latest?

The Reds are believed to have sent scouts over to Spain to watch the 20-year-old in action, after he caught the eye having become a first-team regular last season.

He has maintained his place in the side at the start of the current campaign, too, and so far the winger has one goal in three La Liga games, adding to the five goals and two assists he got from 26 league matches in 2018/19.

Adrian was the only senior player to arrive at Anfield over the summer, leaving Divock Origi and Xherdan Shaqiri as the club’s only experienced back-up options in the forward positions.

That could suggest that Jurgen Klopp is eager to add Chukwueze to the squad, but will first cast an eye over his performances to determine whether he will an effective addition.

Perhaps too early

Whilst the winger has done well to break into Villarreal’s side at an early age, his inconsistent performances – as highlighted by his goals and assists record – suggests he is not yet the finished article.

As a result, if he was to join Liverpool in the next transfer window he may struggle to make an impact, and certainly wouldn’t trouble players like Mo Salah or Sadio Mane for a first-team place.

If he found game time limited it could affect his development and it would therefore be a risk to bring him in now.

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Instead, the Reds should bide their time, keep tabs on him as they have so far, and if he develops into a more productive and consistent player they could then make a move for him.

Mane, Salah and Roberto Firmino arrived at Anfield when they were aged 24, 25 and 23 respectively, and have begun to hit their best form at the age of 26/27, which suggests the young Nigerian should be granted more time to develop given he is only 20 years of age.

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Real Madrid can still prosper from Gareth Bale’s renewed sense of trust

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It really did seem like it was all over just weeks ago. Gareth Bale was a man out of sorts, out of luck and, more importantly, out of options. Zinedine Zidane said so himself, practically banishing the great Welshman from the team in a public outburst not many expected at that time.

And granted, it was cooking for a long, long time. After all, their infamous relationship was far from a secret. For some reason or the other, the Frenchman and the Welshman never saw eye to eye and, despite Bale’s part in so many glorious Los Blancos moments, particularly the most recent ones, Zidane never truly accepted him as part of his gala roster.

That was always the weird part. Sure, Bale’s stubbornness also must have played a role in that. His unwillingness to learn Spanish and his constant injury woes served to stifle his popularity from soaring in the capital. From that point of view, one could understand Zidane’s slight grudge that he was reportedly holding.

But no more, or at least that’s what one could conclude from his latest words, praising and even practically confirming Bale would not only stay in the squad but also that he would play a big role within it.

And looking solely at the team’s needs and Bale’s qualities, it’s difficult to argue with this decision regardless if it was taken willingly or forcefully after a reported move to China broke down.

Of course, there’s no escaping the fact that Bale’s injury record is his biggest weakness of all. That aspect of any player can make even the best and deadliest of them redundant. You can’t really use a goal-scoring machine if its engine is broken at all times. And Bale’s really seemed to be more often than not.

Just last season, in 2018/19, he suffered five different injuries that sidelined him for a total of nine games. But even if five injuries sounds like an awful lot, the actual total of games he missed is far from catastrophic.

In fact, that still left him with a chance to take part in a total of 42 games across all competitions, which is more than many players get to play when fully fit. For all his faults in language and his apparent glass physique, Bale still very much delivers.

Last season, when Real Madrid were struggling for goals, he netted a total of 14 and even assisted seven across all competitions in the process, becoming the team’s second-highest goal scorer of the campaign. Not too bad for a player who feels relatively unimportant and unloved at the Bernabeu.

But that’s not even his best trait, not in the slightest. Bale just might be the most clutch player Real Madrid had since Cristiano Ronaldo. No one can deny the Portuguese’s influence on the pitch, especially in the big Champions League nights, for sure.

And that one is a given and cannot really be disproved. But it was actually Bale that completely took the spotlight on occasions in recent years, most notably in the 2018 final against Liverpool.

They might have had some differences in the past but surely it would be in Zidane’s best interest not to lose such an influential player.

Of course, one has to consider his age. Bale is 30 years old and, for a player who relies on his pace and fitness, the latter stages of his career might not be as successful as one might anticipate. But even with that in mind, Real need figures like him in the squad to successfully transition to the younger generations.

Maybe Bale doesn’t seem like the best role model out there but at this stage the Galacticos cannot be picky and neither can Zidane.

Once upon a time Bale was the most expensive player on the planet and, today, although his pedigree and reputation have certainly decreased, he is still very much an elite-quality squad member.

Tactically, it also makes sense. He can be deployed on either wing and he can be deployed as a centre-forward as well. That kind of tactical flexibility is invaluable, especially for teams who are in transition and also struggling with injury problems.

And, unfortunately for Florentino Perez and his boys, Real Madrid are currently both. They are ridden with injuries: Hazard? Injured. Asensio? Injured. Brahim Diaz? Also injured. Rodrygo? You guessed it, injured.

Whether they like it or not they seem to need Bale even more than he needs them. This relationship has been through real turmoil but it’s still something that can be fixed.

Bale showed he’s willing to make it work as he started Madrid’s opening game against Celta Vigo last weekend. He even provided his team with an important assist, once again showing his ability to deliver when they need him.

Just weeks ago it seemed so hopeless but now there just might be light at the end of the tunnel. And not just for Bale and his relationship with Zidane but also for the club as a whole.

Everyone seems to think they were doomed from the start but maybe Bale’s resurrection will prove to be the club’s as well.

A potential and unlikely resurrection is an opportunity Zidane shouldn’t miss.

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Rain knocks SRH out and hands DC a reprieve

SRH captain Pat Cummins struck thrice and that helped restrict DC to just 133

Karthik Krishnaswamy05-May-20251:01

What did Cummins do right?

No Result Rain put an official end to Sunrisers Hyderabad’s (SRH) IPL 2025 playoffs hopes and gave Delhi Capitals (DC) what could be a valuable point in their bid to finish in the top four. It certainly looked like a point gained for DC rather than one lost, after Pat Cummins took three new-ball wickets to put SRH in the driver’s seat at the innings break.Rain arrived soon after DC, sent in to bat, finished their innings at 133 for 7. By the time the weather cleared, the outfield was too sodden for the ground staff to clear by 11.42pm, the official cut-off time for a five-over chase.

c Kishan b Cummins, again and again and again

A grass-free surface at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium proved to be a tricky one, offering enough grip for balls banged into a hard length to misbehave, and Cummins is a master of banging the ball into a hard length.The SRH captain took the new ball himself with Mohammed Shami left out, and struck first ball, getting it to straighten and find Karun Nair’s edge. It was a sign of things to come, with the ball frequently stopping on the batter or – particularly if delivered with a wobbly seam – deviating sideways, usually just enough to find the edge.By the time he had bowled 19 balls, Cummins had taken three wickets and Ishan Kishan – keeping for the first time this season, relieving Heinrich Klaasen of the gloves – three catches.Pat Cummins wheels away after dismissing Karun Nair with the first ball•BCCI

With Harshal Patel and Jaydev Unadkat also getting into the wickets column, DC were gasping at 29 for 5 in the eighth over. The fullish ball Unadkat bowled to dismiss KL Rahul, from left-arm around, summed up the conditions – on nine out of ten IPL pitches, Rahul would have probably middled the drive he attempted; this was the tenth pitch, and the ball straightened to kiss his edge and make Kishan the first keeper to catch out an entire top four in an IPL innings.

Stubbs and Ashutosh steer DC towards respectability

Tristan Stubbs anchored DC’s recovery from that point, putting on 33 with Vipraj Nigam for the sixth wicket – Nigam sacrificed his wicket following a mix-up that left both batters at the same end – and 66 with Ashutosh Sharma for the seventh.As they have done in other recent games, DC named a bowler-heavy starting XI despite batting first, and brought Ashutosh off the Impact Player bench when the need arose. And Ashutosh was primarily responsible for a late flourish that brought DC 61 runs off their last six overs, hitting three sixes in a 26-ball 41. Stubbs finished unbeaten on 41 off 36 balls.

Rain ends SRH’s hopes

Rain began soon after DC’s innings ended, leaving SRH waiting to begin a chase that eventually never took place.With three games left to play, SRH can finish the league stage with a maximum of 13 points. Four teams already have 14 or more points. DC, with 13 from 11 games, sit just outside that group.

Harry Brook to shelve franchise cricket as England captain

New white-ball leader says he will put international commitments above T20 earning opportunities

Vithushan Ehantharajah09-Apr-20251:02

New captain Harry Brook promises an ‘aggressive, competitive’ England

Harry Brook says no amount of money will get between him and giving his all as England’s new limited-overs captain, as he pledged to put franchise cricket on the backburner for the good of English cricket.Brook, 26, was named as Jos Buttler’s successor on Monday, a role which will furnish one of the team’s premier all-format batters with extra responsibility by putting him in charge of a much-needed refresh. After a challenging period in the ODI and T20I formats, with T20 World Cup and Champions Trophy disappointments in the space of nine months, the first year of Brook’s tenure will require clarity alongside sharp improvement, with another T20 World Cup to come next February in India and Sri Lanka.Running parallel to Brook’s first year as captain are major Test series against India and Australia. A vital cog in the red-ball side – Brook is ranked No.2 in the ICC’s Test batting rankings, behind fellow Yorkshireman Joe Root – he will be integral to those challenges. It speaks to where Brook’s head is at that, even with his new role, he values success in this winter’s Ashes above lifting 2026’s T20 World Cup. The Ashes tour is viewed as integral to the legacies of Brendon McCullum and Ben Stokes with the Test side, with Brook fully in alignment as a senior member of the Test core, who has occasionally operated as vice-captain.Related

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  • Why Brook captaincy call could define Key and McCullum legacies

  • Harry Brook pulls out of IPL for second year running

“It’s the Ashes, I think,” Brook said at his Headingley unveiling on Wednesday, when asked to pick between the two. “I know I’ve taken over the white-ball captaincy, but the Ashes is the pinnacle of cricket for me still.”Already stretched across formats, something will have to give – and Brook has decided that will be franchise cricket. While in keeping with March’s decision to pull out of an IPL deal worth £590,000 with Delhi Capitals for the second year running, earning himself a two-year ban, it is a cost he is willing to bear for the good of his country.”Definitely not at the minute,” Brook said when asked if there was a figure that would make him rethink his franchise stance. “I just want to play cricket for England, represent my country like I have over the last few years and hopefully have a big impact on the side moving forward.”It’s my priority – England is the way forward for me and franchise cricket can almost take a step back for a little while. At the end of the day I enjoy playing cricket for England more than anything else so, yeah, to lose a little bit of money here and there I’d take that any day to play for England.”I haven’t completely given up franchise cricket. But in the near future, I don’t see a way with the schedule that I’m going to have much time to play on the franchise circuit.”Harry Brook chats to the media at his Headingley unveiling•PA Photos/Getty Images

Brook has yet to be informed of his IPL ban by the BCCI, but accepts it is “fair play” given the rules brought in for the 2025 season. His absence from 2024’s edition owed to the death of his grandmother, having missed England’s Test tour to India at the start of the year when she fell ill.This time around, Brook cited the need to “recharge after the busiest period in my career to date”. And though forgoing IPL riches is a luxury he can afford, with 18 months still to run on a lucrative ECB central contract – now supplemented by a captaincy bonus – the need to recuperate has merit.Since the start of last summer, Brook has played 50 matches, 38 of them spread across three formats for England, including two ICC events. Only five men, at the time of writing, have played more international cricket during this period.During this stretch, he sat out a home T20I series against Australia and the eight-match white-ball tour of the Caribbean which bled into the New Zealand Test tour at the end of 2024. And though Brook anticipates further gaps will have to be created in his schedule, finding them will be tougher as captain.England’s summer comprises six Tests (starting with a one-off meeting with Zimbabwe ahead of the India series) and 12 white-ball fixtures (against West Indies and South Africa) before an ODI tour of Ireland in late September. After two to three weeks off, a limited-overs tour of New Zealand begins in late October, ahead of the five-match Ashes, followed by a white-ball warm-up tour of Sri Lanka leading into the T20 World Cup.The vast quantity of cricket gives Brook plenty of sympathy for his predecessor, Buttler, who often led weakened squads during the busiest parts of the calendar. “It was hard on Jos. I think he didn’t really have the best players at all times, and hopefully we can have that moving on forward.”As one of those “best” players whose availability was scuppered by all-format demands, Brook’s biggest challenge will be balancing his workload alongside leadership. The Ireland series, for example, made up of three matches across five days in September, has already been earmarked as one to sit out. But Brook concedes these could provide valuable opportunities to further instil his standards and methods early in his reign.”That Ireland series, potentially [is one to miss], but I might want to play. Because it’s my first year, I might want to keep around the lads and keep them in high spirits.”It’s a lot of cricket. And I’m looking forward to it. The Ashes is going to be mega. But we’ve got a lot of cricket before that. That’s probably where the odd week off here and there, maybe missing the odd series, wouldn’t be a stupid thing.”Domestically, Brook confirmed he will play in the Hundred, as captain of Northern Superchargers, and “a game or two” for Yorkshire in County Championship in May ahead of the Zimbabwe Test, which begins at Trent Bridge on May 22. A training session at Headingley on Wednesday morning was only his second since returning from the Champions Trophy at the start of March.As for his own form, could captaincy help Brook overcome a lean patch that culminated in just 47 runs from three innings at the Champions Trophy? He certainly thinks so, pointing to last September’s five-match ODI series against Australia when, standing in for an injured Butter, he averaged 78.”This might sound a little bit stupid, but I think when you’re captain it almost wants to make you win a little bit more. That’s not me saying when I’m not captain I don’t want to win. I’m a very competitive person anyway, I hate losing at anything. Hopefully, I can bring that competitiveness and have it in a good way around the group.”

Manchester United tactical tweak could bring the best out of Harry Maguire

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This article is part of Football FanCast’s The Chalkboard series, which provides a tactical insight into teams, players, managers, potential signings and more… 

So Manchester United may finally have the long-term answer to the question of who will fill the shoes of Rio Ferdinand and Nemanja Vidic. Harry Maguire’s world-record move for a defender has certainly given the Red Devils a much-needed imposing figure at the back, but there are question marks over just how well he could adapt to Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s style of play.

The United boss has looked to implement a high-intensity approach and pressing from the front – something slightly unfamiliar to Maguire from his days at Hull and Leicester. The 6 foot 4 powerhouse has long been used to playing in sides that defend deep and counter-attack. At Old Trafford, Maguire will be expected to play a huge part in leading the club’s back-line high up the pitch to dominate possession.

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But, switching to a back-three could bring rich rewards for Maguire and United. If utilised as the middle centre-back, the 26-year-old could bring the ball out of defence with typical composure, and crucially know that were he to make a mistake, he would have two covering players behind him to deal with the situation. Indeed, one of the major risks of Solskjaer’s new approach will be the side being susceptible to balls in behind.

For all of Maguire’s qualities, pace has never been one of his strong points. But in having a pairing of Victor Lindelof and Axel Tuanzebe alongside him for example, United would have greater security.

The Red Devils were incredibly porous in defence last season, letting in a disappointing 54 goals in the Premier League alone. Opting to go for a three-man defence with Maguire at the heart of it however, could also bring about greater rewards going forward.

Last season, the former Leicester centre-back averaged an impressive 56.4 passes per game, but also managed 6.2 long balls per game. In a back-three, Maguire could step out from the back and play those laser-like passes into the side’s wingers and help stretch the play. It would allow United to introduce a different dimension to their game and ensure opposition teams always try and stay close to the side’s wide-men, thus leaving more space for the Red Devils in central positions.

So whilst Maguire’s signing should automatically give United a much-needed boost in central defence, it could well take a tactical tweak for the Red Devils to truly bring the best out of the English powerhouse.

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Jacob Duffy duffs up Essex on 14-wicket day

New Zealand seamer’s four-for gives Worcestershire the upper hand on lively deck

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay18-Apr-2025Jacob Duffy and Matthew Waite took advantage of a seam-friendly pitch to skittle Essex for 179 in the Rothesay County Championship at Chelmsford.New Zealand’s Duffy led the way with a fine display of fast, accurate bowling that was rewarded with figures of 4 for 39 while Waite took out three middle-order wickets as Essex were dismissed inside 59 overs.Only Simon Harmer’s innings lasted more than 47 balls and 68 minutes – his obdurate 77-ball 28 spanned nearly two hours – as no one got to grips with a hybrid pitch that had plenty of grass on it and provided extra lift, carry and lateral movement. The toss was crucial and Brett D’Oliveira won it for Worcestershire.Not that the visitors fared much better when it was their turn to bat. Though Essex were without England pace prospect Sam Cook on instruction from the ECB, they still managed to reduce Worcestershire to 22 for 4 before they revived to 98 for 4 when bad light ended play with nine overs remaining.A knee injury to Michael Pepper, that necessitated a runner when he came back to bat, meant Jordan Cox had to take the wicketkeeping gloves earlier in the campaign that he had planned.Essex never recovered from a poor start. Paul Walter was the first to go when Duffy left just his leg-stump standing as he played across the line. Duffy had a second wicket in eight balls. Charlie Allison had already three times driven Tom Taylor exquisitely straight before playing around one to fall lbw.Cox might have gone in his first over from Tom Taylor, an involuntary edge sneaking through the slips for four. Unfazed, Cox then came down the wicket and lofted Ben Allison over his head for six.Tom Westley had earlier hit Taylor out of the attack with three boundaries in an over, but the bowler gained revenge when he returned to have the Essex captain caught behind after a 60-run partnership with Cox. Cox followed 10 balls later, though, beaten by one from Duffy that nipped off the seam and took a leading edge through to the wicketkeeper.Pepper was injured before lunch, but came out to continue his innings after the break but lasted one ball before rearing up in agony and immediately retiring hurt.
It was 106 for 5 soon after that when Matt Critchley sauntered down the wicket to Waite and could only deflect the delivery that followed him. Waite collected a second when he had Noah Thain trapped by a straight one that hit his back pad.Shane Snater slammed Waite for 14 from an over, including a straight six. He was determined to repeat the feat but perished with a wild top-edge against Duffy to be caught at deep third.Pepper returned with Allison as his runner, but his dismissal initiated the beginning of the end of Essex’s innings as the last three wickets fell for two runs. Pepper was trapped lbw before Allison came to the party with two wickets in three balls. Harmer finally departed to a fourth catch at the wicket by Roderick, and then Porter lost his off stump to his former team-mate.The wickets continued to clatter when Worcestershire batted. Jake Libby pushed a delivery from Snater into Critchley’s right hand at third slip and Roderick fell to the same combination, though the catch was taken low down this time.Essex’s debutant overseas bowler Kasun Rajitha made an instant impact by knocking Roderick’s bat out of his hand with his second ball. The Sri Lankan had his first wicket soon after when Cox snaffled Rob Jones behind the stumps.Porter then had Kashif Ali taken by Thain diving forward at fourth slip, before Adam Hose and D’Oliveira pieced together the biggest partnership of the match so far with an unbeaten 76 added for the fifth wicket.

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