Gul considering Test future because of knee injury

A persistent knee problem has put Pakistan fast bowler Umar Gul’s Test future in doubt

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Aug-2014A persistent knee problem has put Pakistan fast bowler Umar Gul’s Test future in doubt. Gul has played only eight ODIs and four Twenty20 internationals since having surgery in May 2013 and each time his comeback has been stymied by fitness problems.He said he was targeting the Tests against Australia in the UAE in October, but if he failed to make that deadline he could take a call on whether to continue in the format.”It is frustrating and right now the doctors and trainers at the national cricket academy have told me I am still not 100% fit and need to do more rehabilitation and gym training so that the knee is back to normal,” Gul told PTI. “I don’t feel comfortable bowling right now because of the knee problem and if you ask me right now if I could play Test matches I would say no.”Gul sustained the knee injury in March 2013 during the second ODI against South Africa in Centurion. Following the injury, he travelled to Australia for surgery and after six weeks of rest, began his rehabilitation. His appearances since then – the ODIs against Sri Lanka in January, the Asia Cup, and the World T20 – have been sporadic.”Honestly speaking at present I don’t know what my future is,” Gul said. “But I am targetting a return to the test side for the series against Australia later this year. But if that doesn’t work out I could quit playing Tests to prolong my career.”It is never easy to make a comeback from a knee surgery. But I have tried to do my best as I want to play for Pakistan. But if I am not feeling 100% fit and I don’t feel comfortable bowling I will not make myself available for selection.”

Pakistan to host Sri Lanka in UAE

Pakistan will host Sri Lanka in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) between December 2013 and January 2014 for a bilateral series that includes three Tests, five ODIs and two Twenty20s

ESPNcricinfo staff02-Aug-2013Pakistan will host Sri Lanka in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) between December 2013 and January 2014 for a bilateral series that includes three Tests, five ODIs and two Twenty20s. The series, the second bilateral contest between Pakistan and Sri Lanka in the UAE, will be played in Dubai, Sharjah and Abu Dhabi.The T20s and ODIs have been scheduled before the Tests. The T20s will be played on December 11 and 13 in Dubai, while Sharjah will host the first ODI on December 18. The last two ODIs will be played in Abu Dhabi. Pakistan will take on Afghanistan in a T20 match before the start of the Sri Lanka series, although the venue for the match has not yet been announced.The first Test has been scheduled for December 31 in Dubai, while Abu Dhabi and Sharjah will host the second and third Tests, from January 8 and January 16.”The tour itinerary has been approved after consultation between Pakistan Cricket Board and its counterpart Sri Lanka,” the PCB said in a statementSince the terrorist attack on the Sri Lankan team in Lahore in March 2009, Pakistan have been forced to play their home series overseas, with UAE being the preferred venue. The last time the two sides played in the UAE in 2011, Pakistan won the ODIs 4-1 and won the Test and T20 series 1-0. Pakistan enjoyed little success on their tour of Sri Lanka in June and July 2012 – the last bilateral series between the teams – losing the Tests (1-0) and ODIs (3-1), while the T20 series was tied.Fixtures
1st T20I: December 11, Dubai
2nd T20I: December 13, Dubai
1st ODI: December 18, Sharjah
2nd ODI: December 20, Dubai
3rd ODI: December 22, Sharjah
4th ODI: December 25, Abu Dhabi
5th ODI: December 27, Abu Dhabi
1st Test: December 31-January 4, Dubai
2nd Test: January 8-12, Abu Dhabi
3rd Test: January 16-20, Sharjah

Barisal cruise home against Khulna

Brad Hodge scored a half-century to lead his team, Barisal Burners to an eight-wicket win over Khulna Royal Bengals in the Bangladesh Premier League on Sunday

The Report by Mohammad Isam20-Jan-2013
ScorecardNew arrival Brad Hodge led from the front, scoring a half-century as his team Barisal Burners beat Khulna Royal Bengals by eight wickets in the Bangladesh Premier League on Sunday. It was the first win for Barisal after they were trounced by Sylhet in the first game on the opening day, while Khulna lurched to their second defeat in as many games.The Barisal captain struck 53 off 40 balls with five fours and a six, as he and Phil Mustard began their chase of 143 with a 78-run opening stand. Hodge opened up with a straight six and a boundary off Farhad Reza in the third over.The loss of Mustard hardly bothered Hodge, who continued to dominate the largely inexperienced Khulna bowlers, including Afghanistan’s left-arm fast bowler Shapoor Zadran. Hodge was also severe on Sanjamul Islam in the seventh over, hitting the left-arm spinner for two boundaries and a six. By the time Islam dismissed Hodge in the 13th over, Barisal had their chase under control.Another new player for Barisal, Englishman Joe Denly, also contributed, putting on an unbroken 45-run, third-wicket stand with Azhar Mahmood.Choosing to bat first, Khulna once again felt the absence of their Pakistan players, as they mustered a below-par score on a batting track. Captain Shahriar Nafees and Riki Wessels consolidated the innings with a stand of 58, after the loss of a couple of early wickets including that of opener Nazimuddin, who edged a cut off the first ball of the mach.Nafees started slowly before launching into Nazmul Islam’s left-arm spin in the tenth over, hitting him for four fours. Wessels, too, had his moment, hitting English pacer Kabir Ali for two sixes in the 12th over, before he was eventually dismissed for 48.Barisal’s bowlers, especially Alok Kapali and Elias Sunny, kept the opposition in check during the final overs with regular wickets.

Higuain, Aguero or Icardi? Messi's strike partner options for World Cup 2018

While the Albiceleste captain is an automatic choice for his nation, there is fierce competition to accompany him in Russia

JUAN MABROMATA/AFP/Getty Images1Dario BenedettoIf it were not for a cruciate ligament tear suffered back in November, Benedetto would have had a real chance of making Argentina's World Cup list. The Boca striker had netted 12 goals in as many games prior to his injury, and also featured in the Albiceleste's last four qualifiers, albeit without hitting the net. Even if he does beat the odds and make it back to competitive action before June, however, his World Cup dream is effectively over.AdvertisementGetty2Cristian PavonThe Boca Juniors star joins Martinez in the squad as one of Sampaoli's picks from the Argentine Superliga. Pavon made a huge impression in his international debut back in November, laying on two goals for Sergio Aguero in clashes against Russia and Nigeria, and his prowess down the right marks him out as a useful option in Argentina's star-studded attack.Getty3Lautaro MartinezAt just 20, the Racing Club wonderkid's name is on everybody's lips. Sampaoli has already visited the Cilindro on no less than three occasions to watch Martinez, who obliged the Argentina coach with an incredible seven goals to earn his first call up to the senior Argentina side. The World Cup may be arriving just too soon for the striker, but his talent is undeniable and a strong showing in this double-header might just tip the balance and see him make Russia as a wildcard pick.ENJOYED THIS STORY?

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Getty4Angel CorreaWhen injury forced Aguero out of March's clashes, Sampaoli turned to an unexpected face in order to fill the gap in his squad. Atletico Madrid's Correa got the nod ahead of both Icardi and Dybala to join the squad, a chance he has richly earned thanks to his excellent performances at the Wanda Metropolitana. The 23 year old offers depth both through the middle and out wide in the Argentina attack and will be eager to add to his collection of seven caps against Italy and Spain.

Gale ton steals the show

Another century from Andrew Gale gave the Yorkshire crowd some to cheer as Kevin Pietersen spent a full day in the field on his Surrey return

Jon Culley at Headingley21-Jun-2013
ScorecardAndrew Gale continued his run of heavy scoring with another century•PA PhotosAnyone who came to Headingley hoping to see Kevin Pietersen bat had to accept that such a pleasure would not be forthcoming after Surrey put Yorkshire in and failed to take a wicket in the first hour and a half. From England’s perspective, a day in the field as one of the key components of their plan to win the Ashes is nursed back to fitness was probably what they had hoped for.In any event, this was a Yorkshire crowd and another century from Andrew Gale gave the day a much more satisfactory feel than anything Pietersen might have achieved. The Yorkshire captain, whose early season form had appeared to be a scratchy continuation of a lean couple of years, suddenly seems unable to do anything but accumulate runs: 272 at Scarborough, 103 at Lord’s and now this; three hundreds in as many Championship games.”I changed a few things technically,” he said, after leaving the field on 114 not out. “I felt my balance was a little bit off early season. It’s just been about being ruthless. It probably is my best form. Three hundreds in a row speaks for itself.”Now that I’m in form, I just want to make sure I stay in form. I’ve been telling myself to be really greedy and don’t take it for granted. I’m taking each ball as it comes and pretending I’m nought not out.”Perversely, Gale will begin the second day under a little pressure. He shared a magnificent partnership of 204 with Gary Ballance that seemed to have guaranteed it would be Yorkshire’s day, but then Ballance – who will leave this match on Saturday evening to join England’s Twenty20 squad – was leg-before to Jon Lewis 10 runs short of his hundred and Adil Rashid, himself enjoying a golden run of form, edged the same bowler to second slip, where Vikram Solanki took a fine catch. It gives Surrey an opportunity to limit the damage still further if Gale can be prised out early on day two.If he is, it will not be through his own indiscretion. Only once did he lose his discipline and he was visibly cross with himself. It came when he had reached 95 and, by his own admission, he started to replay the six he had hit to complete his century against Nottinghamshire at Scarborough. He went after Gary Keedy but the timing was wrong and for a moment it looked as if he might be caught – by Pietersen, of all people – but the ball had just enough legs to evade his outstretched fingers as he ran back from mid-off.KP watch: how the comeback went

9am: First sighting. Has a gentle net on the outfield.

10.45am: More reporters here than for a normal county match but England’s date in Sunday’s Champions Trophy final keeps the majority engaged elsewhere. KP will doubtless have tweeted his thanks.

11am: Alas, Surrey have won the toss, so it’s fielding duty for our man. Although, as he tells Darren Gough on Talksport, that’s what he’s here for.

11.10am Goes to ground to field at mid-off and lands on knee, a grass stain on his trousers marking the spot. Happily, it’s not the knee he injured back in March.

2pm: Must seem like the longest day in more than just daylight hours with so little happening in the mid-off region that removing sweater is most energetic thing he does.

3.20pm: Captain Solanki relieves the tedium by asking KP to bowl: Four overs of offspin, one maiden, 13 runs conceded. Spell ends with tea.

4pm: Evening session. Sweater back on. Sensible move, that – wouldn’t want him to catch a chill.

5.01pm: Huge excitement. Andrew Gale, on 95, tries to reach his century by hitting Gary Keedy over mid-off. KP turns and gives chase, he dives (well, sort of) and gets a fingertip to the ball. He can’t hold it but at least he felt confident about trying. Hoorah.

“It was a poor shot,” Gale said. “I was reminiscing the Scarborough moment. I should have just kept knocking it around.”Gale and Ballance could take credit for steering Yorkshire through a potentially decisive phase as Surrey’s bowlers, who had been ineffective with the new ball, slipped into a better groove all round after lunch. Chris Tremlett, still bowling primarily in short, sharp spells, made one climb on Adam Lyth that the opener had to play and which edged to second slip, then Zander de Bruyn found some inswing to trap Alex Lees in front. Joe Sayers, out of form but in the side because Phil Jaques is injured, scratched around before an indecisive prod had him caught at first slip, at which point Yorkshire were 77 for 3.Pietersen had a gentle few overs himself just before tea, to supplement his work in the field. Alec Stewart, in charge for the moment after the sacking of Chris Adams, spoke on Pietersen’s behalf, in effect, with the England player keeping his thoughts to himself.”With Kevin, it was never about coming here and getting runs, it was about doing the hard yards,” Stewart said. “You do all your rehab, your gym work, your shuttles and everything but standing in the field for six and a half hours is part of cricket.”He is in an ice bath now. He will be sore but on the first day of your season if you are 100 percent fit, you are still sore. The good thing is that he has got six hours in his legs and that can only hold him in good stead for the second innings and when the Ashes start.”Yet how Surrey would welcome some runs from Pietersen, not least because having lost one overseas player with the promise of big scores when Graeme Smith’s ankle gave out, they have now lost Ricky Ponting with a hand injury sustained in fielding practice on Wednesday, although the hope is that it is a less serious blow.”He has had scans and it does not look like there is anything seriously wrong,” Stewart said. “But when he woke this morning his hand was just locked up. We are hoping he will be fit for our Twenty20 match on Wednesday but we are in the hands of the medical people.”

Warks alive after Woakes five

Warwickshire were grateful for a ninth-wicket stand between Chris Woakes and Chris Wright for rescuing them from a tough position against Nottinghamshire despite Jonathan Trott’s return to the game

George Dobell at Edgbaston01-Jul-2014
ScorecardChris Woakes claimed the 15th five-wicket haul of his career to keep Warwickshire in the game (file photo)•Getty ImagesChris Woakes may never establish himself as an allrounder in the England Test side but, if he does not, it will be to Warwickshire’s immense gain.Woakes may be the perfect player for a county. Always on the verge of the international side, he remains high achieving and highly motivated. But, crucially, he also remains available for his club.He has underlined his worth in this game. Following his 91 in Warwickshire’s first innings, a contribution that was made with his side under pressure, he claimed five wickets in Nottinghamshire’s second innings to earn an outside chance of an unlikely victory.Woakes’ reputation was built as a swing bowler. But, dangerous as he was in helpful conditions, the suspicion remained that he lacked the ammunition to damage the opposition when the ball did not swing. In short, he has been defined as a fine county bowler, but one lacking the pace to cut it in the conditions prevalent in Test cricket.That is a reputation that may require re-evaluation. Here, in conditions offering him nothing, he claimed a five-wicket haul against a batting line-up containing three of the top four run-scorers in Division One this season (and six of the top 17) to keep his side’s fourth-innings target just within reach. He is now averaging 18.61 with the ball this season.Key to Woakes’ improvement would appear to be increased control and a little extra pace. A combination of better use of his front arm and extra gym sessions has created a bowler with quite an armoury. As Alan Richardson, the Warwickshire bowling coach, said: “He has been able to seam it, swing it and hit good areas all day for a while. But now he can force people on to the back foot, too, he has even more options.”Woakes’ first-class record is exceptional. A bowling average of 24.88 (with 15 five-wicket hauls) and a batting average of 38.50 (with eight centuries) compares favourably with that of Ben Stokes, who has a bowling average of 28.11 (with three five-wicket hauls) and a batting average of 35.17 (with nine centuries). As Mick Newell, the Nottinghamshire director of cricket and England selector put it: “Warwickshire have got themselves a proper good cricketer on their hands. He has terrific stats, especially with the ball.”With little help from the conditions, Warwickshire concentrated on bowling straight and full in the hope of exploiting Nottinghamshire’s impatience and just a touch of uneven bounce in the wicket.While Phil Jaques, playing his final game before returning to Australia, and Alex Hales were together, it looked as if Nottinghamshire would stretch their lead well beyond 300. But with Hales bowled by one that kept low and Jaques playing on as he chased one, the innings began to falter. James Taylor was yorked and Andre Adams and Samit Patel were guilty of frustrated slogs. Jeetan Patel found enough turn to have Riki Wessels caught at short leg off bat and pad and beat Peter Siddle with an arm ball. After losing their last five wickets for 10 runs in the first innings, Nottinghamshire lost their last five for 49 in the second. It meant Warwickshire required 289 to win. It could, should, have been far more.Nottinghamshire will curse themselves if they lose this game. They have had several opportunities to shut Warwickshire out of the match, not least when reaching 338 for 4 on the first day or when Warwickshire were 188 for 7 on the second, but now go into the final day with the game finely poised. Nottinghamshire probably retain the stronger position, but their lack of a frontline spinner may yet hurt them.Indeed, it is a day that could define the Championship seasons of both teams. Win and Nottinghamshire stretch their lead at the top of the top or Warwickshire re-enter the title race; lose and Warwickshire are involved in the relegation battle while Notts would be back among the pack.If Warwickshire do win, they will surely need Jonathan Trott to continue his rehabilitation with a major contribution. He looked admirably composed on the third evening, repelling the inevitable barrage – just as in the first innings, his first three balls, all bowled by Siddle, were bouncers – with relative ease and batting through the last hour of the day. It was, by some distance, the most calm innings he has played since his troubles in Australia.”Everyone wants to see him playing again,” Newell said. “It is great for Warwickshire and it’s great for England. He knows he is going to be roughed up. He knows he will always face a higher percentage of short balls than other batsmen. But he looked the same old Jonathan Trott to me.”While Trott looked comfortable, though, two of his partners squandered their wickets with rash strokes. Varun Chopra, having played himself in, top-edged a pull, while William Porterfield attempted to play a straight ball through square leg. An intriguing final day looms.

BCCI puts ICC events on the line

The BCCI today virtually served notice on any ICC Full Members opposed to a makeover of the ruling body, indicating that India’s participation in ICC events was subject to the radical draft proposal being approved by the ICC’s executive board

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Jan-20140:00

Ugra: Cricket gives in to BCCI’s blackmail

The BCCI today virtually served notice on any ICC Full Members opposed to a makeover of the ruling body, indicating that India’s participation in ICC events was subject to approval of the radical draft proposal by the ICC’s executive board. The proposal recommends a structural overhaul of the ICC and proposes bigger revenues and more executive decision-making powers to the BCCI, Cricket Australia and the ECB.The BCCI, in a three-point release following an emergent working committee meeting in Chennai, said the committee had formally approved the proposal, terming it as being “in the interests of cricket at large”. The message as regards ICC events was then sent out to the other members, stating that the committee has “authorised the office bearers to enter into agreements with the ICC for participating in the ICC events and hosting ICC events, subject to the proposal being approved by the ICC board”.The BCCI’s working committee also cleared the way for its leading officer bearers to sign bilateral agreements with all other Full Member boards, including Pakistan. The draft proposal contained commitments from the ECB and Cricket Australia over legally-binding bilateral agreements with eight Full Members. The absence of such a guarantee from the BCCI in the draft document had raised apprehensions among smaller boards who subsist on tours from India. Such a commitment could not have been made by the BCCI without approval of the its working committee, a formality completed on Thursday. While the ECB and CA have committed to undertake tours to the top eight countries, in principle, the BCCI’s proposal covers all Test playing nations.”We have never said that it [the draft proposal] was set in stone or a ‘take-it-or-leave it’ proposition,” a BCCI official said. “It is clear that it is a draft and members can discuss it with their respective boards and it can be discussed in the ICC board meeting.” The draft proposal will be presented to the ICC executive board during its quarterly meeting in Dubai on January 28 and 29.It is also understood that the draft proposal, put together by a working group of the ICC’s Finance & Commercial Affairs committee was open for discussion and amendments as long as the BCCI’s central plank – redistribution of the ICC central revenue being proportionate to the income generated through each member board – was not diluted.The BCCI working committee was insistent on not yielding ground on the matter revenue distribution. The proposal recommends a maximum allotment of 21% of the ICC’s revenues to the BCCI on the grounds that Indian cricket helps generate 80% of ICC’s global revenues. The draft proposal, when handed out to the Full Member nations at a specially called board meeting in Dubai on January 9, did not however contain any supporting documentation for its current revenue distribution percentages or future estimates.The ICC’s current broadcast deal expires after the 2015 World Cup in Australia and New Zealand but the new tender document for media rights cannot be floated without the all the member boards signing the Members Participating Agreement. The BCCI has made that signature conditional to the re-organisation of the ICC, which automatically implies that no progress on the broadcast deal will be possible till this proposal is cleared.Cricket South Africa is the only board to have publicly opposed the proposal, and the Pakistan Cricket Board have made their opposition privately known. The West Indies Cricket Board is yet to make a statement, but was engaged in a teleconference over the week and has stated that it has “taken a position in the best interests of West Indies cricket”. It is understood to be negotiating a deal with the Big Three. Cricket South Africa argued the idea was “fundamentally flawed” and “in breach of the ICC constitution”, while New Zealand Cricket said it was wrong to jump to the conclusion that the proposal would be bad for cricket. FICA, which represents player associations in seven of the ICC’s ten Full Member countries, declared itself “extremely concerned” with the proposal.One of the key governance changes proposed in the position paper, pertained to the creation of a proposed Executive Committee (ExCo) – a security-council style group with three permanent members, the BCCI, Cricket Australia and the ECB. While the Big Three will insist on being founding members of this committee, the possibility of enlarging it from the recommended four to more could be discussed. “It must be understood however that this another committee just like an F&CA committee that currently works under the IDI (ICC Development International), the ICC’s commercial arm,” the BCCI official said. “It will report to the ICC board, which will have the right to approve or reject its recommendations.” The draft states that the ExCo will act as a “sole recommendation committee … on all constitutional, personnel, integrity, ethics, development and nominations matters”.The BCCI working committee meeting, which took place in Chennai, was chaired by one of the board’s vice-presidents Shivlal Yadav, in the absence of BCCI president N Srinivasan, who could not attend due to the death of his mother early on Thursday morning. It was not Yadav who did the talking, though. Sundar Raman, the IPL chief operating officer, explained the details of the ‘position paper’, outlining the revamp of the ICC and why it was necessary. The proposed revenue model, according to which India stood to earn a bigger percentage of the ICC earnings, was also explained to the members.The other big advantage of the proposal, Raman highlighted, was that India could be more free to negotiate bilateral series with another Full Member instead of being obliged to follow the FTP. The members were also made aware that under the new structure India would host at least one ICC tournament almost every two years, further enhancing its financial strength. Most BCCI members were happy to hear about the move to deal directly with other countries’ boards, which would result in India hosting more international cricket. It was explained to the committee that with this move the BCCI can take even Test cricket to the new stadiums in the country, with one committee member stating that “all the unutilised stadia in the country will be able to host more big matches”.The document was drafted by a “working group” of the ICC’s Finance & Commercial Affairs (F&CA) committee comprising Giles Clarke of the ECB, Wally Edwards of Cricket Australia and N Srinivasan of BCCI, who were assisted by a clutch of commercial executives: Dean Kino (general manager of legal and business affairs, Cricket Australia), John Perera (commercial director ECB) and Sundar Raman (chief operating officer, IPL). Kino and Raman also form a two-man technical committee in the Champions League T20, one of the world’s wealthiest cricket tournaments. It happens to be one of only three committees listed on the tournament website.

Shoaib Malik signs with Hobart Hurricanes

Shoaib Malik has been signed by Hobart Hurricanes for the upcoming season of the Big Bash League

ESPNcricinfo staff04-Oct-2013Shoaib Malik, the Pakistan batsman, has been signed by Hobart Hurricanes for the upcoming season of the Big Bash League. It will be Malik’s first stint in the Australian T20 league, in which Shahid Afridi has featured in the past seasons.”He’s an exciting player, a fast paced batsman who will likely bat in our middle order and he’ll add another option to our bowling stocks as well,” Damian Wright, the Hurricanes coach, said. “He is a quality player with a quality T20 record and his performances in the Caribbean Premier League suggest he’s in red-hot form right now.”Representing the Barbados Tridents, Malik was the leading run-scorer in the inaugural edition of the Caribbean Premier League with 272 runs from eight matches. Overall, Malik has played 134 T20 matches and scored 3396 runs at a strike rate of 123.31. He has also picked up 75 wickets with his offspin.”Those are impressive stats for someone who has played so many games in a format where you often have to place little value on your wicket in search of quick runs at the end of an innings,” Wright said.Hobart Hurricanes, led by George Bailley, also include Dmitri Mascarenhas and Owais Shah as their overseas players for the season.

'I'm a handsome man!' – Pep Guardiola explains strange 'seduction' technique that helps Man City players absorb information so quickly

Pep Guardiola has explained how being a “handsome man” helps him to get his message across during short training sessions at Manchester City.

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Catalan coach one of the best in the businessDoes not push players hard before gamesIs still able to deliver positive resutlsWHAT HAPPENED?

With so many games being packed into a hectic schedule, the Catalan coach is wary of pushing his players too hard behind the scenes. That means he can spend as little as 25 minutes working on upcoming fixtures, but he is still able to impart wisdom and ensure that his star-studded squad are ready for whatever challenge awaits them.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT GUARDIOLA SAID

Quizzed on how he is able to achieve that, former Barcelona and Bayern Munich boss Guardiola has jokingly said: “Because I'm really good. I'm a handsome man and I seduce them and we did it. So, I'm really good. Today we have the TV, the images, and we talk individually, and moving that way. I spoke with Ruben (Dias) with what happened at Chelsea, I spoke with Kyle (Walker) with what happened at Chelsea. I talked about it in this specific was after they made mistakes, they just understand.”

THE BIGGER PICTURE

Revealing that he has never been one for long practice sessions, Guardiola said of the limited time that he spent with his players prior to a 1-1 Premier League draw with Liverpool at the Etihad Stadium: “In seven years, I don’t train. Maximum 35 minutes. We don’t train. They started pre-season 15 days before. Do you know what 15 days is? We played the FA Cup final and then the Champions League final. They had 15 days more with the new players. We didn’t do one day of tactical. It's the same for Jurgen [Klopp], I’m pretty sure. The day before this game, we did 10-15 minutes with the ball and 10 minutes defensively. Before Tuesday it will be 10 minutes on the pitch, moving in that way. We cannot train. If we train, we don’t have players for the next game. We don’t have them. That’s why we have to learn from the past: just understand what you have to do. The press, who jumps. This is what we absolutely rely on.”

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Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT FOR GUARDIOLA?

City, who claimed a historic treble triumph last season, will be back in Champions League action on Tuesday when playing host to RB Leipzig. The Premier League title holders are nursing a number of injuries at present, which is further preventing Guardiola from pushing aching limbs towards breaking point.

Man Utd player ratings vs Wolves: Raphael Varane and Andre Onana get rusty Red Devils out of jail

The French defender headed in the only goal of the game while the debutant goalkeeper made a series of saves to shut out an impressive Wolves side

This was far from the performance Manchester United would have expected after a summer of lavish spending but they somehow got away with it and beat an excellent Wolves side 1-0 to start the season with three points.

Mason Mount had a really disappointing competitive debut but his fellow new arrival Andre Onana made four big saves to keep out Gary O'Neil's rampant visitors, who also hit the woodwork and defied expectations just a week after parting ways with coach Julen Lopetegui.

United went ahead against the run of play when Raphael Varane headed home Aaron Wan-Bissaka's cross in the 76th minute. Wolves will be wondering how they did not take more from the game, especially after having a strong penalty shout in added time when Onana collided with two players. GOAL rates Manchester United's players from Old Trafford…

Getty ImagesGoalkeeper & Defence

Andre Onana (7/10):

The Cameroonian played with courage on his competitive debut and, unlike in the friendly against Lens, his tendency to roam did not get him into trouble. Made smart saves from Matheus Cunha, Pedro Neto and Fabio Silva (twice) although was fortunate to not be penalised for clashing with two Wolves players in added time.

Aaron Wan-Bissaka (8/10):

Attentive to the danger down his side and set up the only goal with a smart cross to Varane. Stayed focused until the end.

Raphael Varane (8/10):

Gave United leadership when they were struggling to hold Wolves off and, most crucially, found the breakthrough goal.

Lisandro Martinez (5/10):

Looked rusty on what was his first competitive game in more than four months. Got an early booking for a sliding tackle on Neto and that conditioned his performance until half-time, when Ten Hag took him off for Victor Lindelof.

Luke Shaw (6/10):

Some of Wolves best chances came down his left side and he was not very effective going forward. Made an excellent block late in the game.

AdvertisementGettyMidfield

Bruno Fernandes (6/10):

Was far from his dominant self but helped United find the breakthrough with a lovely through ball to Wan-Bissaka.

Casemiro (6/10):

Not as solid as usual defensively but was lively in attack.

Mason Mount (5/10):

An uninspiring full debut. Struggled to create much and his passing was imprecise.

GettyAttack

Antony (7/10):

United's liveliest attacker and a big improvement on many matches from last season.

Marcus Rashford (6/10):

Struggled to get much space as a centre-forward and had more joy when he returned to his favorite position on the left of the attack in the second half. Still created little to shout about.

Alejandro Garnacho (6/10):

Lively but frustrating. Got forward a lot but routinely made the wrong decision. Removed in the 68th minute.

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GettySubs & Manager

Victor Lindelof (6/10):

Played the entire second half and could do little to prevent Wolves' dominance.

Jadon Sancho (6/10):

Gave United a bit more fluidity when he came on.

Christian Eriksen (6/10):

His experience helped United get a win they did not deserve.

Scott McTominay (N/A):

Only introduced for the last 13 minutes.

Facundo Pellistri (N/A):

Only introduced for the final two minutes.

Erik ten Hag (6/10):

No complaints with his team selection and his substitutes helped improve the team and ultimately get the result.

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