Keeping £22.5m-rated ace beyond August 9 is the most important job Puel has this summer

According to a recent report from CaughtOffside, there is a whole host of Premier League interest in the services of Leicester City defender Harry Maguire. The 25-year-old is currently excelling for England at this summer’s World Cup to continue raising his stock, and alongside an impressive debut campaign at the King Power Stadium, it’s absolutely imperative that manager Claude Puel retains the centre back beyond the August 9 transfer deadline. 

The Breakdown

Ultimately, Maguire made the move to the Foxes 12 months ago after suffering relegation at Hull City, although he certainly couldn’t be blamed for the Tigers’ demise after a fine season at the KCOM Stadium, hence he earned a £17 million move to Leicester last summer.

And the 25-year-old has since gone from strength to strength at the Midlands outfit in starting all 38 of their Premier League matches last season to help them to a ninth place finish in the top-flight, with his endeavours recognised by the club’s supporters given that he won their Player of the Season award.

And they weren’t the only ones hugely impressed by Maguire’s performances, so was England manager Gareth Southgate, who has since made the 25-year-old a vital part of his Three Lions team in starting three of their four World Cup games this summer, and is likely to start in their quarter-final clash with Sweden on Saturday.

How far will England get in Russia? Tell us now

Thus, it’s pretty evident that Maguire is a huge asset to Puel and his Leicester team, and given they did somewhat struggle defensively last season in shipping 60 goals in their 38 league games, it’s vital they retain him over the summer – imagine how much worse it could have been without the 25-year-old.

Yes, the arrival of Jonny Evans will go some way to further bolstering the backline, but take Maguire out of that defensive unit, and it is not half as strong and solid, and thus could spell problems for Leicester this season.

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Thus, amid interest from some of the Premier League’s biggest sides, it is absolutely essential that Leicester retain the services of the £22.5 million-rated ace (as per Transfermarkt) beyond the early August deadline – it’s the most important job Puel has at the King Power Stadium during the close season.

Leicester fans… what do you think? Let us know!

Maharashtra take first innings points in drawn clash

Saurashtra and Maharashtra played out a draw on Friday in a CoochBehar Trophy contest in the West Zone league, with the latter gainingfive points by virtue of their first innings lead.At Rajkot’s Municipal Stadium, Maharashtra won the toss and werebowled out for 273 late on the opening day. The top ten batters allreached double figures, AS Bhosale top scoring with 58. Saurashtra’sskipper Uday Karavadra, a National Cricket Academy graduate, picked up5/73 with his off spinners.Saurashtra fell away to 200 all out, notwithstanding opener and wicketkeeper AK Dawda’s 75. Maharashta’s own offie, Kashinath Khadkikarbested Karavadra’s figures with a haul of 6/69. The visitors showedno inclination to force an outright result, batting out the third dayto finish on 289/7.

Brown and Lewry earn maximum bonus points for Northants at Wantage Road.

Jason Brown and Darren Cousins shared eight wickets to earn Division Two leaders Northamptonshire maximum bowling points against Sussex at Wantage Road.Off-spinner Brown (4-53) and paceman Cousins (4-36) helped dismiss the visitors, who began the day only three points behind Northants, for 232 after Chris Adams won the toss and chose to bat.The home side closed on 23-0 from five overs to set the seal on a successful opening day as they look to build on victories in their previous two games, over Warwickshire and Worcestershire.Cousins struck the first blow when he trapped former Northants opener Richard Montgomerie leg-before in the fifth over of the match, and from then on it was a struggle for Sussex against the combination of spin and seam.Only Wasim Khan, making his first Championship appearance of the summer as replacement for the prolific Australian Michael Bevan, offered any serious resistance. He battled his way to 74 in four-and-a-quarter hours, hitting 11 fours, until Brown had him caught at silly point.Wasim and Robin Martin-Jenkins (27) posted 51 in 23 overs for the fifth wicket – the biggest partnership of the innings – but Northants kept chipping away, and removed Martin-Jenkins just before tea and Wasim just after.Cousins rounded off the innings by holding a regulation catch at long-on as Jason Lewry looked to hoist Brown over the Indoor Cricket Centre, and home openers Matthew Hayden and Adrian Rollins then safely negotiated a potentially tricky 15-minute session before the close.

Bell finds his touch as Australia are set 412

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsWelcome to Wales, land of rain and anxiety. Cambridge scientists recently concluded that it is here where the United Kingdom is at its most neurotic. And it is here where Australia did their utmost to prey on those nerves and insist against all logic that even though they must embark upon a seemingly impossible pursuit of 412 on the fourth morning, and the pitch is both turning sharply and bouncing irregularly, they are not quite dead in the Cardiff Test. They are. They must be.Pessimism can cling to a side with recent memories of an Ashes whitewash. England initially made rapid headway as they sought to turn a formidable first-innings lead of 122 into a bridgehead for victory and a 1-0 lead in the Investec Ashes series. The impetus from bundling out Australia in their morning spread into the batting of Ian Bell and, less obviously, Joe Root in the afternoon. And even as the lead built, millions of England supporters looked on and spoke of “only”.The lead was only 200, 300, and 20 minutes from the close, with great relief, 400, as England’s No. 10, Mark Wood, swung the offspin of Nathan Lyon towards the River Taff for six and then reverse lapped him for four to applause from the England balcony. The wickets remaining slipped to only eight, four, two. But by the close of the third day, an awkward spell in which Bell, Root and Ben Stokes had their wicket struck in turn and Australia felt a glimmer of hope, Wood, a tail-ender with a sense of fun, had an unbeaten 32 from 18 balls and England were out of sight. Finally, there was not an “only” to be heard.Australia like to speak of the highest Test run chase ever pulled off in England, of Headingley 1948, of Don Bradman and of 404 for 3. Even that would not be enough now. The forecast for Sunday is indifferent, but as the Welsh have it, it is not expected to rain old women and sticks. This excellent game deserves a winner and logic suggests that it is England.Four wickets for Lyon were deserving of respect, if an expected reward on a dry pitch offering considerable turn. Australia’s bonus was Mitchell Starc. When he left the field for the last time, the clock had gone beyond six o’clock and a bowler whose first ball of the day had seen this lissom left-armer hop gingerly through the crease in mistrust of an ankle injury had got through 16 overs, logged Alastair Cook and Stokes in the wickets column and, at 92.8mph, had clocked the fastest ball of the match. Impressive stuff – but he might miss the Lord’s Test as a consequence.Australia were not averse to playing on England’s insecurity. New ICC regulations might make sledging a risky business, and not before time, but nobody said anything about mind games. Lyon and David Warner more than once held conversations at the point in the crease where Stokes, idiosyncratically, likes to sweep the crease in a semicircle. Brad Haddin had more appeals than the Salvation Army.It would be tempting to term the pitch treacherous, but considering its particular difficulty to Australia, whose batsmen are brought up with pace and bounce, perhaps it was actually suffering from excessive loyalty. It has also produced magnificent entertainment from the outset.It had taken England only 14.5 overs to polish off the last five Australian wickets, 44 runs added in the process, and although the stand-out performer was James Anderson, who provided a brief exhibition of new-ball bowling to log 3 for 43, every England bowler took a wicket in what had been a consistently focused display.The sense that batting might remain a taxing business was encouraged when Alastair Cook, England’s captain, failed for the second time in the match, driving at a gentle, wide outswinger from Starc which was well picked up by Lyon, low at backward point. He seems, perhaps temporarily, to have abandoned his habitual insistence of making bowlers bowl at him in a desire to buy into England’s much-vaunted commitment to enterprising batting.If Cook could rue a puff of dust from the footholes, Gary Ballance had more reason for frustration. Two excellent swinging deliveries from Starc left him fortunate to reach lunch unbeaten – but still on nought. Ballance might have reached the interval, but that first run never came as soon after the resumption he received a climbing delivery from Josh Hazlewood and gloved to the wicketkeeper.Bell’s three hundreds won him the Man of the Series award the last time the Ashes were contested in England, but who had been bereft of form with six scores of 0 or 1 in his last nine Test innings. It was a timely moment for him to regain form. He drove sublimely through the off side from the outset, two early boundaries against Starc setting the tone from a half-century of elegant ambition. There were 11 boundaries in his 60 before he became Mitchell Johnson’s first victim, expecting inswing but beaten by one that seamed away.Bell’s authority briefly rubbed off on Adam Lyth, whose slog-swept six against Lyon summed up his rising ambition. Lyon, though, gradually unravelled his game and outdid his defensive poke for Michael Clarke to hold a wonderful springing catch to his left at slip.At 207 for 4, England’s lead was already 329, but the loss of Root, bowled by a nip-backer from Hazlewood, was the start of an uncomfortable period in which four wickets fell for 38 in nine overs. Jos Buttler might have regretted this reverse sweep more than most as Lyon had him caught at the wicket; Stokes’ controlled 42 ended with a drag-on as Starc scudded one through; Broad flung his head skywards and reached deep mid-off, running in. Wood banished the nerves.Australia had begun the morning at 264 for 5 and might have shrugged off the loss the nightwatchman, Lyon, as he fell lbw to Wood, immaculate in line throughout, but the dismissal of Shane Watson that preceded it was drainingly familiar as he played across his front pad against Broad. For Watson, it was another Test match 30 and a striking record of 28 lbw dismissals in 108 innings, unmatched for a player of such longevity. He left with mournful, pursed lips, as if he could not believe that fate had conspired against him once more.Haddin was a danger, memories of his productive last series against England still fresh, but Anderson found prodigious movement both ways and it was not long before Haddin edged an outswinger to the wicketkeeper. Johnson clipped Broad to midwicket and Australia’s innings came to a close when Anderson had Starc expertly held by Root, diving to his left, one of five England slips stationed for a catch, an attacking flourish they clung to, refusing whatever the doubts around them to let the talk of “only” enter their thoughts.

Twenty-one players fast-tracked to audition for Americas team

Twenty one players from Canada, USA, Bermuda and Suriname have been shortlisted to play for an ICC Americas regional team that will take part in West Indies’ Nagico Super50 tournament next January. All 21 men have been fast-tracked into phase two of a trial organised the Americas regional office in Indianapolis this September.Aside from the 21 players invited to phase two, ICC Americas high performance consultant Tom Evans said close to 300 applications have been received from the Americas region to participate in phase one of the trial, which begins on September 18 in Indianapolis.Headlining the fast-tracked list is USA’s Steven Taylor, who opened the batting for Barbados Tridents in the Caribbean Premier League final against T&T Red Steel. Other USA players tabbed were Fahad Babar, the ICC Americas Division One T20 MVP and Timil Patel, who finished the group stage of the World T20 Qualifier tied for third with 10 wickets.

Shortlisted players

Bermuda: Christian Burgess, Delray Rawlins
Canada: Cecil Pervez, Farhan Malik, Hamza Tariq, Junaid Siddiqui, Navneet Dhaliwal, Nitish Kumar, Ruvindu Gunasekera, Saad Bin Zafar, Satsimranjit Dhindsa
Suriname: Muneshwar Patandin, Wasim Akram Haslim
USA: Akeem Dodson, Fahad Babar, Hammad Shahid, Muhammad Ghous, Naseer Jamali, Nicholas Standford, Steven Taylor, Timil Patel

Canada had the most players – nine – going through to the second weekend, including Ruvindu Gunasekera and Nitish Kumar.However, a notable omission was 20-year old offspinner Nikhil Dutta, who was Canada’s best bowler at the Americas qualifier in May, and later won a CPL contract with St Kitts & Nevis Patriots.Dutta had pulled out from the national squad for the World T20 qualifier to play in the CPL. And Cricket Canada responded by revoking their No Objection Certificate. Since then a dispute has risen between the two parties.Cricket Canada president Vimal Hardat said Dutta had sent an email on June 28 about his intention to withdraw from the World T20 qualifier. Although Dutta’s representatives acknowledge the email, they allege it was in response to the administrators putting pressure on him to drop his CPL commitments and return to Toronto so he could practice with his Canada team-mates.According to multiple sources, Cricket Canada general manager Ingleton Liburd then flew to St Kitts on June 29 to personally meet with Dutta and Eric Simons, the Patriots coach. A verbal agreement was made that Dutta could stay in St Kitts for another week before joining the Canada squad in Scotland on July 7, two days prior to their first match of the World T20 qualifier.But, sources claim officials in Canada disregarded Liburd’s efforts and later that day applied to the ICC to replace Dutta with Hiral Patel, and also revoked Dutta’s NOC.The shortlist to phase two of the trial in Indianapolis was decided based on the players’ performances at the Americas qualifier and the World T20 qualifier, and recommendations from each country’s board. Since Cricket Canada did not nominate Dutta, Evans said his status for the trial is on hold.”They are working through a process with Nikhil given what happened at the CPL,” Evans told ESPNcricinfo. “We hope that can be rectified and he can then be included straight into phase two, but if not we hope that he’ll come to phase one and would make it through. We hope he and Cricket Canada can work through some of their issues and we see him involved in this process because he’s an exciting talent.”A majority of the phase-one applications came from the USA, but Evans said there was also interest from Canada, Bermuda, Cayman Islands and even Panama. Between 75 and 100 players will be asked to participate in phase one, five to ten would move on to phase two and compete with the 21 shortlisted players for a spot in what is expected to be a final 14-man regional squad.”I think getting hundreds of applications online has been really pleasing,” Evans said. “Even in talking to a couple of the US players who are going through to phase two, I think they’re excited by the prospect of representing the region and playing in the West Indies 50-over competition. When you look at the names on that page as well as some potential talent that will come through phase one, it’s exciting. Hopefully with a side picked three months beforehand, it’s enough time to galvanize the group together and make them highly competitive.””We know in such big countries like the USA and Canada that there’s plenty of good cricketers out there that we might not have known before. So I’m excited to work through the list of applicants and hopefully get a really good group of 75 to 100 there. As you can imagine with so many applications, the quality varies quite a lot. But there are some people who have put quite a lot of time into some of their videos, putting together highlights packages together as well as nets highlighting their skills. If their league or association they play in has online stats, it makes a big difference to be able to look at those as well and see for yourself how they’re doing.”Evans said that the 75-100 players chosen for phase one of the trial, which will feature Courtney Walsh and Mike Young as coaches, will most likely be finalised in another two weeks so as to give participants enough notice to make plans to arrive in Indianapolis in mid-September.

No frills as Hampshire dig for survival

ScorecardJimmy Adams drives during his half-century•Getty Images

There is nothing like county cricket to remind you that, whatever else is going off out there, the big bad world will keep on spinning. As a new working week began with Britain convulsed by the news that a left-wing political party had elected a left-wing politician as leader, the pitch of public discourse seemed ever more shrill. Was the proletariat about to storm Buckingham Palace? Were the workers uniting to overthrow the establishment? By all available evidence at the Ageas Bowl, where Hampshire were entertaining Yorkshire in Division One of the County Championship, the answer was no.It might be a stretch to call it entertaining, actually. But, as Jeremy Corbyn could probably attest, excitement is often over-rated. Even the weather seemed flummoxed by the prevailing state of normalcy. The sun shone from the skies even as it tried to rain and, after play had been called off for the day, there was a brief appearance from a rainbow.None of which tells you much about Hampshire’s attempts to avoid relegation but, since their fate remains about as clear as the blotchy skies that hampered play around the country, that is fitting. This was an honest-to-goodness hard-working day of solid Championship battling, unfashionable down to its bootstraps and not much to write home about but nevertheless worthy of its place in the cosmos. It was also being shown on Sky Sports. Those worried about the revolution being televised only had to change the channel for proof to the contrary.”You can put lipstick on a pig,” goes a saying beloved of US politicians, “but it is still a pig.” Despite the presence of Sky’s cameras, it was hard to dress up a contest featuring one team scrapping at the foot of the table and another who secured their season’s fulfilment last week. Yorkshire can still claim records for points and wins since the advent of two-division cricket but, as the eventual defeat at Lord’s perhaps suggested, their fire appears to have been doused after retaining the Championship for the first time since the 1960s.Hampshire were, understandably, more concerned about not making a pig’s ear of things after being inserted on a wet September morning. They largely succeeded, amid the showers, compiling 219 runs for the loss of four wickets in 78 frill-free overs – well, aside from some late embroidery by Sean Ervine, who punched five boundaries in 26 off 25 balls before a final deluge brought an early close. The forecast suggests this match might end up in a watery grave but Hampshire will be striving to ensure they are not interred with it.There was some logic to their approach, given that the two clubs above them, Sussex and Somerset, are currently duking it out. Hampshire began this round 11 points behind and knowing that there is no likely scenario where both will be out of sight. If there is a result at Hove, a draw against Yorkshire would see them creep closer to the loser; a stalemate would not change the overall picture by much, leaving Hampshire to try and target a win over Nottinghamshire in their final match and hope that either Sussex or Somerset slip up.Such calculations rely on Hampshire not losing here and there would have been trepidation as well as precipitation in the air after Andrew Gale won the toss. In the event, Hampshire’s suitably on-trend lefty opening pair of Jimmy Adams and Michael Carberry saw off the new ball with grit, application and a little luck, before a solid fourth-wicket partnership between Will Smith and Liam Dawson took them towards higher ground.This match is the last for which Hampshire’s retiring groundsman, Nigel Gray, will prepare a pitch but although a greenish tinge caught Gale’s eye, the surface played true. Adams passed 50 for the second innings running – having not done so for the previous 18, a run of form that prompted him to hand the captaincy to James Vince – and drove pleasantly through the covers before being tempted by one that Steve Patterson pushed across him invitingly. As the edge landed in Andy Hodd’s gloves, Adams may have been guilty of some unparliamentary language.Yorkshire were true to their attacking selves, stacking four men in the slips at times, but the ball swung only intermittently – most often out of the hand of Matthew Fisher, the 17-year-old whose reward for missing school this week was 16 overs of toil at a thrifty cost of 24 runs. Even the anarchic Jack Brooks, Yorkshire’s “Headband Warrior”, struggled to run amok, although his frown at Peter Hartley’s decision to turn down an appeal for caught behind of Liam Dawson – an edge confirmed by the slenderest of spikes on the Snickometer – told of a desire to reject authority.The Yorkshire players wore black armbands in memory of Brian Close, who doubtless would have attempted to ruffle the opposition by positioning himself to glower at the batsman, in their soft southern helmets, from short leg. But Hampshire just got on with the dirty, everyday business of trying to survive. And Close would certainly have appreciated that.

Lyth bares his soul on Facebook

Adam Lyth has taken to Facebook to express his disappointment at his Ashes summer and say that the experience has made him hungrier to succeed.It has been widely assumed in the English media that Lyth’s dropping for England’s series against Pakistan in the UAE is inevitable – and the odds are that they will be proved right.But Lyth has spilled out his belief that he still has a Test future in a perhaps unique Facebook statement: bare-the-soul honesty approaching 900 words in which he thanks England’s selectors for sticking with him in a series in which he made only 115 runs in five Tests at 12.77.”I don’t really pay attention to people talking about who will open in the UAE with Alastair Cook, it’s completely out of my hands who the selectors pick. I know exactly what I have to do and that is score big runs for Yorkshire, it’s as simple as that… It really does mean a hell of a lot that the captain, coach and selectors have stuck with me.Failure in international sport can be a lonely place, especially after the emotional highs and lows of a series like the Ashes, and Lyth makes the point of thanking his Facebook followers for “incredible support”.”I have only played seven Tests at the minute and to have achieved that is fantastic,” he writes. “Hopefully there are many more matches and many more series to come but I know I need to go back to Yorkshire and score lots of runs.”This experience has made me hungrier, you don’t become a bad player overnight and you don’t in five games either.”It could have gone better on a personal note but that’s cricket and that can happen when you’re facing one of the best attacks in the world on testing pitches. Going forwards I have learnt a lot in this series and hopefully I can go back to Yorkshire, score some runs and help them with the County Championship.”I can’t really put my low scores down to one thing. The Aussies have bowled well in testing conditions, I have copped some decent balls but I’ve played some bad shots which I’m disappointed about.”

England Women to appoint new head coach

Paul Shaw, the head of England Women’s Performance, will step down from his job under a coaching restructuring following this summer’s Ashes defeat which will see a new head coach appointed early next year.The ECB has said they ideally want a coach with first-class or international experience, something Shaw does not possess, ahead of a period that includes the World T20 in India next March and the 2017 World Cup which will be hosted in England.Shaw has worked with England’s women’s set-up for seven years and was appointed to the head of performance role in 2013. He oversaw back-to-back Ashes series victories but England have not found success at a global event since winning both the World T20 and World Cup in 2009 although they have reached the last two World T20 finals – losing to Australia both times.Last month, England relinquished the Ashes 10-6 in the multi-point format having lost the one-day series and one-off Test. They won the T20 series 2-1, but a batting collapse at Hove – a theme of the season – when they fell to 87 all out chasing 108 decided the contest.”The important contribution that Paul has made to the development of England women’s cricket over the last seven years is unquestionable,” Clare Conner, the director of England women’s cricket, said. “When Paul was appointed to the new role of Head of England Women’s Performance in 2013, it was at a stage when professionalism of the England women’s team was imminent. His strategic planning, long term vision and relationship management have been instrumental in guiding the programme through this transition.”The women’s game is now fully professional and is in a different place to when Paul was appointed two and a half years ago. The decision to move back to a more traditional coaching structure, led by one overarching head coach, ideally with first-class or international playing or coaching experience, is what we believe is now needed to take the players to the next level in their development as professional cricketers.Shaw said: “I have very much enjoyed the past two and a half years working with the England women’s team. My personal highlights have been the successful back-to-back Women’s Ashes campaigns, both in England and Australia, as well as leading a young England team to the 2014 ICC Women’s World T20 final in Bangladesh.””The England women’s performance programme has evolved into a world class set-up over the past few years. With this in mind, I believe it is now time to step aside and give someone else the opportunity to take the programme and the team onto the next level, as I look to take on my next challenge.”I wish Charlotte and the team every success in what promises to be a very exciting couple of years ahead.”Interviews for the new head coach will begin next month with the ECB aiming to have the position filled before the tour of South Africa next February. Shaw will continue in his position until the end of the year.

Bird helps give Tasmania the edge


ScorecardSteve O’Keefe picked up 4 for 46 (file photo)•Getty Images

Three wickets from Jackson Bird helped Tasmania into a strong position on the second day of their clash with New South Wales at Bankstown Oval, where the Blues went to stumps on 6 for 150. They still trailed by 145 runs after Tasmania were earlier dismissed for 295, and at the close of play Kurtis Patterson was the key on 56, and Sean Abbott had 16.Bird had collected 3 for 34 and Sam Rainbird had taken 2 for 26, including the wicket of Ed Cowan, who was bowled for 13. The major wicket takers in the Tasmania innings had been Doug Bollinger and Steve O’Keefe, who each picked up four victims.Tasmania had resumed at 1 for 127 and Ben Dunk failed to add to his score of 68 before he was bowled by Bollinger. Alex Doolan was lbw to O’Keefe for 65 and the only other half-century of the innings came from wicketkeeper Tom Triffitt, who managed 54.

Kulasekara replaces Prasad in ODI squad

Nuwan Kulasekara has replaced the injured Dhammika Prasad in Sri Lanka’s squad for the ODI series in New Zealand, which begins on December 26. Prasad had been ruled out of the entire tour when he sustained a back injury during the tour game against New Zealand’s Board President’s XI in Queenstown. The uncapped Vishwa Fernando had replaced Prasad in the Test squad, but for the ODIs the selectors chose to go with the experienced Kulasekara, who has 182 wickets from 168 ODIs.Kithuruwan Vithanage, currently in the Test squad, will remain in New Zealand for the ODIs as well, as a replacement for Kusal Perera, who was suspended following a positive test for a banned substance.Sri Lanka are also keeping a close eye on the fitness of their ODI pace spearhead Lasith Malinga, who is recovering from a knee injury picked up during the recent home series against West Indies. If Malinga fails to clear a fitness test ahead of the ODI series, the allrounder Thisara Perera will take his place in the squad.