logo
Dawson to play first England Test in eight years

Dawson to play first England Test in eight years

Yahoo7 days ago
Spinner Liam Dawson will play his first Test in eight years after being named in the England team to face India at Old Trafford on Wednesday.
Left-armer Dawson, 35, returns as the replacement for off-spinner Shoaib Bashir, who suffered a broken finger in the thrilling third-Test win at Lord's.
Pace bowler Chris Woakes keeps his place, holding off the challenge of Gus Atkinson.
England are 2-1 up and will win the series if they take the fourth Test in Manchester. They have not won a five-Test series since 2018.
Hampshire's Dawson will win his fourth Test cap, his third coming against South Africa in July 2017.
England have played 102 Tests since Dawson last appeared. Only six other players in history have gone more Tests between caps.
While Dawson will provide reliable slow left-arm, he also boosts England's lower-order batting. He owns 18 first-class hundreds and his average of 35.29 outstrips opener Zak Crawley.
Part of the squad that won the 2019 World Cup, his international career appeared to be over. After fleeting appearances in white-ball cricket in 2022, he went more than three years without another call-up.
At the beginning of this summer, he said he was "realistic" about his England prospects, only to receive a recall for the T20 series against West Indies in May.
He now gets his chance in the Test side, leap-frogging fellow left-armer Jack Leach, who was part of England's squads during the winter and has a central contract.
"He brings experience and guile," batter Harry Brook told BBC Sport. "He's very skilful.
"He's been around the block, played hundreds of games and he's a great bloke. He's very competitive and he's a very good player.
"He was very nervous before his T20 comeback and I'm sure he'll be nervous this week. I'm sure he'll let his experience and skills take over."
England XI for fourth Test v India: Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Ben Stokes (captain), Jamie Smith (wicketkeeper), Liam Dawson, Chris Woakes, Brydon Carse, Jofra Archer.
Woakes has struggled to make an impact in the first three Tests, though did have his most successful match at Lord's, taking four wickets.
He gets the nod over Atkinson partly because of his record on this ground. The 36-year-old averages almost 37 with the bat and 17 with the ball in Manchester.
Atkinson was put through a fitness test at Old Trafford on Monday. He has not played professionally since injuring his hamstring in the one-off Test against Zimbabwe in May.
He was deemed fit enough to make a Test comeback if required, but given the other options in the squad and the fact Atkinson has played only one day of club cricket in two months, there was no need for England to take a risk.
England will now seek games or him to play elsewhere, yet he is not in the Surrey squad to play Yorkshire in the County Championship, beginning on Tuesday.
Any slim chance that fellow pace bowler Mark Wood could return for the fifth Test following knee surgery is now over. Wood is instead targeting the white-ball matches against South Africa at the end of the summer.
India will make at least one change to the side beaten at Lord's, after all-rounder Nitish Kumar Reddy was ruled out of the rest of the series with a knee injury.
Wicketkeeper Rishabh Pant batted in the nets on Monday and looks to have recovered from the finger injury that hampered him in the third Test.
There is yet no decision on Jasprit Bumrah. The star pace bowler was set to play only three of the five Tests and has so far featured in two.
Following a week of rest between the third and fourth Tests, the tourists must surely be tempted to unleash Bumrah in order to keep the series alive.
India have never not won any of the nine Tests they have played in Manchester, dating back to 1936.
England have lost only two of the 20 Tests they have played on this ground this century.
India's Reddy misses remaining Tests due to injury
'A Day for Thorpey' to celebrate England batter
Get cricket news sent straight to your phone
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

England batter Knight signs new Somerset deal
England batter Knight signs new Somerset deal

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

England batter Knight signs new Somerset deal

Former England captain Heather Knight has signed a new contract with Somerset until the end of the 2026 season. The 34-year-old captained her country to victory in the 2017 World Cup and has 295 caps across all formats. Knight, who has scored 7,298 runs and taken 84 wickets for England, has not played for Somerset since May after picking up a hamstring injury against West Indies. "I'm really pleased to have extended my time with Somerset," she told the club's website. "It's a club that means a lot to my family and I, and I feel a huge amount of pride every time I pull on the shirt." Lord's to host three England Tests in 2026 Who should be in England team for World Cup?

Nottingham Forest eyeing double swoop for wingers Adama Traore and Dan Ndoye
Nottingham Forest eyeing double swoop for wingers Adama Traore and Dan Ndoye

New York Times

time9 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Nottingham Forest eyeing double swoop for wingers Adama Traore and Dan Ndoye

Nottingham Forest want to sign Fulham winger Adama Traore, as well as Dan Ndoye from Bologna. Forest head coach Nuno Espirito Santo hopes to see both players arrive this summer to bolster his wide options, as the club prepares for a return to the European stage for the first time in three decades. The Athletic reported on July 20 Forest were keen on a move for Switzerland international Ndoye. A fee has not yet been agreed between the two clubs but there is an optimism at Forest that a deal can be reached, with personal terms not expected to be an issue. But Nuno is also keen to be reunited with winger Traore, with whom he previously worked at Wolverhampton Wanderers. Traore, 29, is now at Fulham but Forest are also targeting the former Barcelona player, who has also spent time at Aston Villa and Middlesbrough. Forest's interest in both players comes after the club sold Swedish winger Anthony Elanga to Newcastle United for £52million ($70.7m) earlier this window. They were also among the clubs interested in Johan Bakayoko, then of PSV Eindhoven, though the winger has since joined Bundesliga side RB Leipzig. Wide men are integral to Forest's approach under Nuno and Traore in particular could add the kind of explosive speed that Elanga brought to the side last season, even if they are slightly different players. There are still negotiations to complete over Ndoye, who would biome Forest's third signing of the window, having already secured the arrivals of Brazilian pair Igor Jesus and Jair Cunha from Botafogo while Morgan Gibbs-White, who was a target for Tottenham Hotspur, signed a new contract through to 2028. Advertisement He was a regular for Bologna last season, scoring nine goals and providing six assists in 41 games and scoring the winning goal in the Coppa Italia final against Milan, winning the club's first trophy in 51 years. He has made 71 appearances for the club in total, scoring 11 times. The 24-year-old began his career with Swiss club Lausanne-Sport, making his senior debut for the team in 2018. He was signed by French club Nice in January 2020, though remained with Lausanne on loan for the rest of the campaign. He scored three goals in 37 appearances for Nice, primarily coming off the bench. Ndoye joined Basel on loan in August 2021 with the move being made permanent in the subsequent January transfer window. He signed for Bologna in August 2023, where he was eventually joined by former Basel team-mate Riccardo Calafiori, now of Arsenal. Ndoye has been a fixture of the Swiss national team since being capped for the first time in 2022, appearing in 22 games and scoring three goals. ()

Why it's the perfect time for a Bend it like Beckham sequel
Why it's the perfect time for a Bend it like Beckham sequel

Yahoo

time23 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Why it's the perfect time for a Bend it like Beckham sequel

With England's Lionesses winning the 2025 Euros, it is absolutely the right to revisit the classic, which is a staple of the British film industry. The Lionesses have won the Women's Euro 2025 championship, proving that women's football is worth taking seriously, something Bend It Like Beckham tried to show more than two decades ago. That's why it's such great news that the British classic is getting a sequel, with director Gurinder Chadha sharing ahead of the Euros final that a follow-up was in development. While details about the film are still being kept under wraps, the target release for the sequel is 2027 to mark the FIFA Women's World Cup and the original film's 25th anniversary It is the perfect time for there to be another film when the love for the sport is at an all-time high, but also because there are still naysayers speaking out against the merits of women's football. When Bend It Like Beckham came out in 2002, the movie helped put women's football at the forefront of people's minds. It explored teens Jesminder "Jess" Bhamra (Parminder Nagra) and Juliette "Jules" Paxton's (Keira Knightley) quest to become professionals like their idol David Beckham, at a time when women's sport wasn't taken seriously. Unfortunately, in some circles not much has changed. Even though England's Lionesses have proven their mettle and that they should be considered on a par with the men's England team, there are many who still decry the team just because they are women. For example, in an LBC radio interview, one football fan called in to complain about women's football being "shoved down our throats" and how they should be given their own channel separate from men's football, even though he claimed "no one" would watch it. The listener also said female sports presenters shouldn't even be allowed on Match of the Day because he couldn't stand listening to their voices. Now these are extreme claims, but unfortunately, that viewer isn't completely alone in that viewpoint either. There are still some people who believe women's football isn't as worthwhile as men's football, and that's simply not true. Women's football is inspiring and exciting, and the Lionesses are inspirational for young girls around the world. Put simply, they deserve our respect for their achievements to date. That's also why Bend it Like Beckham is so important, it shows the merits of women playing football and helped inspire generations of young players to follow in the footsteps of Jess and Jules. And now, in the wake of the Lionesses' success, it feels like the right time to revisit the narrative to motivate even more girls to take up the sport. Speaking on Good Morning Britain the day after the Lionesses' win, director Chadha reflected on the impact the original had and how a sequel could do the same. Saying: "I waited a long time because I just didn't think it was right to do anything after the film, because so many people love it, and I was terrified that I could ruin it because we captured magic in a bottle. "We've inspired champions, not only the Lionesses. I know the US team all got into playing football after watching the movie. There was a lot riding on it, and so I didn't really want to go back there." Chadha added that now women's football has become a movement, so it is the perfect time to jump back into the beloved British comedy's story: "I thought actually it's different now, it's not so much the film, it's the movement. This is what we created, a movement much bigger than the film and so now I feel much less pressure." There is another thing that means it is the perfect time for a Bend It Like Beckham sequel, and that's millennial nostalgia. Millennial content has helped fuel the box office for quite some time now, and it's only going to continue growing with sequels to movies like Freaky Friday and I Know What You Did Last Summer landing this year and a Scrubs reboot green-lit. If the box office for Lilo & Stitch alone is anything to go by, then if it's something they love Millennials will tune in. We like to return to familiar stories and imagine what happened next, perhaps because it is a way to go back to a simpler time when the pressures of adult life hadn't quite set in yet. It's a lesson Hollywood seems to have taken on board quite significantly in recent years. There is merit in returning to beloved classics for another go, and Bend It Like Beckham falls into that category. It is not only a beloved film for millennials, it is also a staple of the British film industry that is worthy of a return. And with women's football finally at the forefront of people's minds in the real world it seems like the perfect time to explore it once again in the fictional world. Bend It Like Beckham is available to watch on Disney+ and ITVX.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store