
Glamorgan 'a lot of potential'
Glamorgan's new coach Richard Dawson says he is coming into a team with "high potential players".The Welsh county ramp-up preparations for the new campaign with a three-day game against Cardiff UCCE starting Sunday, before beginning the County Championship season on Friday, 4 April. "It's an amazing county with a rich history, and I've coached Welsh Fire so I know the city," said Dawson who was appointed in February to succeed sacked Grant Bradburn as Glamorgan coach."It's a squad with two recent trophy wins [in the One Day Cup] and a lot of potential, so I'm looking forward to getting started," added Dawson."We've got the squad to be able to get into the T20 Blast knockout stages."
England off-spinner Shoaib Bashir (on loan from Somerset) and Sri Lankan paceman Asitha Fernando are set to make official debuts against Leicestershire in the opening Championship Division Two match.But seamer James Harris (calf) and all-rounder Dan Douthwaite (pectoral muscle) have joined leg-spinner Mason Crane (shoulder) on the injury list.Doncaster-born Dawson, 44, coached Gloucestershire for five years before various roles with England and was recruited at short notice following the shock departure of Bradburn."We're really lucky to have Richard, he's coming straight off a spell with England but he's got brilliant experience coaching Gloucestershire and the England pathway so he'll be perfect for us this year," said director of cricket Mark Wallace."He's a coach who makes players better and he's got a good idea of what the squad looks like. We're also going to have some involvement with [former Glamorgan and England coach] Matthew Mott who'll help in developing our coaches, doing some work on the male and female game."After Glamorgan finished a disappointing sixth in Division Two in 2024, Dawson is keen to emphasise progression of his players, both junior and senior, rather than setting targets for the number of wins."What we're looking for is progression in how we play cricket, how we play at home and being able to take [20] wickets is going to contribute to that," he reflected."If you can get to half-way and keep players fit, then it's about how you can push through September. Hopefully the wins will come if we do those other things."Championship captain Sam Northeast has worked with Dawson in the England Lions set-up."He's pretty blunt, he's a straight talker but there's support with that, he'll put an arm round the shoulder at the right times. He's worked with a similar club to Glamorgan at Gloucestershire, so we've got to use his experience," said Northeast."Promotion is always the aim, we need a good start, we got it last year but the back-end didn't go as planned though we had an eye on the 50 overs and playing a few younger players."
Bashir is likely to be the only British newcomer in early season, filling in for Crane on a three-match loan stint, albeit when pitches are traditionally least likely to be spin-friendly."Once we heard Mason was injured, it was a question of reaching out to Somerset and the ECB to see if there was the potential to get Shoaib in. I worked with him in Brisbane on the England Lions tour, he's hungry to learn and wants to play," Dawson explained.As far as overseas players are concerned, Glamorgan will have veteran South African batter Colin Ingram available throughout the season while Australian star Marnus Labuschagne may make a fleeting appearance in May.Sri Lankan opening bowler Fernando has signed up for the first two months with the possibility of more, though the county could look for a different T20 bowling option."Asitha is a similar bowler to Michael Neser, he swings it and attacks the stumps so he'll be a really good addition. Hopefully he fits in well and we'll get him back at some stage later," said Northeast.The captain started last season with a ground record 335 not out at Lord's and passed 1,000 first-class runs, mostly scored away from home."I haven't set any personal targets because I want the squad to do well and keep the younger players growing. But my game feels in a good place and it's just about having good mental vibes."Glamorgan's limited-overs form has shown a sharp divide between the One Day Cup, which they have won twice in four years with a relatively full-strength squad, and the T20 Blast where they have not progressed out of the group stage since 2017."The 50 over comp last year was great, we really enjoyed it as a squad, so it's about trying to take that momentum and some of the good stuff we did, and use it to our advantage," said white-ball captain Kiran Carlson."We weren't far off in T20, we had a few bad losses, a few good wins and it's about finding that sweet spot, peaking at the right time."Getting the balance of a team is still something I'm learning about, it's about trying to get match-winners out there," Carlson added."It's massive to win [the One Day Cup], it gives the club a boost and it's the icing on the cake for players after a long hard season."After begining their Championship season at home to Leicestershire on Friday Glamorgan face visits to Bristol and Lord's.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Wales Online
2 hours ago
- Wales Online
Tonight's rugby news as Wales collapse against England and Farrell sweats on injured Lions stars
Tonight's rugby news as Wales collapse against England and Farrell sweats on injured Lions stars The latest rugby news stories from Wales and beyond Sion Davies of Wales is tackled by Connor Treacey and Ben Redshaw of England (Image: Huw Evans Picture Agency ) Here are the latest rugby headlines on Friday, June 6. Wales in late collapse against England Wales U20s conceded five tries in the final 13 minutes as England U20s ran out 47-14 winners in a World Cup warm-up at Pontypool Park. There were only five survivors from the side which beat England U20s in the final game of the U20s Six Nations, but Richard Whiffin's team held a 14-7 lead at the interval. Outside centre Elijah Evans opened the scoring before openside flanker Caio James powered over from short-range, with Harri Ford converting both tries. Sign up to Inside Welsh rugby on Substack to get exclusive news stories and insight from behind the scenes in Welsh rugby. But England hit back in the 25th minute when backrower Reggie Hammick barged his way over the line with Josh Bellamy adding the extras. Whiffin made mass substitutions after the break and second-row Luke Evans got sent to the sin bin for a technical offence. England's pack began to gain the upper hand, with flanker George Timmins smashing his way over the line. Article continues below Wales wing Aidan Boshoff was then cruelly denied a try from 45 metres because he was deemed to be offside when he received the ball. The hosts fell apart after that and England extended their lead through a penalty try which also saw Wales tighthead prop Jac Pritchard sent to the sin bin for illegally collapsing the maul. Hammick then claimed his second try for England, with Bellamy adding the extras. England piled on the misery as Tyler Ofiah - son of rugby league legend Martin Offiah, ran in an interception try from 70 metres out. There were further tries for Jonny Weimann and Nic Allinson. Farrell sweats on Lions Leinster have lost two more of their British and Irish Lions call-ups to injury, with both Josh van der Flier and Hugo Keenan missing for the United Rugby Championship semi-final against Glasgow Warriors. They join fellow tourists Tadhg Furlong and Garry Ringrose on the sidelines just two weeks before the Lions' first match, as Leinster continue their bid to avoid a fourth successive season without silverware. Ireland international Robbie Henshaw is also missing through injury. Keenan and van der Flier both picked up injuries in their BKT United Rugby Championship play-off quarter-final victory over the Scarlets last Saturday, which could well have Lions coach Andy Farrell concerned ahead of the tour of Australia. The Lions travel down under later this month, ahead of their three Test series against the Wallabies in July and August. Back-row van der Flier was forced off after 30 minutes against the Scarlets, with the former World Rugby player of the year failing to recover from a hamstring injury. Full-back Keenan misses out due to a calf injury. The Lions take on Argentina in Dublin on June 20 - a week after the URC final - before playing their first game on Australian soil against the Western Force in Perth on June 28. URC Player and Coach of the Year announced Leinster and Springboks second row RG Snyman has been crowned United Rugby Championship Players' Player of the Season. The award is voted for by the captain and vice-captains of the 16 URC teams, with the 30-year-old following in the footsteps of Leinster hooker Dan Sheehan and Munster fly-half Jack Crowley by winning it. He joined Leinster from rivals Munster last summer and has been a huge presence as the Irish giants topped the regular season table and beat the Scarlets to earn a place in the URC semi-finals. Zebre's Massimo Brunello is the surprise winner of the Coach of the Year award after guiding the Italian side to five wins and a draw this season CEO of BKT Europe Lucia Salmaso said: 'Massimo has done a wonderful job this season with Zebre Parma, guiding them to some famous wins against tough opposition. 'He has demonstrated excellent leadership in his first season at the helm, creating history with Zebre's first away win in four years. In creating a custom ring for him as the BKT Coach of the Season, we want this achievement to live long in the memory. 'Congratulations to Massimo on his fantastic work this season, and we wish him all the best in the future.' Wales' Ioan Lloyd won the Golden Boot award, while Cardiff's Harri Millard was top try scorer and Cam Winnett took the Ironman prize for the most appearances. Full list of URC Awards Winners 2024-25 Gilbert Golden Boot: Ioan Lloyd (Scarlets) OFX Top Try Scorer: Harri Millard (Cardiff Rugby) Tackle Machine: Ruben van Heerden (DHL Stormers) Ironman: Cam Winnett (Cardiff Rugby) Playmaker: Tom Farrell (Munster Rugby) Elite XV: Jamie Osborne (Leinster Rugby), Darcy Graham (Edinburgh Rugby), Tom Farrell (Munster Rugby), Andre Esterhuizen (Hollywoodbets Sharks), Blair Murray (Scarlets), Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu (DHL Stormers), Craig Casey (Munster Rugby), Jan-Hendrik Wessels (Vodacom Bulls), Marnus van der Merwe (Scarlets), Wilco Louw (Vodacom Bulls), RG Snyman (Leinster Rugby), Tadhg Beirne (Munster Rugby), Jac Morgan (Ospreys), Rory Darge (Glasgow Warriors), Cameron Hanekom (Vodacom Bulls) Next-Gen Player of the Season: Cameron Hanekom (Vodacom Bulls) Innovation Award: Hollywoodbets Sharks Try of the Season Powered by Deon Fourie (DHL Stormers) South African Vodacom URC Player of the Season: Sacha Feinburg-Mngomezulu (DHL Stormers) BKT Coach of the Season: Massimo Brunello (Zebre Parma) Players' Player of the Season: RG Snyman (Leinster Rugby) Huw Jones to miss out again as Warriors face Leinster in URC semi-finals By PA Sport Staff Glasgow centre Huw Jones will again miss out as Warriors travel to Dublin to face Leinster in the BKT United Rugby Championship semi-finals. Jones has been missing for several weeks with an Achilles problem and has failed to make the 23-man squad for the Aviva Stadium encounter despite some optimism over his fitness from Scotstoun earlier in the week. Forwards Matt Fagerson, Jack Dempsey and Zander Fagerson all miss out again as expected but were progressing well in their recoveries earlier in the week. Head coach Franco Smith has made just two personnel changes following the 36-18 triumph over Stormers last weekend, which took the defending champions into the final four of the competition. Former Scotland Under-20 international Fin Richardson comes into the starting line-up at tighthead prop as Murphy Walker drops out of the 23. Adam Hastings is recalled at fly-half to spark a reshuffle in the back division. Tom Jordan moves to inside centre, where he will partner Sione Tuipulotu. Stafford McDowall drops to the bench. Warriors are making their third trip to Dublin inside two months and will need to make further improvement. Glasgow were thrashed 52-0 by Leinster in April in the Champions Cup and lost 13-5 in the Irish capital in the final match of the regular URC season. Article continues below Smith told 'Leinster are the standard setters in this competition. They finished top of the standings for a reason, and have consistently out-performed teams across the course of this season while showing their strength in depth. 'It is a challenge that we know we will need to be at our best to meet, and the players are focused on the task at hand. 'Training this week has been sharp and competitive, with every player working hard for each other to put this squad in the best possible position.'


Wales Online
2 hours ago
- Wales Online
Ryan Reynolds faced with £350million Wrexham sale decision as talks in early stages
Ryan Reynolds faced with £350million Wrexham sale decision as talks in early stages Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney are believed to be seeking external investment in Wrexham after taking the Welsh club from the National League to the Championship Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney are reportedly seeking new investment in Wrexham (Image: Leon Bennett/The Hollywood Reporter via Getty Images ) Wrexham's Hollywood owners are reportedly seeking fresh investment in a move which could see the club's value soar to as much as £350million. Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney bought the Welsh side for a nominal amount in February 2021, subject to an immediate cash injection of £2m. The Red Dragons have since risen from the National League to the Championship after being promoted for three seasons in a row. The club's profile has grown significantly in the last four years thanks to the success of the Welcome to Wrexham documentary, which follows the actors' ownership. Reynolds and McElhenney took steps to shore up the club's financial position back in October when they welcomed the Allyn family from New York as new investors. According to Bloomberg, their acquisition of a minority stake placed Wrexham's value at approximately £100m. The same outlet now reports that the club is working with bank advisers to find further potential investors and to discover if there is a demand. The move has been discussed internally as the owners look to secure enough money to enable Wrexham to compete in the second tier. The new suggested valuation of around £350m would make Wrexham the highest priced team in the Championship. For context, Sheffield United were recently bought by an American consortium for roughly £111m. Wrexham have posted strong financial results under Reynolds and McElhenney's ownership. The latest available accounts show the club recorded a record annual turnover of more than £26m while still playing in League Two. Article continues below Wrexham's popularity has soared under the ownership of Reynolds and McElhenney (Image: 2023 AMA Sports Photo Agency ) Watch Welcome to Wrexham season 4 on Disney+ This article contains affiliate links, we will receive a commission on any sales we generate from it. Learn more from £4.99 Disney+ Get Disney+ here Product Description Welcome to Wrexham is back on Disney+ for a fourth season. Fans can watch the series with a £4.99 monthly plan, or get 12 months for the price of 10 by paying for a year upfront. That figure is understood to be set to rise to anywhere between £30m and £40m for the most recent season in League One. Talks over new investment are said to be in the early stages, with Wrexham expecting a boost in revenue from broadcast payments and sponsorship deals at Championship level. Deadpool star Reynolds openly discussed the idea of selling a further stake in the club during a recent appearance on the Fearless in Devotion fan podcast. However, he stressed that it would not diminish the passion that he and McElhenney feel for Wrexham. "There are still people who think we are fading away or we're going to get bored," he said. "I don't know how you get bored with something like this. Sign up to our newsletter! Wrexham is the Game is great new way to get top-class coverage Wrexham AFC is the arguably the fastest-growing club in the world at the moment thanks to a certain Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney. The Dragons have achieved two consecutive promotions and are cheered on by crowds from not only North Wales but also from all over the globe, thanks to the success of the Disney+ documentary 'Welcome to Wrexham'. But does it have a dedicated, quality source of information piped through to your inbox each week, free of ads but packed with informed opinion, analysis and even a little bit of fun each week? That's where Wrexham is the Game steps in... Available every Wednesday, it provides all the insights you need to be a top red. And for a limited time, a subscription to 'Wrexham is the Game' will cost fans just £15 for the first year. Sign up for Wrexham is the Game here Article continues below "I have said this before, I love this sport so much now that I f***ing hate it. I really feel that in my cells." He later added: "Even if our stake in the club shrinks because we have to go all the way up to the Premiership (Premier League), that's what's called an uptown problem. "It doesn't change a thing in terms of the emotional investment. The financial investment stuff I've never cared as much about – emotional investment is my job, that's Rob's job, and that's what we love the most."


Daily Mirror
3 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Reynolds and McElhenney 'ready to sell their stake' as Wrexham's value soars
Wrexham are gearing up for a season in the Championship and co-owners Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney are looking to bring extra investment into the Welsh club Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney are said to be willing to sell a stake in Wrexham following their promotion to the Championship. Wrexham have enjoyed a remarkable rise since they were bought by Reynolds and McElhenney back in 2021 for around £2million. The club has been promoted three times in four full seasons under the two Hollywood stars, rising from the National League to the Championship; now they are looking to raise additional funds in a bid to help Wrexham go one step further and reach the Premier League. According to a report from Bloomberg, Reynolds and McElhenney are considering selling a stake in the club for a valuation of up to £350m. Earlier this year, the Allyn family became minority investors, with Wrexham valued at around £100m. However, the club's profile has risen further following their recent promotion and the report states that Wrexham are now working investment bank advisers to gauge potential interest. A £350m valuation would make Wrexham the most expensive team in Championship, with Sheffield United recently bought for around £111m by an American consortium. Speaking after Wrexham secured promotion from League One, Reynolds reiterated their ambition as he told Sky Sports: "Four years ago, this man [McElhenney] said our goal is to make it to the Premier League. And there was understandably a lot of titters, laughter and giggles - but it's starting to feel like a tangible thing that could actually come to fruition." Wrexham boss Phil Parkinson, meanwhile, is confident the club are ready to make the "huge" step up from League One to the Championship. "I think everybody knows the jump is huge," Parkinson said. "But I'm confident we will be well prepared for that. I think that a lot of tough decisions will be made this summer, in terms of who we bring in and how we add to this fantastic squad of lads we've got, but let's see if we can build a squad to compete at that level. "I think it's interesting because the jump in salaries is incredible, mind-blowing. Even coming up to this level [League One], the jump to get players of Championship quality is expensive but obviously with the next level, I don't think people outside football quite realise. "They think players in League One must be multi-millionaires, but the drop-off from what people read about Premier League players when they come down is huge. "That is a challenge, but what we've always tried to do is make sure the culture in the club is right and I think that's key - no superstars, no egos in the dressing room and we've got to try and get that balance right again. "You always need extra quality when you go up a level to make sure the right people come into the building." Join our new WhatsApp community and receive your daily dose of Mirror Football content. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice.