Indian news round-up

* Murali and South Africa clinch CEAT awardsStar Sri Lankan spinner Muthiah Muralitharan has been named the CEATInternational Cricketer of the Year 2000-01. Murali headed the CEATRatings with 111 points and comfortably edged out his compatriotMarvan Atapattu, who finished runner-up 16 points behind. The SriLankans completed a clean sweep of the top three positions as Murali’sskipper Sanath Jayasuriya ended third with 93 points. Jacques Kallis(87) and Sachin Tendulkar (85) took spots four and five respectively.The annual CEAT Ratings which were instituted in 1995/96 aresupervised by a panel comprising three of the game’s gray eminences,Clive Lloyd, Ian Chappell and Sunil Gavaskar. They take into accountall the cricketing action between May 1 and April 30. InterestinglySachin Tendulkar has never won the award in the six years since itsinception. His CEAT Efficiency Quotient (CEQ) of 3.04 was however thehighest among the leading contenders for the Award. Previous winnersinclude Brian Lara (1995-96), Venkatesh Prasad (1996-97), SanathJayasuriya (1997-98), Jacques Kallis (1998-99), Sourav Ganguly(1999-00).South Africa clinched the CEAT Team of the Year award with a tally of98 points, which included 57 from the 14 Tests and 41 from the 26 ODIsthey played during the year. Pakistan (1996-97), Australia (1997-98and 1999-00) and South Africa (1998-99) were the four previousrecipients.* Chinnaswamy stadium pitch being relaidThirty years after it was first laid, the square at the Chinnaswamystadium in Bangalore is being relaid. Under the supervision of GKasturi Rangan, the chairman of the pitches committee of the BCCI,work on the relaying has already begun.”The idea behind the reconstruction is to have hard, firm wickets,”says Kasturi Rangan. “We have told other associations to provide truewickets and if we make a start here, then we can set an example forthe rest to emulate,” he says. According to Kasturi Rangan, theentire surface will be playable within 50 days. In all, there will beeleven strips, one centre wicket and five wickets on either side. Thecost of the entire exercise is estimated at Rs 10 lakh.India is scheduled to play a Test match at Bangalore against Englandlate this year and the new surface is likely to provide a hard andbouncy track. Bangalore staged its first Test match against WestIndies in November, 1974.* Patel, Hazare join NCAMedium pacers Rakesh Patel of Baroda and Swapnil Hazare of Mumbai havereported at the National Cricket Academy in Bangalore a couple of daysago.Patel, who was inducted into the NCA after the first set of 20 nameswas announced last month, was in the camp for the probables for thetour of Zimbabwe in Bangalore. However he was out of action for sometime due to a knee injury. which he sustained during the Ranji Trophyfinal against Railways in April. Hazare was forced to miss a month’straining at the NCA because of his college exams. The NCA will take aten day break from June 16 before the inter-zonal acadmies tournamentcommences on June 28.

Preview: Celtic vs Rangers

Ange Postecoglou’s Celtic head into Sunday’s Premiership showdown against their Glasgow arch-rivals in an exceptional run of form, with the Bhoys remaining undefeated in their last 25 league outings, winning 21 of those.

As such, confidence within the 56-year-old’s squad will be extremely high, but with Giovanni van Bronckhorst’s outfit also having lost just two Premiership games all season, the Hoops manager will be well aware that his team simply must be at their best if they are to leave Ibrox with all three points this afternoon.

Will Postecoglou make any changes to the team which started the 4-0 win over Ross County last time out? Here’s how we think Celtic could line up against Rangers today, along with the latest team and injury news…

With Postecoglou revealing in his pre-match press conference that both Kyogo Furuhashi and Tom Rogic will be available for selection on Sunday after recovering from their respective injuries, we predict that the Hoops boss will make three changes from the side which started the victory over County.

The back five remains unchanged, with Joe Hart starting between the sticks and Greg Taylor, Carl Starfelt, Cameron Carter-Vickers and Josip Juranovic making up the defensive quartet.

In the middle of the park, despite Rogic’s availability, it is the 22-year-old David Turnbull – who Alan Hutton claimed is playing with his chest “puffed out” this season – given the nod alongside Callum McGregor and Reo Hatate in the Bhoys’ three-man midfield.

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In attack, the £52.5k-per-week Kyogo’s recovery from a long-term injury sees him take the place of Giorgos Giakoumakis up top, while Liel Abada also returns to the starting XI on the right, with Daizen Maeda dropping to the bench and Jota switching back to his preferred role on the left.

AND in other news: £3m wasted as Celtic had a shocker on £7.9k-p/w “loner” who rinsed Desmond for 129 weeks

McCullum monsters Canterbury with unbeaten 108

Brendon McCullum repeated his national heroics and sealed Otago’s spot in next Sunday’s State Shield final © Getty Images
 

Brendon McCullum continued his winning ways with his unbeaten 108 steering Otago into the State Shield final against Auckland next Sunday. Having taken 77 off 43 balls from England on Saturday to help New Zealand take the series, McCullum backed up for his provincial side in Christchurch as they defeated Canterbury by six wickets with four overs to spare.Canterbury, McCullum’s former team, batted first and Iain Robertson’s 53 and Peter Fulton’s 66 set the platform for what looked like a healthy total of 8 for 262. The spin of Nathan McCullum was potent and economical – he picked up 2 for 26 from ten overs – while Brad Scott chipped in with 3 for 40, including the important wickets of Robertson and his opening partner Michael Papps.In reply Otago lost Aaron Redmond for 0, but as long as McCullum was there they had nothing to worry about. He struck nine fours and a six, but was much more considered than on the previous evening, spending 126 balls at the crease. Alex Gidman’s 81 was also an important innings and Neil Broom swept in at the finish to blast four fours and three sixes in his 41 not out off 27.Otago now have the chance to upset Auckland, who finished on top of the ladder, and reverse the result of last season. Auckland won by five wickets on that occasion and they have the advantage of hosting the game.

Too much cricket taking a toll on McMillan

Craig McMillan: “I’ve been going since I was 20 so that’s close to ten years and it has been a long time” © Getty Images

Craig McMillan feels a hectic cricket schedule is taking a toll on his body, and admits that retirement may not be far away. He said he was enjoying the West Indies, especially because six months ago he was not expecting to be there, but conceded he was unlikely to add to his three World Cup trips.”It can be a rollercoaster at times,” he told . “I’m not going to put a time on anything but there is a good chance this could be my last World Cup. I’ve been going since I was 20 so that’s close to ten years and it has been a long time. I would love to finish on a high at this World Cup with a very good side.”McMillan, 30, feared that too much cricket could shorten the careers of top-class athletes. “There is a lot more cricket played these days,” he said. “It’s something they [the cricket boards and the ICC] need to look at because combined with the Test tours it can get very tough.”Maybe you will get guys just playing one form of the game. That might be a way to sustain yourself and stay involved for the last two or three years of your career, maybe forgoing one-dayers so they can play Test cricket for the last two or three years.”McMillan said a maiden World Cup title for New Zealand would be incredible. “From a personal point of view I’ve really enjoyed this World Cup,” he said. “So I’m hoping to contribute to what will hopefully be a special tournament for New Zealand.”New Zealand have been tipped by many, not least including Ian Chappell and Sir Viv Richards, to make it to the final of the tournament. McMillan looked at the side’s success so far as a “very satisfying” experience and was confident they would go all the way.”One of our strengths is that we bat low down and we’re strong in the last ten overs and I think that will become prevalent in the last few games of the tournament,” he said. “The thing about our game so far is that we haven’t relied on one person. Some teams rely on one or two players and you know that if you put them under pressure then the rest of the side is under pressure. The strength for New Zealand is that we have guys from one to 11 who can, on his day, win a game.”A look at New Zealand’s recent chases in a 3-0 sweep of Australia in the Chappell-Hadlee Series is testament to McMillan’s words. New Zealand’s next match is against Ireland on Monday.

T&T looking to overcome finals jinx

Daren Ganga, a contender for the West Indies captaincy, would like to add to his credentials with another title triumph © Getty Images

The much-vaunted regional first-class double is within their grasp. But Trinidad and Tobago will have to battle recent history against their opponents, Barbados, to achieve it.When the Carib Beer Challenge final bowls off from today at Guaracara Park, Point-a-Pierre, T&T should remember that their two previous encounters against Barbados on home soil ended in defeat, including a 246-run loss in the 2003-04 season at the same venue of this match and a six-wicket loss at the Queens Park Oval in the 2004-05 season.Added to that, the last time the two teams met in a final was in the 1999 Busta Cup competition where T&T, led by Ian Bishop, lost to Barbados at the Kensington Oval.Back in February, though, Daren Ganga and the current T&T squad trounced the Bajans by 264 runs to lift the Carib Beer Cup, the regional tournament. And T&T’s confidence ahead of this weekend’s final was boosted by their emphatic 391-run victory over the Windward Islands in the semi-final earlier this week.Ganga believed his team was in the right mood for the crucial last match of the season and was also mindful of the consequences of taking victory for granted.”I think it is always good having a good performance in a semi-final and getting your opposition in the final to know you are a tough team, a champion team,” Ganga said after the Windwards win. “We played like champions (in the semi-final). To be able to beat a team in three and a little bit days, it is very important for us to send the right message.””We are not going to get complacent,” he added. “We know this is an opportunity for us to make history and to set a path that no other Trinidad and Tobago team has achieved. It’s something we are all hungry for and we are looking forward for that opportunity and ensuring we make the best use if it.”Their confidence is well-warranted given the inclusion of Brian Lara, who despite missing the recent semi-final, is in the line-up as well as the in-form Ganga himself, and their West Indies colleagues Dwayne Bravo and wicketkeeper Denesh Ramdin. Jason Mohammed, who scored a century against the Windwards in the semi-final and who escaped unscathed from a vehicular accident late Wednesday night, should also take his place in the side.Individuals apart, T&T will also take confidence from the good team cricket they have played this season, which has been the main reason for their presence in the final.Unlike T&T, Barbados’ entry to the final was less emphatic. Much less. They owe their advancement to a `not-so convincing’ first innings points win against Guyana in their semi-final, according to Hendy Springer, their coach.He said, “We want to try and get our mental game right. That is the shortcoming in Barbados’ cricket – the way we prepare ourselves mentally and our general attitude going into first-class games.”Besides his apprehension with his team’s mental focus, Springer expressed concern about the ability of the Guaracara Park pitch to hold up over five days.”One of the things that I hope wouldn’t happen is that the pitch deteriorates,” he said. “It’s five days. I don’t know when last a first-class pitch would have gone five days.”Barbados have welcomed back to form the experienced Floyd Reifer who hit a century against Guyana, and will be joined in the batting department by Ryan Hinds, their prolific captain, along with Dale Richards and Dwayne Smith. Excluded from the 14-man squad was fast bowler Jason Bennett.But with an attack reinforced by the experience of Pedro Collins, the visitors will not be mere spectators in this contest.Trinidad and Tobago – Daren Ganga (capt), Lendl Simmons, Sherwin Ganga, Brian Lara, Dwayne Bravo, Jason Mohammed, Denesh Ramdin, Richard Kelly, Rayad Emrit, Mervyn Dillon, Dave Mohammed, Amit Jaggernauth, Adrian Bharath, Samuel BadreeBarbados – Ryan Hinds (capt), Dale Richards, Wayne Blackman, Dwayne Smith, Floyd Reifer, Alcindo Holder, Patrick Browne, Ian Bradshaw, Tino Best, Ryan Austin, Pedro Collins

Bangladesh prepare for daunting task

Matthew Hoggard prepares under the watchful eye of Troy Cooley © Getty Images

It’s grim up north, as Southerners are wont to say, but few prospects can have been grimmer than the one facing the Bangladeshis, as they geared up for the second Test at Chester-le-Street on Friday. Under overcast skies – which looked leaden enough to make the new ball sing on a fresh Riverside wicket, but not quite sufficient to cause any much-needed rain delays to aid their cause – Bangladesh prepared for the unpalatable task of salvaging their pride after a desperate first Test.It will not be an easy task. The most disappointing aspect of the Lord’s debacle was not the size of the defeat – in alien conditions, that much had been anticipated long in advance. What was more depressing was the manner of the capitulation. England, by their own admission, bowled woefully in the first hour and yet were gifted a succession of wickets by batsmen who believed they had won the lottery overnight. From Allan Border to Andrew Strauss, many of the most successful cricketers in the game have made a virtue of batting within their limitations – not, as Habibul Bashar demonstrated, by swinging wildly at anything dropped a fraction short or wide.Bangladesh, like England, have resisted the urge to ring the changes – at least those in the Lord’s XI now know what is about to hit them. They will make a late decision on their 16-year-old Mushfiqur Rahim, who sprained his ankle on a flight of stairs, while the seamer, Tapash Baisya, has been added the reckoning after missing the first match with an Achilles injury.Bangladesh’s coach, Dav Whatmore, sounded a warning to his players and the public earlier in the week, when he expressed his concerns about the challenge that awaited at Chester-le-Street. Today, however, he was bullish once again, and scoffed at suggestions that Bangladesh should be stripped of their Test status. “We are a full Test match nation,” he said. “That’s where we belong and where we will stay,”The quest for respect is a double-edged sword, however, and the more that Bangladesh demand to be accepted on this tour, the harder they are likely to be slapped back into place. For Michael Vaughan and England, the temptation to experiment with their batting order must be great, seeing as key personnel such as Andrew Flintoff and Geraint Jones did not get any time in the middle at Lord’s.But instead they have named the same XI, including the redundant Gareth Batty ahead of the seamer Jon Lewis, who would have revelled in these conditions just as Richard Johnson did in 2003 (6 for 33 on debut against Zimbabwe). With the Australians due to arrive midway through the match, now is hardly the time for England to step on what Michael Vaughan metaphysically described as “a potential banana skin”.”You want players to get time in the middle,” Vaughan told reporters at Chester-le-Street, “but you’ve got to be respectful of the game as well. As soon as you start being clever it comes back and bites you.” Nevertheless, with Andrew Flintoff fit and firing on all cylinders again after his ankle surgery, the outlook is bleak for Bangladesh. Even his apparently half-pace workout at Lord’s last week resulted in five wickets from 14.5 overs.”It was a huge bonus having him bowl in the first Test,” said Vaughan, “and it’s an even bigger bonus knowing we can use him just that little bit more now. I wasn’t expecting him to be bowling again until maybe halfway through the one-day games, so it just shows how hard he’s worked on his rehab and how well the medical staff have done to get him back playing again.”Sadly, it will take more than medical staff to put Bangladesh back together again if this Test follows the same pattern as the first Test. “Given the weather we have had the pitch might be more difficult to negotiate than Lord’s,” Whatmore reiterated. All he, and the cricket-loving public as a whole, can hope for is that they can put up a fight, however futile.

Law and Perren batter Western Australia

Queensland 362 and 1 for 222 (Perren 82*, Law 126*) lead Weatern Australia 523 (North 130, Campbell 91) by 61 runs
ScorecardStuart Law gave the Gabba crowd a send-off to remember, as he equalled Matthew Hayden’s record of 24 Pura Cup centuries to breathe new life into Queensland’s crucial clash against Western Australia.Law, who has announced his retirement from Australian state cricket, almost broke down in tears as he batted through his final innings in a first-class match at Brisbane. By the close, he had reached 126 not out, after adding 222 for the second wicket with Clinton Perren (82 not out).”I nearly burst into tears,” admitted Law, who will complete his career with Lancashire. “Today was just a great way for me to say thanks to the Brisbane people who have supported me. The fairytale is not quite complete but there’s room for it at the moment.”Queensland had appeared down and out when they conceded a first innings deficit of 161, and Martin Love’s latest batting failure merely compounded their struggles. He was trapped lbw by Darren Wates for a first-ball duck, and with Jimmy Maher sidelined with a hamstring injury, Queensland were effectively 2 for 0. But Law, who has scored 865 runs at 72.8 already this season, attacked from the outset to bring up his 100 from 114 balls.It was a batsman’s day. Western Australia’s wicketkeeper-batsman Ryan Campbell belted 91 from 72 balls to put the finishing touches to a massive first-innings total of 523. Andy Bichel had earlier ended a a match-turning 150-run stand with a sharp return catch off Scott Meuleman (50). He followed up by removing Marcus North (130 from 219 balls) with a superb off-cutter in his next over.

Matabeleland get off to a disastrous start on day one

Former cricket academy student Wisdom Siziba scored a century as Matabeleland got off to a disastrous start on the first day of their Logan cup match against Midlands at Bulawayo Athletic Club yesterday. Matabeleland were all out for 192 in 63 overs with Siziba scoring 103 runs, more than half the team’s score, while Midlands were 107 in reply at the close of play.New Midlands captain Dirk Viljoen won the toss and seemed to have made anunlikely decision when he sent the home side in to bat first. But his ployworked out as Matabeleland batsmen failed to utilize the flat pitch that isgood to bat on first.Matabeleland never recovered from an early loss of wickets, with most of their batsman failing to record double figures. Three of them went out without any runs on the board. Vice-captain and opening batsman Ryan King was the first to leave the filed of play when he was dismissed by Campbell McMillan, edging a ball into the slips where he was caught by an alert Sean Ervine, to depart for two runs.The visitor’s bowling attack tightened the noose and the home batsman couldnot withstand the pressure. Keith Dabengwa, one of the new faces in the squad, departed without scoring when he was trapped leg before wicket by James Kornford. Kornford claimed his second and last wicket when he dismissed Mecury Kenny, who was caught at first slip by Viljoen for 22 runs. Siziba and Gregory Strydom put on 21 runs for the fourth wicket before Strydom departed for eight, caught behind by wicketkeeper Colin Delport off the bowling of McMillan.Midlands introduced John Vaughan-Davies and the medium-pacer grabbed two quick wickets in the same over to leave Matabeleland reeling at 96 for six. He dismissed Mike McKillop and Gavin Ewing in the same style in the 29th over, leg before wicket. McKillop managed only eight runs while Ewing went out without scoring.Siziba and Warren Gilmour put some life into the home side’s innings, putting up 61 runs for the seventh wicket until Gilmour was caught at mid-wicket by Ervine off the bowling of Viljoen for 29 runs. Captain Colin Williams failed to live up to expectations as he went out for a duck, offering Viljoen a simple catch off his own bowling.Siziba was the last man to go when he was dismissed by Davies, caught behindby Delport, to end his fine performance, which saw him smash 12 fours.Vaughan-Davies was the pick of the Midlands bowlers, taking four for 38 injust seven overs. McMillan, Viljoen and Kornford grabbed two wickets each.In reply, Midlands lost Luther Mutyambizi who was trapped leg before wicket for nine and Craig Grant who was clean bowled by Ewing.Matabeleland manager Derrick Townshend admitted that his side did not get itright from the start but was optimistic that they would come back and win the match. He said the batting was a big let-down but Siziba’s feat was a remarkable one, though he ran out of partners.

A new low for West Indies cricket

A few weeks ago, after their first innings of 82 in the First Test at Brisbane, I remember suggesting that the West Indies should have been sent home.There were two distinct replies to my suggestion, from either side of the world. I will say this in my defence. Had the team gone home then, the embarrassments that we saw on the second day of this Test would have been avoided: the cricket shown by the West Indies on day two was putrid, at best.The Australian supporters, who wanted to see their team surpass the then West Indian consecutive winning record, rebuked me for such a suggestion. They knew that the West Indians were on to a terrible hiding. One did not have to be a soothsayer to know that the writing was already on the wall. The Australian supporters knew their team would never have this kind of chance again.From across the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans, and the Caribbean Sea, came the retort that perhaps “Colin Croft should emigrate to Australia, since he does not know what he was saying. Our boys will bounce back.”That sort of blind faith has allowed many people to lose much in the past.I even had some supposedly important people associated with West Indies cricket saying publicly, but indirectly, that “one of our former West Indian cricketers, a former fast bowler, is never positive about our team, since we know that the team would come out of its slump while on the Australian tour.”If I could be as sure with my lottery numbers as I was that the WestIndies should have been sent home then, then I would be so rich that I would not have to endure such abuse for being one of the few really honest sports journalists around.The West Indies cricket team on this tour has been so outplayed that even some of the team’s officials have deluded themselves into believing that their charges are better than they have shown. Maybe they are, but that does not show at all.I am sure of at least one other thing. Had the team been sent home then, they would not have been involved in what I call “negative history”; being involved, on the losing side, of so many landmarks. Already, the West Indies have scored 22 zeros on this tour, and not all by the tail-enders.Another piece of “negative history” is looming. If the West Indies lose this game at the MCG – which is likely – then they are in danger of becoming the first West Indies team to travel to Australia and not to win a Test. The West Indies started touring Australia in 1931/2.There is an old saying I had heard in my youth: “you can fool everyone some of the time, or some of the people all of the time. However, one cannot fool one’s self.” It is my opinion that a few of the West Indian team officials are fooling themselves.This West Indies cricket team has more officials than any I have ever known on tour. While there is a Manager, whose job should not necessarily include many cricketing matters, this team also has a coach in Roger Harper, an assistant coach in Jeff Dujon and a fielding coach, in Julian Fountain. Now, if anyone wants to tell me that the team looks as if they are benefiting from the presence of these supposed experts, then maybe they can tell me the lottery numbers too?The technical deficiencies are appalling. The fast bowlers, again except the “great” Courtney Walsh, seem unable to pitch on a constant line or length. To allow Australia to recover from 225-7, and 295-7 at the close of the first day, to realise 364, even with the considerable input from Steve Waugh, defies any explanation. While Waugh was truly brilliant with his 121 not out, he did not even try to corral the bowling, but allowed his “tailenders,” Gillespie, Miller and even McGrath to blast the continually wayward bowling everywhere.One has to assume that either the younger West Indies fast bowlers were not listening to either the captain or the coaches, or that they decided to act otherwise.Then the West Indies batsmen, especially the senior ones, showed their lack of technical assets, as if they too did not understand the idea of the game, or were simply not up to it.Darren Ganga drove a Jason Gillespie delivery pitched outside the off-stump with his left foot just outside the leg-stump. Anyone who knows about batting knows that could not be the right technique. I am here to suggest to you that McGrath, Gillespie and to a lesser Andy Bichel, know something about bowling. Unlike the West Indian bowlers, they knew exactly the length to bowl on the still excellent pitch for batting.Wavell Hinds drove at a delivery, as did Brian Lara and the well-organised Ridley Jacobs, with their weight on the back foot. The deliveries that dismissed them were pitched up a bit more, getting enough time to move from the seam to take the edges and to fly to the brilliant slip fieldsmen.At least the normally reliable Jacobs could be proud of his new West Indian record, snaring seven catches. This equals the world record held by Wasim Bari, Ian Smith and Bob Taylor. For one, I feel very happy about this, as I remember suggesting back in 1995, when Jacobs had made his One-Day International debut, that he should have made his Test debut then. Many thought that I was mad then too!Marlon Samuels showed best how it should be done. Again playing within his limitations, his innings was a technical gem, the poise unbecoming of one so inexperienced and so young.One commentator suggested that Samuels never played with “his head moving.” A “still” head, as opposed to a “steady” head, is necessary for proper stroke-play. Another suggested that he did not play much outside his off-stump. Yet the young man took on the Australian bowling and in a way, won. One could only hope that the West Indies could try, for once, to emulate the youngster. This guy is going to be very special.What was glaringly evident though, Samuels apart, is that the entire West Indies cricketing effort has fallen down, especially the batting, and, ironically, this is a team that has three specific coaches, more than any other team in the history of West Indian cricket.On no occasion in recent times could it be said that the West Indies have put in such a poor effort overall – bowling and batting – in just one day of cricket. It was really embarrassing: a new low!

Celtic: Johnny Kenny suffers injury with Ireland’s U19

Celtic forward Johnny Kenny had to be stretched off with what appeared to be a knee problem in Ireland’s U19 clash with England, The Irish Examiner report.  

The Lowdown: Kenny’s struggles

Kenny was one of five January arrivals at Parkhead, joining from Sligo Rovers in a deal worth an initial £135,000.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/celtic-updates-23/” title=”Celtic updates!!” poster=”” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

The 18-year-old is yet to make a senior appearance for the Hoops, though, and has had to overcome multiple setbacks since moving to Glasgow.

Kenny had to recover from an injury earlier this year and was also required to follow isolation protocols, eventually scoring on his Celtic B debut earlier this month.

The Latest: Stretchered off

As reported by The Irish Examiner, Kenny was forced off in the first half for Ireland’s U19s against England.

The forward needed to be stretched off after colliding with Matthew Cox and was seen holding his knee.

The Verdict: Nightmare

Kenny has been extremely unfortunate since moving to Celtic, and it seems as if this setback could be the worst of the lot, considering the stretcher was required.

The teenager was looking lively before his collision with Cox, striking the post early on, with The Irish Examiner describing him as a ‘livewire’.

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This update will also come as bad news for Ange Postecoglou, who already has concerns over Daizen Maeda and Tom Rogic during the international break, with Kenny now added to the ever-mounting list of problems during this two-week interval.

In other news: Liverpool move for Celtic youngster now set to collapse; Parkhead deal imminent. 

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