Leeds handed Gonzalo Plata blow

Leeds United appear to have been handed a blow in their pursuit of Sporting CP winger Gonzalo Plata.

The Lowdown: Leeds links

The Whites have been name-checked with an interest in the 21-year-old this month as the club look to bolster their wide ranks.

Jack Harrison and Raphinha have been linked with Elland Road exits, which has resulted in Leeds looking at the Ecuador international, described as ‘super’ by journalist Sam Tighe.

Plata, who actually shares the same agency as six Whites players, spent last season on loan at Real Valladolid in Spain’s second tier, helping them finish second and earn promotion back to La Liga.

The Latest: Transfer update

MOT Leeds News relayed an update from Monday morning’s edition of Portuguese newspaper O Jogo regarding Plata.

They claimed that a sale is now complicated after Plata suffered an injury for Ecuador against Cape Verde and left in an ambulance.

The report adds that the winger could be injured for two months which would make it difficult for Leeds or any other interested side to seal a move until mid-August.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/latest-leeds-united-updates-4/” title=”Latest Leeds United updates!” poster=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/cropped-2022-03-10T184055Z_1834933207_UP1EI3A1FW561_RTRMADP_3_SOCCER-ENGLAND-LEE-AVA-REPORT-1-scaled-1.jpg” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

The Verdict: Not a priority right now

A move for Plata shouldn’t be viewed as a priority at this moment in time. Leeds have already brought in Brenden Aaronson and Rasmus Kristensen and are now looking to land defensive midfielder Marc Roca.

Should they sign the Bayern Munich man, another central midfielder could still be required after Manchester City launched a bid for Kalvin Phillips.

A centre-forward also seems needed following Patrick Bamford’s injury problems last season, so although Leeds have been handed a blow in their pursuit of Plata, it shouldn’t be viewed as a disaster at this moment in time.

In other news: ‘Sky Sports has been told…’ – Live TV update emerges involving 113-goal star; Leeds mentioned. 

Spiers drops key Neves claim

Reliable journalist Tim Spiers believes Ruben Neves could yet be torn over whether or not to leave Wolves this summer, after hearing his words on Sunday.

The Lowdown: Neves’ final game?

Wanderers were beaten 3-1 away to Liverpool on Sunday afternoon, producing a good performance at Anfield on a dramatic final day of the Premier League season.

Neves started in the middle of the park, making his 33rd league appearance in an excellent campaign, in what may end up being his last-ever game for Wanderers.

The 25-year-old has been continually linked with a summer move to Barcelona and his head may have been turned by their interest, with reports even claiming it’s a move that’s ‘destined’ to happen, but Spiers has shared a possible late twist…

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/all-the-latest-from-wolves-6/” title=”All the latest from Wolves!” poster=”” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=“none”]

The Latest: Twist in the tale?

Taking to Twitter after the Liverpool game, Spiers said that it could yet be an emotional issue for the player after hearing what he had to say:

“Neves says nothing decided but mentioned twice that careers are short and dreams need to be lived. ‘I don’t know how it’s going to be. If it was my last game it was really important.’ Clearly would be a wrench to leave. His affection for Wolves and the city is genuine.”

[freshpress-poll id=“388780″]

The Verdict: More likely to leave

While it would be heartwarming to see Neves stay on at Molineux beyond this season, it still feels highly likely to he will find another club this summer, likely one that plays in red and blue in Catalonia.

At 25, he is coming into the absolute peak years of his career and he may simply feel that he has come as far as he can in a Wolves shirt, following five memorable years at the club.

If Neves does leave, he could be remembered as one of the best midfielders to ever play for the club, possessing such wonderful technique and also helping the club return to the Premier League.

In other news, Wolves are reportedly eyeing up a move for an exciting defender. Find out who it is here.

Tottenham: Italian paper breaks big Barak transfer development

Italian newspaper Corriere di Verona have now shared a big transfer development out of Tottenham Hotspur involving target Antonin Barak, who they believe is the perfect fit for an Antonio Conte team.

The Lowdown: Conte eyes move…

As Spurs gear up for their highly-anticipated Premier League clash with Arsenal this evening, a make or break encounter which may well determine who is playing Champions League football, it appears transfer activity is still very much alive behind-the-scenes.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/tottenham-newest-updates/” title=”Tottenham newest updates…” poster=”” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

Czech Republic international Barak, for example, has been of serious interest to Spurs according to reports in recent days.

Earlier this week, outlet Mondo Udinese.it shared news that Lilywhites head coach Conte is personally prepared to convince the attacker to join his side this summer in a ‘sensational deal’.

Now, in an update, it appears the Italian has now given his green-light for whole club to pursue a deal for Barak.

The Latest: Italian newspaper break Barak development…

As per Corriere di Verona (via Sport Witness), the former Chelsea coach has personally ‘asked’ Spurs to bid for the 27-year-old who is ‘tailor-made’ for his side.

This comes as Barak’s move away from the Marcantonio Bentegodi Stadium is ‘almost certain’ this summer, but the 6 foot 3 star’s club want around €25 million (£21m) and even hope to exceed that number.

The Verdict: Tailor-made indeed

Barak is perhaps one of the more underrated players in Serie A and we believe £21m would be a more-than fair asking price.

Lauded as ‘phenomenal’ for his international performances by members of the press, he has stood out as one of Hellas’ most crucial players – racking up 11 goals and four assists from midfield over 2021/2022.

Barak also stands out as their third-best star overall going by average match rating and is just about to enter his prime, potentially backing how he could be real value for money if Spurs were to advance with a bid.

In other news: Reliable source: Tottenham agreement now ‘very likely’ as Conte closes in on ‘top signing’, find out more here.

The irony of Shadman's rise to the top

Always under the radar in Bangladesh because his style of play isn’t as flashy as some of the others’, the opener has arrived in international cricket with the potential to go big

Mohammad Isam in Dhaka30-Nov-2018It had only been a few hours since Shadman Islam had made 73 against the West Indians in the practice game. But the news was already out. He had made the Bangladesh Test side. It was the final confirmation that the coach Steve Rhodes and selectors Minhajul Abedin and Habibul Bashar believed in his ability. He would be the back-up opener.Soumya Sarkar failed in the first Test in Chattogram. So did Imrul Kayes, who then picked up shoulder and toe injuries as well. Bangladesh needed a new opener and Shadman was there. The eighth debutant in a year when they have played only eight Tests.The onus was on the 23-year-old to make the most of his chance. Although he was the top-scorer of the Under-19 World Cup in 2014, some of his peers from that tournament – Imam-ul-Haq, Aiden Markram, Kusal Mendis, Liton Das – had overtaken him onto the international stage. He needed to catch up.Shadman certainly looked the part on his first day as a Test cricketer, going to lunch on 36 not out, with three sweetly-timed fours. More than that, he had batted without being overwhelmed by the fact that he was facing an attack that had caused several Bangladesh batting collapses in the recent past.Shadman struck three more fours in the post-lunch session, one of which brought up his half-century, and by the time he was finally dismissed, he had played 199 deliveries, the most for any Bangladesh debutant in the last 15 years.”It felt good,” Shadman said. “Everyone has a dream to play for their country. I tried to give my best for the team, and although I couldn’t fulfill expectations, I will try to do it in the future.”There’s no real regret [of not reaching a century]. I think everyone wants a century on debut. I tried to bat the way it was best for the team. I couldn’t finish the day properly. I felt I should have been around for longer.”Shadman is an old-fashioned opener. He has made most of his 3023 first-class runs by concentrating on his defence. And that is what he did against West Indies as well.”I didn’t think much more than trying to play to the merit of the ball, like the way I have played in domestic cricket,” he said. “I think the practice match helped me. I got an idea about their bowlers. My plan for the practice match also worked here. [My senior team-mates] are more experienced than me, so they kept telling me that I should do only what I do best, like I bat in domestic cricket. They told me to not try anything extra. You have trusted your natural game, so stay that way.”Shadman became a contender for higher honours in 2014-15, when he accumulated 1,323 runs at 55.12 in both four-day and one-day cricket. He’s had a good time in recent Dhaka Premier League seasons as well, averaging 47.00 in 2017 and 46.20 in 2018, and his chart-topping numbers – 680 runs at 64.80 – in the ongoing National Cricket League made sure he couldn’t be ignored by the national selectors anymore.Ironically enough, the reason behind his success is also the reason behind his taking so long to come to prominence. His steady approach to run-making goes under the radar when compared to some of the other, flashier talents in Bangladesh. But now that he has made good of his first opportunity at the highest level, Shadman certainly has the potential to catch up with the Under-19 class of 2014. His father – Shahidul, who has been a longtime talent scout for the BCB – made sure of that.”My father definitely has an influence in my life. When I was a kid, used to take me to all the U-15 and U-17 camps. I tried to prepare myself in academy and school cricket like my father guided me.”He supported my cricket a lot. He still tells me how to play, how to set my life as a cricketer. I try to keep myself that way.”Shadman could have easily sulked over his lack of opportunities. He could have been lost in Bangladesh’s rapidly shifting domestic cricket system. But he seems to possess patience, a very important characteristic for a cricketer, especially for one in this part of the world.

Imrul accepts Willey's gift

Plays of the day from the first ODI between Bangladesh and England

Mohammad Isam at Mirpur07-Oct-2016The early breakSoumya Sarkar was marking his position at deep square-leg in the first over despite the fact some 30 minutes earlier at the toss, Mashrafe had confirmed that Soumya had been dropped for the first time in his international career, making way for Imrul Kayes. The confusion ended when it was noticed that Taskin Ahmed was missing among the fielders. He had apparently taken a comfort break, which meant that he missed the first two overs of the innings. There was no problem in making up time as he only came to bowl in the 25th over.The cheekBen Duckett lived up to his billing with his 60 in his debut innings, although Ben Stokes’ strokeplay at times made you forget that another bright left-hander was at the other end. But Duckett did have his moments during their 153-run fifth wicket stand, and one of them came in the 27th over when he shimmied towards off stump to lift the fast bowler Taskin Ahmed over the wicketkeeper’s head for a boundary. The newcomer’s presence of mind was laudable.The first dropWhen Stokes slammed one towards mid-on in the 31st over, here was Bangladesh’s chance for a major breakthrough. Stokes and Duckett had added 108 runs to that point and a wicket could had stopped Bangladesh’s sliding fortunes. Instead, Mahmudullah dropped a straightforward chance off the Stokes bunt and the home side’s fielding disintegrated. The ball was struck hard but it was right into Mahmudullah’s lap after he made a little ground to his right. Unfortunately, his fall to complete the catch resulted in the ball getting out of his control.The last strawThe Bangladesh bowlers didn’t offer much more than a scowl after Mahmudullah and Mosharraf Hossain managed to drop three chances between them, and catches fell between fielders twice. But Taskin had had enough when Tamim Iqbal and Mosaddek Hossain made a royal mess of a skier in the 49th over. Miscommunication was to be blamed as Mosaddek, who had the catch within his reach, didn’t go for it. Taskin screamed in anger, as his bowling stint ended wicketless.The hole in oneImrul’s intent was shown straight away when he deposited Chris Woakes into the stands at deep square leg. It was so well struck, that the ball got lodged into an advertising hoarding on the second level of the grandstand. A volunteer needed to climb up and fetch the ball, which took some finding. He took delight in doing so, while Woakes waited for the retrieval.The (other) captain’s approvalAs David Willey was sizing up a fiercely struck pull from Sabbir Rahman at deep midwicket, England’s Test captain Alastair Cook was standing nearby over the boundary rope. Willey completed the juggling act brilliantly, converting the half-chance into a timely breakthrough and removing Sabbir. Cook, meanwhile, was still standing in his spot but now he was celebrating with a clenched fist and a grin in his face.The freebieImrul batted splendidly until he had reached 98 off 104 balls, at which point Willey literally gifted him the hundred with four overthrows that, while close to effecting a run-out as he struck the stumps, could have been avoided. Willey undid a bit of his good work on the boundary to get rid of Sabbir. Imrul meanwhile was relieved to reach the landmark, his first in ODIs after six years.The missed sitterImrul’s first life, as such, was in the 40th over when the England captain and wicketkeeper Jos Buttler dropped a sitter off his top edge. Imrul was getting tired at this stage and when Jake Ball had bounced him, the attempted pull was a weak attempt. But what was even weaker was Buttler’s attempted grab, as he dropped the ball while trying to appeal for the caught behind.

Bangladesh wilt after Pakistan's 557

07-May-2015Asad Shafiq arrived early on the second morning and eased to his half-century off 79 balls•AFPThe two of them were responsible for the second 200-plus stand of the innings as Pakistan surged towards 500•AFPAzhar, having been cautious early on, opened up and collected his first double-century in Tests well before tea. He was eventually dismissed for 226•AFPShafiq became the third man to record triple-figures in the innings, making 107, as Pakistan amassed 557•AFPJunaid Khan reinforced Pakistan’s advantage by removing Tamim Iqbal in the first over•AFPImrul Kayes produced a brisk 32, but fell victim to Yasir Shah’s third delivery of the match as Bangladesh slumped to 107 for 5 by stumps•AFP

Abdulla's silent redemption

After two poor seasons and repeated axings, Iqbal Abdulla has returned in style for Mumbai

Amol Karhadkar in Mumbai07-Jan-2014Halfway into 2011, Iqbal Abdulla was feeling on top of the world. The left-arm spinner had been picked for the India A tour of England in 2010, and then won the BCCI’s best allrounder award for the 2010-11 Ranji Trophy season, in which he scored nearly 400 runs, including a maiden first-class century, and took 27 wickets.The trajectory of Abdulla’s young career then took an abrupt turn for the worse. A torrid 2011-12 Ranji Trophy campaign, in which he took just 13 wickets in six matches, led to him being dropped from the Mumbai team. He struggled with being labeled a limited-overs specialist, and whispers of Abdulla having been led astray by IPL glitz started doing the rounds.The following season did nothing to help Abdulla’s cause. With Mumbai in a must-win position in their last league game against Madhya Pradesh, Abdulla dropped a regulation catch, which almost led to their exit from the tournament, that too in a televised match. Mumbai left him out of the knockouts and won the Ranji Trophy.All this while Abdulla, who had moved to Mumbai from Azamgarh district in Uttar Pradesh to pursue his passion, remained silent. Even after he was dumped from Mumbai’s squad despite returning match figures of 4 for 83 against Punjab, his only game of the season. Even after Mumbai selector Deepak Jadhav explained 42-year-old Pravin Tambe’s inclusion by saying Abdulla “hasn’t been bowling well”. Abdulla just kept working on his game.When he got his next opportunity, against Gujarat in Valsad, with Mumbai in another must-win situation in another final group match, Abdulla grabbed it. Two crucial thirties and 11 wickets won him Man of the Match and helped Mumbai sneak into the quarterfinals. Then, he opened up.”I always knew my performance would speak for me,” Abdulla said ahead of Mumbai’s quarterfinal against Maharashtra. “A lot of things have been said. There have been many
who criticised me and many who stood by me as well. I don’t think I deserved to be dropped after the Punjab game, but I just kept on doing what I have always done. Thank god the rewards have followed.”When asked if he had analysed the downturn after the high of 2010-11, Abdulla said it wasn’t the result of bad bowling. “It wasn’t as if I was trying too many things,” he said. “It was just that the wickets were so flat that (2011-12) season that no spinner could have an impact. Even Ramesh (Powar), who was the senior spinner, could hardly pick up wickets.”Did focusing on limited-overs cricket make him a defensive bowler? “Many people felt that way,” Abdulla said. “Even Padmakar Shivalkar sir, who was the chief selector then, told me I was dropped because I was bowling too flat. But all I have been doing is backing myself all along. I have always bowled according to conditions and that’s what has worked for me more often than not.”Flighting the ball in helpful conditions in Valsad, Abdulla displayed he had it in him to succeed by bowling classical left-arm spin. If he can continue in the same vein at the Wankhede Stadium over the next five days, he will have done a world of good not just for himself but also for Mumbai’s quest for their 41st title.

Fire and intelligence from Australia quicks

Australia’s young fast bowlers used the help available from a spicy pitch better than their England counterparts

George Binoy in Townsville11-Aug-2012They did not break stumps in half, like Reece Topley did, nor were any of them the quickest – Jamie Overton was – but the Australia Under-19 fast bowlers won the day against England in Townsville. Given first use of a spicy pitch at the Tony Ireland Stadium, Joel Paris, Mark Steketee and Gurinder Sandhu made intelligent use of it: bowling with impressive pace and accuracy, which they were able to sustain through long spells.There was a nippy wind blowing across the open ground; Paris was bowling with it, while Steketee ran into it. They both had success in their first overs and built on it by denying England easy scoring opportunities. Sandhu’s parents had been among the first to find seats in the grandstand before the start of play but they had to wait until the end of the first hour to watch him bowl. Paris and Steketee carried on for seven overs each, taking three wickets and applying pressure from both ends.And when Sandhu came on in the 15th over, he bowled unchanged until the 29th, taking 2 for 24 in his first eight overs. In the final over of that spell, Sandhu got a ball to rise quickly from short of a length and smack into Overton’s shoulder. The unyielding hostility at one end also helped the offspinner Ashton Turner at the other and his three wickets were instrumental in ensuring England failed to score enough.”Not really,” said Sandhu, when asked if the eight-over spell had tired him. “It wasn’t too hot. There was a fair breeze so I didn’t really get a sweat up that much to be honest. It wasn’t too tough.”It wasn’t tough because Sandhu, Paris and Steketee, are extremely fit young athletes. Former Australia fast-bowling coach Craig McDermott, who’s assisting the Under-19 coach Stuart Law in Townsville, worked with Sandhu for last 10 weeks, with Paris over the last two years, and with Steketee since he was 14. He places a premium on fitness.”I think all young bowlers need to be able to bowl seven or eight or nine-over spells, if needed,” McDermott said. “If you are bowling well, and you are on top of the batsmen, the captain has to have the ability to be able to keep bowling you. The fitter they are, the more regularly they can execute the ball in the right spot and hold their actions.”What the Australian pace trio did especially well today was to not get carried away on a pitch that was pacier and bouncier than McDermott thought it would be. They bowled a full length, got the ball to move – Paris and Steketee’s first wickets were with inswingers – and used the bouncer primarily to mix things up.Sandhu, more than the other two, has the tall, strapping physique to try and intimidate at an age when muscular strength makes a bigger difference than it does a few years later. He didn’t fall prey to the temptation, though, and finished with 3 for 27 in 9.3 overs.”I think if you stick to the line and length that you have, fourth-stump line, good length as well, I reckon it’s pretty tough to play no matter what sort of conditions. Batsmen don’t really know if they have to go hard at it or leave it alone,” Sandhu said. “[The bouncer is] just a variation. Not too many short balls in a row. Your stock ball has to be a good-length ball on fourth stump, and then the odd one at the nose.”McDermott called Sandhu an “exciting prospect” for the future. “He has got some good skills – slower-ball bouncers and good finishing skills … he is a good death bowler, there’s not a lot of those around in Australia.”The plan Australia bowled to today is from McDermott’s coaching manual, for he had drilled the full-length discipline into the senior Australian bowlers with success as well.”Keep it simple, keep the ball up. The fuller you can bowl the more chance you have of getting the ball to swing or nip back off the seam,” McDermott said. “It’s a big focus of ours, mixed in with some bouncers. I think we bowled well on a wicket that you could get carried away and try and bowl too short.”I think, towards the end, England actually bowled a bit too short. I think if they had kept the ball up more, they would have troubled our batsmen more and possibly won the game. It’s not an age problem. It’s just something that the pace bowlers who don’t know how to bowl on those sort of wickets get carried away with.”McDermott said he’d been led to believe the pitch for the next game against Nepal could be faster and bouncier than today’s was. And apart from Paris, Steketee and Sandhu, Australia have another well-built fast bowler in their squad, who did not play today – Harry Conway.

Mohammad Asif: A master strategist

In each and every spell of Mohammad Asif’s there remains a threat, a leg-before appeal, a play and a miss, an edge. He carries the sense every ball that something very clever he has been working on is just about to, or has almost come off

Osman Samiuddin at the SCG03-Jan-2010Time can really be a bastard. The last time I met Mohammad Asif properly for an interview, he was confident, full of wit and supreme in his own art. That was just before the England series of 2006, which now qualifies as another age of Pakistan cricket. Probably it was another life for him.We spoke again briefly just before this New Year’s Test in Sydney because it was a five-year anniversary for him; he made his debut at this very ground, notable only for a few no-balls and an Adam Gilchrist spanking. He took a good catch at long-on and stuck around with bat, annoyingly like a Melbourne fly but little else. Pakistan lost, he was discarded, came back, conquered the world and then lost it.If the humour and bluster is still there, he doesn’t show it so readily now. He had a casual easy lope then, though it not looks more like a weary trudge. When he talks, he seems to first calculate what possible headline could be twisted out of what he has said and is, as a result, cagier and measured. I did a story once about his Dubai detention that upset him and he let me know it. That is the way, so he is understandably wary.Unsaid, it is nevertheless agreed we won’t talk about what, probably, most people want to hear about. We agree to look ahead and we tread carefully while doing it.***The one thing that hasn’t changed is the experience of watching him. I probably appreciate it more now. He remains as compelling as he was, though has he lost a little pace? He would hate to even talk about that for he is outside the faithful when it comes to pace.Elsewhere he is intact. The wrist is still loose and cut forthcoming from it. In Melbourne, he even got more out of the old ball. The appeal still has the suddenness and abruptness of a dance movement and becomes a persistent if he feels it is really tight. On the field he still smiles, beamingly for wickets and slyly for when something has just failed to come off.The brain most definitely is still ticking. In each and every spell of his there remains a threat, a leg-before appeal, a play and a miss, an edge. Like those legspinners Shane Warne and Abdul Qadir, to close watchers he carries the sense every ball that something very clever he has been working on is just about to, or has almost come off.In Melbourne, he was at the center of attempts to deny Shane Watson a hundred in the second innings. A simple plan was devised and I half-suspect he had something to do with it. An 8-1 field was set and over after over passed by as maidens of temptation, the ball hung out well wide of Watson’s off stump and swinging away. Watson broke a couple of times, but all went on unscathed for nearly an hour before lunch. Then in the fourth over of Asif’s spell one came straighter and dipped in late. Watson tried to clip it, overbalanced and the ball missed leg stump by no more than an inch.The whole setup was so beautifully worked. He had drained Watson mentally, each ball a little water drop of Chinese torture. He then slipped one in when no one was prepared, the only straight ball in that entire passage. Consensus was that it was a poor ball and that Watson missed out on four. Watson probably believed the same. But that is to know nothing of Asif. Much like Verbal from , he had worked it from start to finish.

Few Pakistani bowlers have ever really played this game that Asif does. Wasim Akram’s mind was similarly sharp but his magic was unique. And he always had pace. Maybe Sarfraz Nawaz was like him, but went on like a bowler who thought he was quick. He got caught up often in bouncer wars and that isn’t always a thinking man’s game, especially at that pace. Asif doesn’t have the mind of that kind of fast bowler

***The grass was greener in Sydney this time.Few Pakistani bowlers have ever really played this game that Asif does. Wasim Akram’s mind was similarly sharp but his magic was unique. And he always had pace. Maybe Sarfraz Nawaz was like him, but went on like a bowler who thought he was quick. He got caught up often in bouncer wars and that isn’t always a thinking man’s game, especially at that pace. Asif doesn’t have the mind of that kind of fast bowler.He’s been strangely underestimated in Australia on this trip, strange given this is the land of Glenn McGrath. Mohammad Aamer was the star of Melbourne and he has the pace, the youth and freshness to excite everyone. Nobody forgets he is left-arm either. Mohammad Sami also has pace and his burst made for a great story here. But Asif? Since he is not quick, people often don’t get it. How can he be Pakistani and not quick?He set about Australia from the Paddington End in his second spell with the care and precision reserved for PhD theses. Michael Clarke was done in by a fast bowler’s googly. He had got him into driving the very first ball and for Asif, like spinners, that is victory. He kept doing it, mostly straightening the ball away. Eventually it came; same length, shape but straightening and the deed was done.Such plans were in place for his other victims. Essentially, he played on Michael Hussey’s patience, giving him less room than a taxi full of elephants, before he eventually cracked. Poor shot? Probably. Smart bowling? You bet. Marcus North didn’t know what hit him, saved by technology to one that came in and gone to one that kept going across. Brad Haddin thought he had an idea, stepping out to change the length and driving him, until Asif pulled one back a little more and Haddin drove anyway.The tail took swings at him but he had their fates already written. Time leaves some things untouched.

Rocchiccioli and Paris set up vital victory chance for Western Australia

The home side had a productive day amid stoppages as they push to get into the Shield final

AAP02-Mar-2024Western Australia 310 (Goodwin 115, Whiteman 79, Bartlett 5-64) and 16 for 0 lead Queensland 170 (Wildermuth 41, Rocchiccioli 4-54) by 156 runsWestern Australia’s bid for a hat-trick of Sheffield Shield titles was back on track after producing a sizzling bowling display against Queensland at the WACA Ground.In reply to WA’s competitive 310, Queensland were skittled for 170 in 54.5 overs in overcast and windy conditions on Saturday. WA reached 16 for 0 in their second innings before nearby lightning forced players off the ground late in the day.Related

  • Goodwin shines with maiden hundred as Bartlett also stars

  • Hughes shines but rain and bad light frustrate New South Wales' final bid

  • Webster flays spectacular hundred in record last-wicket stand

It capped a stop-start day in which rain interrupted play several times as Queensland slumped to 54 for 4 and 108 for 7 in the tricky conditions.Spinner Corey Rocchiccioli played a key role in cleaning up the tail, while Joel Paris continued his hot form with figures of 2 for 15 off 12 overs. Charlie Stobo and Cameron Gannon were also among the wickets.WA had slipped to third spot on the ladder after posting two draws and a loss from their previous three Shield encounters. But with second-placed Victoria on track for defeat against ladder leaders Tasmania, WA now have an excellent chance to soar into second spot ahead of the final round. WA take on Victoria at Junction Oval in the final round, meaning their fate will be in their own hands if they can secure victory here.Cameron Bancroft and Sam Whiteman will be aiming to form a big second-innings partnership when play resumes on Sunday.Queensland’s top order struggled in the overcast conditions, with Paris snaring the breakthrough when he found the edge of Bryce Street for a 14-ball duck. Gannon produced the highlight of the day when he pulled off a diving one-handed catch off his own bowling to dismiss Angus Lovell.Jack Clayton, Jimmy Peirson and Jack Wildermuth all made starts, but none was able to go on with the job as wickets fell at regular intervals.Queensland added 46 runs for their last two wickets, but WA were well and truly in the box seat with a lead of 156.