Shane Watson: 'In teams that focus on results instead of processes, players start playing for themselves'

In this extract from his new book, the former Australia allrounder looks at sides that allowed players to thrive and those that hung a fear of failure over their heads

Shane Watson05-Nov-2022Winning The Inner BattleThere are environments where the leaders talk about how big this game is, how important this game is, and say, “If we lose this game we are out.” I have been in plenty of these team environments. There are also environments where leaders talk about how performance in this game will dictate selection, and that underperformance might lead to players getting dropped. I have heard from leaders of a number of teams that I have played in say things like, “Spots are up for grabs in the game” or “If you don’t perform, you will get dropped.”So guess what people are thinking in those environments? “Don’t lose. I really need to perform today. I need to score runs. We need to win. Don’t get out. Don’t bowl badly. Don’t stuff up, otherwise I might be gone.” All of these focus on results and fear of failure.These environments can work for a shorter period of time, where fear of failure can drive individuals to be ready to lock in for one very important game. But these environments are not sustainable at all as stress and anxiety builds up to a point where the whole team implodes and I have been a part of these environments on a few occasions too. The telltale signs are that everyone starts to only play for themselves, for their individual spots, and as long as they do enough to get picked for the next game, they are happy. This always leads to an incredibly toxic team environment where the enjoyment factor of playing the game that you love evaporates and it turns into every person for themselves. We should be doing all that we can to do the opposite of this, as the best and most successful team environments always have a fun and enjoyment aspect to them as a very important undercurrent to all that they do.Other environments I have been a part of are ones where there is a clear focus on the process and leaders ask the players to just bring the best version of themselves every time and to do it over and over again. They reiterate that if we all do this, we give ourselves the best chance of coming out on top. This is exactly what a championship mindset looks like!This is what made Ricky Ponting such a good captain. He always said to the team in the lead-up to big games that the team whose individuals do the basics better and for longer will be the team that will come out on top. It focused our minds on the process, on doing the basics, controlling the A factors.

After the retirement of Ponting and Hussey, the Australian team drifted significantly. Players, myself included, began to look over our shoulders. I wasn’t able to direct my thoughts to consistently bring the best version of myself into every performance

Paddy Upton for Rajasthan Royals built a process-driven environment that took all of the anxiety and stress out of a very pressurised tournament where performance and results were so important. The other team environment where this was done incredibly well was at Chennai Super Kings in the IPL under captain MS Dhoni and coach Stephen Fleming. I never heard either of them say, “We need to win this game today”, or “If you don’t score runs today or take wickets, you will be getting dropped.”My second year with CSK really stuck with me. There was no chopping and changing in selection. In other teams I had been with, players were turned over constantly. If a player didn’t perform for a couple of games, selectors would think he wasn’t good enough and would replace him immediately. This meant that everyone started looking over their shoulders and thinking, “Gosh, if I don’t perform in a couple of games, then I could be gone too.”No matter who we are, we are always going to have times in our lives where we are in a “results-focused” environment. By understanding the mental-skills framework in this book, we know that this is the opposite of where we want to be mentally for us to be at our best both individually and collectively. We need to listen to what is being said by the leaders in this environment and we need to redirect their words ourselves to say, “I am not going to let their results focus influence the correct mindset I need for me to be at my best.” This can be much easier said than done when players are being chopped and changed from one game to the next without any rhyme or reason, apart from someone not performing in one game. But understanding this will be a powerful tool for you to use throughout your life to ensure a negative environment doesn’t infiltrate your thinking and pull you out of your high-performance mindset.I’ve been a victim of a negative team environment. After the retirement of Ricky Ponting and Mike Hussey, the Australian team drifted significantly. Pressure to perform began to affect confidence and consistency. Players, myself included, began to look over our shoulders. I didn’t have knowledge of the mental skills I needed to redirect my thoughts to the right things at the right times to consistently bring the best version of myself into every performance, instead of being overcome with fear and overwhelmed by a need for results, which saw my performances go downhill throughout that time. And this was all at a time where I was in my prime, performing really well in the IPL in an incredibly enjoyable, process-driven team environment. But as soon as I went back into this other environment, my kryptonite, my performances started to tank again and the enjoyment factor of playing the game that I loved evaporated very quickly.When Watson was able to let go of the negative mindset that gripped the team, he was able to play with freedom and the results automatically followed•Craig Golding/AFP/Getty ImagesMy last three months with the Australia T20 team from early January 2016 through to the T20 World Cup in India was another example of one of those environments. We played India in a three-match T20 International series, where the selectors picked a really big squad and chopped and changed the team significantly from game to game, and then this flowed on to a T20 series in South Africa before we headed to India for the T20 World Cup. The conversations and actions around the group from the leaders – that being the coach, captain, selectors – were consistent messaging like, “All spots are up for grabs if you want to play in the T20 World Cup” and “You need to perform in this game as you might only have one opportunity to press your claim.”As soon as I heard and saw this, I immediately acknowledged in my own mind what this ridiculous situation was creating. This time I opted out. I knew the importance of preparation and focus. The result was that I bowled as well as I had in T20 cricket for Australia, played one of the games of my life at the SCG as captain, and retired at the end of the T20 World Cup as the No. 1 T20I allrounder in the world.Surprise surprise, we lost to India in the quarter final knockout game. We left a few runs on the table and didn’t execute that well with the ball against an Indian team that had barely changed their XI from the first game that we played against them during the series in Australia, three months before.But the attitudes I saw in that T20 World Cup are everywhere. I saw it recently in a game of junior cricket. The result of the match was important as a place in the grand final was riding on it. A number of the parents had really built this game up as being a knockout game and had stressed to the kids how important it was to win to make the final. Then one of the calmest kids in the team went out to bat with two overs to go and one of the parents said, “Don’t get out, otherwise we will lose” as he walked out to bat. And guess what happened. This poor young kid ended up getting out, and because of all of the build-up of importance for this game by the parents and kids around him, the calmest child on the field lost the plot, throwing their gear everywhere in disappointment of letting the team down. It was so sad to see and something that should never happen if the parents around the team simply understood the fundamentals of how to create the optimal environment. Reinforcement of the correct mindset would then filter down to all of the young kids.It is so easy to allow the “live or die by results” environment to infiltrate your mindset and start to corrupt it. It is easy to start to move your thinking to fear of failure and how important it is to perform and get the results. But by understanding all of the mental skills in this book, you will be armed with all that you need to be mentally tough enough to create a super-strong cocoon around yourself, to just direct your thoughts to continually creating your optimal mental environment to bring the best version of you, no matter what team environment that you are in.We need to do all that we can in our power to help with creating the best team environment possible, so that individuals don’t have to feel like they are rebelling against the team leadership just to stay process-driven, to bring their best A game possible, game in game out. I’m convinced that more and more teams should be open to allowing players to manage their own mental and physical preparation. Everyone is different; everyone comes to know what best suits them; just as a lot of cricket is individual, so should a lot of the preparation be too. Understanding this will create so many more high-performing team environments, higher-performing individuals and most importantly, much more enjoyable team environments too, so that we never lose the fun and joy that we get playing the game that we love.Alex Malcolm, an associate editor at ESPNcricinfo, was involved in the editing of the book.

Man Utd likely to have £35m bid accepted to sign their new Rashford

Pre-season preparations get underway on Monday, although the transfer train has ground to a halt as far as Manchester United are concerned, with Matheus Cunha still the only senior addition this summer – excluding £7m teenager, Diego Leon.

A key crux of the issue appears to be the club’s inability to shift the ‘deadwood’, with manager Ruben Amorim reportedly frustrated at the failure to sell United’s exiled stars, namely Jadon Sancho, Alejandro Garnacho, Antony and Marcus Rashford.

That quartet, alongside Tyrell Malacia, have been granted permission to enjoy an extended break, rather than link up with the rest of the squad, with all parties still hopeful of sealing an exit ahead of next season.

Bridges appear to have been burned with almost all of those high-profile figures, none more so than Rashford, with the Englishman still seemingly dreaming of sealing a summer switch to Barcelona.

Should those raft of forwards – including the 27-year-old academy graduate – all be shipped off, it would only further heighten the need for replacements. With that in mind, a potential opening has presented itself to director of football, Jason Wilcox.

The latest on Man Utd's search for a striker

A new name emerged this week amid United’s centre-forward search, with reports indicating that contact has been made regarding a possible move for Aston Villa talisman, Ollie Watkins.

Reportedly available for £60m, the 29-year-old would prove a ready-made solution for the Red Devils, having hit double figures for goals in each of his five Premier League seasons at Villa Park.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

As reported by The Mirror, however, the England international isn’t the only option on Wilcox’s striker shortlist, with the club also considering a move for Chelsea’s Christopher Nkunku.

According to the report, United have been offered the chance to sign the 27-year-old for a knock-down price of £35m, with the former RB Leipzig man deemed to be surplus to requirements, amid the signings of Liam Delap and Joao Pedro at Stamford Bridge.

As the piece also notes, the prospect of a swap deal involving the aforementioned Garnacho had been floated, although the Blues are more likely to consider a straight sale instead as they seek to balance the books.

Why Nkunku could be another Rashford for Amorim

If United were targeting the Nkunku of two years ago, there would be undoubted excitement at Old Trafford, with the Frenchman having joined the west Londoners after registering 126 goal involvements in just 172 games at Leipzig.

The man who once hit 35 goals in all competitions in 2021/22 hasn’t been seen in English football, however, with the one-time Paris Saint-Germain man having been unable to recover from an injury-hit start to life at the Bridge.

Struck down with a knee issue during pre-season in the summer of 2023, Nkunku has since gone on to start just 11 Premier League games across the last two campaigns combined, scoring just six top-flight goals in total in that time.

A particular issue has been his inability to nail down a consistent role for himself under Mauricio Pochettino and Enzo Maresca, having operated off the left, as a number ten or as a central striker to date – all with little success.

That question mark over whether he is best out wide or centrally is one that has also plagued Rashford, with the United outcast recently stating that he is finding it “more natural” to play as a number nine, despite Amorim’s prior claim that such a role “is not the best one for him”.

2024/25*

24

7

3

2023/24

43

8

6

2022/23

56

30

11

2021/22

32

5

2

2020/21

57

21

18

Rashford is currently out in the cold under the Portuguese coach, having not featured for the Old Trafford side since sitting out the Manchester Derby back in December, with his 30-goal heroics in 2022/23 now looking like a distant memory.

Amorim, and those at United, are seemingly in need of a fresh start without the £300k-per-week man onboard, with there likely to be concern that Nkunku could provide a similarly expensive problem, considering his own £195k-per-week salary.

Interestingly too, Rashford and Nkunku were noted as statistically similar players in the Premier League in 2024/25, as per FBref, with that likeness perhaps a key reason why such a move should be avoided.

Yes, the Nkunku of 2023 would be a worthy Watkins alternative, but the same could very much be said of the Rashford of 2023, in contrast to the one of the present. For both men, it looks like their best days could already be behind them.

Worth more than Gyokeres: Man Utd face Elanga 2.0 as terms agreed for exit

Manchester United look set to offload a player who has failed to impress at Old Trafford.

ByEthan Lamb Jul 4, 2025

Zimbabwe's 344 for 4 breaks the record for highest T20 total

Sikandar Raza became the country’s first T20I centurion, reaching the mark in 33 balls

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Oct-2024Zimbabwe shattered the record for the highest total in T20 cricket on Wednesday when they ran up 344 for 4 against Gambia in the men’s T20 World Cup Africa sub-regional qualifier tournament. Sikandar Raza spearheaded the effort with a century – Zimbabwe’s first one ever in the format – off just 33 balls. He eventually finished unbeaten on 133, with 15 sixes. His team-mates hit 12 more to set that record as well. Until now, Nepal had been the holders of the highest total (314) and the most sixes hit in an innings (26). Gambia in return were bundled out for 54 as Zimbabwe also posted the biggest-ever win (in terms of runs) in T20s.The Ruaraka Sports Club Ground in Nairobi witnessed history on Wednesday with Zimbabwe showing great intent right from the first ball they faced. They brought up fifty in 3.2 overs. Tadiwanashe Marumani brought his up quicker, in just 13 balls. The team hundred was up before the powerplay was done and from there on it was an exercise of how far they could send the ball into the stands. There were 57 boundaries in the innings overall – which is also a T20 record – with four Zimbabwe batters contributing fifty-plus scores – another record. Brian Bennett made 50 of 26 and Clive Mandande got to 53 off 17 by hitting the final ball of the innings for six.ESPNcricinfo LtdRaza, though, was the star of the show. He came into bat at the end of the seventh over, after the fielding restrictions had been relaxed, but it made no difference. He struck the third ball he faced for six and went on a run-scoring spree that made him the owner of the second-fastest century in T20I cricket. His 33-ball effort equalled Jan Nicol Loftie-Eaton’s, for Namibia against Nepal in February 2024.Related

T20I record holders you have (probably) not heard of

Gambia, which is the smallest country in continental Africa, located to the west, could do very little to stop the run flow. Musa Jorbateh conceded the most runs by a bowler in a T20, his four overs going for 93. He was one of five bowlers to go for over 50 runs or more in their spell. The team is still looking for its first win in the Africa sub-regional qualifier so far, having given walkovers to their opponents Rwanda and Seychelles in the first two games, while Zimbabwe have already picked up four from four.

Dodô se adapta à nova posição e exalta confiança do Santos para 'decisão' contra o Vasco

MatériaMais Notícias

da gbg bet: O Santos enfrenta o Vasco neste domingo (1), às 16h, na Vila Belmiro, em confronto direto válido pela 25ª rodada do Campeonato Brasileiro. A expectativa é que o interino Marcelo Fernandes repita a equipe que venceu o Bahia, de virada, na última rodada. Dessa forma, o lateral Dodô, que foi peça importante no setor defensivo do Peixe no último jogo, deve ser improvisado mais uma vez na zaga, decisão aprovada pelo próprio jogador.

RelacionadasSantosConselho do Santos adia votação do novo centro de treinamento para a base e questiona projetoSantos26/09/2023SantosPresidente do Conselho do Santos atualiza situação do acordo com a WTorre sobre a nova Vila BelmiroSantos26/09/2023SantosQual é o valor de mercado de Marcos Leonardo, atacante do Santos?Santos26/09/2023

da leao: + Confira a tabela completa do Brasileirão-2023

– Foi decisão do professor (Marcelo Fernandes). Conversamos durante a semana para experimentar esse novo formato contra o Bahia e deu certo. Estou feliz e à disposição. Já havia atuado assim algumas vezes, mas começar o jogo nessa posição foi uma das primeiras vezes – disse Dodô.

+ Garanta a sua vaga no curso que formou craques como Pet, Dante e Léo Moura! Cupom: LANCE1000

“Comprando” a luta do time contra o rebaixamento, a torcida do Santos esgotou os ingressos para a “decisão” contra o Vasco em poucas horas após o início das vendas. Em mais uma “final”, o Peixe conta com a Vila Belmiro lotada para ir em busca dos três pontos, contra um adversário direto, que podem, enfim, tirar o Peixe da zona de rebaixamento. Dodô enalteceu a confiança da equipe para o confronto decisivo deste domingo.

– Jogo importante e grande oportunidade para nós dentro de casa. Estamos trabalhando bastante e estamos confiantes em fazer um grande jogo – completou o jogador.

Um dos reforços do Santos na última janela de transferências, Dodô foi titular em sua posição de origem em todas as partidas, totalizando dez jogos nesta temporada. Em sua segunda passagem pelo clube, o jogador totaliza 63 duelos com a camisa santista. Com a saída de Diego Aguirre, o interino Marcelo Fernandes optou por improvisá-lo como zagueiro aberto pela esquerda contra o Tricolor de Aço, o que deve se repetir diante dos cariocas.

+ Conselho do Santos adia votação do novo centro de treinamento para a base e questiona projeto

Com a vitória do Vasco contra o América-MG na segunda-feira (25), o Peixe caiu para a 18ª posição do Brasileirão com 24 pontos, dois a menos que o Goiás, primeiro time fora do Z4. Um eventual triunfo diante do Cruz-Maltino pode fazer com que o Santos finalmente saia da zona após quase dois meses e ultrapasse a equipe carioca na tabela.

Para dar ainda mais o ar de “decisão” para a partida e atrair seus torcedores, o Santos realizará um treino aberto no dia anterior, no sábado (30), à torcida e imprensa, na Vila Belmiro. A abertura dos portões será às 9h, e o treino terá início às 10h. O clube disponibilizará mais informações sobre o evento ao longo desta semana.

Dom Bess half-century guides Yorkshire to crucial win

Unbeaten 53 seals victory in rollercoaster clash with Essex after James Wharton, Shan Masood fifties

ECB Reporters Network06-Aug-2024A nerveless List A career best of 53 not out from Dom Bess guided Yorkshire to a crucial win in a rollercoaster Metro Bank One-Day Cup clash with Essex as they chased 244 to win by three wickets at Scarborough and maintain their qualification hopes.Both sides encountered batting problems in an enthralling contest played on a competitive pitch.The Vikings fell from 102 for 2 to 184 for 7, losing Shan Masood for 58 and James Wharton for a career-best 71 off 89 balls. Seamer Shane Snater impressed with three wickets for Essex, but it wasn’t enough to prevent a fourth defeat in five matches in Group B.After losing three early wickets having been inserted, Robin Das and Luc Benkenstein made 67 off 92 balls and 68 off 94 respectively in Essex’s 243 for 9, which saw new-ball pair Ben Cliff and Ben Coad claim three wickets apiece for Yorkshire, who have now won three from five.Coad also contributed 26 not out in an eighth-wicket stand of 60 inside nine overs with Bess, who hit six fours in 55 balls.Essex opener Feroze Khushi played on to Cliff in the fourth over to start this contest before further wickets fell shortly afterwards as Essex fell to 27 for 3.Nick Browne miscued Coad to midwicket and captain Tom Westley slashed Cliff to point.Das and Benkenstein rebuilt with caution, though Das pulled Matthew Revis for six and ramped Cliff for four over the wicketkeeper’s head.Das reached his fifty off 67 balls, and by the time Benkenstein followed him to the same milestone, off 71, Essex were 150 for 3 in the 32nd over.But, in the following over, Das picked out deep cover off the seam of Revis, ending a fourth-wicket partnership of 125.The good work of Das and Benkenstein would be undone by the loss of four wickets for only five runs in 12 balls as left-arm spinner Dan Moriarty, Coad and Cliff all struck.Benkenstein’s departure came in a damaging spell which saw Essex crumble to 190 for 8 in the 42nd over.Moriarty had a reverse-sweeping Noah Thain brilliantly caught by a diving Wharton at deep backward point before Coad had Benkenstein caught at wide mid-on in that collapse.Ben Allison’s useful unbeaten 27 gave Essex something to work with, and he was one of four batters to post career-best scores alongside Benkenstein, Das and Simon Fernandes with 18.Essex’s hopes were raised when Yorkshire slipped to 18 for 2 inside seven overs of their reply. Snater claimed both wickets – Harry Duke smartly caught at second slip above his head by Thain and Fin Bean caught at mid-on.Masood and Wharton then shared 84 in similar fashion to the earlier Benkenstein-Das alliance – composed but not becalmed.Masood’s 46-ball fifty was his third in succession in this campaign, while Wharton pulled Aaron Beard’s seam for six to reverse the pressure.But the pendulum was about to swing again, as the Vikings lost four wickets for 21, including Masood, to slip to be 123 for 6 in the 31st over.Westley’s off-spin accounted for Masood lbw and Will Luxton caught at cover before Snater returned to bowl George Hill with an angled-in beauty and Richards removed Revis.Wharton pulled a couple of sixes in his 79-ball fifty to keep home hopes alive. But when he was brilliantly caught at mid-on by a leaping Browne off Thain’s medium pace, the Vikings were 184 for 7 in the 40th over and under the cosh.But, in keeping with the day’s flow, the game wasn’t over.Bess, having shared 61 with Wharton, played the guiding hand in partnership with Coad. He worked the ball expertly – to delight the majority of a 3,113 crowd – and reached his fifty with the winning hit off Allison.

Stats takeaways – Mumbai dominate with the bat, Delhi impress with the ball

The key stats takeaways from the first half of IPL 2020

Bharath Seervi13-Oct-2020 Bat first, win the match
Teams batting first have won 75% (21) of the 28 matches, while chasing sides have won only seven games. Five of the seven wins by chasing teams were completed in the final over. In the four previous IPL seasons, from 2016 onwards, in each season the teams chasing have won more games than those batting first. The average first-innings score so far has been 181, the highest in any IPL season. Teams batting first are averaging a high 36.59 runs per wicket. In none of the previous 12 seasons have teams batting first averaged over 30.ESPNcricinfo LtdSpinners play key roles in defending targets
The spinners have contrasting numbers between the first innings and second innings. In the first innings, they average 40.60 runs per wicket, while their average when defending targets is just 22.91. Of the three venues, Abu Dhabi is the only venue where the spinners have been equally effective in both innings. In Dubai and Sharjah, the difference between first and second-innings averages is huge.ESPNcricinfo LtdIndian batsmen on a roll
There have been 12 innings of 80 or more, of which nine have come from Indians. Of the three 80-plus knocks by overseas batsmen, two came in the same innings – Faf du Plessis (87*) and Shane Watson (83*) against Kings XI Punjab; Jonny Bairstow’s 97 is the other. It is not a regular sight to see overseas batsmen not dominating the list of top scores: in the last four seasons (2016 to 2019), Indians have scored only 50% of the 80-plus scores, but this year the share is 75% so far.ESPNcricinfo LtdMumbai’s batting bosses all phases
Mumbai Indians have been the best batting team in terms of scoring rates in each of three phases of the innings – Powerplay (run rate of 7.97 in the first six), middle-overs (8.77 between overs 7 and 16) and the death overs (13.26 in the last four). In each of these phases, their batsmen average over 30 runs per wickets. Kieron Pollard has scored 138 runs at strike rate of 222.58 in the death overs, which is the most by a batsman in that phase this season. In the Powerplay overs, Quinton de Kock has been Mumbai’s key performer with 119 runs at 130.76, while Suryakumar Yadav has topped in the middle-order with 133 runs at 144.56. Mumbai batsmen also have the second-best ratio of balls to sixes (12.57); only Rajasthan Royals have hit sixes more frequently, every 12 balls. Chennai Super Kings are the worst in the balls per six ratio (23.54).ESPNcricinfo LtdESPNcricinfo Ltd Delhi’s bowling unit most economical
Delhi Capitals are the only team with an economy rate below eight this season (7.90). In their first seven matches, they have also taken the most wickets (51) and conceded the fewest boundaries (120). In the tournament so far, six bowlers have taken five or more wickets at economy of less than eight and average of below 20. Three of them are from Delhi – Kagiso Rabada, Axar Patel and R Ashwin. Their other key wicket-taker Anrich Nortje has taken eight wickets at economy of 7.21 and average of 25.25.ESPNcricinfo LtdSharjah vs Abu Dhabi and Dubai
Clearly Sharjah has been the most batting-friendly venue among the three venues. The average run rate at Sharjah has been 9.67 whereas at Dubai and Abu Dhabi it is 8.34 and 8.16 respectively. However, Dubai is catching with Sharjah in terms of frequency of sixes. At Sharjah a six is hit every 16 balls while at Dubai it is 20 balls per six. At Abu Dhabi, batsmen take 32 balls for every six. Seven 200-plus totals have come at Sharjah, all in the first seven innings and none in the next five.

Stats at each venue in IPL 2020 (first 28 mats)

Venue Mats Run rate Runs/wkt Balls/Six Ave 1st inns score 200+ totalsSharjah 6 9.67 31.25 16.76 209 7Dubai 12 8.34 27.88 20.32 178 4Abu Dhabi 10 8.16 27.98 32.18 169 0

Rebaixamento: quais times caíram mais vezes no Brasileirão?

MatériaMais Notícias

da roleta: Quando a era dos pontos corridos se instaurou no Campeonato Brasileiro, em 2003, todo ano os quatro times de pior campanha são rebaixados para a série B. Seja por uma fase ruim ou por uma má gestão financeira, alguns clubes acabam indo e voltando da tão gloriosa primeira divisão.

RelacionadasCruzeiroCruzeiro tenta ‘acertar o pé’ para melhorar campanha no BrasileirãoCruzeiro06/07/2023BotafogoBotafogo x RB Bragantino: confira as informações sobre a venda de ingressos para o jogo da 15ª rodada do BrasileirãoBotafogo05/07/2023Brasileirão8 números impressionantes do Botafogo no BrasileirãoBrasileirão05/07/2023

da jogodeouro: América-MG, Coritiba, Goiás, Sport e o Vitória são os nomes que caíram mais vezes para a segunda divisão, contando com 6 rebaixamentos.
Entre os principais clubes brasileiros, o Vasco, com 4 rebaixamentos, é o time que com mais idas a série B. Já Flamengo, Santos e São Paulo nunca sofreram a queda.

+ Veja a Tabela do Brasileirão Série A 2023

Abaixo, confira os times com o maior número de rebaixamentos no Brasileirão:

6 rebaixamentos: América-mg; Coritiba; Goiás; Sport; Vitória
5 rebaixamentos: Santa Cruz; Avaí
4 rebaixamentos: Bahia; Criciúma; Fortaleza; Vasco
3 rebaixamentos: América-RN; América-PR; Botafogo; CSA; Figueirense; Grêmio; Guarani; Joinville; Náutico; Paraná; Paysandu; Ponte Preta; Portuguesa; Juventude; Atlético-GO; Ceará
2 rebaixamento: Botafogo-SP; Bragantino; Chapecoense; Desportiva; Ferroviário-CE; Fluminense; Gama; Mixto; Palmeiras; União São João
1 rebaixamento: América-RJ; Atlético-MG; Bangu; Brasília; Brasiliense, Corinthians; Cruzeiro; Galícia; Grêmio Prudente; Internacional; Internacional-SP; Ipatinga; Itabaiana; Juventus-SP; Moto Club; Nacional-AM; Remo; Rio Branco-ES; River-PL; São Caetano; São José-SP; Santo André; Taguatinga; Treze

Flamengo, Santos e São Paulo nunca caíram para a série B.

Quantas vezes o Vasco foi rebaixado?

Resposta: 4 vezes.

Martinez upgrade: Aston Villa in contact for one of the 'most talented GKs'

da dobrowin: Aston Villa will be busy this summer in the transfer market, even if they miss out on Champions League qualification.

da pinup bet: As it stands, the club need to win their final game of the campaign and hope for Chelsea, Newcastle United or Man City to suffer a slip-up.

If so, the riches of Europe’s top-tier competition will fill the coffers once again, allowing Unai Emery to sign high-profile players this summer.

Signing a new goalkeeper might be a priority heading into the transfer window, especially with Emiliano Martínez’s future in doubt.

Aston Villa’s search for a new goalkeeper

According to Football Insider, the enigmatic Argentinian is expected to depart Villa Park this summer for a new challenge.

He has been with the club since 2020, turning 33 at the start of the 2025/26 campaign, suggesting Emery is right to cash in now.

As such, this means the club will need a new goalkeeper to take them forward, and according to journalist Sacha Tavolieri, it appears as though Lucas Chevalier is the preferred candidate.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

The Midlands side have approached the youngster regarding a potential move to the Premier League, although no transfer fee has been reported as yet.

The 23-year-old has a contract with Lille until 2027, which means now is the ideal time for the French club to sell. Will Villa make their move soon? Especially if Martinez is seeking a quick exit.

Why Aston Villa must sign Lucas Chevalier

Martinez may have made over 200 appearances for Villa, but a few mistakes have crept into his game this season. Indeed, he’s made five errors leading to a shot in the Premier League, as per Sofascore.

His mistake against PSG saw Villa exit the Champions League, while he parried a shot directed straight at him by Bernardo Silva into the Villa net during the recent defeat to Man City.

Lucas Chevalier’s stats for Lille this season

Metric

Ligue 1

Champions League

Goals conceded

36

13

Clean sheets

11

1

Saves per game

2.8

3.2

Goals conceded per game

1.1

1.3

Touches

36.4

39.7

Via Sofascore

Signing Chevalier could be an upgrade on the former Arsenal keeper, especially when comparing their domestic statistics this season.

Indeed, the Frenchman has conceded fewer goals than Martinez this term (36 vs 45), while also conceding fewer goals per 90 (1.06 vs 1.29), having a higher save percentage (74.6% vs 67.9%) and keeping more clean sheets (11 vs eight) across their respective domestic seasons.

Add in the fact that the current Lille number one is nine years younger than the Argentinian, making a move for him in the coming weeks could be shrewd business by the club.

Following an excellent 2023/24 campaign for the Ligue 1 side where he made 2.8 saves per game and conceded just 32 goals in 33 games, talent scout Jacek Kulig lavished praise on him, saying Chevalier was “one of the most talented young goalkeepers in Europe.”

If Emery manages to lead Villa into the group stages of the Champions League, it will do his chances of landing Chevalier the world of good.

Lucas Chevalier for LOSC Lille.

He kept a clean sheet against Real Madrid in the competition earlier this season, proving he has what it takes to star at the highest level. Much will depend on the Frenchman’s price tag, but signing Chevalier must be a priority this summer.

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India haunted by dropped catches and poor batting form on big stage

‘We were not able to create those chances,’ Harmanpreet Kaur said after the match

Annesha Ghosh in Melbourne09-Mar-2020Spinners’ dream run endsThrough their undefeated run in the league stage, India’s bowlers, especially their spinners, did the heavy lifting. The slowness of all the surfaces through the group games – at the Sydney Showground Stadium, the WACA, and the Junction Oval in Melbourne – aided India’s four-pronged spin-heavy attack.”It has all panned out really well. It’s just a joke going around that this World Cup is made in such a way that it’s helping us; starting from the wickets to everything,” Veda Krishnamurthy had said on Thursday in Sydney after India made the final via a washout.The MCG turf in the final was on the quicker side, and with conducive bounce, it made for a flat deck that Australia used to notch up their highest total, 154, batting first in a T20 World Cup final across men’s or women’s cricket in just 17.1 overs. Their 184 for 4 became the highest total in a T20 world tournament final.Each of India’s four frontline spinners conceded at least 7.25 runs per over, and the treatment from a rampaging Alyssa Healy and Beth Mooney meant Shikha Pandey, India’s only quick bowler in the XI – a combination they stuck with since their second group game – was carted at 13 an over.The big guns never came good with the batTeenager Shafali Verma’s tally of 163 from the five innings in the World Cup was the most from the Indian side. The combined returns of their key cogs in the top five – Harmanpreet Kaur, Smriti Mandhana and Jemimah Rodrigues – was 164 in the 14 innings between them. In the final, opener Mandhana fell for 11 while Rodrigues’ up-and-down campaign culminated in a duck.Kaur’s horror run with the bat, meanwhile, reflected in her scores of 4, 15, 1, 8 and 2. Any hopes of a form revival in a big-match scenario, an apt setting for Kaur’s hundreds in recent world tournaments, were dashed when she holed out to deep square leg off left-arm spinner Jess Jonassen, with India slumping to 30 for 4 in the final over of the powerplay.ALSO READ: ‘I told her she should be proud’ – India hurt but hopefulThe Indian players wear a dejected look•AFP via Getty ImagesCatches win… World Cup finalsVerma dropped Healy on 9 – a straightforward, flat, waist-high chance shelled at cover. Mooney, the highest run-scorer for Australia heading into the final, was on 8 off six when left-arm spinner Rajeshwari Gayakwad spilled a return catch low to the ground. Healy went on to hammer a 39-ball 75; Mooney finished atop the tournament run-charts with a 54-ball 78.”When you lose half chances, and then it’s hard for a bowler to get that confidence back,” Kaur said after the match. “Then, I guess it’s easy for a batter too because, when they get a chance, then they are just batting freely. They don’t have any pressure.”India sacked their previous fielding coach, Biju George, ahead of the tour of the West Indies in November last year. The work put in by George’s successor Subhadeep Ghosh had held India in good stead heading into the final. Was it the nerves of playing a big match in front of a record crowd, then, that drew errors out of the Indian fielders who had fared relatively better than many of their opponents in the group games?”I don’t think we were fielding under pressure,” Kaur explained. “But unfortunately, we were not able to create those chances because that was very crucial because they both were in great form. You cannot drop the catches. After that, I think they batted very well.”Fit India movementMandhana, who cut out a few fours by throwing herself around in the circle and near the boundary, underscored India have work to do in another key area: fitness.”It’s been a clear indication that we lack in fielding and fitness, that one thing was a major difference between both the teams,” Mandhana said. “We definitely felt that through the tournament but today we didn’t field [up to the mark]. [We] not only dropped the chances, in general throughout the match.”That’s two things [we need to work on]. In batting and bowling, we’ve got the skills; we’re slowly getting into the power-hitting zone. These are two things we need to implement and hopefully, it will help us lift the ICC trophy.”

Gubbins frustrates Lancashire as Hampshire hold out for draw

Nick Gubbins batted out the final day to make sure Hampshire and Lancashire drew their Vitality County Championship fixture at the Utilita Bowl – and maintained the visitors’ unbeaten record on the ground.Gubbins added an unbeaten 69 to his first-innings 50 in a four-and-a-half-hour vigil to nullify any threat of a Hampshire collapse and a result – with James Vince and Tom Prest equally stubborn in their resistance.Lancashire picked up one extra point to Hampshire’s 12, with both sides shaking off their rain-affected openers with more shared points.It did, however, extend the Red Roses’ record of not losing a first-class away match at Hampshire to 35 years – with the last home success coming at Portsmouth in 1989.Any hopes of Lancashire forcing a result by blowing away Hampshire quickly were kyboshed by no play possible in the morning due to a rain shower which left the run-ups temporarily unusable.In all 24 overs were lost from the day before the visitors set about hoping to add the final eight wickets to avoid the otherwise inevitable draw in strong winds.George Bell had spoken the previous evening about how excited he has been for fielding at short leg to Nathan Lyon, despite being in the firing line for the angle the ball is turning. He got his wish to share a line on the scorecard with the legendary Australian spinner when nightwatcher Kyle Abbott clipped the 16th ball of the day to the 21-year-old under the helmet.Any chance of the hosts collapsing from that point ended with Gubbins and Vince occupying the crease for the next two hours – and in Gubbins’ case, beyond.Lyon, who had claimed three first-inning wickets in 38 overs, tried everything to spark a flurry of wickets with the Kookaburra ball. He teased Vince with different flights – tempting the Hampshire skipper to almost hole out to long on – he flirted with front pads and he created his own rough at either end of the pitch so he could have a patch to aim at wherever he was bowling. His battle with Vince also saw the batter bottom-edge a sweep, which trickled past his stumps.Finally, Lyon made an unlikely turn towards Bazball for inspiration when he tried switching the bails. It turns out that specific magic can only be conjured by Stuart Broad.More Lancashire tricks of a 7-2 leg-side field and Tom Bailey bowling spin to the left-handed Gubbins and his usual pace to the right-handed Vince, also didn’t produce returns.Vince and Gubbins were steadfast in their 66-run partnership to showcase their vast Championship experience. Both had scored half-centuries in the first innings, although Vince failed to reach the landmark in the second dig as Lyon pinned him lbw to dismiss him in both innings.Gubbins scored twin centuries the last time Lancashire came to the Utilita Bowl in 2019. He half-replicated that with twin half-centuries, this time coming in 135 balls.Tom Prest, another first-innings fifty-maker, simply continued where Vince left off – although was unafraid to plonk half-trackers over the ropes for six to end up unbeaten on 45.The inevitable handshakes came at 16:50 BST, after a short rain delay, to signal the draw.

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