Injured England pacer ruled out of fifth Ashes Test in Sydney

England pace spearhead Gus Atkinson was, on Monday, ruled out of the fifth and final Ashes Test against Australia, scheduled to be played in Sydney, with a hamstring injury.

The Surrey right-armer hobbled off early on day two of the fourth Test in Melbourne, clutching his left leg and taking no further part in the game.

“Gus Atkinson has been ruled out for the remainder of the Ashes tour after scans confirmed he has sustained a left hamstring injury,” the England Cricket Board (ECB) said.

With one Test remaining in Sydney, scheduled to begin on January 4, England has decided not to bring in a replacement player.

Follow us on our Official WhatsApp channel

This decision paves the way for either Matthew Potts or Matthew Fisher, both of whom are in the squad but have yet to feature in any game.

Notably, Gus Atkinson is the third England quick to be sidelined after Mark Wood (knee) and Jofra Archer (side strain), leaving Brydon Carse, Josh Tongue and Ben Stokes to shoulder the attack.

England are 3-1 down ahead of the Sydney Test starting on Sunday.

They suffered back-to-back eight-wicket defeats in Perth and Brisbane and an 82-run loss at Adelaide before bouncing back to clinch a four-wicket win in Melbourne.

READ: Van Dijk urges Liverpool to improve ‘killer’ set-piece goals

Stuart Broad backs THIS Bowler to replace Jofra Archer in The Oval Test

Former England fast bowler Stuart Broad believes Jofra Archer should be rested for the fifth and final Test against India, starting July 31 at The Oval, and has backed Gus Atkinson to take his place.

Archer made a highly anticipated return to Test cricket earlier this series after a four-year absence caused by recurring elbow and back injuries.

The speedster marked his comeback in style during the third Test at Lord’s, taking match figures of 5-105 and playing a key role in England’s dramatic win.

His spell included early damage with the new ball and crucial wickets in the second innings, notably Yashasvi Jaiswal, Rishabh Pant, and Washington Sundar.

Determined to help England clinch the series, Jofra Archer pushed through for the fourth Test in Manchester, claiming four wickets for 151 runs.

However, he looked visibly uncomfortable, especially during India’s mammoth second innings where they batted out a draw at 425/4.

With Archer clearly struggling physically, Stuart Broad has urged the team management to avoid risking a long-term injury.

Follow us on our Official WhatsApp channel

“We can’t not have Jofra Archer for four years, bring him back and then bowl him into the ground and not see him for another four years,” Broad said.

Broad has called for Gus Atkinson to be given a shot, noting that the young quick hasn’t yet been tested against a top-quality Test opponent.

“I think Gus Atkinson has to play. I know he has not had any workload, but we need to see him. He hasn’t been really challenged against top-level opposition in Test cricket yet,” he said.

Broad also pointed out that Brydon Carse looked “knackered” during the fourth Test and could use a breather, while Josh Tongue, who featured earlier in the series, could be a like-for-like replacement if England opt to rest Jofra Archer.

READ: Ben Dwarshuis helps Australia sweep West Indies in T20I series

England likely to recall THESE two pacers after heavy defeat against India

Fast bowlers Jofra Archer and Gus Atkinson could be recalled for next week’s third Test against India at Lord’s after England captain Ben Stokes admitted his attack had failed to “blast them open” at Edgbaston.

India levelled the five-match series at 1-1 with a crushing 336-run win in the second Test on Sunday’s fifth day.

And within hours of the thumping loss, England added Surrey quick Atkinson to their squad for the Lord’s Test.

Atkinson is fit again after suffering hamstring trouble against Zimbabwe in May and could join forces for the first time with Archer, who trained with England in Birmingham ahead of what promises to be the express quick’s first Test following four years of injury-induced exile.

Brydon Carse and Josh Tongue could be the two bowlers to make way after plenty of overs against an India side who’ve scored nearly 1,900 runs, including five individual hundreds, in the opening two games of this series.

Stokes, as he’d done during England’s five-wicket win in the first Test at Headingley, sent India in to bat at Edgbaston.

Follow us on our Official WhatsApp channel

But having seen India reduced to 211-5, the England captain became increasingly helpless in the field as the tourists piled up 567, with opposing captain Shubman Gill making an outstanding 269.

“At 200-5, we were happy, but we just weren’t able to blast them open,” said Stokes after England were dismissed for 271 on the final day. “They ended up getting a big first innings total after us having a good start.”

“It’s no secret that we have spent some time in the field and bowled some overs in the first two games, so we’ll have to see how everyone pulls up over the next two days. With it being a quick turnaround, there probably will be a decision we have to make.”

England bowlers, meanwhile, now have the tough task of stemming new India captain Shubman Gill’s extraordinary run spree.

Not content with his first-innings effort, Gill made 161 second time around at Edgbaston as he became the first batsman in 148 years of Test history to score a double century and a 150 in the same match.

The 25-year-old Gill, who marked his first Test as skipper with a century at Headingley, has now scored 585 runs in the series at a colossal average of 146.5.

England squad for Lord’s Test against India

Ben Stokes (c), Jofra Archer, Gus Atkinson, Shoaib Bashir, Jacob Bethell, Harry Brook, Brydon Carse, Sam Cook, Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Jamie Overton, Ollie Pope, Joe Root, Jamie Smith (wk), Josh Tongue, Chris Woakes.

READ: ICC names top India broadcaster official as CEO

Major blow for England as Gus Atkinson ruled out of West Indies ODIs

England suffered a significant blow as fast bowler Gus Atkinson has been ruled out of the upcoming ODI series against the West Indies.

Gus Atkinson sustained the injury during England’s Test victory over Zimbabwe at Trent Bridge last week.

He will now undergo a period of rehabilitation under the supervision of the England medical team. Meanwhile, no replacement will be added to the ODI squad.

In a statement on Tuesday, the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) confirmed that the pacer would miss the upcoming ODI series.

“[Gus] Atkinson sustained the injury during England’s test victory over Zimbabwe at Trent Bridge last week… No replacement will be added to the ODI squad,” the ECB statement said.

Gus Atkinson injury has added to England’s woes as he was the most experienced member of the pace attack. Besides this, Mark Wood, Jofra Archer, Brydon Carse, and Chris Woakes are all sidelined due to injuries.

Follow us on our Official WhatsApp channel

England, under new captain Harry Brook, will play a three-match ODI series. The first ODI is scheduled for Thursday, 29 May at Edgbaston.

Following the conclusion of the ODI series, the Three Lions will play a three-match T20I series, set to begin on Friday, 6 June.

England Updated ODI Squad

Harry Brook (c), Tom Banton, Jacob Bethell, Jos Buttler, Brydon Carse, Ben Duckett, Tom Hartley, Will Jacks, Saqib Mahmood, Jamie Overton, Matthew Potts, Adil Rashid, Joe Root, Jamie Smith, Luke Wood.

England T20I Squad

Harry Brook (c), Rehan Ahmed, Tom Banton, Jacob Bethell, Jos Buttler, Brydon Carse, Liam Dawson, Ben Duckett, Will Jacks, Saqib Mahmood, Jamie Overton, Matthew Potts, Adil Rashid, Phil Salt, Luke Wood.

ODI series Schedule

1st ODI: England v West Indies, Edgbaston, 29 May 2025,
2nd ODI: England v West Indies, Cardiff 1 June 2025,
3rd ODI: England v West Indies, London 3 June 2025

READ: Salman Ali Agha reveals reason behind dropping Sufiyan Muqeem

Gus Atkinson joins elusive list with Test hat-trick against New Zealand

WELLINGTON: England pace bowler Gus Atkinson claimed his Test career’s first hat-trick during the second Test against New Zealand here on Saturday to join an exclusive club of bowlers.

New Zealand were struggling on 125-7 with Glenn Phillips and Nathan Smith on the crease when Atkinson wrapped up their innings with a historic hat-trick.

Atkinson claimed the wickets of Smith, Matt Henry, and Tim Southee with three consecutive deliveries, marking the 15th instance of a bowler from England recording a hat-trick in Test cricket.

He uprooted Smith’s middle stump with a brilliant delivery, while Henry tried to evade a sharply rising short ball, but only managed to glove it into the hands of Ben Duckett.

Follow us on our Official WhatsApp channel

Atkinson then bowled a full and straight delivery that crashed into Southee’s front pad, dead in front of the middle stump. Southee opted for the review, but to no avail, as umpire Rod Tucker raised his finger decisively for a second time, confirming the dismissal.

It’s worth noting that Atkinson’s hat-trick was the 50th Test hat-trick in global cricket—47 in men’s matches and three in women’s.

The last English player to accomplish this feat was Moeen Ali who claimed a hat-trick against South Africa at The Oval in 2017.

Notably, Gus Atkinson is the 14th English player to join the exclusive club of hat-trick takers, joining the ranks of illustrious names such as Stuart Broad, who claimed two in his storied career.

Test hat-tricks by England bowlers

  1. Billy Bates vs Australia, Melbourne (1882/83)
  2. Johnny Briggs vs Australia, Sydney (1891/92)
  3. George Lohmann vs South Africa, Port Elizabeth (1895/96)
  4. Jack Hearne vs Australia, Leeds (1899)
  5. Maurice Allom vs New Zealand, Christchurch (1929/30)
  6. Tom Goddard vs South Africa, Johannesburg (1938/39)
  7. Peter Loader vs West Indies, Leeds (1957)
  8. Dominic Cork vs West Indies, Manchester (1995)
  9. Darren Gough vs Australia, Sydney (1998/99)
  10. Matthew Hoggard vs West Indies, Barbados (2003/04)
  11. Ryan Sidebottom vs New Zealand, Hamilton (2007/08)
  12. Stuart Broad vs India, Nottingham (2011)
  13. Stuart Broad vs Sri Lanka, Leeds (2014)
  14. Moeen Ali vs South Africa, The Oval (2017)
  15. Gus Atkinson vs New Zealand, Wellington (2024)

WATCH: Sarfaraz Ahmed hints at retirement ahead of Champions T20 Cup

England take massive lead in second New Zealand Test after Gus Atkinson hat-trick

WELLINGTON: Gus Atkinson claimed a hat-trick before England batters ran riot to power the visitors 533 runs ahead of New Zealand on Saturday and in full control of the second Test of the Crowe-Thorpe Trophy here at Basin Reserve.

New Zealand will need to chase an enormous score in the fourth innings after England went to stumps at 378-5 on day two.

Captain Ben Stokes resisted any urge to declare, instead cementing England’s position of power as four batters posted half-centuries to build on their first-innings advantage of 155.

Joe Root was at the crease on 73 while Stokes struck a whirlwind 35 not out against a tiring attack after Jacob Bethell and Ben Duckett were both dismissed in the 90s.

The fast-moving nature of the Test means the Black Caps should have ample time to reach any target, as they bid to square the three-match series after losing the opener of Crowe-Thorpe Trophy in Christchurch by eight wickets.

However, history is firmly against them. The highest successful fourth-innings chase at the Basin Reserve is 274, achieved by Pakistan against the hosts in 2003.

The hopes of New Zealand of getting back into the Test were scuppered in the opening 40 minutes of play when they lost their last five wickets to be all out 125 against a hostile England bowling attack.

Gus Atkinson (4-31) removed the last three with successive deliveries to become the first Englishman to claim a Test hat-trick since Moeen Ali against South Africa seven years ago.

The seamer was all smiles after bowling Nathan Smith for 14, then having Matt Henry caught in the gully and trapping Tim Southee lbw.

Follow us on our Official WhatsApp channel

England made batting look a lot easier, most notably when Bethell (96) and Duckett (92) combined for an untroubled 187-run second-wicket stand.

Bethell fell agonisingly short of a maiden Test ton when edging Southee to wicketkeeper Tom Blundell. The 21-year-old looked crestfallen as he exited after a 118-ball knock which featured 10 fours and three sixes.

Opener Duckett was closing on his fifth Test ton when he played on off Southee (2-72), ending an innings of 112 balls.

First-Test centurion Harry Brook reached 55 before being caught in the deep off spinner Glenn Phillips while Root put some modest recent form behind him to post another batting milestone.

Root became only the fourth player to reach 50 runs in 100 different Test innings.

Ollie Pope fell for 10 off seamer Matt Henry (2-76), who earlier dismissed Zak Crawley for eight, continuing a lean series for the opener. In 19 Test innings against the Black Caps, Crawley has scored just 193 runs at an average of 10.15.

In-form England seamer Brydon Carse shapes as a key figure for the remainder of the Test, finishing with 4-46 in New Zealand’s first innings, including both overnight batters after they had resumed at 86-5.

Blundell was bowled for 16 before nightwatchman Will O’Rourke was out lbw for a 26-ball duck. New Zealand added 39 runs off 8.5 overs in the morning, with Phillips not out on 16.

WATCH: Sarfaraz Ahmed hints at retirement ahead of Champions T20 Cup

England make one change to ODI squad for Australia series

LONDON: The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) on Monday, announced Olly Stone as the replacement for Gus Atkinson, who has been given rest from the five-match ODI series against Australia.

Atkinson did not take the field on the morning of the third Test against Sri Lanka due to a tight quad. He, however, appeared to have recovered from the discomfort and resumed bowling in the evening and on the fourth day but was lacking speed.

The right-arm pacer played a pivotal role in England’s 2-1 series victory over Sri Lanka, picking up 12 wickets at an average of 27.41.

He turned heads with his batting skills in the recently concluded series when he scored his maiden century in the second Test at Lord’s while batting at No.8.

Gus Atkinson was initially named in England’s ODI squad which marked the absence of key players like wicketkeeper batter Jonny Bairstow and experienced all-rounder Moeen Ali.

Jos Buttler was named as the captain of England’s ODI squad for the Australia series, however, his participation in the five-match series remains uncertain, with him being already ruled out of the T20I series.

Follow us on our Official WhatsApp channel

Atkinson has represented England in nine ODIs, picking up 11 wickets at 35.27. His last appearance for the Three Lions came in the format came against the West Indies in late 2023.

Meanwhile, 30-year-old Nottinghamshire seamer Olly Stone will replace Gus Atkinson in the squad.

Stone was also clinical in the recent Test series against Sri Lanka as he bagged seven wickets. In his budding ODI career, Stone has eight wickets in as many matches.

The opening ODI of the five-match series between England and Australia will take place at Trent Bridge on September 19 while the last will be played in Bristol on September 29.

England’s ODI squad for the Australia series:

Jos Buttler (c), Jofra Archer, Jacob Bethell, Harry Brook, Brydon Carse, Ben Duckett, Josh Hull, Will Jacks, Matthew Potts, Adil Rashid, Phil Salt, Jamie Smith, Reece Topley, John Turner and Olly Stone.

READ: Nissanka hits ton as Sri Lanka stun England in third Test

Gus Atkinson stars as England wrap up Sri Lanka series win

Gus Atkinson continued his Lord’s love affair by taking five wickets as England thrashed Sri Lanka by 190 runs in the second Test on Sunday to take an unassailable 2-0 lead in a three-match series.

Sri Lanka set what would have been a new Test record fourth-innings winning total of 483, were dismissed for 292 after tea on the fourth day despite half-centuries from Dinesh Chandimal (58), Dimuth Karunaratne (55) and captain Dhananjaya de Silva (50).

Fast bowler Gus Atkinson, who scored his maiden first-class hundred in England’s first-innings 427, led the attack with 5-62.

Player-of-the-match Atkinson secured a fifth mention on the dressing room honours boards in just his second Test at Lord’s after taking 12 wickets on his England debut against the West Indies in July.

He also became just the third England cricketer after Tony Greig and Ian Botham to score a century and take five wickets in an innings of the same Test.

Gus Atkinson followed India’s Vinoo Mankad (against England in 1952) and Botham (against Pakistan in 1978) as the only men to have achieved that double at Lord’s.

The 26-year-old Surrey paceman’s latest impressive return helped England seal a seventh successive win over Sri Lanka following their five-wicket success in last week’s first Test at Old Trafford.

“To get on both honours boards is incredible,” Atkinson told Sky Sports. “It will take a while to sink in.”

This game was also a personal triumph for Joe Root.

For the first time in 145 matches at this level, Root made hundreds in both innings — 143 and 103 — to set a new record of 34 Test centuries by an England batsman.

Sri Lanka have little time to regroup before the third Test at The Oval starts on Friday.

Follow us on our Official WhatsApp channel

De Silva admitted he had erred in opting to field on a good batting pitch after winning the toss.

“Definitely. I got it wrong,” he told the BBC, before adding: “We have got to improve on the first innings whether we bat or bowl first, that’s what I will be telling my boys is that we’ve got to start better.”

Sri Lanka resumed Sunday on 53-2, with the odds stacked against them given the highest winning fourth-innings total in any Test is the West Indies’ 418-7 against Australia at St John’s in 2002/03.

But Root — who on Saturday had taken his 200th Test catch — reprieved Karunaratne when dropping a tough one-handed slip chance from the opener’s edged cut off Atkinson.

Karunaratne, 36, drove and pulled Atkinson for fours off successive deliveries on his way to a 98-ball fifty including seven boundaries.

The left-hander, however, was out shortly before lunch when injury-plagued fast bowler Olly Stone, in his first Test for three years, produced a rising 87 mph (140 kmph) delivery that Karunaratne could only glove down the legside to wicketkeeper Jamie Smith.

Chandimal counter-attacked early in the afternoon on his way to a dashing 42-ball fifty including 40 runs in boundaries before Atkinson had him caught at short leg off bat and pad.

Kamindu Mendis, boasting a colossal Test batting average of 92 following his third hundred in four Tests at Old Trafford, had made 74 in Sri Lanka’s meagre first-innings 196.

But the 25-year-old left-hander, again batting low down the order, fell for just four on Sunday when caught in the slips off Atkinson.

Mendis’s exit left Sri Lanka, who have now not won any of their nine Tests at Lord’s, slipping towards defeat at 200-7.

De Silva kept England waiting before playing on to Atkinson, who then had Milan Rathnayake caught behind to complete his five-wicket haul.

Chris Woakes had the final say when Lahiru Kumara holed out to Stone at mid-on.

READ: Joe Root opens up on prospect of breaking Sachin Tendulkar’s record

ICC reveals Men’s Player of the Month for July 2024

DUBAI: England fast bowler Gus Atkinson was crowned ICC Men’s Player of the Month for the Month of July on Monday, owing to his brilliant performance in the Test series against West Indies.

The ICC Player of the Month award acknowledges the magnificent individual performers on the international stage.

Gus Atkinson claimed the prestigious award after beating off stiff competition from India’s off-spinner Washington Sundar and Scotland’s pace bowler Charlie Cassell.

The 26-year-old fast bowler was proud and grateful to have received the Player of the Month award.

“It is a real privilege to win the ICC Player of the Month! The start to my Test career has been unbelievable, and I never imagined achieving this level of success in my first series with England,” Atkinson said.

He also expressed his appreciation to England captain Ben Stokes and red-ball head coach Brendon McCullum for establishing a positive and competitive atmosphere in the team’s dressing room.

“I am incredibly grateful to my teammates and the fantastic environment created by Baz (Brendon McCullum) and Stokesy (Ben Stokes),” he added.

Follow us on our Official WhatsApp channel

“It’s an honour to play and represent my country. I know there is a lot of hard work ahead, especially with a big series against Sri Lanka coming up. I’m excited to maintain consistency and do my best to help England succeed,” he further added.

Atkinson left a lasting impression on his Test debut, which was also legendary James Anderson’s farewell international match.

The express pacer dismantled the West Indian batting line-up as he claimed a five-wicket haul in each inning, returning with 12 wickets in the match.

He was adjudged man of the match for his heroics as England thumped West Indies by a massive margin of an innings and 114 runs.

The 26-year-old ran continued his impressive form in the subsequent games, taking 10 more wickets across the remaining two Tests.

He was key to England’s clean sweep victory and earned the Player of the Series award for taking 12 wickets.

READ: Graham Thorpe’s family reveals the cause of his death

ICC unveils nominees for Player of the Month awards for July 2024

DUBAI: The International Cricket Council (ICC) on Monday, unveiled the nominees for the Player of the Month Awards for July 2024.

The ICC Player of the Month award acknowledges the magnificent individual performers on the international stage, and the names shortlisted for July span a range of formats.

The nominees for the Player of the Month include England’s pace bowler Gus Atkinson, India’s off-spinner Washington Sundar and Scotland’s pace bowler Charlie Cassell.

The Scottish pace bowler made his ODI debut in the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup League 2 match against Oman.

He made an unforgettable first impression as he claimed the best bowling figures on debut in ODI cricket, breaking South African fast bowler Kagiso Rabada’s nine-year-old record.

Charlie Cassell claimed the spectacular bowling figures of 7-21, becoming the first bowler to take seven wickets on debut.

Another debutant, who left a lasting impression in his first game is Gus Atkinson, who made his Test debut in legendary James Anderson’s farewell international match during the series against West Indies.

Atkinson dismantled the West Indian batting line-up as he claimed a five-wicket haul in each inning, returning with 12 wickets in the match.

He was adjudged man of the match for his heroics as England thumped West Indies by a massive margin of an innings and 114 runs.

Follow us on our Official WhatsApp channel

The 26-year-old ran continued his impressive form in the subsequent games, taking 10 more wickets across the remaining two Tests.

He was key to England’s clean sweep victory and earned the Player of the Series award for taking 12 wickets.

The third nominee for the coveted ICC Player of the Month Award is Washington Sundar, who returned to the Indian side during the T20I series against Zimbabwe.

Sundar stepped up in the absence of India’s first-choice players, who were rested for the series following the team’s ICC T20 World Cup 2024 triumph.

The spin-bowling all-rounder proved his worth and helped India defeat Zimbabwe 2-1 in the series. He was adjudged Player of the Series for his eight wickets across three games.

He played a solitary game in the following T20I series against Sri Lanka as India’s regular players returned to the side.

However, he gave an impactful performance in the only game he played. He scored a crucial 25 off 18 balls to help India post 137/9.

He then picked two important wickets during Sri Lanka’s innings to force the game into Super Over as the hosts managed 137/8 in 20 overs.

Rohit Sharma trusted Sundar to bowl the Super Over and the off-spinner repaid the faith, taking two wickets for two runs, which earned him a Player of the Match award.

READ: Former England batter Graham Thorpe passes away at 55

A responsible overview of casino magic online argentina should keep expectations realistic and highlight policy clarity. Focus on withdrawals, limits, and KYC requirements first, then assess mobile performance and provider lineup. Promotions can be optional; wagering and expiry terms matter more than headlines. 18+ only; set strict limits.

Voor spelers die waarde hechten aan eerlijke feedback en praktijkervaringen is https://theslotzcasino.nl/spelersrecensies een nuttige ingang. De pagina legt de nadruk op gebruikerservaring, uitbetalingen, bonusvoorwaarden en klantenservice. Daardoor ontstaat een duidelijker beeld van hoe het casino in het dagelijks gebruik aanvoelt, vooral voor bezoekers die niet alleen naar promoties kijken maar ook naar betrouwbaarheid en speelcomfort.