Meia do Figueirense quer aproveitar semana para focar na evolução

MatériaMais Notícias

O Figueirense ocupa o G-4 da Série B do Campeonato Brasileiro e quer se manter firme entre os primeiros colocados da disputa. Com jogo somente no dia 11, quando encara o Juventude, o elenco alvinegro vai aproveitar ao máximo os próximos dias para evoluir, segundo destacou o meia da equipe Renan Mota.

– Vamos procurar aproveitar ao máximo esse período sem jogos na Série B para recuperarmos a parte física e evoluirmos dentro de campo. O grupo vai trabalhar forte nos próximos dias para voltar com tudo no jogo com o Juventude. Temos que continuar trabalhando forte para melhorarmos ainda mais nosso desempenho nas próximas semanas – afirmou.

Ainda de acordo com o atleta, o foco do Figueira é continuar firme na briga pelo acesso nesta temporada.

– Temos que manter o foco jogo a jogo, sem ansiedade. Estamos fazendo uma boa Série B e nos dedicando ao máximo para brigarmos pelo acesso até o fim. Vamos nos dedicar ao máximo para que isso seja possível – concluiu.

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Worried India look to snuff out Windies resurgence

ESPNcricinfo previews the fourth one-dayer between India and West Indies in Indore

The Preview by Nitin Sundar07-Dec-2011Match factsThursday, December 8
Start time 1430 (0900 GMT)Will Darren Sammy be celebrating after the game on Thursday?•AFPBig PictureDarren Sammy’s reactions at the end of each game on this tour have been fascinating to watch. Resignation after the hammering in the Eden Garden’s Test, unabashed school-boy glee following the nerve-jangling draw in Mumbai, and agony after being denied by Umesh Yadav and Varun Aaron in Cuttack. The best of the lot came in Ahmedabad, though, when Sammy lasered down the stumps from mid-on to run out Rohit Sharma and all but confirm West Indies’ first win on tour. He leapt, yelled, pumped his fists and could barely control the adrenaline rush as he charged towards his team-mates. Sammy will be determined to recreate that feeling with the series still up for grabs.West Indies have played better cricket than the hosts in the ODI series, but that isn’t saying much. Their top order has been asked to bat in all three games – a rare streak of extended generosity on the flat decks of the subcontinent – but has floundered against India’s young seamers, before steadily losing momentum against spin in the middle overs. They haven’t been as disadvantaged by the dew as expected in any of the matches, yet have allowed the action to drift along after making major incisions with the new ball. The catching has been poor, the captaincy worse, and on both counts Sammy has been the biggest culprit.The visitors’ lapses mean India need only one win to take the series, but concerns abound for the home side ahead of the Indore ODI. The 2-1 scoreline doesn’t quite convey how much they have been stretched. West Indies had no business letting India’s last pair sneak home in the opening ODI, and have toyed with the hosts’ pop-gun attack in the slog overs in both games since. Bowling meltdowns in the death have become so routine that India don’t panic when it happens anymore (think of the World Cup final). The bigger worry is the prolonged top order funk, and more specifically the lack of runs from Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir. They have two games to hit upon some form ahead of far sterner tests in Australia. Will they shake off the rust in Indore?Form guideIndia LWWWW (Most recent first)
West Indies WLLLWIn the spotlightHis fans have been clamouring for this day for months on end, often disregarding form, and at times even ignoring his injury status. Irfan Pathan is back in the mix, but crucially, he is in form and fitter than he has been at any stage since he last played for India. His resurgence has come the hard way, with wickets by the bunch in the Ranji season, and the banana swing that made him such a rage in 2003-4 has also shown promising signs of reappearance. Can he transfer the rhythm and skill to the white ball?At Motera, Sunil Narine walked up to the cauldron like he belonged and performed without a fuss. The much-feared topspinner made an early appearance, but he got his wickets with an offbreak and a carom ball. If the ball stays dry in Indore, expect him to parade a few more of his unique variations.Pitch and conditionsThe Motera game featured strange crop patterns on the outfield as the groundsmen went a touch overboard with their creativity. There will, however, be no such gimmickry at the Holkar Stadium where heavy seasonal dew in the evenings has dissuaded chief curator Samandar Singh Chouhan and his team from removing any grass from the outfield. According to , Chouhan is betting big on an anti-dew chemical that has been routinely sprayed on the outfield in the lead-up to the game. Expect India to field again if they win the toss, unless Sehwag believes batting in the afternoon will offer a better chance to regain some form.Team newsWest Indies’ best batsman on the tour, Darren Bravo, is out with a hamstring injury. The replacement is most likely to be Adrian Barath, though Kieran Powell deserves a chance after batting impressively in the Tests.West Indies (possible): 1 Lendl Simmons, 2 Adrian Barath / Kieran Powell, 3 Marlon Samuels, 4 Danza Hyatt, 5 Kieron Pollard, 6 Denesh Ramdin (wk), 7 Darren Sammy (capt), 8 Andre Russell, 9 Ravi Rampaul, 10 Kemar Roach, 11 Sunil NarineUmesh Yadav is flying to Australia early, which means Varun Aaron has the chance to return to the XI. It will be a tricky call for Sehwag to make: Irfan Pathan and Vinay Kumar will both expect to play since they are the more experienced seamers in the ODI side. But neither is going to Australia for the Tests; Abhimanyu Mithun and Aaron, who are likely to tussle for the third seamer’s spot in Indore, are.India (possible): 1 Parthiv Patel (wk), 2 Virender Sehwag (capt), 3 Gautam Gambhir, 4 Virat Kohli, 5 Rohit Sharma, 6 Suresh Raina, 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 Irfan Pathan, 9 R Ashwin, 10 R Vinay Kumar, 11 Varun Aaron / Abhimanyu MithunStats and trivia Rohit Sharma has amassed 514 runs against West Indies in 2011 – already the highest by any batsman against them in a calendar year This will be the first day-night international ever played at the Holkar Stadium. The venue has hosted two ODIs prior to this one, with India beating England in both.Quotes”It’s difficult to say I am satisfied when you are losing. But we have shown a lot of spirit and created opportunities to win.”

“It feels great to be leading the Indian attack. The new ball suits me very well because I am more a swing bowler.”

Grêmio analisa a situação de ex-jogador do clube na Europa, mas ouve "não"

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Os bons momentos que o jovem atacante Pedro Rocha viveu com a camisa do Grêmio principalmente em 2016 parecem fazer falta ao ponto de incentivar o clube brasileiro a analisar sua situação no futebol russo.

De acordo com a informação que circulou inicialmente através do tradicional jornal gaúcho Zero Hora, representantes do Tricolor dos Pampas chegaram a contatar o Spartak Moscou-RUS para saber da situação do brasileiro. Foram 14 partidas disputadas na última temporada e apenas um gol, algo que poderia motivar o jogador de 23 anos a analisar com carinho seu retorno ao Grêmio.

No entanto, os russos veem a situação principalmente com o olhar do investimento de 12 milhões de euros (quase R$ 45 milhões) e responderam aos responsáveis pela sondagem que pretendem usar Pedro Rocha em 2018/2019 com mais afinco, acabando nesse momento com a possibilidade de negociação.

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O que tem motivado bastante a diretoria gremista em procurar jogadores com essa característica é, principalmente, a necessidade de trazer mais uma peça de velocidade ao ataque com a tentativa frustrada de recuperar o bom futebol de Maicosuel, que será devolvido ao São Paulo.

Garaway leaves High Performance post

Mark Garaway has decided to leave his post as Cricket Ireland’s High Performance Director, citing family reasons

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Jul-2011Mark Garaway has decided to leave his post as Cricket Ireland’s High Performance Director, citing family reasons. Garaway, who was England’s team analyst for three years, joined Ireland’s staff in 2009 and also helped implement and develop programmes aimed at nurturing the game in Ireland.”My personal situation has progressed to a point where my working HQ and family base need both to be in England,” Garaway said. “I sincerely thank Warren and my other colleagues for the support that they have given me on both a professional and personal perspective over the past two years.”It has been a period of significant growth for the organisation and I am proud to have played my role in developing the structures and recruiting high-achieving individuals into both the Development and Performance Departments. I have really enjoyed working in Ireland these last two years, and wish Cricket Ireland all the success that their talent, passion and commitment on and off the field deserves.””We are very sorry to lose Mark, but of course we appreciate that family comes first,” Cricket Ireland Chief Executive Warren Deutrom said. “He has played the defining role in shaping our cricket department, giving it the structure, dynamism and professionalism that it previously lacked. He has set down the pathway for our youngsters to be the next William Porterfield or Kevin O’Brien, and can be rightfully proud of his significant achievements in such a short space of time.”Current Ireland vice-captain Trent Johnston was also generous in his praise for Garaway saying: “Mark Garaway has been instrumental in setting up a world-class infrastructure for Cricket Ireland. He has put in place processes which will stand Ireland in good stead for generations to come.”He’s been a pleasure to deal with, and on a personal level was very supportive when I was completing my level three coaching course. I wish him and his family all the best for the future.”

Dernbach stars as Sri Lanka struggle

Sri Lanka’s difficult preparations ahead of the first Test continued on the second day at Derby as their top order floundered against a strong England Lions pace attack

Andrew McGlashan at Derby20-May-2011
ScorecardJade Dernbach picked up 5 for 44 as the England Lions seam attack dominated Sri Lanka on the second day in Derby•Getty ImagesSri Lanka’s difficult preparations ahead of the first Test continued on the second day at Derby as their top order floundered against a strong England Lions pace attack. Jade Dernbach was the most successful of the quartet with 5 for 44 while Ajmal Shahzad and Graham Onions claimed two apiece as the tourists were bowled out for 266.At 97 for 6 the innings was hurtling towards a rapid conclusion, but an eighth-wicket stand of 89 between Thisara Perera and Suraj Randiv provided some belated resistance. Randiv, who has one first-class century to his name, finished on 76 but it couldn’t make up for an expensive bowling performance. Dernbach returned to mop up the tail by bowling the last two batsmen with consecutive deliveries and be on a hat-trick for a second time.While the opening day was spent debating the merits of Eoin Morgan, who fell for 193 in the morning session, and Ravi Bopara – and the seemingly nailed-on Test place for the latter – the major interest then switched to England’s reserve pace bowlers. One of them is likely to take the place of the injured Tim Bresnan in the squad for the first Test.Shahzad has impressed during his short international career and, given his ability to find both conventional and reverse swing, would be the most like-for-like replacement for Bresnan. Two big wickets of Tillakaratne Dilshan and Kumar Sangakkara won’t have harmed his chances, but Dernbach has shown there is a rich pool of talent to choose from.The other major interest was the ability of the Sri Lanka batting to adjust to tougher conditions than they experienced at Uxbridge. They were given an awkward 20-minute session before lunch and Dilshan should have departed for 8 but Samit Patel couldn’t gather the edge at third slip.Dilshan was quick to attack any short balls, but Tharanga Paranavitana was trapped lbw by Onions to end the opening stand of 59. Dilshan made the most of being dropped in the previous match against Middlesex to score 123 and was motoring again when he slashed to first slip in Shahzad’s opening over.The batting then began to cave as Dernbach claimed a notable scalp when Mahela Jayawardene guided an edge to third slip where Patel this time held on comfortably. Shahzad struck again when Jonathan Bairstow held an excellent leg-side catch to remove Sangakkara, leaving Sri Lanka’s two main batsmen one more innings before the Test series.Dernbach had the tourists lurching towards a possible follow on when Dinesh Chandimal edged to second slip and Prasanna Jayawardene was pouched at first in consecutive balls. It was far from the ideal preparation for a Test match and England will hope there is some life in the Cardiff pitch so they can target the Sri Lankan batsmen in a similar vain to the Lions bowlers. Given Cardiff’s history, though, that is unlikely so Sri Lanka may feel more comfortable.It is also to their credit that the innings didn’t subside in a heap. Although Thilan Samaraweera let himself down with a flat-footed drive against Onions after reaching 41, Randiv and Perera gave the visitors a much-needed boost. They played aggressively, which knocked some of the bowlers off their length. Perera scored at more than a run-a-ball, while Randiv went to a well-constructed fifty from 91 deliveries, but the partnership was ended when Perera lofted Patel’s first ball to mid-on.Earlier, Morgan fell seven runs short of his second first-class double hundred. He was given an easy restart to his innings after being 156 overnight when Thisara Perera served up two full tosses in the first over of the day as he took three boundaries. Morgan also added a fifth six with a slog-sweep off Randiv as he closed in on the career-best of 209 not out he made for Ireland, against UAE, in the Intercontinental Cup.He was batting so freely that the double hundred appeared a formality but Perera, after changing ends following the expensive start, trapped him leg before to end a 226-ball innings. The England selectors were again present and they will have been impressed by Morgan’s performance even if it won’t earn him a Test place.The fifth-wicket stand with Patel was extended to a ground record of 266 as Patel also latched onto a few early offerings from the Sri Lankan bowlers. He was the first wicket of the day when Dilhara Fernando forced one through his defences for 119.Bairstow, the Yorkshire wicketkeeper, looked composed at the crease and collected a few meaty boundaries before chipping a catch to mid-on where Fernando tried his best to drop it then held on at the fourth attempt. Randiv eventually managed to open his expensive wicket account when Onions missed a charge down the pitch and at the end of the over James Hildreth declared to allow the Lions quick bowlers a chance to impress. They didn’t disappoint.

Rajasthan to rely on Dravid, Warne to attract young players

Faced with a reduced budget of $7.1m at the IPL player auction, the Rajasthan Royals were limited to buying just eight players (of which only two were Indian) and now face another problem – how do they fill out the rest of the squad? The solution, according to franchise officials, will be to use the star power and proven leadership qualities of players such as Rahul Dravid and Shane Warne, and the presence of two current national Twenty20 captains, to attract and mould younger, talented domestic players.Rajasthan were widely considered to have the weakest team on paper in 2008, but their combination of experience and young talent gelled under Shane Warne’s inspired leadership, and they confounded the pundits to lift the trophy in the tournament’s inaugural year. The same blueprint will be in place this time around, which is why Sean Morris, the Rajasthan chief executive, says they honed in on players who have captained their national Twenty20 sides, such as Johan Botha and Paul Collingwood.”We had to be focused and have specific targets,” Morris told ESPNcricinfo. “I think we’ve got the kind of dressing room you would build if you wanted a dream dressing room of leaders. We’ve surpassed our expectations. [There is] lots of talent that we can bring in to the dressing room that is full of international experience, creating a blend of incredible experience with the young, local players.””All these Indian boys can have Dravid as a mentor,” Raghu Iyer, spokesperson for Rajasthan, said. “The strategy is to have a blend of youth and experience. That is what delivered for us in season one. Yusuf [Pathan] was not the star he is now. [Ravindra] Jadeja was not the star he is now. They have all delivered for us and done extremely well.”There is a second incentive the team can offer talented, young players that other franchises might not be able to match – the opportunity to play regularly in the IPL. Over the first three years, a number of domestic players merely sat on the sidelines and watched while the more established players in the squad were picked for matches. They still benefitted from training with and being exposed to international players, but there is no substitute for competitive games.”Our players are going to be playing a lot of cricket for us,” Morris said. “The young Indian players will be looking at all the teams and players and thinking who am I going to compete with and when I am going to play? And they will look at Rajasthan and will be thinking I have a fantastic chance of playing.”The franchise plans to begin augmenting its squad with players from Rajasthan’s Ranji Trophy team, which has had an excellent domestic season, knocking off heavyweights Mumbai and Tamil Nadu on their way to the finals against Baroda. “The domestic players from Rajasthan are going to get a lot of focus,” Iyer, said. “They have done very well this season. There is a loyalty there and talent as well. We need to be riding that wave.”Among the players the franchise is looking at are 18-year-old Deepak Chahar, who made a huge splash on his first-class debut by taking 8 for 10 to dismiss Hyderabad for a Ranji record low-score of 21, and 20-year-old Ashok Menaria, who captained India in the Under-19 World Cup in New Zealand in 2010, after which he bagged an IPL contract with Royal Challengers Bangalore. Rajasthan’s wicketkeeper, Rohit Jhalani, is another player the franchise has its eye on as they failed to pick up a keeper in the auction. In addition, the team is hoping to re-sign players that were part of its development squad for the first three years.Naturally, the franchise is also attempting to sign some of the more prominent domestic players, such as the Mumbai pair of middle-order batsman Ajinkya Rahane and seamer Dhawal Kulkarni, by offering them the same carrot of regular cricket alongside established stars.”At the end of the day, the domestic players are going to make a lot of difference,” Iyer said. “It [the squad] is going to be lean and mean. Everybody has learnt that.”

Clarke fights, then falls, as England eye victory

Kevin Pietersen gave England every chance of victory in Adelaide with his career-best 227, but it’s his bowling that might have made the biggest difference

The Bulletin by Brydon Coverdale06-Dec-2010
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsMichael Clarke fought hard for 80 but his dismissal on the last ball of the day left Australia in some trouble•AFP

Kevin Pietersen gave England every chance of victory in Adelaide with his career-best 227, but it’s his bowling that might have made the biggest difference. Michael Clarke and Michael Hussey gave Australia a fighting chance of escaping with a draw to head to the third Test in Perth still 0-0, but the loss of Clarke to the last delivery on the fourth day gave England a major boost amid the gloomy conditions.Clarke had 80, and was threatening to stand between England and victory, until he inside-edged onto his pad and the ball looped over the shoulder of the short leg Alastair Cook, who took a good catch. Adding to the late drama, the umpire Tony Hill called the appeal not out, but England asked for a review and Clarke was found guilty of putting bat on ball, to hand Pietersen his first Test wicket since 2008.It was exactly what Australia didn’t need, after Clarke and Hussey put together a promising 104-run partnership. Instead of two established men walking out in the morning, the under-pressure Marcus North will join Hussey, who was on 44, with the new ball due at the end of the over Pietersen will complete with four more deliveries. And if that wasn’t pressure enough for North, there is a chance of morning showers, which could mean cloud cover and swing.Australia will be hoping the showers turn into heavier rain, and there is the chance of a thunderstorm in the afternoon. The battle will be ensuring they last that long, with only Brad Haddin and a long tail to follow Hussey and North, who will resume with Australia still 137 runs behind, at 4 for 238, searching for a draw that would feel like a win.It remains to be seen whether Andrew Strauss will rue his decision to bat into the fourth morning, despite already holding a 300-plus lead. He might have been questioning that call while Hussey and Clarke were together, batting solidly either side of a heavy downpour late in the afternoon. Clarke seemed to have shaken off his poor touch and his bad back, looking comfortable against pace and spin.And it wasn’t easy against Graeme Swann, who created the most problems for Australia. He removed Simon Katich and claimed the big wicket of Ricky Ponting, before Steven Finn chipped in by dismissing Shane Watson for another solid half-century that promised to be more. Swann was finding sharp spin from the rough and his drift and flight caused a few headaches for the Australian batsmen.Several times, inside edges didn’t quite fly to hand for the cluster of fielders surrounding the bat, and Clarke was given out caught at slip on 67 only to have the decision reversed on review; the ball had spun past his bat and lobbed up off his pad. Generally, though, Clarke handled Swann well, using his feet to smother the spin and driving hard through gaps on both sides of the wicket.Importantly, all the Australian batsmen played positively, refusing to simply bat for time and allow England to dictate the flow. Clarke struck 11 boundaries and Hussey, who continued his excellent series, slammed Swann over midwicket for six late in the day, ensuring that any bad balls were put away, as they would be in happier circumstances.The only batsman who really struggled was Ponting, who was mesmerised by Swann and couldn’t get off the mark until his 13th delivery. Despite punishing Swann with a vicious cut for four and a powerful sweep to the boundary, Ponting was eliminated by Swann on 9 when he played for the offspinner and edged a straighter ball low to Paul Collingwood at first slip.Swann had already ended the 84-run opening partnership when Katich tried to defend and was caught behind off a thin edge for 43. Katich had hobbled his way through the innings with an Achilles tendon injury that severely hampered his running between wickets, and although his hard work was valuable, there is every chance the Australians will need to look for another opener for the third Test in Perth if his problem persists.The man who threatened to be Australia’s anchor was Watson, who batted confidently with his usual aggression and well-timed drives, but once again he failed to convert a strong start. Watson has passed fifty on 15 occasions in Test cricket but only twice have those half-centuries turned into hundreds, and if ever Australia needed triple figures from him, it was this time.It was the patience of Finn, who peppered away consistently just outside off stump, that did for Watson when he edged to first slip for 57. The inability of Australia’s batsmen to capitalise on their starts was all the more frustrating for them given the monstrous scores racked up by England’s batsmen, led by Pietersen with his double-century.Pietersen added 14 to his overnight score but it was enough to beat his previous Test best of 226, which he made against West Indies at Headingley in 2007. He eventually fell caught by Katich at slip, when he misjudged a slog sweep, and it was a consolation wicket for Xavier Doherty, who finished with 1 for 158 and looked nowhere near as threatening as Swann.England’s batsmen scored their runs briskly after Strauss decided against declaring overnight, and in nine overs they pushed the total up by 69 before Strauss called a halt to the innings. Ian Bell had moved on to an unbeaten 68 and Matt Prior was on 27, which guided England to 5 for 620 – their highest Test innings total in 20 years and their fifth-best of all time against Australia.The visitors would be sorely disappointed if that effort doesn’t turn into a win. They’ll want a lift from James Anderson, who didn’t bowl at his best, while a stomach strain could keep Stuart Broad from playing much of a part on the final day. England can only hope the weather doesn’t play any role either.

City: Guardiola confirms doubt for clash

Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola has cast doubt over the availability of two more defensive options for the Premier League meeting with Watford. 

The lowdown: Walker worry

The Sky Blues are currently in the midst of a gruelling fixture schedule and are likely to remain without Kyle Walker with an ankle injury after Ruben Dias also spent time on the sidelines recently.

As just a solitary point separates Guardiola’s side and the chasing Liverpool, every remaining league game has been billed as a must-win encounter by the Spanish boss.

Walker appear to roll his ankle in the win at Atletico Madrid and has since been spotted in a protective boot, raising plenty of doubts over his availability for the run-in.

However, it seems he’s not the only defensive issue for Pep to worry about…

The latest: Defensive duo doubtful

Speaking during the pre-match press conference, as relayed by the Manchester Evening News, Guardiola is unsure about the availability of John Stones and Nathan Ake.

When asked over fresh team news, he said: “A niggle [Stones]. Little problems, like Nathan today we make an assessment, tomorrow we decide.”

Regular England international Stones is believed to have felt tightness during the 3-0 win over Brighton & Hove Albion in midweek whilst Ake had to be replaced at half time due to a twisted ankle.

The verdict: No risks required

In truth, the potential defensive absentees shouldn’t cause too many headaches for City in a game the hosts should dominate at the Etihad.

Albeit Roy Hodgson’s side will arrive with their Premier League status hanging in the balance, Watford have only mustered 30 goals in 32 matches this season and therefore Aymeric Laporte alongside a fit again Dias should be more than enough to cope with any threat posed by the visitors.

Allowing key players such as Stones, recently hailed as ‘phenomenal’ by Guardiola, time to recover ahead of crunch clashes still to come is vitally important as the Citizens still harbour ambitions of completing a historic double this season.

In other news, a journalist has shared a major City transfer breakthrough. Read more here.

Update on CPFC contract talks with Zaha

Crystal Palace are enjoying a comfortable season in the Premier League, with Patrick Vieira guiding the side to a potential top-half finish in his first season in charge at Selhurst Park there could be a problem unfolding ahead of next season.

What’s the word?

According to journalist, Pete O’Rourke, Crystal Palace are unlikely to improve the current salary of Wilfried Zaha to extend his contract beyond the current 15 months that he has left at the club.

O’Rourke told GIVEMESPORT: “He’s on a pretty good deal at Palace as it stands right now. I think he’s probably the highest-paid player at the club, so I’m not sure if Palace will be willing to give him an improvement on that.”

Disaster for Palace

Wilfried Zaha has been back to his best this season and surely Palace will want to do everything they can to keep the striker at the club next season, but with rumoured interest from Tottenham Hotspur and Arsenal this summer, and the club unlikely to increase his wages, it could spell disaster for Vieira.

As per SofaScore, the 29-year-old hailed “phenomenal by Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta, has scored 11 goals and contributed one assist so far this season in the Premier League, with 1.4 key passes and 1.2 tackles per game as well as a pass accuracy of 81%, proving he has become a key component in the progress at Selhurst Park.

The £130k-per-week star has even admitted he would be open to a move in an interview with The Face, which will again only add to the problems the Palace board are faced with in keeping the forward at the club;

“I feel like I can have another shot at the top teams, because my dream is to win things,” he said. ​

“I’m good enough to go out there and compete with the best. If the opportunity came, I wouldn’t turn it down, because I feel like I deserve it.”

Crystal Palace have already made the Ivorian goal machine their highest paid player, so it will be interesting to see if they make any movement on his salary ahead of this summer to secure his future before other clubs begin to make offers, otherwise Vieira will need to prepare for the loss of Zaha’s output going into next season.

In other news: Vieira can unearth CPFC’s next Mitchell in rarely-seen 18 y/o who is “full of energy”

Mirpur capacity slashed for New Zealand ODIs

The Sher-e-Bangla National stadium in Mirpur is likely to operate at less-than-half capacity during the one-day series between Bangladesh and New Zealand in October due to ongoing renovation work

Cricinfo staff22-Sep-2010The Sher-e-Bangla National stadium in Mirpur is likely to operate at less than half its capacity during the one-day series between Bangladesh and New Zealand in October because of ongoing renovation work ahead of the 2011 World Cup.The official capacity of the stadium – which will host six World Cup matches, including two quarterfinals – is 26,000 but the BCB will issue a maximum of 10,000 tickets for each match of the New Zealand series. Of these, around 2000-3000 will be complimentary tickets, leaving only 7,000-8,000 seats for the general public.”For the greater interest, we have to accept some difficulties for the coming series,” Gazi Ashraf Hossain, the BCB’s director and tour organising secretary, told the . “Within a very short time we will get a guideline from the local organising committee about the capacity for the series. But the number will not be more than 10,000.”The first ODI between New Zealand and Bangladesh will be played on October 5.

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