England"s ruthless streak turned India series around – Nasser Hussain

Nasser Hussain: England's new ruthless streak turned series around

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UPDATED:

23:46 GMT, 17 December 2012

The first Test in Ahmedabad may have seen England beaten heavily but the second innings there proved a turning point both in this series and in the future of this team. Without it things could look very different now.

Just look at what had gone on before then. The high of going to No 1 in the Test world last year was followed by a 5-0 one-day thrashing in India, then a 3-0 Test hammering by Pakistan in the UAE followed by a convincing Test series defeat by South Africa last summer and then a very poor performance in spinning conditions in the World Twenty20 in Sri Lanka.

All the good vibes about the England cricket team were starting to be questioned.

Ruthless: Stuart Broad was gone from the side after two poor tests

Ruthless: Stuart Broad was gone from the side after two poor tests

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But when Alastair Cook scored a big hundred in a losing cause in Ahmedabad in that second innings things changed. It was the moment the captain said to his team: ‘Hang on, there are no demons here. The ball is not spinning both ways. If we show some character, application and belief we can do this.’ And since then the transformation has been astonishing.

Everything England have done since then has been right. And their business has been conducted in a quite ruthless manner. There has been no dilly-dallying, no worrying about reputations. This has been anything but a closed shop.

Tim Bresnan has been a very good cricketer for England but as soon as Cook and Andy Flower realised they had made a mistake in not picking Monty Panesar for the first Test the Yorkshireman was gone.

Stuart Broad was England’s vice-captain and one of the leading wicket-takers in world cricket in 2012 but when he had two poor Tests and England knew they had to get a fit-again Steven Finn in the side, Broad was also gone.

Samit Patel had not done too much wrong but once it became clear that his bowling was not going to be required with Panesar in the team England took one look at him and said: ‘He’s not one of our best six batsmen.’

And then they overlooked Jonny Bairstow and Eoin Morgan to make another ruthless, and what turned out to be a thoroughly astute, call in picking Joe Root.

England basically had to nail everything to win this series after going one down and they did it. Look at Kevin Pietersen. He was a frenetic wreck in the first Test and only had a couple of days to come up with a defensive technique against his old nemesis, left-arm spin. What happened He went out and smashed 186 in Mumbai.

Good call: Joe Root was brought in for business and it proved a wise decision

Good call: Joe Root was brought in for business and it proved a wise decision

Consider also that this effectively became a three-match series when you look at how poor the wicket in Nagpur was.

Nobody
was going to get a result on that so England had to win in both Mumbai
and Kolkata, which they did in spectacular fashion. Two players stand
out — Cook and Jimmy Anderson. The way the new captain went about his
work was hugely impressive. He is a run machine. Cook would always start
again after a big innings as if he still had everything to prove.

Tour by numbers

Tour by numbers

He was never out straight after an interval or after drinks, as many were in this series, and he always made sure he kicked on after reaching a hundred.

And Anderson was world-class. The deliveries and spells he produced. The hold he had over Sachin Tendulkar. He led the attack with great energy and gusto, and he was not even as grumpy as he can be. Jimmy set the tone and he enjoyed what he did.

India are not the side they were. If I was putting together a composite side from the two teams I would start by picking the whole England attack. England, for once, had better spinners than India in Indian conditions. The tourists were fitter, both physically and mentally, and hungrier for Test cricket. India would not have been able to take four wickets late in a day, after two sessions without a wicket, as England did on Saturday.

India went one up and just thought they could prepare a turning pitch and England would crumble. They showed too much bravado.

And England made them pay very heavily indeed for that.

Picture dispute: We are unable to carry live pictures from the fourth Test in Nagpur due to a dispute between the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) and international news organisations.

The BCCI has refused access to Test venues to established picture agencies Getty Images and Action Images and other Indian photographic agencies.

MailOnline consider this action to be a strike against press freedom and supports the action to boycott BCCI imagery.

Jamie Mackie says he"s proud to say he"s former Wimbledon, not former MK Dons: EXCLUSIVE

EXCLUSIVE: I'm proud to be former Wimbledon, not MK Dons, says QPR's Mackie

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UPDATED:

22:45 GMT, 29 November 2012

Ask Jamie Mackie if he considers himself a former Wimbledon or MK Dons player, and you’ll get an unequivocal response.

'I'd always say I was a former Wimbledon player,' said the Queens Park Rangers forward. 'I just don’t feel as emotionally attached to the MK Dons. Wimbledon was my first club.

'I made my debut in the league for the club, even though, strangely, it was playing in Milton Keynes.

Top Don: Jamie Mackie considers himself a former Wimbledon, not MK, player

Top Don: Jamie Mackie considers himself a former Wimbledon, not MK, player

'But the badge said Wimbledon. We were Wimbledon, we had Wimbledon’s history — we just weren’t playing there.'

Mackie is part of a small band of footballers to have played for Wimbledon and MK Dons. Having emerged through the youth ranks at Wimbledon, Mackie made his first-team debut in December 2003.

But the famous Crazy Gang spirit was no more. Wimbledon had already moved to the National Hockey Stadium in Milton Keynes — and just eight months later he was lining up for MK Dons in a 1-0 defeat by Doncaster.

'I was at Wimbledon as a youngster, I understand the turmoil the supporters have gone through,' said the Scotland forward. 'Some Wimbledon fans say losing the club was like losing a loved one. I don’t think that is taking it too far.

'That’s what is amazing about football, the passion runs so deep. It’s like dating a girl and then breaking up with her. I can totally understand it.'

But, while Wimbledon’s break-up meant heartbreak for the club’s fans, Mackie is not ashamed to admit he benefited from the move.

'I know that era will hold bad memories for Wimbledon fans but for me it was a time to remember because I made my breakthrough into the first team,' he said.

New dawn: Wimbledon's league place was taken by the newly-formed MK Dons in 2004

New dawn: Wimbledon's league place was taken by the newly-formed MK Dons in 2004

Phoenix from the flames: AFC Wimbledon have risen through non-league football to League Two

Phoenix from the flames: AFC Wimbledon have risen through non-league football to League Two

'I was getting a game when maybe I might not have if the club were still as strong as they once were but, I have to admit, it was strange playing for Wimbledon in Milton Keynes. One day we were told we were going to Milton Keynes and that was it.

'Of course, it was a bit weird to start with but we were employed by the club. The players didn’t even have a choice.

'Ideally, we wanted it to stay as Wimbledon and keep playing in London. But we, the players, had bills to pay, mortgages and families to feed.

'We were all under contract and, if we didn’t play then, we might not have had a job. We had to work.'

Once Mackie walks off the pitch against Aston Villa on Saturday afternoon, his thoughts will turn to Sunday’s FA Cup clash at stadium:mk, when MK Dons and AFC Wimbledon, the reincarnation of Wimbledon, will go head-to-head for the first time.

Up for the cup: Wimbledon face MK Dons for the first time on Sunday in the FA Cup

Up for the cup: Wimbledon face MK Dons for the first time on Sunday in the FA Cup

The 27-year-old said: 'This match was always inevitable. It was always going to take place, be it in the league or a cup. I know a lot of AFC fans never wanted to see this match take place and I can sort of understand their point.

'It would be great if this match could be the beginning of the end of the rivalry but I don’t think that will be the case. You will never change that, it will be very hard to draw a line under it because of the history.

'But, for me, both sets of fans should be proud of their clubs for their own achievements.

'I see the clubs as completely different entities. I see AFC Wimbledon as the new Wimbledon and MK Dons as MK Dons.

'I don’t attach the old Wimbledon to MK Dons, the badges tell you that and that’s how it should be.

'But at the same time, I don’t think people should hold that much against MK Dons as a club and people should appreciate what they have achieved.

'The chairman is fantastic and an ambitious man. At the end of the day, Wimbledon were going out of business and if he didn’t do it then someone else would have tried. A lot of credit has to go to him because the club were on their knees.'

A large section of south-west London will not see it that way. Particularly at 12.30pm on Sunday.

Jen Chang wants to be director of football at Monaco

Now former Liverpool media chief Chang wants to be director of football at Monaco

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UPDATED:

12:02 GMT, 28 November 2012

Jen Chang, Liverpool’s hapless former
media chief who was never suited to the post, has shown an even more
unlikely interest in becoming director of football at Monaco —
especially as one of the reasons given for his departure from Anfield
was that his family was still based in New York.

One link for Chang is that Bruce
Bundrant, Liverpool’s former head of partnerships, is commercial
director at Monaco. But he only overlapped with Chang at Anfield for a
few weeks.

French fancy: Former Liverpool chief Jen Chang (right)

French fancy: Former Liverpool chief Jen Chang (right)

Chang left the club following the Twitter storm with spoof blogger 'Duncan Jenkins'.

The club were forced to apologise to Jenkins, real name Sean Cummins, for the 'inappropriate actions' of Chang, after they met in a Manchester restaurant.

Chang wrongly believed inside information used by Cummins on Twitter had been fed to him by an Anfield mole.

The fan then alleged in a blog that Chang made a series of threats to him, which included revoking his shared season ticket.

After accusing Cummins of costing the club 300,000 extra in the Fabio Borini transfer from Roma this summer because of 'information' posted on the Jenkins Twitter feed, Cummins pointed out that all his information was lifted from fans' forums.

Exclusive: Sportsmail revealed the turmoil at Liverpool

Exclusive: Sportsmail revealed the turmoil at Liverpool

It is then alleged that Chang demanded he tweet under the fake account to 'confess' there was no mole and the whole account was made up.

After Cummins complained, Liverpool managing director Ian Ayre spoke to both men before apologising for Chang’s error.

In his letter to Cummins he wrote: ‘I acknowledge some of the elements you highlight were not appropriate. I would therefore like to apologise to you on behalf of Liverpool FC, for any upset and distress this caused you.’

'Clearly it is not appropriate for me to comment on how the club is managing this internally, and I trust you understand this.'

Chang has been in New York sorting out the family home after Hurricane Sandy.

Newcastle handed Euro boost after Bruges axe boss George Leekens

Newcastle handed Euro boost after Bruges axe boss Leekens

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UPDATED:

14:56 GMT, 6 November 2012

Newcastle United's Europa League opponents FC Bruges have been thrown into turmoil ahead of this week's meeting in Belgium.

The Belgian side have sacked manager George Leekens after a run of six games without a win.

Axed: Georges Leekens

Axed: Georges Leekens

The former Belgium manager, who was in his second spell at the Jan Breydel Stadium, was dismissed after the 1-0 defeat to Zulte-Waregem at the weekend.

Reserve team coach Philippe Clement will be in charge for Thursday's clash with Newcastle in Bruges which the Belgian side need to win to stand any chance of staying in the competition.

Bruges lost 1-0 at St James's Park last month, thanks to a Gabriel Obertan goal, but performed well in front of more than 2,500 travelling fans.

Leekens, 63, who managed nine different Belgian clubs as well as taking over the national team twice, had vowed to exact revenge this week with a fully-fit side, while injuries will force Alan Pardew to name an even more makeshift Newcastle side than usual.

Why I had to go: Captain classy Strauss bows out, saying he wasn"t up to it any more

Why I had to go: Captain classy Strauss bows out, saying he wasn't up to it any more

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UPDATED:

23:03 GMT, 29 August 2012

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It was apt in this Olympic year that Andrew Strauss should say he had ‘run his race’ when he took his leave from cricket.

There was to be no gold medal at the end of his very own marathon but nobody within the England cricket team has better embodied the Games ideal than their selfless, statesmanlike leader.

Strauss insisted it was his lack of runs, rather than the Kevin Pietersen text fiasco, that made him decide to go.

‘The driver of it all was my form with the bat,’ he said. ‘I haven’t played well enough for a long time now. For a captain to perform his role properly it’s important that he’s not a passenger and also that people are not speculating as to whether he should be in the side. I knew I wasn’t going to improve. I’ve run my race.’

Scroll down for video

Time to declare: Andrew Strauss announced his retirement from all forms of the game at Lord's

Time to declare: Andrew Strauss announced his retirement from all forms of the game at Lord's

Relaxed mood: Strauss spoke with his usual calmness and assurance

Relaxed mood: Strauss spoke with his usual calmness and assurance

Strauss inherited the England captaincy in the midst of a crisis involving Pietersen and he leaves it three-and-a-half years later amid more KP-induced turmoil but this retirement from all cricket has little to do with the debilitating effects of that particular wheel turning full circle.

Sandwiched between the two Pietersen affairs has come a truly golden period in which Strauss became one of England’s most successful captains.

There have been home and away Ashes successes and the high of thrashing India to go top of the world last year, but Strauss’s powers have been on the wane since then and he has acted now to try to make sure his side’s concurrent slide can be arrested. As ever, he put the interests of Team England first.

‘It hasn’t occurred overnight,’ said Strauss as he sat between his boss Hugh Morris and his successor Alastair Cook at Lord’s.

A class act: Strauss takes the plaudits after retaining the Ashes in Melbourne

A class act: Strauss takes the plaudits after retaining the Ashes in
Melbourne and took England to No 1 in the Test rankings (below) after a 4-0 whitewash of India

A summer of strain on and off the field has contributed to Strauss's decision

A summer of strain on and off the field has contributed to Strauss's decision

‘It’s been a feeling that has grown in
the last six to 12 months and in the last few weeks it has become
apparent that this is the right time. I wanted to go on my own terms
with my head held high. This is the best time to do that. You just feel
it in your heart.’

Perhaps we should have seen this coming. Perhaps we should have realised a 2-0 defeat by South Africa coupled with a batting average of 17 from three Tests for the 35-year-old added up to the end. After all, that captain slayer Graeme Smith was in charge of the opposition and both Nasser Hussain and Michael Vaughan will tell you what happens when he is in town.

It was just that with Pietersen left out for disciplinary reasons and England wobbling all year, Strauss’s calm hand on the tiller seemed to be needed more than ever in India this winter. That this news came as a shock said everything about how, as Cook said, you can take some people for granted.

‘I go out with absolutely no regrets,’ insisted Strauss. ‘I’ve achieved a lot more than I thought I would. That makes me feel very proud and honoured. I like to feel I played the game in the right way and adhered to my principles. If people remember me for that I’ll be very happy.

Loss of form: Strauss has struggled with the bat in recent years

Loss of form: Strauss has struggled with the bat in recent years, averaging 17.83 against South Africa

Out of form: Strauss averaged 17.83 with the bat against South Africa
Strauss stat zone

24: Tests won as captain by Strauss out of 50. Only Michael Vaughan, with 26 victories in 51 Tests, has won more games as captain of England.

169: His top score in 85 innings as captain, against West Indies at St John’s, Antigua, in February 2009.

1,421: Test runs against Australia, more than he made against any other team (next best 1,408 against West Indies).

40.76: Strauss’s batting average as captain, almost identical to his overall Test average of 40.91.

100: Test caps won by Strauss, placing him joint-eighth on England’s all-time list with Graham Thorpe. Alec Stewart tops the list on 133.

6: Of his 21 Test hundreds were scored against West Indies, his favourite opponents. He didn’t manage a ton against Bangladesh or Sri Lanka.

11: Tests lost as captain, six of them in 2012 alone.

‘The last week or two haven’t been ideal but I like to think I’ve gone out at a good time. We may have lost that final Test but I’ve never been prouder of an England team. The way they played at Lord’s after all the distractions, the way they stuck together and the resolve and fight everyone showed was a fantastic way for me to go out. The players kindly got me a hundred bottles of wine for my 100th Test and I think they will furnish me very well in my retirement.’

There was a smile from Strauss but enormous sadness among all present. It did not quite end literally in tears, as it did for Hussain at Edgbaston and Vaughan at Loughborough, but there were plenty of metaphorical ones and a large elephant in the ECB rooms in the form of Pietersen. Has he ultimately driven his captain out of office with his ‘provocative’ texts about Strauss to South African players and his disloyal behaviour at Headingley

‘No, not in any way,’ insisted
Strauss. ‘I’ve been thinking about this for a while and I first spoke to
(coach) Andy Flower about it before the whole business reared its head.
It hasn’t been a consideration. What happened hasn’t undermined me in
the eyes of the team. It has been a difficult thing to deal with but
nothing that has made me more or less inclined to lead the side forward.
I knew my time was up probably before the South African series and
certainly by the end of it I knew it was time to go.’

Strauss
eventually made up his mind while on holiday with his family in the
aftermath of the Lord’s Test. He pulled out of Middlesex’s match at
Worcester on Monday night and then informed all at the ECB on Tuesday.
Significantly, there were no attempts by Flower nor anyone else to
change his mind.

Winning team: Strauss with England team director Andy Flower

Winning team: Strauss with England team director Andy Flower

There seems to be a four-year cycle for England captains, apart from Pietersen, and Strauss has pretty much reached the end of his.

The players were all informed, rather quaintly, in the form of letters hand-written by Strauss and given to them after they had lost to South Africa at the Ageas Bowl. He is yet to speak to them all personally about his decision but he will do. No texts, provocative or otherwise, nor emails for the England captain. He is not that sort of bloke.

‘It’s a hugely sad moment, saying
goodbye to team-mates and, in particular, Andy Flower, who has been a
great support for me and has taken the side forward in so many ways,’
said Strauss. ‘But it’s time for the team to refresh and think about how
best to regain that No 1 ranking. This is a great way for us to be able
to do that. If people still think I should be part of the side then
that validates my decision. I would have hated to have outstayed my
welcome.’

He was never
likely to do that. While Strauss goes off to spend time with his young
family, gets his golf handicap down and decides what to do next — the
smart money is on cricket administration but not commentary — England
must get ready for India and solve the Pietersen dilemma without the man
unwittingly at the centre of the row.

Doubling up: Strauss made a century in each innings in Chennai in 2008

Doubling up: Strauss made a century
in each innings in Chennai in 2008

‘Nothing has changed with Kevin,’ said Strauss. ‘There is a process to go through and it’s not going to happen overnight.’

So how would he advise Cook to deal with, shall we say, difficult individuals

‘I’m not going to answer that one directly in case it’s interpreted as being about a certain individual,’ said Strauss with a smile.

‘My advice to Alastair is to savour and enjoy the challenge of captaining your country. Throw yourself into it with everything you’ve got and have no regrets. I’ve got every confidence that’s what Alastair will do.’

New era: Strauss passes on the baton to Cook for the visit to India

New era: Strauss passes on the baton to Alastair Cook for the visit to India

Captain Cook: England's new Test captain was unveiled on Wednesday
Short and tweet

Michael Vaughan @VaughanCricket

Can’t believe Straussy didn’t Cry….. Lol

Phil Neville @fizzer18

Sad to c Strauss retire-didn’t c that coming at all been a great captain that’s for sure handled himself with class!!

Jonathan Agnew @Aggerscricket

Always feel sorry for the successor on days like this. Touch of ‘the King is dead, long live the King.’ And Cook faces a huge challenge now

Stuart Broad @StuartBroad8
Awesome guy, great leader, dependable batsman and a solid 1 slip catcher. Cheers Straussy you’ll be playing scratch golf within a year…
…Best Straussy knock for me was his 100 on the 1st day of the Ashes Test at Lords, allowed us bowlers to have a massive lunch!

Matthew Hoggard @Hoggy602

Andrew Strauss has been a fantastic servant to the game of cricket I am lucky to have played with him and one game with him as captain

Both Morris and Cook talked about dealing with the Pietersen issue ‘behind closed doors’, with the next step being talks between the batsman, Morris and Flower and it is clear that there is no softening of England’s hardline stance. If anything attitudes may have hardened, particularly among the players who will undoubtedly believe Pietersen may have played a part in the departure of the captain they held in such high regard.

Only pragmatism might save the errant star because without both him and Strauss, England’s top order is going to look mightily inexperienced when faced with the enormous challenge of taking on India in their own conditions.

It could easily be argued that England’s hopes of winning on the sub-continent may depend on somehow re-integrating Pietersen into a dressing room that remains openly hostile towards him.
Jonathan Trott may be promoted to open the batting alongside Cook but that would leave another gap in a middle order that already contains young players in Jonny Bairstow and James Taylor.

Yorkshire’s highly promising Joe Root has long been considered Strauss’s eventual successor but will England throw him into the deep end that India represents

Saga: Strauss and Kevin Pietersen (above left) have dominated the headlines of late

Saga: Strauss and Kevin Pietersen (above left) have dominated the headlines of late

Then there are the question marks over the fitness of Graeme Swann, who was left out of the remaining three one-day internationals against South Africa to rest his chronic elbow problem ahead of the World Twenty20. He will be replaced for now by James Tredwell but Swann, who will surely need another operation on that right elbow soon, is integral to England’s chances of thriving in India and beyond with a four-man attack. Over to you, captain Cook.

At least the new Test leader will have the enormous presence of Flower alongside him to drive the rebuilding process because Morris moved quickly to reassure everyone that the team director is in no hurry to follow Strauss out of the exit door.

‘Andy Flower still has enormous energy and enthusiasm for the job,’ said Morris, managing director of Team England. ‘He’s very excited about the challenges ahead over the next two or three years. Andy is fully committed to that. He’s really looking forward to working with Alastair with the Test team.’

Flower will have to do that, though, without the man who he has worked so well and so productively with since the beginning of 2009. The Flower-Strauss combo proved to be a cricketing marriage made in heaven and only time will tell whether he can truly have the same chemistry with Cook.

Debut ton: Strauss celebrates his century at Lord's in 2004

Debut ton: Strauss celebrates his century against New Zealand at Lord's in 2004

Iconic moment: Andrew Strauss catches Adam Gilchrist off Andrew Flintoff at Trent Bridge in 2005, in what became one of the defining moments of an epic series

Iconic moment: Strauss catches Adam Gilchrist off Andrew Flintoff at Trent Bridge in 2005, in what became one of the defining moments of an epic series

There was a round of applause from the media when Strauss left his final press conference — we hacks are usually too cynical for that sort of thing — and he was heard to say ‘well done mate’ to Cook as the pair disappeared from view.

The new captain is not as comfortable in the public eye as the outgoing leader and Strauss, a team man to the last, recognised that in giving him a pat on the back for his debut performance.

A cricketing statesman and a batsman good enough to score more than 7,000 runs and 21 Test centuries over 100 appearances, 50 of them as captain. Yes, Andrew Strauss will be missed, but the timing of his departure is perfect.

VIDEO: Andrew Strauss announces his retirement…

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England must block out Kevin Pietersen furore to beat South Africa

Enough about KP, let's play! England must block out text furore and take fight to tourists

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UPDATED:

22:30 GMT, 15 August 2012

Andrew Strauss would never have dreamt that the build-up to his 100th Test for England would be like this.

Graeme Smith could never have imagined that the eve of his record-breaking 94th Test as captain would be so dominated by one absent opponent. Once again at Lord's everybody was talking about Kevin.

These two contrasting, highly successful skippers conducted themselves admirably in their different ways ahead of the decisive final Test, Strauss reasserting his authority by talking in strong terms about the Kevin Pietersen affair while Smith acted in a bemused, slightly prickly manner over a saga that has affected his team, too.

Quit talking: All the build-up to the final Test has surrounded Pietersen's absence

Quit talking: All the build-up to the final Test has surrounded Pietersen's absence

That Pietersen apology in full

I did send what you might call provocative texts to my close friends in the SA team. The texts were meant as banter between close friends. I need to rein myself in sometimes.

I apologise to Straussy and the team for the inappropriate remarks at the press conference and for the texts. I truly didn't mean to cause upset or tension particularly with important games at stake.

This is a hugely important Test, with England needing to win it not only to square the series but also to stop South Africa overtaking them as the best Test team in the world. Now we will see which captain will be able to cut through the distractions caused by a man who is close to neither.

At any other time there would be much debate about whether Strauss's position would be in any way threatened if England were to lose this game and the Investec series 2-0 and topple from their lofty perch after just a year.

Yet there has been such turmoil caused by the biggest crisis in English cricket since Pietersen clashed with coach Peter Moores, leading to Strauss and Andy Flower taking over, that surely England will want the incumbent's calm hand on the tiller even if South Africa triumph.

Strauss, as ever, cut a mightily authoritative figure yesterday as he faced up to the humiliating realisation that one of his team had been critical of him in texts to opponents and the chances of that undermining both his leadership and his team.

'Once the players became involved in Kevin's dispute with the board then I had to become very protective of our environment,' said Strauss. 'I have to be vigilant now about the values with which we live and treat each other because it is central to how we became a very good side.'

Smith, meanwhile, must be secretly delighted that England have been faced with such a divisive situation.

Back to basics: England spent the day training at cricket HQ before the biggest match of the year

Back to basics: England spent the day training at cricket HQ before the biggest match of the year

Back to basics: England spent the day training at cricket HQ before the biggest match of the year

The ECB response from Hugh Morris

We are in receipt of Kevin's apology, but further discussions need to take place to establish whether it is possible to regain the trust and mutual respect required to ensure all parties are able to focus on playing cricket and to maintain the unity of purpose that has served us so well in recent years.

He said: 'Kevin is obviously a world-class cricketer and for me to say that England won't miss him would be wrong. But there is a talent pool in English cricket that we need to respect. For us to sit back and take things for granted now is not the way we have prepared for this tour.'

South Africa will be firm favourites to achieve at least the draw they need here but England may yet surprise us and take strength from the adversity that has claimed their outrageously gifted batsman.

They have certainly seemed relaxed and happy in practice and would love to prove that, as in one-day cricket, they can win without Pietersen.

Strauss would give no clues as to whether England would change the balance of their side but it would be a huge surprise if they abandoned their four-bowler policy now, even though they desperately need to take 20 South African wickets on one of Mick Hunt's flawless Lord's pitches.

That means Jonny Bairstow will almost certainly step in to join James Taylor in the middle order, two hugely promising batsmen who have come through the ultra-professional England age-group and Lions structure.

Bairstow struggled against the short ball when faced with Kemar Roach against West Indies earlier this summer but the hope now is that he takes on bouncers rather than being caught in two minds by them. All he has to do is whack the bowling of Dale Steyn and Morne Morkel. No pressure then, Jonny.

Firm focus: Coach Andy Flower and bowling coach David Saker watch on during the session at Lord's

Firm focus: Coach Andy Flower and bowling coach David Saker watch on during the session at Lord's

Firm focus: Coach Andy Flower and bowling coach David Saker watch on during the session at Lord's

England v South Africa: Third Test

His task would be made considerably easier if England already have a platform built for them by Strauss and the man who will replace him sooner or later as Test captain, Alastair Cook.

It is eight years since Strauss made such an auspicious debut here at Lord's against New Zealand and he makes his 100th appearance as a three-times Ashes winner and a captain in two of those series.

Now he wants to ensure he does not follow Michael Vaughan in losing to South Africa after conquering Australia.

'Good sides can draw strength from adversity and I'm certainly expecting us to do that,' said Strauss.

'Our preparation for this match has been far from ideal but I'm determined to enjoy and savour my 100th Test as much as I can.

'If I am distracted by the fact it is a milestone it is not going to help me play well, so we all need to concentrate now on playing in the way we know we can.'

Smith is a remarkable cricketer, having taken control as an abrasive 22-year-old and becoming a formidable, mature leader by the age of 31.

The man once derided by Pietersen as a 'muppet' prepares to lead his side to the summit of Test cricket if he can avoid defeat over the next five, compelling days.

No wonder Smith was smiling when the cameras were off him.

Laugh it up: Broad and Anderson see the funny side of things, despite the row rumbling on over KP

Laugh it up: Broad and Anderson see the funny side of things, despite the row rumbling on over KP

Big match stat attack – by Lawrence Booth

94 South Africa captain Graeme Smith will lead out a Test side for a record 94th time — 93 with South Africa and one as captain of the ICC World XI.

6 If Andrew Strauss marks his 100th cap by scoring a ton, he will equal the record for Test centuries at Lord’s of six, held by Graham Gooch and Michael Vaughan.

10 The fresh turf at Lord’s was grown near Scunthorpe and had to be cut, transported and laid within 10 hours. It replaced turf damaged by Olympic archery.

3 England have lost three of 25 Tests at Lord’s since the turn of the century, winning 14. But South Africa have proved a bogey team and won in 1994, 1998 and 2003.

4 Jimmy Anderson needs four wickets to become only the third bowler to claim 50 Test wickets at Lord’s. Currently he trails Sir Ian Botham (69), Fred Trueman (63) and Bob Willis (47).

2 Only two of South Africa’s current touring party are on the Lord’s honours boards: Smith for his 259 in 2003 and 107 in 2008. In the latter game, Hashim Amla also hit an unbeaten 104.

1 Not even a draw will preserve England’s No 1 Test ranking. A 1-0 series victory for South Africa would give them a lead of one-sixth of a point over the hosts, who must win at Lord’s to stay top.

Hayden Mullins joins Birmingham from Portsmouth

Mullins makes Birmingham switch as midfielder leaves crisis club Pompey

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UPDATED:

13:44 GMT, 12 July 2012

Fresh start: Mullins has left Portsmouth for Birmingham

Fresh start: Mullins has left Portsmouth for Birmingham

Birmingham have completed the capture of Hayden Mullins from Portsmouth for an undisclosed fee.

The experienced versatile midfielder finished last season on loan at npower Championship winners Reading having moved from Portsmouth on loan in March, easing the cash-strapped south-coast club's wage bill over the final months of the campaign.

But with Pompey having suffered relegation to League One and currently still in financial turmoil, the departure of senior players from Fratton Park has become inevitable.

And Mullins, who still had 12 months remaining on his contract, has become Blues boss Lee Clark's third signing in four days after forward Peter Lovenkrands and goalkeeper David Lucas.

Football League blog

The 33-year-old, formerly of Crystal Palace and West Ham, can also play in a sweeper role or at right-back and has penned a two-year deal at St Andrew's.

Meanwhile, the midlands club have confirmed Vico Hui has resigned as chairman and left his position on the boards of both Birmingham City Football Club PLC and Birmingham City PLC. Acting chairman Peter Pannu is now likely to take over.

Blackburn turmoil continues with secretary sacking

Blackburn turmoil continues as club secretary's shown the door after just one year

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UPDATED:

21:00 GMT, 19 June 2012

Relegated Blackburn were embroiled in further turmoil after club secretary Anthony Bloch was sacked and replaced by former Liverpool administrator Ian Silvester.

Bloch, appointed as secretary at Ewood Park 12 months ago, is believed to have voiced misgivings about manager Steve Kean’s failure to keep Blackburn in the Barclays Premier League last season and paid with his job after being ruthlessly axed by owners Venky’s.

Divisive: Steve Kean's continued management of Blackburn continues to cause problems among certain sections of the club's hierarchy and fan base

Divisive: Steve Kean's continued management of Blackburn continues to cause problems among certain sections of the club's hierarchy and fan base

Though Venky’s wasted no time installing a successor in Silvester, who left his post as Liverpool secretary by mutual consent last month, the latest unrest will do little to pacify supporters who protested throughout last season at the way their club was being run.

Euro 2012: Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain could start in England v France

Oxlade-Chamberlain primed to start against France with Hodgson in bullish mood

|

UPDATED:

07:02 GMT, 11 June 2012

Roy Hodgson has told his England players they are primed and ready to compete with the finest teams in Europe.

Hodgson’s side launch their Euro 2012 campaign against France on Monday evening in sweltering temperatures near 90F in south-eastern Ukraine.

After training in the Donbass Arena, the manager rallied his squad with a reminder that they are elite players from one of the world’s best leagues.

Final countdown: England go through their paces at the Donbass Arena

Final countdown: England go through their paces at the Donbass Arena

Euro 2012 email button

And he assured them they were well prepared despite the recent turmoil. The England manager urged them not to be ‘suicidal’ if they cannot end the long wait for success.

Hodgson said: ‘To the players, my message is that we’ve done the best preparation we can.

'I think you’re ready and you’re good
enough. Now have the confidence and the belief to get out there and
show it and don’t get suicidal if, for some reason, things don’t work
out for you.

England's Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain

Running the rule: All the players took part in the session taken by boss Hodgson

Running the rule: All the players took part in the session taken by boss Hodgson, with one of them, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain (left) now being considered for a starting role against France

‘To the fans, my message is that
we’ll be doing our level best to send them home happy and not
disappoint. We can’t promise them more than that. It's the only sensible
promise anyone can give.’

There were suggestions on Sunday
night that Hodgson was thinking of picking teenager Alex
Oxlade-Chamberlain ahead of Stewart Downing — a more cautious and widely
predicted option — on the left wing.

The stage is set: The Donbass Arena is ready to host England and France on Monday evening

The stage is set: The Donbass Arena is ready to host England and France on Monday evening

Major challenge: Standing in England's way are a France team unbeaten in 21 games

France coach Laurent Blanc has teased
Monday's opponents about contrasting philosophies and how his side
would play all the football, and Hodgson bristled when asked by a
foreign journalist if England still consider themselves a football
power.

‘We started professional football in
the 1860s or 1870s and, during the centuries since, I don’t think we
could ever be accused of not being a serious — or even a top — football
nation,’ said Hodgson.

Tip top stopper: Joe Hart will need to be on form

Tip top stopper: Joe Hart will need to be on form

‘The fact that it’s 1966 since we won
a major tournament — we are very, very much aware of and you didn’t
actually need to remind me.

'How good we are as a nation will
always be decided on the field of play. Once again we have qualified for
a major tournament. We start off among the 16 teams with a chance to
show how good a football nation we are.’

No excuses: Hodgson's men must put all the recent controversy behind them

No excuses: Hodgson's men must put all the recent controversy behind them

Later, Hodgson added: ‘It was a
facetious question but there was an element of truth — not spitefulness —
in what he was saying. As a top nation we haven’t probably won as many
tournaments as we should have or sometimes done as well as we should
have. We all feel that weight.

'There’s nothing we can do to take that weight off our shoulders except make certain we embrace the tournament.

‘Make certain we’re not afraid of it,
that we believe in ourselves. It’s a fact of life. I think before the
very good French period, we could have levelled a similar accusation
against them.’

Impact: Andy Carroll is likely to start on the bench with Danny Welbeck featuring from the off

Impact: Andy Carroll is likely to start on the bench with Danny Welbeck featuring from the off

Euro 2012: England will make you smile, says Roy Hodgson

Ready to make you smile! Chamberlain primed to start as Hodgson vows to compete with Europe's best

|

UPDATED:

22:24 GMT, 10 June 2012

Roy Hodgson has told his England players they are primed and ready to compete with the finest teams in Europe.

Hodgson’s side launch their Euro 2012 campaign against France on Monday evening in sweltering temperatures near 90F in south-eastern Ukraine.

After training in the Donbass Arena, the manager rallied his squad with a reminder that they are elite players from one of the world’s best leagues.

Final countdown: England go through their paces at the Donbass Arena

Final countdown: England go through their paces at the Donbass Arena

Euro 2012 email button

And he assured them they were well prepared despite the recent turmoil. The England manager urged them not to be ‘suicidal’ if they cannot end the long wait for success.

Hodgson said: ‘To the players, my message is that we’ve done the best preparation we can.

'I think you’re ready and you’re good
enough. Now have the confidence and the belief to get out there and
show it and don’t get suicidal if, for some reason, things don’t work
out for you.

England's Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain

Running the rule: All the players took part in the session taken by boss Hodgson

Running the rule: All the players took part in the session taken by boss Hodgson, with one of them, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain (left) now being considered for a starting role against France

‘To the fans, my message is that
we’ll be doing our level best to send them home happy and not
disappoint. We can’t promise them more than that. It's the only sensible
promise anyone can give.’

There were suggestions on Sunday
night that Hodgson was thinking of picking teenager Alex
Oxlade-Chamberlain ahead of Stewart Downing — a more cautious and widely
predicted option — on the left wing.

The stage is set: The Donbass Arena is ready to host England and France on Monday evening

The stage is set: The Donbass Arena is ready to host England and France on Monday evening

Major challenge: Standing in England's way are a France team unbeaten in 21 games

France coach Laurent Blanc has teased
Monday's opponents about contrasting philosophies and how his side
would play all the football, and Hodgson bristled when asked by a
foreign journalist if England still consider themselves a football
power.

‘We started professional football in
the 1860s or 1870s and, during the centuries since, I don’t think we
could ever be accused of not being a serious — or even a top — football
nation,’ said Hodgson.

Tip top stopper: Joe Hart will need to be on form

Tip top stopper: Joe Hart will need to be on form

‘The fact that it’s 1966 since we won
a major tournament — we are very, very much aware of and you didn’t
actually need to remind me.

'How good we are as a nation will
always be decided on the field of play. Once again we have qualified for
a major tournament. We start off among the 16 teams with a chance to
show how good a football nation we are.’

No excuses: Hodgson's men must put all the recent controversy behind them

No excuses: Hodgson's men must put all the recent controversy behind them

Later, Hodgson added: ‘It was a
facetious question but there was an element of truth — not spitefulness —
in what he was saying. As a top nation we haven’t probably won as many
tournaments as we should have or sometimes done as well as we should
have. We all feel that weight.

'There’s nothing we can do to take that weight off our shoulders except make certain we embrace the tournament.

‘Make certain we’re not afraid of it,
that we believe in ourselves. It’s a fact of life. I think before the
very good French period, we could have levelled a similar accusation
against them.’

Impact: Andy Carroll is likely to start on the bench with Danny Welbeck featuring from the off

Impact: Andy Carroll is likely to start on the bench with Danny Welbeck featuring from the off