his shoulders. From what I have seen, he has han

#1 von riluowanying123 , 28.12.2018 12:26

Saqlain Mushtaq has called on the ECB to appoint a full-time spin bowling coach to work with the England team and said he would love to fill the role.While Saqlain, the former Pakistan offspinner, is hardly impartial in such matters - he is currently fulfilling such a job on a brief consultancy basis - he makes a strong case both with his words and his record.Having joined up with the squad after the two Tests in Bangladesh, he has presided over a sharp improvement in the performance of Adil Rashid, in particular, and argues that the importance of spin bowling is undervalued compared to other disciplines.It is very important to have a full-time spin coach, Saqlain, who leaves the tour after the third Test in Mohali, said. If you look at the highest wicket-taker in Test cricket and the highest wicket-taker in one-day cricket, they are spinners.And it is not just in the subcontinent, but when you go abroad on the fourth and fifth day of the Test match the spinners are the main bowlers. The whole team relies on them so spin is a main thing and you have to have a full-time coach for the spin … not just for the main team but on the county circuit as well. I believe that.It is not just to look after the spinners; it is to help the batsmen as well as to how the spinners think about the batsmen.While the ECB does already employ various bowling coaches - former England offspinner Peter Such is the lead spin bowling coach - it has become common practice for the England team to be accompanied only by a fast-bowling coach when on tour. Mushtaq Ahmed, the former Pakistan legspinner, was also engaged on a part-time consultancy basis in the past but, recently, it has been an oddly overlooked area in an England set-up which boasts experts across many other fields.Its not just me saying this, Saqlain said, evoking recent comments by Graeme Swann. But I think a few weeks age Swanny mentioned it. Lots of experts mention it.It seems the ECB is listening. Andrew Strauss suggested last week that the ECB is open to the idea of engaging a spin-bowling coach on a more permanent basis - though perhaps not full-time - and that Saqlain was effectively in something of a trial period.He can only have impressed. Despite having had little time to work with the England spinners - Before the series you cant really open the technical side of things, he said - he has clearly built a strong rapport with them and inspired confidence. Rashid is the highest wicket-taker in the series with 13 - Shane Warne never took more than 14 in India - while Moeen Ali currently has a better strike rate (67) than R Ashwin (70.5).To know the players is the most important thing for me, Saqlain said. The first couple of days I started to build relationships. It is based on trust, truth, honesty and respect. This is my philosophy on working. The boys are passionate about cricket and they are very hard working guys, especially Moeen, Rash and Zafar Ansari. They are very keen to learn and are hard-working chaps.There wasnt too much technical stuff to begin with but we did work on tactical things and a lot of mental things. The preparation that goes into knowing the oppositions strengths and weaknesses and to know what is our strength. These are the basics.Im enjoying it. Every session, every conversation during the breaks. Im loving the support staff and everyone. It is like a family. It is a relaxed atmosphere, but a professional one. I would love to keep going and be involved in the future.I believe that things are going well and were on the same page. Im trying to bring them, myself and the captain on the same page. Things are going nicely.It seems the admiration is mutual. He describes Rashid as a legspinner with everything who can achieve the highest level within the game and Moeen as a bowler on the way to being one of the top three offspinners in the world.Adil is a very skilful guy and hes got a lot of variations, Saqlain said. Were trying to make things simple and then it is easier to deliver and easier to control. Were making it simple from a thinking and technical point of view. Im saying to him to concentrate on his strengths whatever his strengths are. And hes working on that.Moeen is a proper offspinner. The way he bowls, the energy, the shape of the ball, the control, everything. We shouldnt be thinking that he is not a proper offspinner. He is an allrounder and I would say he is equally good at batting and bowling.He is young and he hasnt bowled as much and had the mileage before. Hes improving and the more he works hard and the more he plays the longer version, the more mileage he will get. You can rate him in the top three offspinners in the world. Stitched Jerseys . The head of USA Boxing came out swinging Tuesday with an open letter to Tyson -- a former Olympic hopeful himself -- that accuses the former heavyweight champion of trying to poach fighters who might be candidates for the U. 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But someday, he might make the major leagues.Riveras path to the bigs is the unlikeliest and likeliest story you could imagine. In an American youth sports culture designed around programs that train toddlers like pro athletes, Rivera barely played baseball as a kid, and when he did, he wasnt particularly good. But through his veins runs the bloodline of the greatest relief pitcher the game has ever known.Rivera, though, doesnt want to be his dad.When he was a kid, he avoided playing baseball, opting instead for soccer and swimming. At 14, he finally went out for Babe Ruth but wasnt anything special. In high school, at Iona Prep in New Rochelle, New York, he played junior varsity and mostly pinch ran. He threw a total of six innings. Because Rivera didnt think he would play much, he declined to go out for baseball his senior year.On a whim, Rivera walked on at Quinnipiac University in Connecticut before he transferred to Iona. He had the name, and by then enough of a game, to compete as a pitcher. But he was nothing special for the Gaels, either. After redshirting, he posted a 5.40 ERA in 13 games as a sophomore in 2014.The Yankees drafted Rivera in the 29th round of the 2014 draft. But Mo III didnt sign, in part because he wants to be his own man.As a junior, he dominated, whittling his ERA to 2.65. In 85 innings, he struck out 113 and walked 27. The Washington Nationals were not doing anyone any favors when they picked him in the fourth round in 2015. They thought he could be a major leaguer on his own merit.Now 22, Rivera is -- what else? -- the closer for the Class-A Hagerstown Suns. According to his pitching coach, Sam Narron, his 95 mph fastball is already good enough for the bigs. He has a slider and a changeup. He does not throw a cutter.In his second year in the minors, he has a 4.20 ERA, which is mostly due to a couple of bad outings. He has struck out 43 and walked 22 in 60 innings. In June, he was a South Atlantic League All-Star.He deals with more attention than your average minor leaguer. Whenever he takes the mound, Rivera has two shadows following him, his and his fathers. For his first professional game at State College last year, the St. Louis Cardinals affiliate played his dads signature song, Metallicas Enter Sandman. A Red Sox minor league affiliate in Lowell did the same thing this season.The son has heard fans yell, Youll never be your father! This is almost comical because he doesnt want to be, which is how his father, his mother, Clara, and his grandma, Anna Diaz, raised him.They taught me that from day one, Rivera said. They wanted me to make my own path, to be a man. From a very young age, they wanted me to know what I wanted and fight for it every day. Thats why Im here.For the first nine years of his life, Rivera mostly lived away from his father and mother. He was born in Panama in October 1993, after his dad, 23 at the time, had finished Rookie League ball. His parents decided it would be wiser for Rivera to grow up in Panama under the guidance of his adoring grandma, rather than living the nomadic existence of the minor and major leagues. Each offseason, his parents returned to Panama.The elder Rivera and his wife lived in a small apartment in New Rochelle, New York, until 2002. Then they bought their first house in Rye. Rivera had made more than $25 million by then. Soon after, his 9-year-old son came to live full-time with his parents.When he arrived in the States, the younger Rivera did not speak English. He had a tutor attend classes with him and was the youngest kid in his grade. Along with the language barrier, Rivera didnt really understand his fathers prominence, which turned compliments into fear at summer day camp whenever the others kids mentioned the Yankees No. 42.They started talking about my dad, Rivera recalled. To me, my dad was a regular dad. They would say, Your dad is famous. I thought they were talking bad about my dad. I came home crying from the bus. I said to my grandmother, You know what they are saying? They said my dad is famous! I had no idea what that was. It was all new.Soon after, Rivera started popping up in the Yankees clubhouse, like many ballplayers children do. But there were no signs that he wanted a career in the big leagues. He continued to prefer soccer and swimming.In high school, Rivera said his fastball was only in the low 80s, which might explain why he pitched only six innings of junior varsity balll.ddddddddddddHe went to college, improved his mechanics and, though he is still slight -- at 5-foot-11, 155 pounds, he is 3 inches shorter and 40 pounds lighter than his dad -- his fastball started to gain steam, and scouts noticed. The Yankees first drafted him in the 29th round, as an homage to his lineage more than anything else. When the Nationals took him in the fourth round, the seriousness of Riveras passion took hold.With each step, his dad is a presence, but he tries not to crowd his son. The older Rivera has more baseball acumen than most, but he advises in a quiet fashion. Mariano knows a lot but says very little, said Fern Cuza, Riveras long-time agent.At the beginning of July, the greatest closer of all time showed up in Hagerstown. Rivera usually catches the Suns when they play closer to his Westchester home in Lakewood, New Jersey.His dad was in town in good ol Hagerstown, Suns manager Patrick Anderson said. Normally, he goes up to Lakewood when we play in New Jersey. But in Hagerstown, he came down, and he came into the office, and I said I wanted to get more information about his son, so he started telling me about how he grew up. It was a good conversation. He told me how they didnt give him everything. He earned everything.At the end of the conversation, he said to me, Do you mind if I go out there and work out with the boys? I was like, Yeah, and I turn around, and he is wearing [his sons] shorts and Nationals shorts and T-shirts. He came out and did a throwing program with his son and spoke to the boys.He talked to them about being good teammates and how amazing it was to have [Derek] Jeter, Jorge Posada and Andy Pettitte [alongside him]. Those guys were all about the team. The message to the boys was it is about the team. It is not about yourself. You want to get yourself better, but it is about the team concept, and how he presented it was amazing.The younger Riveras minor league teammates seem to like him because he plays down his name. His roommate, Rhett Wiseman, grew up near Boston. Wiseman joked that his roommates dad caused me a lot of tears. He has noticed that Rivera doesnt flaunt his fathers legend.I think it is great that he is with the Nationals, Wiseman said. It gives him the opportunity to create his own path. He is a very independent guy. He doesnt say, Im Mariano. Give me this. He is not entitled. He works for everything he gets.So far, this has meant not throwing the cutter, his fathers signature pitch. He has worked on it and tried out some grips but so far is sticking with his 91 mph slider.He wanted to create his own legacy, Wiseman said. I think it took him a couple of years [to decide] that it is a pitch I want to add, Im ready to add.Rivera said he has not added a cutter, but you can imagine that might be the next step in his maturation as a closer.He is also not your average prospect -- and not just because of his name. Because he didnt go through the manufactured, for-profit grinder of youth baseball, his arm might be in better shape.Hes got a fresh arm, thats for sure, said Narron, who pitched a single game in the majors in 2004 with the Texas Rangers. You have a lot of guys here, you have some mileage on their arm. Everything is new to him. You get some guys who are jaded because they are like, Ive played forever. Ive played since I was 5. Everything is new to him, so he wants to get as much information as he can. He is a sponge out there.Narron notices how Rivera reacts to crowds. There are more fans who want his autograph and picture because of his father.You see how he handles that. It is unbelievable, Narron said. He does a tremendous job with that little bit of weight on his shoulders. From what I have seen, he has handled it as well any human being could be expected to handle it.The funny thing is that the old tale about his father is how he found 3 miles per hour on his fastball in the minors. Rivera credited it to God. It is part of his legend. There is something funny about the young Riveras story too. When you talk to him, he has the same grace as his father. He is very polite. As hard as he tries not to be, he is very much like his old man.?His story -- if he makes the majors -- could be just as remarkable as his dads, a man who was just honored with a plaque in Yankee Stadiums Monument Park.If I had a career like my dad, I would be beyond happy, Rivera said. But at the same time, I dont want to be my dad. 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