Luis Suárez trains for the first time with FC Barcelona

Suárez took part in the morning training session with Luis Enrique’s team, his first session following the CAS decision on Thursday 
Xavi and Bartra trained with the main group, Neymar as well but without medical all clear, and Vermaelen continued with some physio work..



Luis Suárez was the centre of attention this Friday morning at the first team training session at the Ciudad Deportiva Joan Gamper. After the ruling on Thursday by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) on the sanction imposed by FIFA on the Uruguayan player, Luis Suárez is now able to train with his new teammates
In the training session, as well as Luis Suárez,  Xavi Hernández and Marc Bartra in also trained with the main group. Neymar Jr. completed the full session with his teammates, even though he hasn’t received the medical all clear yet.  Adriano completed part of the session with the group andVermaelen carried on his specific physio work.
A player not at training was Gerard Deulofeu. On Thursday, FC Barcelonaand Sevilla FC reached an an agreement, in principle for the loan of the player to the Andalusian team, and this morning Gerard was absent at the session. Four players from Barça B continued training with the first team: Grimaldo, Samper, Sandro and Munir.
It’s worth recalling that Luis Suárez will be presented to the Barça fans on Monday before the Joan Gamper Trophy match. On Tuesday he will be presented to the media at a press conference
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Luis Suarez's four-month playing ban upheld but striker cleared to train with Barcelona

The Uruguayan striker's four-month playing ban remains in place, although he will now be allowed to return to training and will be able to make his debut at the end of October



Luis Suarez has had his appeal against the four-month ban placed upon him by Fifa rejected by the Court of Arbitration for Sport, but will be allowed to train with Barcelona.
Suarez was originally banned by Fifa from all football-related activity after biting Giorgio Chiellini during Uruguay's 1-0 win over Italy in a World Cup fixture in Natal in June.

The suspension meant that, although he completed his move to Camp Nou from Liverpool in July, he could not attend matches, practise with his colleagues or be presented to the media. 
But CAS has made the decision that the Uruguayan should be allowed to return to work, albeit with his playing suspension remaining in place.
A CAS statment explained: "The CAS Panel found that the sanctions imposed on the player were generally proportionate to the offence committed. It has however considered that the stadium ban and the ban from 'any football-related activity' were excessive given that such measures are not appropriate to sanction the offence committed by the player and would still have an impact on his activity after the end of the suspension."
The 27-year-old can now train with his new Barcelona team-mates for the first time since his €88 million transfer from Liverpool, while he can also commit to promotional activity.

He is due to return to the playing field on October 26, one day after Barcelona are scheduled to play rivals Real Madrid in La Liga. However, Suarez could well feature in the Clasico as national TV could decide to change it to a Sunday fixture.

Barca released a statement via their official website which confirmed the news and announced that he will be presented to the public on Monday.

"Following the announcement of the verdict by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) regarding the appeal against the sanction imposed on Luis Suarez by Fifa, FC Barcelona hereby announce that the player will join the first team's training session scheduled for tomorrow Friday at 09.30CET in the Ciutat Esportiva Joan Gamper," the statement read.

"Likewise, the public presentation of Suarez as a new FC Barcelona player will be held on Monday at Camp Nou, on occasion of the Joan Gamper Trophy match." 
The extent of Suarez's playing ban was said by CAS to be proportionate with the act committed, with Suarez having twice been caught biting opponents in the past. He was banned for seven matches after biting PSV's Ottman Bakkal while playing for Ajax, then sat out 10 games following a similar incident at Liverpool on Chelsea's Branislav Ivanovic.
He will sit out the first 11 games of Barcelona's season, while his nine-match international ban is still applicable. However, he is permitted to play friendly matches, including Monday's Gamper Trophy clash with Club Leon at Camp Nou.
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England v India - Investec Test Series

Dhoni fights but India's top order folds again



Without MS Dhoni, India would have been entirely bereft. Even with his redoubtable effort, consolation was only skin deep as India succumbed tamely in exacting conditions on the opening day of the fifth Investec Test. If the appearance in a Test match of an old-fashioned England green seamer was cause for debate, the appearance of an old-style green Indian batting performance was wearyingly predictable.
Desperate to summon some resolve after an ignominious three-day defeat at Old Trafford, instead India were routed by the sixth over after tea, entirely unable to combat the moving ball. A young batting line-up, with scant experience in England conditions, looked devoid of confidence. England then emphasised their advantage by easing to 62 without loss in 19 overs by the close with Sam Robson earnestly seeking a more positive approach and India's bowlers hampered by the footholds.
Once again Dhoni stood firm for India while others foundered, last man out for 82, depositing Stuart Broad into the hands of long leg. "Well played mate," was Broad's send-off. Suddenly these teams are being nice to each other again. It was a strangely relaxed innings, failing to bring him a first Test hundred outside Asia, although that must have been far from his thoughts when the last man, Ishant Sharma, walked out with him on 32.
His appetite for Test captaincy has been questioned as the series has progressed, but he struck his fourth half-century of the series, a series of uninhibited blows bringing him 15 of India's 19 boundaries, the sheer parlousness of India's position ultimately allowing him to play much as he pleased.
An unbroken last-wicket stand with Sharma, a stonewalling No. 11, brought India 58 in 17 overs and, if 148 remained a long way from respectability, they would have been dismissed for 90 had England appealed for a catch at the wicket off Chris Jordan when Dhoni was 32, and again for 96 had Ian Bell not dropped Ishant, on 1, at second slip, a rare blemish from a rejuvenated England slip cordon. This Test series has now produced more runs for the last wicket than any in history.
But even Dhoni, India's one figure of defiance, was fortunate not to become India's third duck of the morning. He got off the mark in streaky fashion as an outside edge against Chris Woakes escaped to third man. Nobody would present his technique as a model for English conditions, but once again he resisted vigorously.
As for Dhoni's team-mates, one particularly persistent pigeon spent more time on the pitch than many of them. Considering that Dhoni had skipped practice two days before the Test to go shooting, it was fortunate to escape with its life, even allowing for the fact that pigeon saag is not yet a Jharkhand culinary speciality.
For once, it was England's support bowlers who took most of the spoils. Woakes, who had bowled without much luck in the series, and Jordan both took three wickets, although Jordan's rewards came as bounty from heaven as his inconsistencies went unpunished. England's retention of the XI that trounced India at Old Trafford paid off handsomely.
Is it purely coincidence that since Dhoni pressed his campaign against James Anderson this series has turned so markedly in England's favour or was it the catalyst for England to cast aside their Ashes hangover?
Anderson is bowling with a conjurer's sleight of hand, his sledging less apparent these days, and groundsmen have loyally produced pitches to maximise India's discomfort, most obviously here at The Oval, once the home of dry, quick surfaces replete with runs. Thundery rain has fallen in London all week and enough grass remained on the pitch to expose India's naivety.
There are only three more successful new-ball pairings than England's new-ball pair, Anderson and Broad. They reached 350 Test wickets when opening the bowling together, a wicket apiece as Gautam Gambhir and Cheteshwar Pujara perished within six overs. India, remarkably, have not assembled a half-century opening stand for 17 Test innings.
Heavy rain on Thursday delayed the start for half an hour, but England only had to wait four balls for success once the Test got underway. Gambhir fell for nought, his first ball - from Anderson - leaving him transfixed as he attempted a half-hearted leave and only succeeded in guiding the ball to the wicketkeeper, Jos Buttler, off the full face of the bat. Pujara, late on the shot again, was beaten on the inside edge by Broad as he nipped one back to clip his top arm and hit the top of middle.
Broad, after talk of face masks and experiments in the nets with nose splints, opted not to wear protection on a broken nose that he described as "still a bit wobbly", if not quite as wobbly as a Dukes ball in the hands of his partner in crime, Anderson. Two black eyes made him look like a Goth with badly smudged eyeliner after a heavy night.
India managed only two boundaries by lunch, five wickets lost within 25 overs. Virat Kohli's sumptuous off drive when met by a rare overpitched delivery from Anderson might have belonged to another match; another summer. It was the sole reminder of the style that he had been expected to exhibit all summer. He was dismissed in the following over.
Kohli's run without a half-century in this series now stretches to nine innings, his average of 12.70 among the lowest ever recorded by an India batsman in a five-Test series. His leave alone in Jordan's first over looked reasonable enough, but when your luck is out the marginal decisions tend to go against you: umpire Kumar Dharmasena adjudged him lbw with replays suggesting the ball would have clipped off stump.
India keep repeating their mistakes. Ajinkya Rahane, who began the series so impressively, was out without scoring as a furtive push at Jordan meant that he fell to a return catch for the third time in the series, so continuing a mode of dismissal for him also seen at Lord's and Old Trafford. Jordan, struggling for consistency at the start of his Test career, had barely broken sweat and found himself with two wickets in his first two overs without conceding a run.
M Vijay has been India's staunchest batsman this summer, rarely exciting but certainly the hardest to dislodge. He laboured 64 balls for 18 before he became the fifth batsman to fall, angling Woakes to Joe Root at gully. Stuart Binny, preferred to Ravindra Jadeja, found himself batting by lunch.
Nothing changed after the interval, any hopes that conditions might ease proving erroneous. Anderson toyed with Binny, giving the impression that if he wished he could have turned him in so many directions that he could have tied him around the stumps in any knot you cared to mention: an outswinger, edged to Cook at first slip, extended England's most successful outfielder-bowler combination to 25 catches.
The rest fell to the change bowlers. Woakes removed R Ashwin courtesy of an excellent low catch by Root, Bhuvneshwar flung his bat at a short, wide outswinger, and a short ball into the body of Varun Aaron brought a hapless response and a return catch. That Dhoni dragged the innings out for so long after that was a tribute to his competitive zeal. Others would do well to learn from it.
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Smith, Badree send Bangladesh crashing

 Bangladesh v West Indies 

World T20, Group 2, Mirpur


West Indies 171 for 7 (Smith 72, Al-Amin 3-21) beat Bangladesh 98 (Badree 4-15, Santokie 3-17) by 73 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

West Indies had batted poorly against India in a seven-wicket defeat on Sunday. Their batsmen didn't look entirely convincing against Bangladesh either, but they scored 171, thanks to Dwayne Smith's 43-ball 72 and some amateurish work in the field.
The target proved well beyond the reach of the hosts, who were bowled out for 98. Dew, which had been a big factor in Mushfiqur Rahim sending West Indies in at the toss, barely played a role as Samuel Badree, Sunil Narine and Krishmar Santokie - a left-arm seamer by definition but a quickish left-arm spinner in reality - had no difficulty in gripping the ball in achieving figures of 12-0-49-8 between them.
Badree and Santokie sent back three of Bangladesh's most dangerous batsmen within first four overs. Tamim Iqbal went first, driving Badree uppishly to a diving Dwayne Bravo at mid-off. Bravo would later throw an even harsher light on the gulf between the two fielding sides by hurling himself to his right at point to grab a low one-handed catch and dismiss Mushfiqur.
Before that, though, Santokie struck twice in two balls with his slower offcutters. First, he spun it past the groping outside edge of the right-handed Anamul Haque for Denesh Ramdin to effect a brilliant stumping, then spun his next ball through the gate of the left-handed Shakib Al Hasan. Bangladesh were 16 for 3 in 3.2 overs and the match, as a contest, was over.

Mominul Haque and Mushfiqur fought on for the next six overs, but the required rate was always running away from Bangladesh. Once the two were dismissed, Badree - who finished with four wickets - and the rest of West Indies' attack had no trouble running through the rest. In the end, the margin of victory reflected Bangladesh's inadequacies rather than anything spectacular from West Indies.
Having been sent in, West Indies, for most part, had struggled to put Bangladesh's bowlers away on a slow pitch. Smith, who had scratched his way to 11 off 29 balls against India, was in much better touch though, and provided West Indies impetus that they never lost despite their two best batsmen - Gayle and Marlon Samuels - facing 70 balls between them for 66.
Smith profited from some poor bowling, particularly from Sohag Gazi. Smith greeted the offspinner by sweeping him for two fours off his first two balls, both of which were directed towards leg stump, a dodgy idea with fine leg in the circle.
In the 10th over, Smith struck him for four successive fours. He manufactured the first - a reverse-sweep off a decent ball, but the next three came from ordinary deliveries that would have disappeared in any format of the game. The last of these, a flat-batted sweep, took Smith to 50. The landmark had come up in 34 balls.
Despite this, West Indies' run rate, at the end of the 10th over, was still under eight an over. At the other end, Gayle was playing a bizarre innings. It wasn't a surprise that he was slow off the blocks - he usually is before picking up the rate later. That simply didn't happen today. Part of this had to do with Gayle struggling to time the ball on a slow pitch, and part of it had to do with intent - unless the ball was in his hitting zone, he simply didn't go after it. He was slow between the wickets too, and appeared in some discomfort, suggesting he might not have been fully fit.
After Smith's dismissal in the 12th over, Mushfiqur brought on Shakib Al Hasan for the first time, and the left-arm spinner struck first ball getting Lendl Simmons stumped down the leg side as he went off on a strange wander out of the crease.
In came Samuels, who added 53 in 37 balls with Gayle even though neither batsman looked particularly threatening, as Bangladesh's fielding disintegrated despite two blinders from Tamim. Gayle went from 26 from 38 - at that point the second-slowest score of 25 or more in the history of international T20 - to 30 from 39 - the 14th slowest - courtesy Anamul's slippery fingers at long-on. In the next over, the 17th, Mushfiqur let successive deliveries from Shakib scoot between his legs for four byes. In the last two overs, Bangladesh also dropped three catches - Mahmudullah's two missed chances at long-off adding eight runs to Darren Sammy's score.
Al-Amin Hossain bowled a tight last over, picking up three wickets, but would have wished the spell had been part of a better team performance.
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World T20 Warm-up Match

Australia Vs New Zealand

at Fatullah, Mar 19, 2014

 

David Warner smashed 65 off just 26 balls

 

Welcome everyone, this was a big match  held between two very strong team Australia and   New Zealand. This exciting match finished with a great moment and Australia won this match by 3 runs..
The scorecard of this match is below :

Scorecard:


  Australia innings (20 overs maximum) R B 4s 6s SR

DA Warner retired out 65 26 7 5 250.00

AJ Finch retired out 47 22 9 1 213.63

SR Watson c Guptill b Hira 27 18 0 3 150.00

GJ Maxwell lbw b Devcich 2 4 0 0 50.00

GJ Bailey* b Anderson 19 17 2 0 111.76

BJ Hodge c Neesham b Mills 25 20 0 2 125.00

CL White not out 6 6 0 0 100.00

BJ Haddin† b Mills 0 2 0 0 0.00

DT Christian not out 8 5 1 0 160.00

Extras (w 1) 1



  Total (7 wickets; 20 overs) 200 (10.00 runs per over)
Did not batNM Coulter-Nile, JP Faulkner, GB Hogg, MA Starc, JM Muirhead, DE Bollinger

Fall of wickets 1-113 (Warner, 7.6 ov), 2-113 (Finch, 7.6 ov), 3-117 (Maxwell, 9.1 ov), 4-145 (Watson, 12.4 ov), 5-173 (Bailey, 16.1 ov), 6-188 (Hodge, 18.1 ov), 7-189 (Haddin, 18.4 ov)
 
 
  Bowling O M R W Econ  

KD Mills 4 0 21 2 5.25
  TA Boult 4 0 36 0 9.00
  KS Williamson 1 0 24 0 24.00 (1w)

RM Hira 2 0 44 1 22.00
  JDS Neesham 2 0 27 0 13.50

CJ Anderson 3 0 23 1 7.66

AP Devcich 3 0 15 1 5.00
  C Munro 1 0 10 0 10.00
 
 
  New Zealand innings (target: 201 runs from 20 overs) R B 4s 6s SR

MJ Guptill c Hogg b Muirhead 62 34 5 4 182.35

KS Williamson c †Haddin b Coulter-Nile 17 12 2 1 141.66

BB McCullum* c Maxwell b Muirhead 37 18 4 2 205.55

LRPL Taylor c Christian b Hogg 16 15 0 1 106.66

C Munro c & b Hogg 1 2 0 0 50.00

CJ Anderson c White b Starc 29 17 4 0 170.58

L Ronchi† c Christian b Starc 21 15 2 1 140.00

JDS Neesham c White b Coulter-Nile 2 4 0 0 50.00

AP Devcich run out (Maxwell) 3 2 0 0 150.00

KD Mills not out 1 2 0 0 50.00

RM Hira not out 1 1 0 0 100.00

Extras (b 1, w 4, nb 2) 7



  Total (9 wickets; 20 overs) 197 (9.85 runs per over)
Did not batNL McCullum, TG Southee, MJ McClenaghan, TA Boult

Fall of wickets 1-37 (Williamson, 4.1 ov), 2-98 (BB McCullum, 9.1 ov), 3-132 (Guptill, 11.6 ov), 4-137 (Taylor, 13.1 ov), 5-137 (Munro, 13.2 ov), 6-188 (Anderson, 18.2 ov), 7-191 (Ronchi, 18.5 ov), 8-192 (Neesham, 19.1 ov), 9-195 (Devcich, 19.3 ov)
 
 
  Bowling O M R W Econ  

MA Starc 3 0 21 2 7.00 (1nb)

NM Coulter-Nile 4 0 36 2 9.00 (1w)
  SR Watson 2 0 23 0 11.50
  DT Christian 3 0 29 0 9.66 (1w)

GB Hogg 4 0 36 2 9.00

JM Muirhead 3 0 40 2 13.33 (1nb)
  CL White 1 0 11 0 11.00 (1w)

Match details


Players per side 15 (11 batting, 11 fielding)
Toss - Australia, who chose to bat
Umpires - Enamul Haque and Sharfuddoula
Reserve umpire - Akteruzzaman
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World T20, 2014

Group A: Bangladesh vs Afghanistan
1st Qualifier match


Afghanistan innings (20 overs maximum) R B 4s 6s SR

Mohammad Shahzad† c Mahmudullah b Mashrafe Mortaza 0 1 0 0 0.00

Najeeb Tarakai c Nasir Hossain b Shakib Al Hasan 7 11 1 0 63.63

Gulbadin Naib c Sabbir Rahman b Shakib Al Hasan 21 22 3 1 95.45

Nawroz Mangal run out (Sabbir Rahman) 0 1 0 0 0.00

Mohammad Nabi* lbw b Abdur Razzak 3 9 0 0 33.33

Karim Sadiq run out (Farhad Reza) 10 23 0 0 43.47

Shafiqullah not out 6 6 0 0 100.00

Extras (b 2, lb 5, w 2, nb 2) 11



Total (6 wickets; 12 overs) 58 (4.83 runs per  over)

To batSamiullah Shenwari, Dawlat Zadran, Shapoor Zadran, Aftab Alam

Fall of wickets 1-0 (Mohammad Shahzad, 0.1 ov), 2-36 (Gulbadin Naib, 5.2 ov), 3-36 (Najeeb Tarakai, 5.3 ov), 4-36 (Nawroz Mangal, 6.1 ov), 5-49 (Mohammad Nabi, 9.3 ov), 6-58 (Karim Sadiq, 11.6 ov)

Bowling O M R W Econ

Mashrafe Mortaza 2 0 8 1 4.00 (2w)
Al-Amin Hossain 2 0 18 0 9.00 (1nb)

Shakib Al Hasan 2 0 6 2 3.00
Mahmudullah 3 0 8 0 2.66

Abdur Razzak 3 0 11 1 3.66
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World T20, 2014

Group A: Bangladesh vs Afghanistan
1st Qualifier match





Stay with us for next update...... 
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Australia tour of South Africa, 2013/14

South Africa v Australia

2nd T20  at Durban

 










Scorecard:








South Africa innings (7 overs maximum) R M B 4s 6s SR

HM Amla c & b Coulter-Nile 4 8 9 1 0 44.44

Q de Kock† not out 41 37 20 2 4 205.00

F du Plessis* not out 27 28 13 2 2 207.69

Extras (b 2, w 6) 8











Total (1 wicket; 7 overs; 37 mins) 80 (11.42 runs per over)
Did not bat F Behardien, DA Miller, LL Tsotsobe, JP Duminy, KJ Abbott, JA Morkel, WD Parnell, BE Hendricks
Fall of wickets 1-6 (Amla, 1.5 ov)










Bowling O M R W Econ


MA Starc 2 0 24 0 12.00 (2w)

NM Coulter-Nile 2 0 17 1 8.50


GB Hogg 1 0 5 0 5.00


SR Watson 1 0 14 0 14.00


DT Christian 1 0 18 0 18.00


















Australia innings (target: 81 runs from 7 overs) R M B 4s 6s SR

AJ Finch c Amla b Abbott 5 6 5 1 0 100.00

DA Warner lbw b Duminy 40 22 16 5 2 250.00

SR Watson c Abbott b Parnell 2 11 3 0 0 66.66

GJ Maxwell c du Plessis b Duminy 1 7 3 0 0 33.33

GJ Bailey* run out (Miller/†de Kock) 2 8 2 0 0 100.00

BJ Hodge not out 21 12 8 1 2 262.50

BJ Haddin† not out 4 7 4 0 0 100.00

Extras (lb 2, w 3, nb 1) 6











Total (5 wickets; 6.4 overs; 39 mins) 81 (12.15 runs per over)
Did not bat GB Hogg, DT Christian, NM Coulter-Nile, MA Starc
Fall of wickets 1-21 (Finch, 1.3 ov), 2-46 (Watson, 3.3 ov), 3-48 (Warner, 4.1 ov), 4-52 (Maxwell, 4.5 ov), 5-60 (Bailey, 5.1 ov)










Bowling O M R W Econ


LL Tsotsobe 1 0 21 0 21.00


KJ Abbott 1 0 5 1 5.00


BE Hendricks 2 0 31 0 15.50 (1nb, 1w)

WD Parnell 1.4 0 17 1 10.20 (1w)

JP Duminy 1 0 5 2 5.00 (1w)

Match details

 

Toss: Australia, who chose to field

Series: Australia led the 3-match series 1-0
T20I debut: BE Hendricks (South Africa) Player of the match: BJ Hodge (Australia)
Umpires: S George and AT Holdstock TV umpire: JD Cloete Match referee: BC Broad (England) Reserve umpire: KH Hurter
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