Ashes hosts Australia need to be humble for glory

Updated 15 November 2017
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Ashes hosts Australia need to be humble for glory

LONDON: When you’re just a week away from the first ball being bowled and the one player that gives your side that X-factor is halfway around the world facing police charges, it would be pointless to pretend that all is going according to plan.
To be fair to England they haven’t, and there’s little doubt that has greatly contributed to the feeling that the tourists are about to face a trouncing.
But while it’s clear Root and Co. are some way off Plan A, all the Stokes saga has done is take the spotlight away from both England’s strength and Australia’s weakness — namely the tourists’ attack and hosts’ batting lineup.
Even without Stokes, as Ryan Harris says, England have bowlers that probably cannot wait to get stuck into the Australians. Apart from David Warner and Steve Smith, the Baggy Green batters don’t inspire much confidence. You don’t have to be editor of Wisden to work out that Matt Renshaw, Usman Khawaja, Peter Handscomb and Matthew Wade are hardly in the same league as Hayden, Langer, Ponting, the Waugh twins and Gilchrist.
James Anderson and Stuart Broad are very good, shrewd bowlers and, while their form in Australia has been patchy, will fancy themselves to regularly make early inroads into the Australian lineup. Add in Chris Woakes as first-change bowler and Mooen Ali, who’s form as the side’s spinner was as good as ever this summer, and genuine reasons for optimism aren’t hard to find.
Harris was right when he said: “Both bowling attacks are world class…Bowling will dictate the series.” England will miss Stokes — which side wouldn’t? — but the tourists have the attack to get 20 wickets without him.
Australia are favorites, but as England found out four years ago, any overconfidence at this early stage could be badly misplaced.


Real Madrid to play Benfica, PSG face Monaco in Champions League play-offs

Updated 15 sec ago
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Real Madrid to play Benfica, PSG face Monaco in Champions League play-offs

  • Real Madrid were handed a quick rematch with Jose Mourinho’s Benfica in the draw for the Champions League play-off round on Friday, while reigning European champions Paris Saint-Germain will face dome
PARIS: Real Madrid were handed a quick rematch with Jose Mourinho’s Benfica in the draw for the Champions League play-off round on Friday, while reigning European champions Paris Saint-Germain will face domestic rivals Monaco.
Benfica beat Real 4-2 in their final game of the league phase on Wednesday, with a 98th-minute goal by goalkeeper Anatoliy Trubin proving decisive in allowing the Portuguese side to snatch the last play-off spot ahead of Marseille, who were eliminated altogether.
The defeat also nudged Madrid out of the top eight places in the league standings, which give direct access to the last 16, forcing them into this extra round.
Benfica staged a remarkable recovery to take a play-off place — they finished 24th in the 36-team league phase, the last qualifying spot — by winning three of their last four matches after losing their opening four games.
Mourinho, 63, returned to the Lisbon giants for a second spell as coach in September. He was in charge of Real from 2010 to 2013 and won one La Liga title and one Copa del Rey while also taking them to the Champions League semifinals in each of his three campaigns.
The clubs played each other in the 1962 European Cup final, with Benfica winning 5-3 to claim the last of their two titles to date.
PSG slipped out of the top eight after winning only one of their last five outings in the league phase and finishing in 11th place.
They will go to Monaco for the first leg and will be wary of the principality side who beat them there in Ligue 1 in November.
However, 2004 Champions League finalists Monaco have been in poor form, with just one win in six games since the turn of the year.
They are 10th in Ligue 1, 21 points behind leaders PSG. However, a 0-0 draw with Juventus on Wednesday allowed them to secure a play-off place in Europe.
Newcastle go to Azerbaijan
PSG also beat French opposition in the play-off round last season, hammering Brest 10-0 on aggregate before going on to lift the trophy for the first time in their history.
Elsewhere, Newcastle United will be strong favorites against surprise packages Qarabag of Azerbaijan, with the first leg to come in Baku.
PSG and Newcastle know that if they win, they will play either Barcelona or Chelsea in the last 16. Real’s possible last-16 opponents are Manchester City or Sporting, which would mean yet another trip to Lisbon in the latter case.
Bodo/Glimt, Norwegian champions in four of the last six years, were also surprise qualifiers for this stage and have been rewarded with a tie against last season’s runners-up Inter Milan.
Juventus will take on Galatasaray, while Atletico Madrid face Club Brugge. Borussia Dortmund play Atalanta and Bayer Leverkusen were drawn against Olympiacos.
The two-legged play-off ties will take place in February, with the winners advancing to the last 16 in March.
Already through to that stage are the top eight teams from the league phase, including five English Premier League sides in Arsenal, Liverpool, Tottenham Hotspur, Chelsea and City, as well as Bayern Munich, Barcelona and Sporting.
This season’s Champions League final will be played in Budapest on May 30.