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Tom Norton: Glamorgan hero’s mum missed his historic hat-trick

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Glamorgan teenager Tom Norton says his mum Kelly missed his record-breaking efforts during their dramatic County Championship win over Somerset.

Norton, 18, was the youngest player to record a first-class hat-trick for Glamorgan, the youngest on record anywhere to do it on first-class debut and the first of any age on Championship debut since 1906.

He told BBC Radio Wales Breakfast about the reaction among friends and family to the achievement.

Read more: The rise of Glamorgan’s record-breaking teenager Norton

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Arne Slot: Liverpool owners face a dilemma over head coach’s future

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There are currently no indications that FSG are planning to part with Slot, but the voices of Liverpool supporters are rising in volume against him. Saturday’s 1-1 draw at home to Chelsea was played out in an atmosphere of toxicity rarely heard at Anfield.

Now former Liverpool midfielder Xabi Alonso is the name on the lips of the Kop. Alonso a hugely popular figure with them following a stellar Anfield career, having won the Bundesliga with Bayer Leverkusen before a short spell in the dysfunction of Real Madrid.

Murphy believes Slot’s departure is now purely a case of when rather than if, given the increasing revolt in the stands.

Murphy revealed that he was interviewed by Rodgers for a role in that last reshaped coaching team before the manager was sacked, the job eventually going to former team-mate Gary McAllister.

He told BBC Sport: “Slot has won a title, which Brendan didn’t do, so on the surface it would make more sense to stick with him, and I do feel strongly it is unfair to say he only won the title with Klopp’s team. That’s just not right.

“The problem Slot has got, especially at one of the biggest clubs in the world, is that when the fanbase turns, you are really, really struggling to get them back unless you win every game, then not just win, but win in a style Liverpool fans expect and demand.

“This season you have seen Liverpool being dictated to by the way other teams play at Anfield. Fair enough, it’s different away from Anfield, but at home you expect Liverpool to be going after you, not giving you time to breathe. Too often it’s not been like that.”

It has led to a mutinous mood not seen since Roy Hodgson’s six months at Liverpool in 2010-11, then in the latter months with Rodgers in charge, although that was a climate of resignation rather than revolt.

Murphy added: “It’s a great point to make the comparison with Rodgers and Slot, because there needs to be someone who’s in the wings and available who can take the reins now.

“Is there a suitable candidate who can move them forward? The obvious name out there is Xabi Alonso, who is available. He has got popularity, which is key because it gives you a few months’ grace. It also means everybody starts the season in a good place with a lot of energy.”

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Football quiz: Name every club Jose Mourinho has managed

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They say you should never go back, but Jose Mourinho is in advanced talks to be Real Madrid’s next head coach, 13 years after his first spell at the Bernabeu.

“The Special One” has managed 10 clubs, including two on more than one occasion. Can you name them all?

Be aware, there’s a leaderboard on this quiz which is affected by the speed of your answers.

Press the Next button after finishing to see where you come.

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Tatsuya Imai’s latest implosion further lessens Astros’ expectations for starter

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HOUSTON — A mural greets drivers traveling on Texas Street toward Daikin Park in downtown Houston. The back of Cy Young Award finalist Hunter Brown’s jersey is visible at the bottom. Adjacent to the ace is franchise cornerstone Yordan Alvarez, captured mid-celebration after his heroic home run in Game 6 of the Astros’ 2022 World Series victory.

Towering above both of this club’s backbones is Tatsuya Imai.

He did not ask for this attention, but his paycheck and his birthplace prompted it. No starting pitcher on the Astros’ roster is making more money than Imai, who is supposed to announce this franchise’s arrival in the Pacific Rim, while slotting somewhere in the middle of its starting rotation.

All of this is a burden.

The mural depicts Tatsuya Imai towering over Yordan Alvarez and Hunter Brown. (Photo: Chandler Rome)

Whether Imai is equipped to bear it is becoming evident each time he grabs a baseball. His brutal introduction to major-league life continued on Tuesday during a divisional matchup in which this team needed to show up.

When Imai did not, it deflated everyone: the patchwork lineup that battled Seattle Mariners starter Bryan Woo for two runs across his first three innings, the half-empty ballpark that tried to create some semblance of an atmosphere and an entire organization that must wonder where it will go from here after a 10-2 loss.

“It’s not what I imagined for the results,” Imai said through interpreter Shio Enomoto. “But we’re in season. It’s my responsibility to get the results and get the outs and try my best with what I can do.”

Imai has made six professional starts (four in the majors and two in the minors). He has imploded in four of them.

The latest on Tuesday evening — a four-inning mess in which he surrendered six runs and reverted to a two-pitch pitcher — inflated Imai’s ERA to 9.24 after 12 2/3 major-league innings. He has retired just 38 of the 65 hitters he’s faced. Of the 27 he hasn’t, 17 have either drawn a walk or been hit by a pitch.

After the game, manager Joe Espada said Imai will make his next start, even if nothing he has done during the season’s first two months merits it. Houston has few other options to replace Imai in the rotation and he is owed $18 million.

For a club now 11 games under .500 and trying to save its season — along with a manager and general manager fighting for their jobs — it is an almost impossible position.

“We just have to get him right,” said a perturbed Espada. “That needs to be better.”

Activating Imai on Tuesday from the 15-day IL did not arrive as a result of any improvements he made or meaningful changes he enacted. He did nothing team officials hoped he would during his two minor-league rehab appearances, both of which he made with a clean bill of health but still on the injured list with “right arm fatigue.”

Major-league results are all that matter, but that Imai threw 47.5 percent of his pitches for strikes and found little success against both a Double A and Triple A lineup must prompt massive concern. After throwing three innings for Triple-A Sugar Land last week, Imai indicated a difference in major-league scouting reports contributed to his problems.

In Japan, Imai said, the pregame focus is on a pitcher’s strengths. MLB teams are more focused on an opponents’ weakness. As a result, pitching coach Josh Miller and catcher Christian Vázquez all but eliminated a pregame scouting report on Tuesday.

“Red (zones), blue (zones), heat maps … nah, just go after them,” Espada said pregame.

Given full autonomy to pitch as he saw fit, Imai relied on what inspired this team to pay him. Each of Imai’s 80 pitches were either a four-seam fastball or slider.

“That’s what I did in Japan and that’s why the Astros signed me,” Imai said. “So that’s why I want to work on my fastball and slider, and, if that didn’t work, try my other pitches. But for now, I want to work on my fastball and slider.”

Seattle swung 38 times against the reduced arsenal and whiffed nine times. Of the 13 balls put in play against Imai, 10 were struck 95 mph or harder. Seattle averaged a 96.6 mph exit velocity, making it a minor miracle they mustered just five hits in Imai’s four innings.

After the game, Espada acknowledged there were “windows that (Imai) could have used his split-finger or changeup,” especially against Seattle’s slew of left-handed hitters. Imai hasn’t commanded his arsenal against anyone, but his inability to neutralize lefties has been of particular concern to team officials.

The Mariners lineup featured six of them, along with switch-hitting catcher Cal Raleigh. They teamed to reach base eight times. Three of them worked walks and two others were hit by a pitch.

“We wanted to pound the zone with the two pitches he can command and control,” Espada said.

Tatsuya Imai relied on two pitches in his start against the Mariners. (Tim Warner / Getty Images)

Such a statement sounds reserved for a rookie navigating his first taste of major-league life, not someone with a large salary and expectations to stabilize Houston’s injury-ravaged rotation.

But Imai is both, a fact the Astros must face head-on.

Any lofty preseason thoughts that accompanied Imai’s arrival now seem outsized. His prominence on ballpark murals and advertisements feel misplaced — and only further the pressure applied.

To hear team officials describe it, the Astros have exhausted every avenue to make Imai feel comfortable and aid his transition to the major leagues, which Enomoto already acknowledged has been a struggle.

“We’re trying to create an environment where he feels comfortable and he can be himself and we’re trying to do those things for him just to be him” Espada said before Tuesday’s game. “Just go out there, relax and have fun. That’s been our message.”

Whether Imai is receiving it is a matter of debate. Four months of the regular season still remain. There is enough time for Imai to correct the course and become a bona fide big leaguer, but it is clear the learning curve is far greater than anyone within Houston’s organization anticipated.

Imai’s progress must be measured in incremental gains, not in impressive outings.

For example, both Espada and Imai sounded encouraged that he threw 57.5 percent of his pitches on Tuesday for strikes. Anything is an improvement from the 54.2 percent rate he showed in his first three starts. Twelve of Seattle’s 13 balls in play came against pitches inside the strike zone.

“They won the division last year and they have a lot of hitters that can hit a lot of hard hits,” Imai said. “I think it’s just to the point that their ability was higher.”

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