'Woke up early and the highlights were on'

Current and former South Africa players rejoice at a third straight series win in Australia

ESPNcricinfo staff15-Nov-2016

Rangpur Riders' season of missed opportunities

Table-toppers at one stage, Rangpur fell away and failed to deliver when it mattered most

Mohammad Isam05-Dec-2016Tournament overview
Rangpur Riders will feel hard done by, after Khulna Titans qualified for the playoffs on the last evening of the league stage. Dhaka Dynamites fielded an under-strength side, and Khulna dominated them for most of the contest.But Rangpur got themselves into a situation where their qualification depended on other results, which is never ideal. They should have defeated Comilla Victorians in their last game, which would have all but ensured their progress.It ended up being a season of missed opportunities as Rangpur, who were sitting on top of the table at one stage.However, they still have a few reasons to be happy, given the performances of Mohammad Shahzad, Mohammad Mithun, Shahid Afridi, Sohag Gazi, Rubel Hossain and Arafat Sunny. Liam Dawson looked in good touch at times, while Ziaur Rahman, too, had a good finish to the season despite not being an automatic choice in the XI.High point
Rangpur were on top of the table at the end of the Chittagong leg, with 10 points in six games. They chased down 126 easily against Khulna Titans, with Shahzad, Mithun and Afridi making important contributions.Low point
Rangpur’s defeat in their last match would probably go down as their worst moment. Needing a win against Comilla to qualify, Rangpur were insipid with bat and ball, and lost by eight runs. That summed up their campaign of missed opportunities.Top of the class
Wicketkeeper batsman Mohammad Shahzad’s ability was already well known, but, in this tournament, he showed greater consistency. Shahzad topped Rangpur’s batting charts with 350 runs, which included two fifties. On the down side, Shahzad earned a suspension for poking his bat at Sabbir Rahman; he needs to work on controlling his temper better next time.Under-par performer
Opener Soumya Sarkar’s poor form did not do Rangpur or himself any favours ahead of Bangladesh’s tour of New Zealand later this month. Sarkar ended his season with 135 runs at 12.27 and a highest of 26.Tip for 2017
Rangpur’s owners have had a feel of what will be required next season, and will be more prepared to build a squad that takes them into the qualification stage. A more experienced coaching unit can also give them an advantage.

Bangladesh's 595: the highest total in a losing cause

Fascinating numbers from New Zealand’s unbelievable win in Wellington

Bharath Seervi16-Jan-20170:53

By the Numbers – Kane Williamson, fourth-innings expert

595 Bangladesh’s total in the first innings in Wellington – no team has scored more in an innings and gone on to lose the Test. The previous highest was Australia’s 586 against England at the SCG in 1894-95; Australia lost that Test by 10 runs after enforcing follow-on. Bangladesh features twice in the top five on the list; they had lost after posting 556 against West Indies in 2012-13. The previous biggest total that resulted in a defeat against New Zealand was also by Bangladesh: 408 in Hamilton in 2009-10.1134 Aggregate of the first-innings totals in this match – the third-highest first-innings aggregate in a Test that produced a result. The highest in this case is 1236, just last month in the Chennai Test between India and England.435 The difference in Bangladesh’s two innings in the match – 595 in the first innings and 160 in the second. It is the seventh-largest difference for any team in a Test. The previous highest such difference for Bangladesh was 389 against West Indies in Mirpur in 2012-13, where they made totals of 556 and 167.231 Kane Williamson’s average when chasing in home Tests, in six innings. His scores have been: 102*, 56, 31*, 108*, 61 and 104*. His knock in this match was his third century in the fourth innings of a Test, the most by any New Zealand batsman, going past Bev Congdon’s two. Williamson averages 66.90 in fourth innings in Tests, second only to Don Bradman’s 73.40 among 188 batsmen who have played 15 or more innings when chasing.89 Balls faced by Williamson to get to his century – the fourth-quickest by any batsman when chasing. The fastest in such a case is 76 balls by Gilbert Jessop against Australia at The Oval in 1902. The two others above Williamson are: Shahid Afridi (78 balls) against West Indies in 2004-05 and Matthew Hayden (85 balls) against Zimbabwe in 2003-04.5.47 New Zealand’s run rate in the chase – the second-highest in any successful Test chase of 200-plus. The quickest was England’s chase of 205 at 5.77 against South Africa at The Oval in 1994. Only once New Zealand have had a quicker innings of 200-plus at any stage of a Test: 5.63 against Australia in their first innings in Christchurch last year.6.43 Run rate of the 163-run stand between Williamson and Ross Taylor – the quickest 150-plus partnership in the fourth innings of Tests. Williamson scored 91 off 75 and Taylor contributed 60 in 77 balls.2008 When New Zealand last successfully chased a target of 200 or more in Tests; that was also against Bangladesh in Chittagong. The target of 217 in this match was their fifth-highest successful chase in Tests, and only the seventh time they won chasing in excess of 200.1 Number of bigger partnerships that have resulted in a defeat than the 359 between Shakib Al Hasan and Mushfiqur Rahim in this match. Mohammad Yousuf and Younis Khan had shared a fourth-wicket stand of 363 at Headingley in 2006, when Pakistan lost by 167 runs – the highest stand in a losing cause.7 Batsmen to score a double-century and a duck in the same Test, Shakib being the latest addition to the list. This was Shakib’s first duck in Tests since January 2009; he went 62 consecutive innings without a duck, the longest such streak by any Bangladesh player. Shakib’s 217 is the fifth-highest individual score to end in a defeat.No one has made as many as Bangladesh did in the first innings at Basin Reserve and then lost•Getty Images

Racing to 50 in under 20

The fastest fifties in IPL history, featuring some of the world’s mightiest hitters

ESPNcricinfo staffYashasvi Jaiswal (13 balls) Rajasthan Royals vs Kolkata Knight Riders, IPL 2023Yashasvi Jaiswal, 21, ripped up the IPL record books, slamming the league’s fastest half-century, off 13 balls. He made a two-paced pitch look like a belter to reignite their IPL campaign. Surprisingly, KKR captain Nitish Rana gave himself the new ball and the move backfired, with Jaiswal hitting 26 runs off the opening over. The other Rana – Harshit – wasn’t spared either as Jaiswal chopped the fast bowler behind point and flat-batted him down the ground for fours. Jaiswal also laid into Shardul Thakur and brought up his half-century inside three overs. Jaiswal threatened to convert it into a hundred, but the target wasn’t big enough. Eventually, Royals hunted down 150 with nine wickets and almost seven overs to spare.Pat Cummins (14 balls), Kolkata Knight Riders vs Mumbai Indians, IPL 2022Chasing 162, KKR slipped to 83 for 4 in 12 overs on a challenging Pune pitch. Pat Cummins, though, came in at No.6 and hoicked the second ball he faced for six. In the next over, Cummins took Jasprit Bumrah for a six and a four to raise KKR’s hopes. He then smashed Daniel Sams for 6,4,6,6, 2 (nb), 4,6 to zoom to 56 off 15 balls and seal victory for his side.KL Rahul (14 balls), Kings XI Punjab v Delhi Daredevils , IPL 2018For nearly four seasons, the record for the fastest fifty in the IPL stood at 15 balls, before KL Rahul went berserk with a flurry of boundaries on his debut for Kings XI Punjab. A fortunate top-edged six off Trent Boult kicked things off, before he unveiled an array of exquisite cover drives and pulls off Mohammad Shami’s first over. At 27 off nine balls, the fastest fifty seemed some way away, until he smashed Amit Mishra’s undisciplined first over for 24 runs to eclipse the previous mark by a single ball. He soon got out trying to whip Boult through the legside, only to be caught at short third man off the leading edge. By then, though, he had taken his place at the very top of a list of the IPL’s elite hitters.Sunil Narine (15 balls), Kolkata Knight Riders v Royal Challengers Bangalore , IPL 2017After their destructive opener Chris Lynn injured his shoulder early in the 2017 season, Kolkata Knight Riders experimented with Sunil Narine as a pinch-hitting opener. He got them off to some quick starts and showed enough ability to retain his position as an opener when Lynn returned. Chasing 159 in Bengaluru, Lynn and Narine decided they wanted to try and finish the game inside 10 overs. Both went ballistic, but it was Narine who raced Lynn to a 50. He went after fellow Trinidadian Samuel Badree, hitting him for three sixes in a row, before smashing three fours in a row off S Aravind. When he lofted seamer S Aravind into the stands beyond long-on, Narine equalled the record for the fastest half-century in the IPL.Yusuf Pathan (15 balls),Kolkata Knight Riders v Sunrisers Hyderabad, IPL 2014Yusuf Pathan’s innings came in his side’s final league game, in which they had to chase 161 in 15.2 overs to get two shots at qualifying for the final. After being dropped twice early on in his innings, Yusuf made the most of it, mowing Dale Steyn for 26 runs in an over, ensuring Knight Riders closed out the chase in just 14.2 overs.Nicholas Pooran (15 balls), Lucknow Super Giants vs Royal Challengers Bangalore , IPL 2023Chasing a mammoth 213 against Royal Challengers, Pooran came in with Super Giants still needing 114 from 56 balls. From 10 off five deliveries at one stage, Pooran ended with a 19-ball 62; seven of those deliveries were dispatched for six, while four went for fours. He reached his half-century off just 15 deliveries, mercilessly going after every bowler. By the time he was dismissed, Super Giants needed just 24 off 18, and would end up edging a one-wicket win.Suresh Raina ran himself out after smashing 87 off just 25 balls•BCCISuresh Raina (16 balls), Chennai Super Kings v Kings XI Punjab,2nd Qualifier, IPL 2014Raina’s 87 off 25 arguably remains the best IPL innings in a losing cause, and his blistering hits took his side to the highest ever Powerplay score in IPL history. If not for a mindless run-out in the 7th over, Raina was well on his way to the fastest hundred in T20 history and putting the game to bed.Chris Gayle (17 balls), Royal Challengers Bangalore v Pune Warriors, IPL 2013Gayle’s innings is the only one on this list which resulted in a hundred. He went on to smash the fastest T20 hundred off 30 balls and finished with the format’s highest score – an incredible 175 off 66 balls. Technically, his second fifty was even faster, taking him from 50 to 100 off just 13 balls. Among all his dominant IPL performances over the years, this innings remains his magnum opus.Adam Gilchrist (17 balls), Deccan Chargers v Delhi Daredevils, 1st semi-final, IPL 2009Gilchrist’s big-match temperament came to the fore once again, as he punished Delhi’s bowling attack to get to what was then the fastest fifty in IPL’s two-year history. He took particular exception to Dirk Nannes’ first over, with five hits to the fence. By the time he got out, a Chargers win was all but sealed with nearly ten overs to go.Chris Morris’ phenomenal knock was not enough to prevent a 1-run defeat for his side•BCCIChris Morris (17 balls), Delhi Daredevils v Gujarat Lions, IPL 2016Morris walked in with Daredevils wobbling at 57 for 4 chasing 173, and hit 7 of his first 17 balls for monstrous sixes down the ground. However, even his fighting knock was not enough to overcome their slow start, as they lost a thriller by 1 run.Sunil Narine (17 balls), Kolkata Knight Riders v Royal Challengers Bangalore, IPL 2018Just a year earlier, Narine had equalled the IPL record for the fastest fifty against the same opponent. This time, on home turf at the Eden Gardens, he reaffirmed his reputation as one of the most destructive T20 hitters going around. Virat Kohli threw all his spin-bowling options at him: first, Yuzvendra Chahal was carted all over the park, followed by some damage to Washington Sundar’s reputation as a gun Powerplay bowler. It took the introduction of former KKR team-mate Umesh Yadav to halt his progress, by which time his 17-ball half-century had put Knight Riders in a position of strength: 65 for 2 after just 5.2 overs in a chase of 177.Kieron Pollard (17 balls), Mumbai Indians v Kolkata Knight Riders, IPL 2016Pollard put on one of his regular Wankhede exhibitions, swatting Knight Riders’ hapless bowling attack, having coming in with 69 to get off 42 in a chase of 176. Rohit Sharma, who had already scored a half century when Pollard walked in, was left with little to do, as his partner’s power and finesse reduced their tricky chase to a canter past the finish.David Miller has established a reputation as one IPL’s best finishers•BCCIChris Lynn (19 balls), Kolkata Knight Riders v Gujarat Lions, IPL 2017Fresh off some big scores in the Big Bash League, Chris Lynn continued his Twenty20 form in IPL 2017, scoring 93 off 41 balls in the tournament’s third game. His knock contained eight sixes, five of which came before he reached 50. He and Gautam Gambhir chased 184 without losing a wicket, a record in the IPL.David Miller (19 balls), Kings XI Punjab v Rajasthan Royals, IPL 2014On a batting-friendly track in Sharjah, after Glenn Maxwell had set up a tall chase of 192 with a marauding 89 off 45 balls, Miller walked in with 66 to get off 37 balls. His innings featured six hits over the fence, four of which came off Dhaval Kulkarni’s final over.Robin Uthappa (19 balls), Royal Challengers Bangalore v Kings XI Punjab, IPL 2010This was Royal Challengers before the Gayle-AB de Villiers era, at a time when Jacques Kallis and Rahul Dravid were part of their top order. In pursuit of 204, Kallis and a 20-year old Manish Pandey put on 74 off 8 overs to keep the chase alive. Uthappa’s innings was just the impetus they needed, as he carted the likes of Sreesanth and Piyush Chawla to every corner of the M Chinnaswamy stadium. When he finally perished, the game was RCB’s to lose. Man-of-the-match Kallis and a young Virat Kohli duly completed the formalities.Andre Russell (19 balls), Kolkata Knight Riders v Kings XI Punjab, IPL 2015Russell’s knock came against a Kings XI side desperately looking for a win, having lost 8 of their 10 previous games. After putting up 183 on the board, they had dismantled the Knight Riders top order by the 11th over. Coming in as the last recognised batsman, Russell put on a magnificent display of power-hitting, before getting out with 25 to get off 19 balls. The lower-order almost managed to fluff it up, but Piyush Chawla’s cameo at the end was enough for a 1-wicket win.

Tamim sparks another revolt 10 years later

Tamim Iqbal carried Bangladesh’s hopes for most of the afternoon, channelling the ebb and flow of crowd excitement manfully to give his side something to bowl at, with his 95

Alan Gardner at The Oval05-Jun-2017Bangladesh fronted up from the minute they stepped on to the field. Unfortunately, that was at the toss, when Mashrafe Mortaza decided to take on one of the most potent bowling attacks at the tournament and try to set a target – even with the prospect of rain later in the day potentially helping the chasing side by shortening the game. It was a bold move, and Bangladesh’s openers walked out into a cauldron of adulation cooked up by the local diaspora, but word was not backed by deed.Mashrafe knew the challenge before his team, knew that they had only beaten Australia once in their history (and knew what that felt like, having played in that famous game in Cardiff in 2005). Bangladesh were more assertive in their team selection, bringing in Mehedi Hasan instead of the batting allrounder Mosaddek Hossain, and Mashrafe – perhaps hoping that the spin of Mehedi and Shakib Al Hasan would have greater effect defending a total on a used surface – chose to meet Australia head on under glowering south London skies.Even more so than during the tournament opener against England, The Oval’s teal seats were turned a darker shade of green by Bangladesh fans swamping the ground. The crowd erupted when the first runs flew to fine leg from the third ball of the innings, never mind that they came off Tamim Iqbal’s pad. There was almost as much noise when Tamim slid the next delivery down to third man for a single.It was Tamim who carried Bangladesh’s hopes for most of the afternoon, channelling the ebb and flow of crowd excitement manfully to give his side something to bowl at. His 95 was an innings of staccato bursts, an insurgent operation of rat-a-tat salvoes against an overwhelming opponent, and it was no surprise that his dismissal brought about an abrupt finish, the last four wickets falling for one run in 15 balls.Since the 2015 World Cup, Tamim’s form has been imperious, his average touching 60. He fell just short of back-to-back Champions Trophy hundreds, though this was arguably a more impressive innings than against England, given the quality of the bowling, the slowness of the pitch and, most notably, the lack of support. He was certainly not overawed in taking on Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Pat Cummins, though nor could he wrest destiny back into Bangladeshi hands.He had 2 off 13 balls when he first sprung into life, stepping out to thrash Hazlewood off a length back down the ground – nearly taking out his opening partner, Soumya Sarkar, in the process. Again the crowd exploded, as they would do when a drive and a cut against Starc flew to the rope in the following over. But Australia were able to sit on him for periods, capitalising on his lack of strike rotation while taking wickets at the other end.The boundaries dried up for Bangladesh and Tamim’s next block of scoring saw him add 19 off 42 while losing three partners for single-figure scores – although Mushfiqur Rahim was perhaps unlucky to be given out lbw when technology picked up an inside edge (he chose not to review). Only during a spunky 69-run stand between Tamim and Shakib Al Hasan did Bangladesh have a batsman looking to be positive at both ends.Tamim cut loose again with 15 off five balls from Moises Henriques, then withdrew to his bunker before firing another volley with back-to-back sixes off Travis Head. But a wicket followed in the same over when Shakib was given out lbw by Nigel Llong off Head, despite being well down the pitch; DRS backed up the decision on umpire’s call but Shakib could probably feel a little unlucky since the ball had struck him only fractionally in line.The portents, much like those for rain later in the day, were clear. But still the crowd implored their heroes to pull something out of the fire. Chants of “Ban-gla-desh! Ban-gla-desh! Ban-gla-desh!” rose once again when Tamim took on Cummins’ 90mph heat-seekers, pulling his ninth and final boundary before skipping out and trying to bludgeon the next ball through mid-off. A top-edged pull off Hazlewood evaded mid-on when he had 76 – as had a similar miscue on 16 – and the weight of Australia’s greater resources began to bear down as Adam Zampa, held back until the 35th over, struck twice in 11 balls. Then came Starc’s crushing finale.Ten years on from his role in Bangladesh’s famous World Cup upset of India, Tamim had done his best to spark a similar revolt against the prevailing order. Mashrafe had asked his batsmen to attack so his bowlers could defend – but only three made double-figures and none came close to bettering Tamim’s strike rate of 83.33. Rain ultimately threw bedraggled Bangladesh a lifeline, the return of the covers for the final time on a wet evening drawing one last cheer from the men and women in green; but they will need more than fervent support and a lone hand against New Zealand in Cardiff.

Panicstan embrace the chaos

Just as Pakistan and their fans seemed about to dissolve into a nerve-induced puddle, Sri Lanka decided to outdo them

Jarrod Kimber in Cardiff12-Jun-20174:57

Agarkar: Smaller target eased pressure off Sarfraz

DON’T PANIC. For the love of everything that is good, KEEP CALM. Just don’t be you. Do the right thing, the safe thing, no need to get worried, just please, oh please, just don’t do it again, we can’t take it. Enough.Boom, boom? I don’t think so. That is how a heart beats in a regular cricket fan. A Pakistan heart goes boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, and in a small chase, hell, there is no way to even write it down it’s just a high-pitched squealing noise, like a heart in a vice that’s getting electrocuted as someone burns it with a cigarette butt.It’s not a steady beat, it’s a scream.AAaAAAaaaaaaAAAaäHhhhhHhHHHHhhhH.There are two sides of the brain of a Pakistan fan. The right side looks at a chase of 237 in 50 overs on a clear day and a good pitch, against a team that’s come in short on frontline bowlers and thinks, ‘we’re going to win this comfortably’. And the left side of the brain beats the right side unconscious, because the left side knows, man, it knows, that there is no such thing as an easy Pakistan chase.Opening is Azhar Ali; he’s calm, he’s in control, he can bat for long periods of time without a sniff of a rash shot. He’ll hit the balls to so many fielders you’ll start thinking the fielding team has too many guys out there.  But when he slaps the first one, it’s straight to point, and on the full. Danushka Gunathilaka drops it, catches it, drops it, clutches for it, gropes for it, begs for it before scrambling around on the ground trying to pick up the ball so quickly everyone can’t see he has dropped it.  We know that drop, we pioneered that drop.At the other end it is Fakhar Zaman slapping the ball around. Take that Lasith, and that, and that. Sharjeel who? It doesn’t matter that Azhar’s strike rate was virtually negative. Yin and yang, dark and light, contrasting forces that bring together spiritual harmony.  And that is what happens, an opening partnership of calmness. When Zaman is out, he has 50 from barely any balls, he’s done his job, he’s cracked the top off the chase, the run rate is now never going to be the problem, and over 30% of the runs needed are in the bank.And Babar Azam is here, if there is a player who seems almost unaffected by wearing green for Pakistan, it this guy. He’s a drink of ice cold cola on the hottest day of the year. He’s flicking the ball straight to short midwicket and out. But Professor Hafeez is here, he might love how unpredictable Pakistan is, but he’s not, he just chugs along, experienced, seen it all, knocks it around, gets the job done. Oh hell, hell no, no no no no no no no, what is this? That is not a shot, it’s not soft, butter is soft, this is just a vague collection of gases that looks like a poor cricket shot from a distance.I still remember, vaguely, three short-haired Pakistan bowlers running through Sri Lanka. It was marvellous, no reverse, no scary pace, just quality, clever bowling, and an anything-can-happen attitude. Sure, some random quick bowler came in and stroked us around, but really, it was awesome, we owned the ground, and we were going to go into the semi-finals of a major tournament despite our incredibly poor performance in ODIs over the last two years. All we need is two guys, out there for a while, to honour the work of our bowlers, to stand up. Or just stay upright, and not fall over.Am I worried. Is my heart racing? Yes, sure, but it’s okay, here is Shoaib Malik, solid marriage, overseas-leagues pro, eases a ball through covers. Everything’s coming up Shoaib. Oh it’s at him, and he’s flicked one off his glove, and damn. Now Imad Wasim, ha, my man, the future captain, he’s already won a match here, right here, in Wales, and he was born here, like we planted a sleeper agent for just such a moment. And with the captain, who also smashed the ball here, they don’t even need to score; they just need to stand out there. Just chill, be in the moment, Occupy Cardiff. No, Imad, what have you done, this is not slips practice, why would you think this is slips practice? This is a game, everyone is wearing their matchday clothes, there is a crowd, TV cameras, weird German drummers, and this is a must-win game, and we’re losing it, we’re losing it and you’re hanging your bat out like a fat 50-year-old fielding coach on midweek session.Sri Lanka let their inner Pakistan take hold•Getty ImagesBut we still have one more saviour, Faheem Ashraf, the new Afridi, but without the baggage of thinking he is Afridi. He smashed Bangladesh to win the warm-up game, like just a week or so ago, it was like 77 off 12 balls, or something. Not important. He can do this, he can be our man. Faheem, how can you do it when you can’t even ground your bat? Just ground your bat Faheem, we want to love you, adore you, ruin you with our praise and turn you into a semi-effective allrounder with delusions of grandeur. We can’t do that when you are run out at the non-striker’s end off a fumble, and you have left us seven wickets down with 72 runs to get. How Faheem, how Pakistan? Why?Our only chance now is that the other team is worse than us, that they panic,  throw overthrows, fumble straightforward stops, drop simple catches, let the ball go straight through their wicketkeeper’s legs, drop another catch, and put a short mid-on in front of a normal mid-on, that they lose all sense of self and become us. Oh my, they are, they have become us, they are going to win it for us, our two best players in this chase are going to be a teen prodigy who had five years off and Sri Lankan fielders. We are so Pakistan, we have made someone else Pakistan.  All we have to do is not be worse than them, all we have to do is overcome ourselves, or become ourselves, embrace our chaos, become the chaos.Ride this partnership like it’s a glorious stallion even though we know it’s a busted-up donkey with an inner-ear infection. Let our captain try run himself out every ball, hit the ball to point and take off. A single to short midwicket? Yes please. Let us run head first into risk when we know they have a three-and-a-half man attack that we can outlast.Don’t look back you glorious heroes, ride into the PANIC. Keep panicking, panic hard, panic like no one is watching. Tear your clothes off run around in circles with your hands over your eyes. Oh, for the love of everything you have ever held dear, GO INTO A WILD SWEATY FRENZY OF WORRY. Be you, be all of you, the good, the bad, the Pakistan, pour the Pakistan all over you and trip, stumble and fall into this win. We can take it; we want it, we want all of it. We demand it, be Pakistan, be all the Pakistan you can be. Pakistan, Pakistan.Do you hear that heart beat? Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Pakistan.AAaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaAAaaAaäääääääääääHhhhhHhHHHHhhhHHHH.

'More and more girls are hitting the ball hard from ball one'

Bigger shots, bigger scores, faster innings, faster bodies, more diving, more catching – today’s women’s cricketers tell us how the game has evolved

20-Jun-20172:00

Sophie Devine on the importance of strength and conditioning training

How has power-hitting evolved in the women’s game, which was traditionally more reliant on touch play?Alex Blackwell, Australia batsman: Because of the influence of T20s, I’ve needed to work on my power-hitting. Over the last 12 months, coach Mark McInnes [New South Wales and Sydney Thunder] has helped look at my hand speed, the trajectory that I’m trying to hit the ball, what sort of angle works best to clear the fence.Professionalism has had an impact. I’m able to train for hours during the day, which wasn’t possible earlier because of daytime jobs. Now, there’s time for rest and recovery.Mithali Raj, India batsman and ODI captain: Developing core strength has been key to the adjustments I have made. Those have helped me loft easily. As a teenager, I used to struggle to do that. I think Stafanie Taylor, Deandra Dottin and Ellyse Perry have taken power-hitting to a new level in the women’s game.Harmanpreet Kaur, India allrounder: Gym sessions have become very important. It’s not just your arms or core that you need to generate power with. You also need to have a strong lower body to complete quick singles and convert ones into twos and not fizzle out during a long innings.Heather Knight, England batsman and captain: I think the biggest change in power-hitting is a bit more about mentality. Batters are more willing to take risks. Obviously when you play T20 World Cups in India and the boundary is 80 metres, it’s quite difficult, particularly on slow pitches, to showcase that power-hitting. On slightly faster pitches and more suitable boundary sizes, players are better able to showcase those skills. Strength is part of that, but I don’t think it’s the full story. General skill levels have increased massively and you’re seeing a lot more of the so-called difficult shots, like hitting over extra cover.Sophie Devine, New Zealand allrounder: Having central contracts around the world has given the girls a lot of time to put the extra effort into their strength and conditioning. In the last couple of years, we’ve seen players hit the fence relatively easily. Alongside that, it’s the bat and equipment we use. But at the end of the day, it does come a lot down to the ability to train and gym.Harmanpreet Kaur caught the attention of many in the Women’s Big Bash with her lofted shots across the ground•Getty ImagesBismah Maroof, Pakistan allrounder: When I came into international cricket at the age of 15, I had very little understanding of the relationship between body mechanics and athletic performance. But over time I realised power-hitting is one aspect we, the Pakistan players, and the Asian teams in general, are conspicuously weaker in than any of the top nations. In recent years, West Indies have upped the standard of their game by injecting greater power into their strokeplay. They have improved their fitness immensely, especially over the past three years or so, and it shows in the results they have achieved.As someone who focuses on timing the ball well, my emphasis has largely been on assessing the needs of the team in the context of a particular phase of play. And, perhaps, that has also been the overall approach of the Pakistan team as a batting unit, even though we have a bunch of players who have the ability to hit fours and sixes.Tammy Beaumont, England batsman: I’ve seen a South African player, Lizelle Lee, hit one of our bowlers out of the ground over extra cover. All of us just stood there in shock because we didn’t really know what to make of it. You’re seeing girls hit it all around the ground. But they have still got that deft touch of scooping it over their head, sweeping, all those kind of shots. It’s just making batters so much more dangerous.Natalie Sciver, England allrounder: Coming up against the likes of Deandra Dottin and people who can hit it miles, it adds that pressure that you don’t get otherwise.Asmavia Iqbal, Pakistan fast bowler: The incredible batting standards set by the men’s game has been key to women players aspiring to send more balls soaring into the stands. I think my natural build as a fast bowler has helped me enjoy my occasional stints as a pinch-hitter, and following the fair bit of success I enjoyed on those occasions, I have tried to work on my physique in order to add more power to my shots.What role have strength and conditioning coaches played in taking the game forward?Knight: Probably the biggest change is that the younger players are a lot more prepared now. We probably spend six days a week doing some sort of physical session, and now that we are professionally contracted, a lot of players see strength and conditioning work as the mainstay of the day.

“A lot of girls taking up cricket in Pakistan find themselves without access to gyms and fitness centres. For players in the national side, therefore, strength and conditioning coaches become almost indispensable”Sana Mir

Sciver: When I started, we’d do lunges, but these days it’s more power exercises for the whole body, not just one movement. It’s not just about your arms or your legs but how much power you can put through the ball using your whole body.Maroof: It’s been a little over two years since the Pakistan team consciously started investing more time and thought into acquiring greater physical strength. We started spending more time at the gym, doing a lot of weight training, plyometric exercises, and speed and agility training, and that reflects in the improved fitness levels of the players from what it used to be five years ago. Beaumont: Even if we get a week off from cricket and training at Loughborough to catch up with friends or family, our strength and conditioning stuff doesn’t stop. It just might change in that we don’t all have to have sessions together.Suzie Bates, New Zealand allrounder and captain: Since I’ve played international cricket, there has always been the odd player in each team that had that power. But recently, more and more girls are hitting the ball hard from ball one. It comes down to probably the fact that the girls are now training a lot more. I think coaches have coached girls to be more aggressive, and we are able to spend more time on our strength and conditioning because teams are becoming professional and semi-professional.Sana Mir, Pakistan offspinner and ODI captain: Considering the sporting culture at the grass-roots level in Pakistan is somewhat non-existent, a lot of girls taking up cricket, or wanting to do so at a young age, find themselves without access to gyms and fitness centres. For players in the national side, therefore, strength and conditioning coaches become almost indispensable.Mark Robinson, England coach: I think sometimes they [women’s teams] had part-time [strength and conditioning coaches], so sometimes they did weights for the sake of weights and probably the wrong type of weights. The beauty of us having full-time strength and conditioning coaches is that they are tailoring their programmes to the individual.Since the last World Cup, we have seen more and more female batsmen hit lofted shots on the off side, while earlier most would try to clear the leg-side boundaries. What has changed?
Sciver: That comes down to the technique and the timing. Harmanpreet Kaur is not a very big girl, is she? She can hit it miles, so it’s not necessarily how many weights you lift. It’s actually calculated. People are playing to their strengths. It’s not just swinging and hoping for the bestGetty ImagesBates: [Earlier] there was the odd player that was strong, hitting it through over cover, but now girls have 360 games. I don’t think that’s so much down to improved strength and power. It’s just the more cricket they play, the more they train, the more you grow in the game, you are able to practise shots that perhaps weren’t your strengths.Devine: I think it’s a natural evolution of the game, isn’t it? Players want to get better and use different parts of the ground. In the Women’s Big Bash, Harmanpreet Kaur hit a beautiful six over cover, which was the shot of the tournament for me. I think we’ll see that a lot more in the next couple of years – the power to go over the off side.Ellyse Perry, Australia allrounder: A few girls in world cricket have hit really well over cover. That’s a lot to do with their natural set-up and the way they hit the ball. I think now girls are developing that too as an extra shot. With four [fielders] out in one-day cricket, there’s always a fielder up, so one way you can get a lot of runs is over the covers. Mir: Earlier the fielding side knew the batsman would invariably target the leg side, so the first instinct was to bowl outside the off stump. Since then, the batsmen and the analysts have worked on addressing the issue and they have developed their games to loft those balls over the off side for fours. Just like it so often happens with the men’s sides, when a team develops a certain playing pattern, others analyse it and try and adopt it.Do you think bringing the boundaries in – as we have seen being done recently, especially in England – is good for the women’s game?Raj: It shouldn’t be too near that you have mishits carry, but not so big that the scores are less than what you’d generally want to have in ODIs or T20s. You want games to be competitive and one way is to ensure there is encouragement for batters to attempt big shots. If the boundaries are going to be 75 metres, that isn’t going to happen.Maroof: During our tour of England last year, the 50-metre boundaries didn’t suit us at all. The English players have greater strength than us, which is why it became easier for them to hit even the good balls for sixes, and we ended up having to chase scores over 350 in two of the three ODIs.

” It’s not just your arms or core that you need to generate power with. You also need to have a strong lower body to complete quick singles and covert ones into twos and not fizzle out during a long innings”Harmanpreet Kaur

Sciver: We played Pakistan in England and set the boundaries where we wanted them to be. It was going to be in our favour. But it was to show our team that it is possible to hit it over the rope and hit it a long way. We had a really short boundary at Worcester, and Tammy and Lauren [Winfield] were hitting it over the rope – not just a little bit. In contrast, we went to the West Indies and played on really slow pitches, really slow outfields and massive boundaries. The games were exciting, of course, but they were low-scoring, so it’s up to the people that watch as to whether or not that’s exciting.Beaumont: It’s actually nothing to do with the boundary size, it’s more the pitch we play on. If you play on a good pitch, you can trust to hit through the line of the ball to 70-75 metres. We play on pitches that are used and a bit two-paced or slow or spinning a lot – that’s where you can’t trust that you can hit it 75 metres. In the World T20 in India, I think New Zealand men only got 120-130, which is kind of unheard of, and they won. Their game was very exciting, but if that had been a women’s game it would have been ridiculed because it’s low-scoring, it’s boring.Knight: What short boundaries do – and good pitches do, which I think is even more important – is that your bowlers’ skill levels have to increase massively. You have to have a yorker and a good slower ball. I don’t think we should set it the same size as men’s boundaries. It should be a little bit smaller and in proportion to how the women can hit. I think it’s about finding that balance where it’s exciting to watch but also not forced.Perry: If you’re going to bring the boundary in, you need to play on smaller-sized grounds, so the spectators are still close to the action.Bates: When the boundaries are long, you see more catches, but in domestic games, where the boundaries are too small, bad cricket shots are rewarded and it takes out the ability to run twos in small grounds. I think around 60 metres is a good boundary size. But if the wicket is slow and everyone bowls the spinners, you need to have power to really muscle the ball. Making sure we play on faster wickets with a bit of grass in them helps.Blackwell: My game has been a safe game. I used to hit hard and flat and get one-bounce boundaries. At one time I didn’t even consider trying to hit sixes because the reward for risk wasn’t there. As the boundaries have come in, especially for T20s, I’m able to clear them, even by five to ten metres. My tactical approach has changed. I don’t think it’s out of balance. It’s been good to encourage more big-hitting from the women.Iqbal: As a bowler, I can say the shorter boundaries do little to help us. Considering how the players have gone about this WBBL, I’m sure some of them can easily clear 70-75m at will. Most of the present-day batsmen can hit the ball at least over 60m, so why should we pull the ropes in?Mithali Raj: “You want games to be competitive and one way is to ensure there is encouragement for batters to attempt big shots. If the boundaries are going to be 75 metres, that isn’t going to happen”•Getty ImagesAlyssa Healy, Australia wicketkeeper-batsman: Having smaller boundaries suits us. It also brings into play some of the smaller teams and makes the game exciting, which you eventually need for the fans to come.Mir: I’m in favour of keeping the boundary at 60m or above. It’s not only the lofted shots that go for boundaries. Good rolling shots, played with skill and hit through the gaps, can also go for fours. The rule of having five fielders inside the circle has already taken away flight from the spinners. Perhaps I can speak for most spinners around the world: there would be very little left for spin bowlers to play for if the ropes are pulled in even further.Robinson: When we played in India [the WWT20] with big boundaries on slow wickets, the games were poor spectacles. I actually think it did a disservice to the gifts and the skills of the players. A variety of boundary sizes is great. If the boundaries are in sufficiently, batters don’t feel they need to over-hit, and they actually clear the boundaries by a long way, which breeds confidence that they can do it. When the boundaries are too big, people don’t go for it and it becomes a game of twos and ones, and it can stagnate, especially at the back end.How have T20 leagues – the Women’s Big Bash League in Australia and the Kia Super League in England – influenced the game?Blackwell: In some ways, the WBBL is developing players from around the world, isn’t it? The KIA League is doing the same. When young players in the team are exposed to what Harmanpreet or Stafanie Taylor can do, it lifts them.Raj: Players are more confident of taking the game right till the end, and don’t bogged down by loss of wickets.Perry: If there was to be a women’s IPL, it would take the cake from the Kia Super League and the WBBL, because the IPL for men is on such a huge scale. And I have no doubt that a female version would be similarly successful. I know all the players in the world would be eager to participate.Bates: These leagues have given players the opportunity to play professional cricket for even longer rather than perhaps just with New Zealand Cricket, which was mostly seen as part-time. Other girls, who haven’t been able to play in the Big Bash or the Super League, are working a lot harder, not only for the White Ferns but to be noticed by teams around the world.Harmanpreet: In T20s, you have to maintain a strike rate in excess of 100 from the beginning, and strike rotation is a must. You cannot afford to play out one full over all by yourself, blocking deliveries. The defensive mode of play that one associated with women is becoming redundant.

“I think in the World T20, New Zealand men only got 120-130 and they won. Their game was very exciting, but if that had been a women’s game it would have been ridiculed because it’s low-scoring, it’s boring”Tammy Beaumont

Maroof: I’ve followed the WBBL stints of some of the cricketers, and even played against them in the World Cup Qualifiers. The change in their approach is evident. When required to accelerate the scoring in the death overs, or faced with a daunting asking rate, very little seems to be out of reach for them. They are now better disposed to reading match situations, especially as captains. Bowlers are conceding fewer extras.Sciver: T20 really helps the bowling mindset, especially when you come into 50-over cricket. You have to nail your variations, you have to bowl yorkers, because you’re otherwise going to pay the price. It puts more pressure on you because you know people are going to try and hit you out of the game.Iqbal: Of the WBBL games I watched, I remember at least two instances when the match turned on its head solely because of a brilliant catch or a couple of diving stops near the boundary.Are spinners playing a bigger role in the game today?
Perry: Batters are becoming more adventurous with their shots and are wanting to clear boundaries. It’s brought spin into the game and we see a lot of catches in the deep. The quality of spin is really high as well at the moment. Kristen Beams [Australian legspinner] is world-class. Pace bowling probably lagged in its development as opposed to batting and spin bowling in women’s cricket.Sciver: Previously spin wasn’t really a wicket-taking option. You’d get through 20 overs in the middle of a 50-over game and try to go for as few runs as possible. If you bowled it slowly, they wouldn’t be able to hit you. But nowadays, if you’re facing spin, I find it even more of an opportunity to score really because you can use sweeps and reverse sweeps and things like that. We’ve got some really good spinners in the England squad – Heather Knight, Laura Marsh and Alex Hartley coming through – and they’re certainly not just lobbing it up. They’ve got the variations seamers need, and I think spin could play a really important part in our World Cup.Maroof: Conditions in England inherently favour fast bowlers and the trend is unlikely to change in the World Cup. However, considering how well spinners have fared through the [ICC] Women’s Championship, even on pitches that are not regarded as spin-friendly, captains are perhaps becoming more accommodating to the idea of introducing spinners inside the first five-six overs with a view to enticing the batsman to go for big strokes.Raj: Our attack has been spin-heavy because we’ve got bowlers who aren’t afraid to give it good, slow flight, and the dip means batsmen have to reach out to force the pace. Hitting, especially against the turn, can be hard. In places where there is stiff breeze, it becomes tougher to negotiate spinners.Harmanpreet: Spinners have been able to dominate because not all batsmen in the women’s game have enough strength in their lower body to stay in the crease and clear the infield or the boundary. For them, using the feet and stepping out becomes mandatory. When medium-pacers operate, they go for more runs because it’s mostly a matter of timing for the batsman. If you look at top-level women’s internationals or league matches, where the wicket may not take much turn, you’ll find it’s the discipline of the spinners that helps them dictate terms to batsmen.Central contracts have transformed the women’s game. Players now have more time to train and can access high-quality facilities and experts, which has made a difference to their fitness and to their games•AFP/Getty ImagesKnight: You see spin take a bigger role in the women’s game and there are generally two or three spinners, sometimes more, in each attack. The level of spin has probably improved in the last four or five years, and probably also the players of spin, certainly when you look at some of the England girls.Meg Lanning, Australia batsman and captain: I think early on in T20, spinners were targeted as the ones to go after. The spinners that I’ve played against have adjusted to that and seen what works. Some batsmen clear the ropes, but not all. Having to make your own pace is probably a bit more of a challenge than using the pace of the pace bowlers. I think that’s why spin plays a pretty big role in women’s cricket.Dane van Niekerk, South Africa legspinner and captain: I believe spinners can be more attacking than in men’s cricket. There’s some express pace in female cricket, but I always back a spinner. I believe they are an attacking option.Blackwell: With spinners, because the batter has to generate pace and power, maybe there’s a tendency of losing shape when they hit. That’s a development area for batters, to counter the effect of spinners, bring about better decision-making while trying to hit.Bates: I’d like to say that players have got better at playing slower bowling, whether it’s spin or medium pace. Probably coaches involved in the women’s game have realised that teams were taking the pace off the ball. I know England, for example, are sweeping and reverse-sweeping a lot more than they have in the past.Suné Luus, South Africa legspinner: Spin bowling in general in cricket has stayed the same. Spinners are more attacking generally, but I think it’s the same as the men.Devine: A good spinner in any team, whether T20s or 50 overs, is always going to be a really good attacking option. They are smart, they are used to being prepared for batters to come after them. They’ve done really well, trying to stay ahead of the ball, with their field placements, change of variations.What have been the improvements in fielding and how much of an impact have they made?Harmanpreet: At our training sessions, we are assigned fielding roles similar to what we are expected to perform during an international match. The fielders at the 30-yard circle are the most agile ones and those at the boundary have strong shoulders. We simulate match-like situations during practice so you don’t find it difficult to put in dives or react to sharp edges in the slip cordon. There is also a conscious effort on the part of players to develop their lower-body strength. With stronger legs it gets easier to cut off powerfully hit shots on the boundary, maintain balance while diving, and to get back on your feet quicker.

“Given that the top ten teams in the world are really close to one another in terms of their batting and bowling, fielding starts to separate sides”Ellyse Perry

Knight: I think fitness probably has had the most impact on fielding.Raj: When I started off, you could get away with being a safe fielder. You didn’t need to be athletic. Today, you have to know how to dive and slide naturally. That’s why I’ve often underlined the importance of having a specialist fielding coach. With so much focus on strength training, throwing techniques are extremely important. A wrong method and you could tear a muscle or have a sprain.Perry: Given that the top ten teams in the world are really close to one another in terms of their batting and bowling, fielding starts to separate sides. It is about using their body to full capacity and being able to move laterally and take catches on the run, in the air. I think there can be a more integrated approach between the skills coaches and the strength and conditioning coaches. A lot of those movements can be broken down and combined with the players going to gym, running and sprinting.Beaumont: I think we’re having more games on TV, so you’ve got third-umpire decisions coming into it. That makes a big difference, when you know you can go for that 50-50 run-out and you’ve got a chance to look back at it and get that decision.Blackwell: We have tried to incorporate methods from baseball into our fielding drills. The focus has been on our throwing technique – the ability to keep the ball moving in transit. In the past, we used to hold it back. There are a lot more run-outs in women’s cricket than there are in men’s cricket – on average one run-out per innings. Whether that’s more direct hits or poor running, I’m not really sure.I think we’ve got two of the best gloves in the world in Sarah Taylor and Amy Jones. I think keeping is an area where it’s easier to be on parity [with male players] because it’s not reliant on strength. I’ll never forget Sarah Taylor’s catch at Hove [to dismiss Jodie Fields] against Australia – it was remarkable whether you’re male or female.Devine: Here in New Zealand we always have a massive focus on our fielding. That is such a huge part of the game, especially now some of the grounds we are playing in are so quick that if you don’t keep down on the ground and you don’t put in the effort, the ball is just going to race to the boundary. You’ve got to be prepared to loosen your skin and keep down and stop the flow of boundaries and take those half opportunities, because in T20 cricket you’ve got to create something special every now and then to stop a player.Maroof: Asian sides continue to have one persistent problem: there are phases when one misfield triggers a reversal of a situation in the field, and that has an effect and subsequently everybody begins to drop regulation catches and make unexpected misfields. Over the past two years, we’ve been working particularly on high catches, timing our dives, stopping firmly hit balls, especially inside the circle, and direct hits.Mark Robinson: “I don’t know if this has ever been assessed or not, but the women hit the stumps more than the men”•Getty ImagesLanning: You see female cricketers now being able to throw on the full from the boundary with good power. It comes back to the strength and conditioning.Mir: The kind of ground fielding and diving catches we saw in the second edition of the WBBL and at the World T20 was astounding. In the World T20, even Pakistan did reasonably well as a fielding unit, restricting West Indies to 103 and India to 96. But we have not been as consistent as we would have liked to.As part of our preparation for the World Cup, we invested a lot of time in our fielding sessions at our preparatory camp, working on putting in more strength in our throws and chalking out plans on specific positions for specialist fielders.Van Niekerk: I have seen some spectacular catches in the last few years – Mignon du Preez took a stunner for us in Australia last year. The girls are becoming proper athletes and that’s why the game is taking off really well.Luus: The catches we take, the ground balls we stop, the dives we put in, are the same as the men.Robinson: I don’t know if this has ever been assessed or not, but the women hit the stump more than the men. I’d love to see the stats. Maybe they give just a bit more attention to detail, taking that extra split-second to set and hit, whereas sometimes the blokes rush it. We had Charlotte Edwards who, at the end, because of her knees, wasn’t mobile, but she hit the stumps. She used to have a great run-out ratio because people would try and take her on and she’d hit.

Is Reece Topley facing a T20 future?

Reece Topley’s future, the ignoring of Sam Northeast and the unpredictability of Pakistan cricket jostle for attention in our latest NatWest Blast round-up

David Hopps14-Aug-2017In the fortnight or so since he learned that he had suffered the fourth stress fracture of his career, Reece Topley has had other things to worry about. His dad and mentor, Don, has undergone a major operation in an Ipswich Hospital, but now he has been discharged, and is thankfully on the mend, the odds are that cricket conversation will soon become part of the rehab process.Topley’s move to Hampshire has been a nightmarish one. He has totted up 15 games in a season-and-a-half – including only three Championship matches – and as well as his back trouble he has also suffered a broken hand and a shoulder injury.Nearly 18 months have passed since he played the last of his 10 ODIs and six T20Is for England and the excited talk that they had finally produced a left-arm quick with the ability to swing the ball at pace has quietened.Perhaps it is time for Topley to follow the lead from Tymal Mills down the South coast at Sussex and accept that his future was as a T20 specialist where he might be able to manage his workload more successfully. It is no sort of decision for a young fast bowler of 23, with horizons ahead, but four stress fractures begins to force an inevitable conclusion.

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Fifteen counties face an uncertain climaxThe NatWest Blast has its critics but it is certainly competitive. As it reaches the final week of group matches the counties could not be more tightly bunched.Only Notts Outlaws have qualified from North Group, their home quarter-final already assured.Glamorgan and Hampshire are sure of their last-eight places in the South, although in Hampshire’s case it will take a study of all permutations before they are ready to believe it. As they still want that home quarter-final, they are not about to do the maths.To add to the mid-table melee, only Worcestershire and Durham, both in North Group, have no chance of reaching the last eight, with even Middlesex – bottom in the South – retaining a notional hope of a late dash into the quarters.That leaves 15 of the 18 counties still with something to play for. The Blast has always been fiercely contested, but this is quite some run-in all the same.Key matches? Essex will heavily influence the outcome in South Group as they face Kent at Chelmsford on Thursday and Sussex at Hove 24 hours later. In the North, Yorkshire’s tie against the defending champions Northamptonshire at Headingley could yet turn into a must-win affair for both sides.

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Fakhar Zaman never quite got on the plane•Getty ImagesPakistan’s stars deserve betterMany of Pakistan’s best players have missed out on the gain and the glory that has come with the global rise of Twenty20. They are excluded from IPL because of political tensions and they are recruited in other competitions with a certain amount of disquiet.No wonder when the Pakistan board feels able to abruptly revoke 13 No Objection Certificates given to players involved primarily in the Caribbean Premier League but also in the county game and instruct that they should return home to fulfil national and domestic obligations.The order affects Mohammad Amir, who had been playing for Essex in the Championship and T20, and also Sarfraz Ahmed, who was to play five games for Yorkshire in the Blast, and Fakhar Zaman, who was due to join Somerset until the end of the season, and whose visa had just come through, but whose NOC was withdrawn a day before he was due to get on the flight.The whole thing is a mess. The players have been called back for a series between Pakistan and a World XI which has been rescheduled after Nawaz Sharif’s disqualification as prime minister and a by-election that has resulted.But the World XI series has never actually been confirmed. Sri Lanka might yet step in or perhaps no matches will actually take place.Of course Pakistan deserves sympathy because of the long absence of international cricket in the country. Of course, everybody in cricket should yearn for a better future. Of course a healthy Pakistan would be wonderful for cricket. That being said, the board also has a responsibility to respect professional leagues around the world, and give its players to chance to play their part. That requires planning, consistency and reliability, qualities that are too often absent.

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Keeping a lid on itOne of the joys about a Roses contest – and about English T20 in particular – is how partisanship does not run out of control. Loyalties are paraded but the dominant sense of one big cricket community holds sway.Liam Livingstone, a tough-minded soul, tested that to the full at Headingley on Friday. He marked his first catch of the night, as he ended Yorkshire’s opening stand at long-on, by a polite up-yours retort to those in the crowd who had been on his case.There was no criticism of incitement, no over-reaction, no threat of violence. As T20 grows in England, staying the right side of that line is a challenge that the game must be keenly aware of. Cricket’s community is a priceless thing.

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Sam Northeast remains Kent’s Nearly man•Getty ImagesThe ignoring of Sam NortheastThis column recently alighted on an excellent study by Sports Analytics Advantage about the most effective English batsmen in T20 matches between 2014 to 2016.Sure enough, top of the list and routinely overlooked by England and by other T20 leagues worldwide was Sam Northeast, slightly more effective on their calculations than even Jos Buttler and Jason Roy and streets ahead of the England limited-overs captain Eoin Morgan.Northeast has had another consistent season for Kent where he is one of five batsmen to average more than 30 only for their prospects of reaching the quarter-finals to be in the balance with two final-week victories against Essex and Surrey essential. No Finals Day means no publicity – and clearly, for whatever reason, he needs it.As in the NatWest Blast, so too the Championship, where Kent are again challenging for promotion without suggesting that their pace attack is strong enough to complete the job.The message for Northeast, Kent’s captain, seems obvious. If you want Kent, and your own career to progress, sign some bowlers.Sports Analytics Advantage prefers to put it this way. “It’s difficult to understand why the selectors will not give certain players positions in the squad when the data makes a very strong case for them. Perhaps it’s to do with a big/small county mentality, perhaps it’s to do with influence from captains, or a preference to have consistency with other formats, perhaps it’s to do with subjective assessment (which has the issue in that it is almost always inherently biased), or perhaps it’s to do with the fact that they don’t have a clue what they are doing.”

Basic errors disguise South Africa's structural flaws

It’s easy to pinpoint the areas in which South Africa let England off the hook in the first Test. The truth about their predicament on this tour is more complicated

Firdose Moonda at Lord's09-Jul-20171:03

‘You can take it back!’ – Elgar happy to hand over captaincy

Bad mistakes? They made a few.Dropping Joe Root (twice), taking two wickets off two no-balls, not reviewing a decision against Stuart Broad when England were seven-down in the first innings and he was on 4, dropping Jonny Bairstow in the second innings when the lead could have been clipped to under 300 – those are all the basic things South Africa got wrong and it cost them dearly.They may have bowled England out for 200 runs fewer, they may have ended up with a competitive first-innings total, their comeback with the ball in the second dig may have put them in a match-winning position, and there may be life on Mars. We cannot hypothesise too much.Sure, losing the toss was not ideal on a surface that turned square late on day four, but it is not the only reason South Africa were unable to put up a proper fight. Their batting has been brittle for some time but they have not needed to address the issues because they’ve always had someone or something to bail them out. In their last six Test innings, they’ve lost half the line-up before reaching 100 three times. Against New Zealand, they were 94 for 6 in Wellington before Temba Bavuma and Quinton de Kock put on a match-winning partnership, and 59 for 5 in Hamilton before it rained. Here, they were 94 for 9 and there was no-one to save them.The top four have been the main concern, with an unsettled opening pair and out-of-form experienced players at No.3 and 4, for whom there has seemingly been no suitable replacement. Naturally, that’s put pressure on the middle-order, which South Africa have packed with potential but are smothering with stress. Bavuma and de Kock cannot dig their seniors out of every hole; Vernon Philander and the tail should not have to. So what are South Africa to do?In this series, they experimented with a fourth opening partner for Dean Elgar, after Alviro Petersen, Stiaan van Zyl and Stephen Cook, and with good reason. Since the start of 2015, South Africa’s opening pair has a better average than only West Indies, Zimbabwe and Sri Lanka, so theoretically, it is a good idea to keep trying to find the right combination – and Heino Kuhn deserved his chance. He has been a stalwart of the first-class scene for more than a decade and, last summer, became one of only four players since the start of the franchise era to score more than 1,000 runs in a season. He topped that up with a double-hundred and a century for the A side, so overlooking him did not seem like an option.Hashim Amla’s form and focus remains a worry for South Africa•Getty ImagesBut to play Devil’s advocate for a bit: if the selectors decided it was time to invest in a solution, they could have looked for someone who would be a longer-term answer so that, if he struggled early on, they would have been able to give him a longish run. Aiden Markram, the Under-19 World Cup winner, is also an opener who has done well domestically, was included in the Test squad as cover, and could have been blooded. Now, Markram will return home to play for the A team, so Kuhn will have to be able to help Elgar stabilise things at the top. End of.Kuhn’s record suggests he will come good at some stage but South Africa don’t have the luxury of time. And, in the back of their minds, they may even wonder whether they should have bypassed him completely, harsh though that may have been.Then there is the question of Hashim Amla and JP Duminy and what South Africa need to do to get them firing. Amla has been struggling since the Australia tour last November and, even though he scored a century in his 100th Test against Sri Lanka, something is ailing him. It’s too easy to lean on the “class is permanent” cliche as a way to escape the uncomfortable truth that he may be on the wane, but South Africa may have to because Duminy is the bigger problem. If someone has to take the fall for this defeat, it has to be Duminy.For too long, he has kept his place based on occasional past performances that provide a reminder of how much he has to offer. But those occasions have become too scarce and Duminy has less to bring to the table than Amla. He does not inspire any confidence at all, in everything from his presence to his strokeplay. What a coincidence, then, that the only shot he played in anger was a full-blooded pull to midwicket on the stroke of tea that confirmed South Africa’s slide to a four-day defeat.There seems to be some turning of the tide on Duminy, especially with Theunis de Bruyn showing good signs in this first-innings 48 and so the solution on this tour might be to drop Duminy, have returning captain Faf du Plessis at No.4, Bavuma at No.5 and de Bruyn at No.6. That still means leaving Quinton de Kock at No.7 for now, but that may be the best South Africa can do.De Kock’s aggressive batting style and quick accumulation of runs makes him an obvious candidate for higher up, but the hours he spends keeping wicket and the impact that will have on his long-term workload have to be borne in mind. It may actually work in South Africa’s favor to have him lower down, facing the second new ball and marshalling the lower middle-order, provided the top four can come good. All South African supporters want to see de Kock given the opportunity to do more, but they would not want him to be burdened by the expectation that will come with that. We’ve already seen what undue pressure does to South Africa; at least one star player should be allowed to continue with freedom.South Africa have had their share of sand kicked in their face in this Test, and they have not come out of the experience well. Not yet, anyway.

How India tamed the Maxwell monster

Over the course of the first three ODIs, Glenn Maxwell has managed only 58 runs while falling three times to the same bowler, Yuzvendra Chahal. What are the cunning plans behind India’s success against him?

Alagappan Muthu and Gaurav Sundararaman25-Sep-20171:55

How India set up Glenn Maxwell

Australia are 224 for 2 and in walks Glenn Maxwell. There are 12. 1 overs left for him to wreak havoc. This is the age of the 360-degree batsman and he is one of its vanguards. But it seems India have found a template to beat him, or at the very least keep him quiet.As soon as Maxwell comes to the crease, the ball is tossed to Jasprit Bumrah. Now this might just seem like a team demanding their best bowler to take a key wicket but there is a story here. For one, Bumrah has 24 balls remaining. And all of them are fairly precious to India because, since he made his debut in January 2016, he has taken 22 wickets in the last 10 overs of ODI innings while maintaining an economy rate of 6.5. He is arguably the most potent death bowler in the world.Bumrah is used for only one over – the 40th. It, he attempts the yorker and attacks the stumps, ensuring the batsman has very little room to work with. Additionally, with his unusual action and skid off the pitch, finding leverage to hit over the top is difficult. Maxwell manages only one run in five balls.India turn to Yuzvendra Chahal next and the legspinner ensures he keeps the ball away from Maxwell’s reach. The battle begins with a loopy delivery, well wide of off stump, so wide that the batsman toe-ends it to long-off while playing with a horizontal bat. It ends with a stumping.This in essence is India’s plan against a player who, if he gives himself a chance, could take batting to a level unimaginable.Maxwell has the daring to play a reverse-sweep first ball on a square turner against R Ashwin. And he has the skill to dismantle fast bowlers, playing shots they can’t possibly budget for. In the 2015 World Cup, after Wahab Riaz had terrorised Shane Watson, Maxwell faced a short ball that was climbing on him and cramping him for room. He put it away to the point boundary with a shot he called “the back away, look away deliberate cut.”Yet, on this tour, where Maxwell is perhaps third in command of the batting line up after Steven Smith and David Warner, he has made only 58 runs over three innings. Bumrah has come on early in his innings two out of three times and Chahal has dismissed him three out of three times. This is no coincidence, as the table below shows.

Maxi’s Twin Troubles
Bowler Runs Balls Wickets
Yuzvendra Chahal 28 36 5
Jasprit Bumrah 27 33 4

Maxwell is a fearsome ball-striker, if he can get under it, so India do their best to stop that happening by bringing on a seamer with an unusual action. Bumrah is difficult to line up, and lining a bowler up early is the absolute basis of power-hitting.Then comes the actual plan. Yorkers and bouncers, and he is adept at both. While training in Indore, Bumrah came off a short run-up and nailed a pair of boots placed in front of the stumps three straight times.Though his search for the blockhole manifests as full-tosses on matchday, they don’t cost India much. Australia are in danger of slipping to a below-par total on a surface that will become better for strokeplay under lights, and against a batting line-up both long and power-packed.Maxwell feels that pressure. He knows he has to find release. And this is where Chahal comes in. The legspinner functions as bait. He targets the wide line outside off stump, because even if Maxwell is able to reach that far, he won’t be able to time anything properly. That will add to his frustrations and eventually lead to a lapse in judgment.In Chennai, he was caught dragging the ball to long-on. In Kolkata and Indore, he was stumped running down the pitch too early. None of them were especially unplayable deliveries. But they became wicket-taking because Maxwell almost always goes for the high-risk shot, giving himself no second line of defence.Someone must have spotted that in the Indian camp. “Mahi (MS Dhoni) and [Virat] Kohli told me to bowl him a turning delivery and keep checking his feet,” Chahal had said in Chennai. “So my idea was to bowl to him outside the off stump and if he hits it’s fine but keep mixing it up.”The wicket was turning and if you want to pick a batsman like Maxwell then you have to get it to spin. The plan was to keep attacking but change the line. If he hits a good shot then it’s fine but if he hits he should hit from outside the off stump because he is strong on the leg side.”India play enough cricket against the Australians to pick up such cues. And that presents its own challenges in the modern era. These two teams have played ODIs against each other since 1980. That’s 131 matches, but over half of those – 73 – have come since 2000. A bowler, in this age, gets plenty of chances to study his target. And this is without including the various T20 leagues, a profit-driven business where wins matter massively. Franchises pay plenty for analysts, demanding individual-specific strategies that could well change over by over.Surviving under such scrutiny requires a skill that can’t be found in the coaching manual. But for Maxwell, the case might be the exact opposite. He has to find a way to weather the tactics used against him, at least initially. Take even India’s ploy – making him play hide-and-seek with the ball only succeeds when he loses patience. If he doesn’t, they have to move on to Plan B and that finding one may not be that straightforward a 360-degree batsman.

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