Smith becomes Australia's lightning rod

England were enraged by Australia’s conduct at the Gabba and Steven Smith was their chief target

Daniel Brettig in Adelaide02-Dec-2017In March 2015, Steven Smith had the best seat in the house – the non-striker’s end – as Wahab Riaz went after Shane Watson in a World Cup quarter-final under lights at Adelaide Oval. It was the most pulsating passage of the tournament, so entertaining as to merit an ICC sanction for both players, and impossible to look away from.But the other striking thing about it was how much the tension eased whenever Watson managed to get to the other end. Smith did not have anywhere near as much trouble, almost as though Wahab was saving his aggression for Watson alone, and his calm accumulation helped Australia ease to victory despite Pakistan’s febrile efforts.Two and a half years on and now it was Smith who found himself the lightning rod for desperate opponents. This time they were Joe Root’s Englishmen, enraged by elements of the Australians’ conduct at the Gabba and also operating in the knowledge that defeat in Adelaide would more or less decide this Ashes series in the space of two matches. Smith faced 90 balls on the first evening of the day/night Test, and throughout was given barely a moment’s peace.There was, immediately, a contrast to the way England approached Smith in Brisbane. There and then, they had seemed intent upon suffocating Smith’s scoring as though it was the oxygen on which his batting breathes. To a degree it worked – the phrase “making him work hard for his runs” has seldom been more aptly applied – but Smith did not let it faze him, simple recalibrating for a long innings that grew into the slowest but perhaps also most monumental of all his Test centuries to date.In reflecting on how England had tried to bore him out, Smith expressed a natural love for spending time at the crease that suggested it was not a method likely to stretch him. “I’m happy with that, I love batting so I’m happy to stay out there for as long as I can to be perfectly honest,” he said. “I don’t like being back in the sheds, I prefer being out in the middle and just doing my thing. If it takes me 300 balls to get a 100, then it’ll take me 300 balls. That’ll also tire the bowlers quite a bit too, so it’s a bit of a win-win if that’s the case. But I’ll just adapt to whatever they throw at me.””Whatever they throw” turned out to be a level of overt hostility not commonly associated with the team of Joe Root, and seldom seen from any England side since the James Anderson and Ravindra Jadeja affair at Nottingham in 2014 – perhaps not entirely oincidentally the last Test ever played by Matt Prior. Smith of course knew England had players in their number who had made life difficult for him in the past, none more so than Anderson in 2010-11. He had been happy to suggest hypocrisy on Anderson’s part when responding to the Lancastrian’s accusation that Australia played like “bullies”, happy to kick a supine opponent.But that awareness could not have prepared Smith for the level of prickliness he encountered virtually from the moment he walked out to bat after the dismissal of David Warner, who followed a Chris Woakes delivery that seamed away in contradiction to his earlier forbearance in leaving balls angled across him. Almost immediately, Smith was the target of verbal confrontation, though from Stuart Broad rather than Anderson. At one point Broad punched his chest in what appeared a mocking reference to Smith’s century celebration, while maintaining a constant unfriendly dialogue.Smith looks back to see the ball hit the stumps•Getty ImagesAfter some time and deliveries had passed, Anderson elected to join in, not least when provocatively posted to a very short mid on for Pete Handscomb which meant he was scarcely more than a metre away from Smith. Their level of chatter, banter, chirping or sledging – take your pick among the many euphemisms available – was intense enough to cause the umpire Aleem Dar not merely to ask them to desist but to physically step between the pair, recalling Tony Crafter’s 1981-82 intervention in Perth to stop Javed Miandad from using his bat to fell Dennis Lillee after the fast bowler had essayed a kick at the pugilistic Pakistani.Smith has built a considerable level of toughness throughout his years in then out of, then back in the Australian side, and is able to dish out as much as he cops. Famously, as a teenager in Sydney club cricket, he once responded to some hours of sustained sledging from an older opposing bowler by eventually asking “how old are you?” When the 30something reply arrived, his retort of “and you’re still playing second grade?” ensured little more was said.Nevertheless, England’s attack on Smith had the desired effect, meaning he stayed in the middle for less than a third of the deliveries soaked up in Brisbane, and also looked somewhat out of form and rhythm throughout his stay in the middle. Conditions, it must be said, were more challenging than those in Brisbane, combining seam movement, some variance in pace off the pitch, and the inherent challenge of a pink ball under lights. There was a harried passive aggression about the way Smith took to refusing singles later in his innings, thrusting his bat down the pitch in a manner that begged the question of whether his parents had ever counselled him about the rudeness of pointing.When Craig Overton enjoyed the moment of his cricketing life so far, bowling Smith off bat and pad to claim a first Test wicket, it was an excellent delivery, of good length and nipping back, to draw gasps from 55,317 spectators. But as the first ball of a new spell it also looked to have caught Smith at a moment when his concentration was not quite at the sharpest. In reference to the often fractious India tour earlier this year, in which he was by a distance the best batsman on either side, Smith said that by series’ end he was so drained that he did not think himself capable of batting for as long a period as at the beginning, so felt compelled to try to score faster. England will hope that Smith’s mental reserves are similarly stretched in this series.Despite seeing Smith dismissed for only 40, Australia ended the day with far more satisfaction than England. A tally of 4 for 209 after being sent in to bat was handsome, built upon a more collective effort than that of the Gabba. Warner’s early patience was useful even as England bowled too short and Cameron Bancroft was needlessly sacrificed by a run out, then Usman Khawaja got himself into the series with an innings of 53 helped by Mark Stoneman’s abject drop at fine leg. Finally Shaun Marsh built the foundations of a meaningful stand with Pete Handscomb even though the West Australian showed a far higher degree of comfort in the middle than the wilfully creasebound Victorian.Their survival through to the close was, of course, due to their own efforts. But it was doubtless made easier by the fact that each Australian batsman was able to fly “under the radar” relative to Smith, who made himself very much the lightning rod for England’s vitriol, planning and most intense bowling.In that way, he was able to absorb the efforts of the visitors like Watson had done against Wahab in the World Cup. Now, as then, it meant the Australians will sleep as much the more contented team.

Dobell: England need Stokes but he needs them more

The allrounder’s match-winning spell highlighted his value to the team, but his emotional interview thereafter indicated how much being part of that team means to him

George Dobell in Edgbaston04-Aug-20185:44

#PoliteEnquiries: Is Stokes a Prime Minister in the making?

Of course it was Ben Stokes who sealed the game.Of course it was Stokes, in a match studded with fine individual performances, who produced the definitive contribution.Of course it was Stokes, on the verge of another hiatus from international cricket, who took the key wicket and the final wicket as if to underline how much England will miss him.In both innings, Stokes was England’s quickest bowler. But he is far more than the brutish enforcer he is required to be. He is a skillful swing bowler – perhaps England’s second-best exponent of the skill – with a booming inswinger and the ability to make the odd one hold its line or leave the right-hander just a little. The wicket of KL Rahul, on the third evening, with one that appeared to be honing into the stumps but hit the pitch, nipped away and took the outside edge was Stokes at his best. It was a delivery that would have pleased James Anderson or Richard Hadlee.But it will always be the wicket of Virat Kohli that is most prized in this India line-up. And with Kohli edging – literally, at times – India towards victory, it was his dismissal that gave England – for perhaps the first time since Joe Root and Jonny Bairstow were batting together on day one – the advantage in the match.Taken in isolation, it was not an exceptional ball. Angled in to Kohli, it saw the batman play across the line and miss. But in context it was a fine piece of bowling. It followed an inswinger from the first ball of his spell and an outswinger from the second that drew Kohli into a shot only to fall short of the slip cordon. Desperate not to be forced to play away from his body again, Kohli went a long way across his stumps to the next delivery in an attempt to negate any away movement. Instead, he was left poorly positioned to play the ball swinging in and, overbalancing just a little, he was unable to keep it out.Not long afterward, Stokes persuaded Hardik Pandya to poke at one that bounced and left him. From a position where they had been 87 for 7 in their second innings, England had their most dramatic victory since Chittagong in October 2016 when Stokes, yet again, was called upon to claim the final two wickets. He also scored more than a hundred runs in that game.We shouldn’t be surprised by Stokes’ potency with the ball. Back in 2015, with Anderson injured, he produced a wonderful display of swing bowling to claim 6 for 36 against Australia in the second innings at Trent Bridge and led Trevor Bayliss to suggest he was the obvious successor to Anderson as England’s premier swing bowler. His batting form may be a bit of a concern but the fact that he is now averaging 22 with both bat and ball since his return to Test cricket in New Zealand, is generally encouraging as there seems no reason to presume his batting will not come good.Afterwards, in a brief interview with , Stokes looked exhausted and emotional. It may be that he had simply given his all to this match and was physically and mentally spent. But it may equally be a manifestation of his anxiety and a realisation over the potential consequences of the trial that awaits him next week. Put simply – and without in anyway trying to predict what may happen – the future suddenly looks most uncertain. This – defining games against the best side in the world in front of huge crowds – is what Stokes is good at. And, as he walked off, you get the sense he suddenly had a realisation of how much it means to him.England need Stokes but, make no mistake, he needs them more. He needs the sense of community the dressing room environment provides and the sense of purpose the team goal provides. Sure, he can make a fortune in T20 leagues. But does Stokes strike you as a man who sits back and counts his money in the evenings? That’s not what motivates him. And, for all he has achieved, he has just turned 27 and the best should be ahead of him. The cricketing world may well be keeping an eye on events in Bristol Crown Court next week, but Stokes will be keeping an eye on the scores from Lord’s.The encouraging thing, from an England perspective, was that it felt, as Root put it, that they had “two Ben Stokes” for a while at Edgbaston. Such was Sam Curran’s contribution with bat and ball, that England will still go into the Lord’s Test with enviable depth. It is asking a great deal for Curran to emulate the success of Stokes but he does swing the ball prodigiously and he does have a great eye when he bats. He will do many things very differently to Stokes – he doesn’t have his pace with the ball or his power with the bat, for a start – but they do, perhaps, share a competitive steel and a hunger to be involved when the battle is at its most intense. England are lucky to have one such cricketer. To have two or three, as they do, is a huge asset. Moeen Ali, who has more Test wickets and only one fewer Test century than Stokes, is his most likely replacement at Lord’s.It was that all-round strength that saved England at Edgbaston. Despite the fragility of their batting and the fallibility of their slip catching, they were blessed to see their No. 6 claim six wickets in the match and their No. 8 score 87 runs. They will know, however, they cannot always be bailed out in that way. That top-order and that cordon have to do better if England are going to win more consistently. Stokes probably won’t be at Lord’s to save them.

Record fourth-innings effort from Australia in Asia

Usman Khawaja’s 141 off 302 balls and Australia’s score of 362 broke several fourth-innings records in the UAE and Asia

Gaurav Sundararaman11-Oct-20180 – Number of visiting non-Asian batsmen to have scored more than 140 in Asia in the fourth innings of a Test. Usman Khawaja went past Daniel Vettori’s 140 against Sri Lanka in 2009. Khawaja’s 141 is also the highest score by any batsman in the fourth innings in the UAE. Previously, Younis Khan held the record, scoring an unbeaten 131 against South Africa in 2009.ESPNcricinfo Ltd5 – Batsmen to have scored a fourth-innings century for Australia in Asia. Khawaja joined David Warner, Mark Taylor, Ricky Ponting and Bob Simpson in this elite list. He also became only the sixth batsmen from Australia to score two fifties and aggregate in excess of 200 in a Test in Asia. This is only the second century for Khawaja away from home, adding to the 140 he scored in Wellington in 2016.139.5 – Overs faced by Australia in the fourth innings – the most by them in an innings in Asia. Previously, Australia had batted 107 overs against Bangladesh in 2006 when Ponting scored 118 to help them win the Test. This is also the most overs faced by any team in the UAE in the fourth innings and fourth longest in Asia by any team. This is Australia’s longest fourth innings in 47 years since 1971.

302 – Balls faced by Khawaja in his knock of 141 – the most faced for Australia in Asia in the fourth innings and also the most balls faced by any batsman in the fourth innings in the UAE. Khawaja went past the 249 balls played by Darren Bravo in the day-night Test at the same venue two years ago.132 – Runs added by Travis Head and Khawaja for the fourth wicket – the highest fourth-innings stand for Australia in Asia and also the highest against Pakistan in the fourth innings in the UAE. Head followed his first-innings duck with a score of 72 to become only the sixth Australian to score a duck and a fifty on debut.Khawaja’s Asian Redemption•ESPNcricinfo Ltd117 – Runs scored by Khawaja in the nine innings in Asia leading up to this Test. He had no 50-plus scores and had batted only 295 deliveries in all. In this match, Khawaja redeemed himself by scoring 226 runs from 477 deliveries having batted for 767 minutes.2 – Matches in Asia in which the batting team in the fourth innings with a first-innings deficit of 250 or more runs managed not to lose the game. There have been 55 instances in which teams that batted first in Asia have taken a lead of 250 or more; out of that on 11 instances teams have not enforced the follow-on. The 1999 Test between India and New Zealand is the only other instance when a team managed to play out a draw.362 – Runs made by Australia in the fourth innings – the most for them in an innings in Asia, the highest by any team in the UAE and the second-highest for any visiting team (non-Asian) in Asia.

Can Kieron Pollard rediscover his mojo?

Over the last few years, Pollard has failed to be the match-winner that his teams want him to be. Will he make the most of the limited chances lying ahead?

Sreshth Shah in Chennai10-Nov-2018Kieron Pollard was the joint-biggest buy – USD 750,000 – at the 2010 IPL auction, though the cricketing numbers were not in his favour. He was averaging only 11.30 in 15 ODIs and 17.20 in 10 T20Is when Mumbai Indians shelled out an exorbitant fee for the relatively unknown man from Trinidad. His match-winning promise, it appears, overpowered those meagre numbers.And what Pollard brought to Mumbai’s middle order – as a batting allrounder – made up for the occasional poor performances. He possessed the ability to change the match with a flick of his wrists – wrists that were so strong that a gentle whip took the ball beyond the boundary. He was also a handy bowler, using his guile more than skill to own the middle overs with his medium pace. Those two skills made him a mainstay – often as a marquee player – at Mumbai Indians, Adelaide Strikers, Cape Cobras, Somerset, Karachi Kings and Barbados Tridents over the past decade.But those were the good ol’ days. Over the past 18 months, Pollard has lost his place as a regular for Mumbai Indians. He has been overlooked by South Africa’s newly-created Mzansi Super League – despite being named as an icon player for its precursor, the Global T20 League in 2017 – and won’t feature in Australia’s Big Bash League, possibly because of scheduling clashes with the Bangladesh Premier League. The BPL aside, the only league where he’s a certainty is the Caribbean Premier League, where he took over as captain of St Lucia Stars in 2018 after moving from Tridents.The only other team where Pollard has been a certainty is the West Indies T20I side. Since 2017, he has featured in West Indies’ encounters against Pakistan, India and England as a senior middle-order batsman surrounded by inexperienced players. But his highest score in those eight games has been 14. Knee surgeries have prevented Pollard from bowling consistently and he barely bowls anymore. Are these the sort of numbers West Indies want from their most experienced T20 player?Probably not, but their coach Stuart Law believes Pollard is much more than those numbers. It’s Pollard’s role as mentor, in a dressing room full of young CPL graduates still finding their feet, which impresses Law. In Lucknow, after the second T20I in which West Indies were pummelled by 71 runs, Law said: “With the youngsters in the squad, it’s someone like Pollard who motivates them in the dressing room. Pollard isn’t in the side only because of what he brings inside the ground. He’s one of the biggest motivators of the youngsters.”With Dwayne Bravo retiring from international cricket, Pollard is the senior-most player in the side. But, at 31, his fast ball isn’t fast enough, therefore making his slower balls much less effective. He has also failed to produce any match-winning knock in T20Is since his 24-ball 45 against Zimbabwe in 2013.Law, though, still has faith in Pollard’s abilities. He feels Pollard is “just a game away from reminding us why he’s such a T20 force”, but that is yet to happen under Law’s coaching stint with West Indies.Pollard has failed to be the catalyst that both he and his teams want him to be. He will also be aware that not everybody will be sympathetic towards him, especially in the cut-throat world of domestic T20 cricket, where teams are always hungry to grab the next young allrounder.The West Indies team management and the selectors also need to figure out how to get the best out of Pollard. Pollard has proved that he is not only a driven athlete, but also that if you thrust leadership responsibility upon him, he often succeeds. In recent times, Pollard showed glimpses of his electrifying past, as captain of St Lucia Stars at the 2018 CPL. He was the sixth-highest run-scorer, with 330 runs at an average of 47.14 for a side that needed their leader to stand up after three disastrous preceding CPL seasons.Pollard has got another chance coming up this year, against Bangladesh next month in three T20Is. With the West Indies selectors not so keen for him to be part of their World-Cup pool, the Bangladesh tour may be one of the last times we witness one of the heavyweights of 21st century white-ball cricket in action. Can Pollard find his mojo and reset the argument in his favour?

Hanuma Vihari and Mayank Agarwal's chance to shine amid opening combination chaos

One pushed out of his middle-order station only in his third Test, the other not adequately acclimatised, the pair can make a career out of this opportunity if they are able to deliver at the MCG

Sidharth Monga in Melbourne25-Dec-20184:05

Manjrekar: Hanuma Vihari should play up the order

These Boxing Day Tests are a strange time. In the lead-up to perhaps the biggest Test of the year, that needle and anticipation a day out from the Test is often missing. The intensity at the nets is low. Families are around. Everybody is in a hurry to lock up the stadium after finishing off the press conferences. There is nothing to suggest 80,000 people will walk in through the turnstiles for arguably their biggest sporting day of the year. People tend to turn contemplative.Justin Langer, the Australia coach, spoke the other day of how he invariably – as a coach – has to ruin somebody’s Christmas by telling him he is not playing, and make it for someone who is playing. Amid all the magic family and festival create, there are these difficult decisions to make. “It’s a bit sad,” Langer said. It would have been much more difficult for Virat Kohli and Ravi Shastri this time around. They have made big calls.For the first time in long memory, they have announced an XI a day out from the Test. Only for the second time in their history, India are handing out a debut to an opener in Australia. For the first time in their history, they will have two openers in Australia with no experience of opening the innings.For one of them, this is a Christmas gift well-earned after scoring thousands and thousands of first-class runs. It is a gift that almost never arrived. Mayank Agarwal was part of the Test squad against West Indies, a sign that India were ready to move on from the ones that had failed in England, but then when it came to the big tour, Agarwal was left out of the squad. Just as the Grinch was making away with it, Prithvi Shaw has injured himself, the other openers have hit a rut, and it is almost like there is nothing to lose at the top.ALSO READ: The dismal story of India’s opening actThe man Agarwal replaces is a good friend of his, who made his debut at the same place in the same setting four years ago. It was a nervous debut for KL Rahul, who fell to two nervous shots. Perhaps Rahul will be able to tell Agarwal he needs to give himself more time. “I was playing to their pace,” Rahul told ESPNcricinfo of that debut. There is always more time than you think. Even if you have to walk out to face the first ball. It is actually better because your side wants to bat first.Hanuma Vihari plays on the leg side•Getty ImagesJust like Rahul four years ago, the other opener is now batting out of position. Rahul, an opener, batted in the middle order in India’s last Boxing Day Test, transitioned back into opening, has once been tried as No. 3, then back to opening, and now, as if to complete a cycle, he is dropped for this Boxing Day Test. To Hanuma Vihari, who will be opening with Agarwal, this is almost not a gift. He has done nothing to deserve to be pushed out of his middle-order station. Then again, if Rohit Sharma has to be accommodated, the only slot remaining is at the top. And having batted at No. 3 most often in domestic cricket, Vihari is the man most suited to make the sacrifice.And Vihari will have at least two men around him to tell him what a big opportunity it is if you stand up when the team is in desperate need. Shastri, Vihari’s coach, made the big turnaround in his career when he grabbed the chance with both hands when Sunil Gavaskar came knocking on his door with his other openers either not fit or not good enough. MSK Prasad, Vihari’s chief selector and also an important figure at his home state Andhra, was asked to open the innings on a tour of Australia in 1999-2000.That proved to be Prasad’s last Test. “I always believe it was an opportunity given to me, which I didn’t live up to,” Prasad says now. He believes Vihari has the goods to live up to his opportunity. “It’s fine,” he says if this is unfair on Vihari. “Technically we feel that he is well equipped, there were times where [Cheteshwar] Pujara also opened when the team required. The team demands it, and definitely I hope he will come out successful.”Unlike in his own career, Prasad is there to make sure Vihari is not judged adversely if he fails when answering this SOS call. “Definitely it is not a long-term solution, I can tell you that,” Prasad says. “Definitely. We are convinced with his technique, and definitely he is a long-term prospect for Indian Test cricket.”And so we have a tour where India came with three specialist openers and a wicketkeeper, who travelled as a reserve opener, but two Tests in, there are two new openers, who could have had better preparation. If Shaw’s injury had been diagnosed better, Agarwal could have acclimatised better. If Vihari was batting at his usual slot, he would be in his comfort zone. And yet it is out of these challenges that you can sometimes make yourself a career. It is not ideal, but if the team has nothing to lose, neither do these openers.

Talking Points – where did the power in Sunrisers' play go?

David Warner & Co took the scoreboard only as far as 27 for 1 in the Powerplay, but the Australian champion structured a wonderful innings by the end of it

Srinath Sripath and Gaurav Sundararaman08-Apr-20192:45

Tait: Yusuf Pathan needs to be replaced

At the end of Sunrisers’ Powerplay, David Warner was on 9 off 17, and Jonny Bairstow had been dismissed for 1. There was no collapse, but Sunrisers Hyderabad got off to their slowest start in this season’s IPL, by a distance.Here’s the sequence that led to it.

  • Kings XI won a good toss on a dewy night in Mohali, and picked Mujeeb Ur Rahman and Ankit Rajpoot in place of Murugan Ashwin and Andrew Tye based on the “opposition and the conditions”, in the words of captain R Ashwin.
  • Ashwin used Mujeeb as a wicket-taking option against Bairstow, who has now been dismissed six times out of six in the IPL to wristspinners and mystery spinners, and held him back for later after that.
  • Ashwin, who has bowled in the Powerplay in four of their five games before this one, held himself back for the middle overs, where he has been most successful. Bairstow’s early dismissal and the discipline from his pace bowlers only made that decision easier.
  • Rajpoot mixed up his cutters and hit the deck early on, as was Ashwin’s plan, while Mohammed Shami refused to offer an inch to Warner outside his stumps, a plan that had worked for Kagiso Rabada earlier in the tournament against Warner. The quicks’ preferred channel of attack to Warner (7 runs in 10 balls) was the short one going across the batsman, just outside off, not too wide, and cramping him for room.
  • Plan A falling into place, Kings XI didn’t need to bring in their swing-bowling option Sam Curran until the ninth over.

ESPNcricinfo LtdAll of which meant there was added pressure on Warner to go the distance, with an off-colour middle order to follow.Warner, playing according to the team’s needsAfter that slow start, Warner had to bat through, there was no option for him.So far this IPL, he has attacked the bowlers early on, played second fiddle to Jonny Bairstow when needed, and on Monday night, with Bairstow gone early on a tricky pitch, he ensured he stayed till the very end.Warner’s innings was a pundit’s delight, a classic example of playing according to the situation.ESPNcricinfo LtdIn that sense, Warner’s situation was similar to that of Virat Kohli against Delhi Capitals on Sunday – the team’s best batsman starting slow and having to carry them all the way through, bat deep and launch a late attack. Kohli fell going for one too many big hits against Rabada. Warner, on the other hand, was prepared to do the hard yards when the boundaries dried up.He had just one four by the end of the 10th over, and on a big ground, picked gaps and hared across for as many as ten twos, an underrated feature of his batting – his team-mates, put together, had only seven. It was his slowest IPL fifty – off 49 balls – but Sunrisers would have been relieved that he stayed on.With the middle order not delivering once again, Warner’s knock was a lesson in not getting bogged down, a man in form backing himself to go deep in the innings and finding ways to score runs when most of his usual routes had been blocked. His first 31 balls fetched him 21 runs. In the next 31 balls, he hit 49. He was at his speediest in the last 23 balls of his innings, when he scored 37 runs.ESPNcricinfo LtdAn inspired call to throw Rashid in against Gayle?Rashid Khan has dominant head-to-head records against most T20 batsmen going around, but Chris Gayle isn’t one of them. Gayle strikes at nearly 180 against Rashid, and had been dismissed by the spinner just twice in seven innings before Monday.Chris Gayle departs for 16•BCCIMost tellingly, he had pasted Rashid for 42 off 16 balls the last time the two had faced off in Mohali: Gayle made a match-winning 104 in that game. Given these, and the fact that Mohammad Nabi has done the job in the Powerplay in earlier games, Bhuvneshwar Kumar’s move to get Rashid in for the fourth over was an inspired one in many ways.First ball, Gayle clobbered one flat down the ground, which would have fallen some distance short of the boundary, but a diving Deepak Hooda snaffled a fantastic catch at long-on. Rashid rarely bowls inside the first four – this was only his third time in IPLs – and for the second time this tournament, he struck gold for his side. The previous instance was against Rajasthan Royals, another side that is heavily dependent on the openers, where he got rid of Jos Buttler second ball.ESPNcricinfo LtdCan Sunrisers’ fielders stop dropping catches off Bhuvneshwar, please?Kings XI needed 37 off 27 with nine wickets in hand, when Agarwal presented a rare chance. A short one from Bhuvneshwar, that was sent soaring into the Mohali sky, landed in Yusuf Pathan’s palms. Only, an off-balance Yusuf couldn’t latch on to the simplest of chances.Agarwal added 13 more runs to his total, a number that will haunt Sunrisers given how Kings XI suffered a mini-collapse in the end to add some drama to the game.Yusuf is not the first fielder to fluff a chance off Bhuvneshwar this season: Nabi, Rashid, Sandeep Sharma and Kaul have all put down catches off him. Together, these drops have cost Sunrisers 61 runs, and potentially the match against Mumbai Indians, when they could have had Kieron Pollard for 5. And who knows how things would have shaped up had Yusuf held on here?Bhuvneshwar has endured a difficult start to the season, and as per Luck Index, is the third unluckiest bowler in the tournament so far.

England's worst collapse at home

They were dismissed in 23.4 overs, making it their fifth-shortest completed innings overall in Tests

ESPNcricinfo staff24-Jul-201923.4 – Overs in which England were bowled out against Ireland. It is their shortest Test innings ever at home, about 21% shorter than the 30 overs they lasted against West Indies at Edgbaston in 1955. Overall, this is their fifth-shortest completed innings ever in Tests. The last time they lasted fewer overs was against New Zealand in Auckland last year, when they were bowled out in 20.4 overs.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Fewest overs faced by England in a completed innings
Overs Score Versus Venue, year Result
15.4 61 Australia Melbourne, 1902 lost
19.1 46 West Indies Port of Spain, 1994 lost
20.4 58 New Zealand Auckland, 2018 lost
22.5 101 Australia Melbourne, 1904 lost
23.4 85 Ireland Lord’s 2019

4 – Number of times England have lost 10 wickets in a session in the last three years: the three previous instances were against Bangladesh in Mirpur in 2016, against New Zealand in Auckland and against India at Trent Bridge, both in 2018.ESPNcricinfo Ltd13 – Runs conceded by Tim Murtagh in his five-wicket haul; only once has any bowler conceded fewer runs while taking five or more wickets in an innings against England: Jerome Taylor took 5 for 11 in Kingston in 2009. In England, the previous lowest was 15 runs, by Dennis Lillee at Edgbaston in 1975.ESPNcricinfo Ltd2 – Runs contributed by England’s middle order (Nos. 4-7) in their total of 85. It’s the joint-lowest contribution ever by their middle order, equaling their dismal show in that Auckland innings against New Zealand in 2018. In fact, there have only been five instances in Test history, of the four batsmen in the middle order scoring fewer than three runs; three of those have happened in the last 16 months.

Fewest runs by the middle order (Nos. 4-7) in a Test innings
Team Versus Venue, year Runs Ducks
New Zealand South Africa Johannesburg, 1954 0 4
New Zealand Pakistan Dubai, 2018 1 3
Australia South Africa Port Elizabeth, 2014 2 2
England New Zealand Auckland, 2018 2 3
England Ireland Lord’s, 2019 2 3

Can Siya Kolisi and Jurgen Klopp inspire South Africa?

The Springboks captain is friends with Faf du Plessis, and both recently ran into the Liverpool manager. Is sporting success contagious?

Firdose Moonda24-Dec-2019Faf du Plessis and Siya Kolisi are not your average BFFs. One is the captain of the national cricket team, a leader who has recently weathered a storm that saw all the team’s management replaced. The other is the captain of the national rugby team, a leader who lifted the World Cup in 2019. As far as 2019 goes, du Plessis and Kolisi could not be on more opposite ends but if they needed reminding it came when they dined out in Cape Town last month.At the same restaurant was Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp, who Kolisi had a “man crush moment” with because of his support for the Reds. Klopp was equally starstruck by the Springbok captain, having watched him lead the team to victory over England just ten days before their meeting. Asked if Klopp recognised du Plessis in the same way, South Africa’s cricket captain had a short, sharp answer.”No,” du Plessis said, quickly changing tack. “But he (Klopp) said he watches cricket. The Liverpool guys watched the cricket World Cup and he knew about how well England did, so that’s great.”

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About last night… When ur bro @siya_kolisi_the_bear has a serious man crush moment when he meets one of his heroes… very impressive man . Get why his players love him so much . I’m a fan aswell now #jurgenklopp

A post shared by Faf du plessis (@fafdup) on Nov 12, 2019 at 9:35pm PST

Klopp also knows about how to lead a group of people – Liverpool won last year’s Champions League and sit atop this year’s Premier League table, having also won the Club World Cup – and though their conversation was brief, du Plessis was so impressed with what he saw that he has now become a Liverpool fan.”For someone to be that famous, he is a great guy, and that’s what I believe real leadership is about,” du Plessis said. “It’s about connecting with people, having great relationships with people, so I became a massive fan. I am not a huge football fan, I don’t support a lot but I do support him now.”Ultimately, du Plessis’ friendship with Kolisi and admiration for Klopp speaks to something bigger: his need for South Africa to remember what it’s like to be successful. They enter this England series off the back of five consecutive Test defeats spanning two series. The one at home, against Sri Lanka, was a dent to their pride – no subcontinent side had ever won a series in South Africa before – while the one away, in India, was the crash that exposed the mass of problems that South Africa have spent the last three weeks untangling.By now, you already know that cricket in this country has been through an administrative crisis. The CEO has been suspended, sponsors have pulled out, and an interim structure has been put in place to begin the repair job. The national team has been bolstered with former greats Graeme Smith, Mark Boucher and Jacques Kallis as well as Charl Langeveldt and Paul Harris, and has been in an intensive training camp since last week Wednesday. Their preparation – though left a little late – has been meticulous and has confirmed to du Plessis the value of using their international retirees in key roles.”Why have these guys not been here for the last ten years?” du Plessis asked. “If you look around international cricket, other teams have got that. Think of Australia – Justin Langer, Steve Waugh, Ricky Ponting. We need that. We want that.”Graeme Smith, Enoch Nkwe, Mark Boucher and Linda Zondi at the unveiling of South Africa’s new coaching structure•AFPNow they have it, and it is the start of what du Plessis hopes will be a road to redemption that will culminate in reclaiming the Test mace, at some point down the track. “There is a vision. The Test team is still in an infant stage. The plan is to get back [to No.1]. As a Test team we do need to mature.”With two players, Rassie van der Dussen and Dwaine Pretorius, all but certain to make their debuts, and two others, Zubayr Hamza and Aiden Markram, with less than 20 caps to their names, South Africa’s batting is laced with inexperience. Though Vernon Philander and Kagiso Rabada have played 100 Tests between them, Anrich Nortje has only played two Tests and the back-up seamers, Beuran Hendricks and Dane Paterson, are uncapped.It’s a time of experimentation and testing the depth of a system that seemed to be breaking apart at the seams just a few weeks ago. But du Plessis is upbeat that all is not as bad as it looks. “When someone retires and you wonder where is the next Dale Steyn or Hashim Amla will come from. but it will happen. It will happen. It’s about trusting that we’ve got people in the right positions.”The Springboks followed the same route. After a period of poor performance, they appointed former flanker Rassie Erasmus as the director of rugby and head coach at the start of 2018. In less than two years, Erasmus united the squad and won the World Cup. There is a similar period of time before the World Test Championship final, and though South Africa currently sit at the bottom of the table, with no points to their name, du Plessis doesn’t think it’s too lofty a goal to aim to be there.”The final of the Test champions is 18 months away…” he said wistfully. South Africa’s journey to get there begins this Boxing Day.

Navdeep Saini's rise, Malinga's problems and India's change

The things we learned after Virat Kohli and his men beat Sri Lanka 2-0 in the recently concluded T20I series

Deivarayan Muthu11-Jan-20205:02

Star Sports Match Point – ‘Indian team a well-oiled machine’

Navdeep Saini and Shardul Thakur step upIn the absence of Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Mohammed Shami and Deepak Chahar, Saini and Thakur had to take their chance and they did. Saini, in particularly, was impressive with his hostile bouncers and near-unplayable yorkers at speeds of 145kph. Even as Jasprit Bumrah made a rusty return from injury, Saini showed that he could be more than just a back-up. After demolishing the stumps of Sri Lanka opener Danushka Gunathilaka in Indore, he cleaned up Kusal Perera in similar fashion in Pune. All told, Saini bagged five wickets in 7.5 overs conceding 46 runs.Thakur, too, picked up five wickets, including three in an over in the second match. He said that he had worked on perfecting his variations, including the knuckle ball, during his T20 stints with Mumbai and Chennai Super Kings. Thakur then made a telling contribution with the bat, when the series was up for grabs in Pune, cracking an unbeaten 8-ball 22. Thakur’s blows propelled India past 200 and he made that total look a whole lot bigger by besting Avishka Fernando and Dasun Shanaka in the chase.Nothing to separate KL Rahul and Shikhar DhawanThis series was shaping up to be a direct shootout between the in-form Rahul and a fit-again Dhawan for the second opener’s slot behind limited-overs vice-captain Rohit Sharma. However, there’s nothing to separate both batsmen at the end of two games against Sri Lanka.Dhawan started slowly in Indore as well as Pune, but in that third match, after being 7 off 9, he zoomed to a 34-ball half-century. Rahal also raised a 34-ball fifty to follow his barnstorming run in the series against West Indies late last year.Rohit, who was rested against Sri Lanka, is slated to return for the ODI series at home against Australia and the T20I series in New Zealand, where the race for the other opener’s role will gather more pace.2:12

As opener, it’s my job is to take advantage of first six overs – Dhawan

India are ready to be flexibleIndia have tried six No. 3s in their last six (completed) T20Is. In Thiruvananthapuram against West Indies last December, it was batting allrounder Shivam Dube who had made the most of the promotion by smacking a 30-ball 54. More recently, against Sri Lanka in Indore, Shreyas Iyer pitched in with a fluent 34 to hasten India’s victory. Apart from Virat Kohli, Rahul, Rishabh Pant and reserve wicketkeeper Sanju Samson have also been trialled at No. 3.”See, it is more to give players [game-time], like how Sanju Samson came in today (at No. 3), then Shreyas [in Indore], so they can get more time in the middle, because it is totally different feel when you are batting in the match and having more overs and so that was the reason today,” Dhawan explained.”Even Manish Pandey went up [the order]. So, they can have more time, otherwise it’s the same pattern [that’s] going on. In these series, we can do the experiment, it is best time to experiment and once we know, ‘okay that this guy is clicking’, then we are going to go ahead with those pattern again.”Pandey, who had got a game instead of Dube on Friday, batted above Iyer and Kohli and gave India the fillip they needed in the end overs. He also threw himself around on the field and made some sensational saves at backward point and long-on. By giving the fringe players some chances, India are trying to ensure that they get a decent workout before they face possibly a similar scenario in the T20 World Cup later in the year.Navdeep Saini is pumped after another wicket•BCCIThe pressure mounts on Lasith MalingaMalinga didn’t take a single wicket in eight overs and gave up 81 runs and after Sri Lanka went down 2-0, he took part of the blame for his side’s poor run. Since Malinga had been reappointed captain, in January 2019, Sri Lanka have lost ten T20Is under him and have won just once. That solitary victory came when Malinga wound the clock back and scooped up four wickets in four balls against New Zealand at home.So, is the pressure of captaincy getting to Malinga? “Ahh…yes! Captain means, when we have experienced players who can handle situations, it is very easy to do my job,” Malinga said at the post-match press conference in Pune. “But now I didn’t have that luxury, because when I was captain in 2014, I had Mahela [Jayawardena], Sanga [Kumara Sangakkara], Angelo [Mathews], [Tillakaratne] Dilshan; we had a lot of experienced players, who were single-handed match-winners. They knew what they need to do. Now young players, they are not experienced and I have to guide them and I have to wait and see.”A fit-again Mathews is now back in Sri Lanka’s T20 mix, but Malinga and co. still have a lot of work to do considering they still have to play a qualifying tournament to even make it to the T20 World Cup.2:46

‘I’ve to perform well because I’ve got experience’ – Malinga

Sri Lanka’s wristspinners impressSri Lanka’s top order folded in both matches, their bowling attack was depleted by injuries, and the newly-appointed Mickey Arthur (head coach) and Grant Flower (batting coach) are just feeling their way through the set-up. However, Sri Lanka had some positives from this series in the form of the wristspinners Wanindu Hasaranga and Lakshan Sandakan.”When there was no Murali [Muttiah Muralitharan], we still had to win,” Malinga had said on the eve of the washed-out T20I in Guwahati. “When there’s no Akila [Dananjaya], we still have to win”.Hasaranga has more than filled in for Dananjaya in recent months and has a zippy wrong’un that can trouble even the very best. In addition to the variations with the ball, he is a fine batsman in the lower order and it was on view when he slammed Bumrah for three successive boundaries in the last over in Indore. Hasaranga is also reputed to be one of the best fielders in the current Sri Lankan batch.With Hasaranga by his side, left-arm wristspinner Sandakan made a sparkling return to T20I cricket, picking up 3 for 35 in four overs, in a match where India amassed 201 for 6. Sandakan isn’t as attractive an all-round package as Hasaranga, but seems to have greater control over his lines and lengths.”We have got a plus point that is [Lakshan] Sandakan and [Wanindu] Hasaranga bowled well in these conditions and against this kind of batting line up,” Malinga said. “Going forward, we are looking forward to give opportunity to all these players because we didn’t have time to change our line-up and get new guys into the system. The management and I want to give maximum opportunities because they are talented players.”

Leeds want "brilliant" £60k-p/w star who has same agent as Rodon and Bogle

Leeds United have fallen into a sticky predicament within their promotion push, but that hasn’t stopped the club in pushing to land a high-profile summer target, per reports.

Leeds United risk failing to claim automatic promotion

Despite claiming a point at Luton Town courtesy of Daniel James’ first-half strike in a 1-1 draw, the Whites have won one of their last six Championship matches under Daniel Farke.

Frustratingly, Burnley now sit at the summit following their narrow victory over Coventry City, while Sheffield United remain in contention even after a shock loss to Oxford United on Saturday lunchtime.

On the eye, a sense of fragility has crept in at the wrong time for Leeds United. The situation is still salvagable as it stands, but they will certainly want to rectify their on-field issues to put forward the best picture possible to potential targets come the summer window.

Providing a marker of their ambitions in the market, the Yorkshire giants have made an opening approach for West Ham star Tomas Soucek in a deal that could see the Czechia international earn £120,000 per week.

Premier League promotion would need to be a certainty for the veteran to entertain the possibility, and the same goes for Leeds United’s pursuit of Chelsea goalkeeper Djordje Petrovic.

Leeds in contact to sign 6 ft 4 Farke target as 49ers ready £120k-p/w deal

He’s currently on £90,000-per-week.

By
Charlie Smith

Apr 4, 2025

Illan Meslier has been dropped due to a string of erratic performances, so it only makes sense that their recruitment team begin to do their homework on stoppers far and wide that could replace the Frenchman.

Looking to rectify the problem, Farke and company have now cast their eye on a Premier League veteran who could be on the move this summer.

Leeds United eye surprise move for Newcastle United stopper Nick Pope

According to The Sun, Nick Pope is being lined up by Leeds United as a replacement for Meslier following question marks over his form since recovering from injury.

Intriguingly, the Magpies’ pursuit of James Trafford could put the England international under ‘serious pressure’ at St James’ Park. However, the Whites also have Trafford in their sights should promotion occur at Elland Road.

Nick Pope key statistics in 2024/25 – Premier League

Saves

61

Save percentage

69.3%

Goals conceded

27

Error which leads to goal

2

High claim

28

Labelled “brilliant” by Pep Guardiola, there is no doubt Pope has lived up to that billing since arriving in the North East. The former Burnley man has kept 31 clean sheets in 86 appearances, playing his part in a top-four finish and EFL Cup triumph under the stewardship of Eddie Howe.

Nevertheless, the 32-year-old, who is a CAA Stellar client alongside Leeds United pair Joe Rodon and Jayden Bogle, may feel his best chance of continuing to receive first-team football could come elsewhere amid Newcastle’s desire to land a younger profile.

Saying that, it does feel unlikely that the £60,000 per week earner would drop down to the second tier, making promotion a necessary development before any serious talk of a move can take place.

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