The towel that prevented a stumping

ESPNcricinfo picks the plays of the day from the IPL match between Chennai Super Kings and Kolkata Knight Riders

Alagappan Muthu02-May-2014The dead ball
It was India’s first IPL match this season and the first six overs offered ample evidence of Ranchi’s hospitality to spinners. A loopy delivery from Shakib Al Hasan almost had Dwayne Smith stumped in the third over, but the third umpire was not required because Nigel Llong was busy signaling dead ball. A confused Shakib and Gautam Gambhir rounded on the on-field umpire who informed them that the bowler’s towel had slipped from his waist during his run-up. Shakib had to bear with his misfortune for two more balls before he had Smith leg before in the same over.The no ball
It is not often that Sunil Narine goes wicketless but this time he only had himself to blame. A lull towards the business end might have been capped by Ravindra Jadeja’s wicket in the penultimate over of the Super Kings’ innings. He had shuffled across to a good length ball to tuck around the corner, but underestimated Narine’s turn into the bat and was found in front of leg stump. The batsman was making tracks towards the dugout when umpire Anil Chaudhary chose to check for the no-ball. And it was an uncharacteristically big one.The debut
Andre Russell kept out Morne Morkel, Pat Cummins and Umesh Yadav – three bowlers who bowl at over 90mph – and so was tasked with bowling in the death. He has no mystery about him and his pace invites the long handle. He has the worst economy rate, at 9.91, in IPL on the condition of 140 balls bowled. Kolkata Knight Riders could have managed him better, but he was thrown in against MS Dhoni, who admittedly wasn’t striking too well. It only took one ball to change that – a half-volley on off stump belted down the ground with stunning power. Halfway through his Kolkata debut, Russell had leaked 25 runs and had a lot to catch up on with the bat.The fifty
Gautam Gambhir’s torment this season gained another chapter and this time he wasn’t even on strike. He had assumed an inside edge off Robin Uthappa had beaten the keeper and hared more than halfway down the pitch. The striker, fully aware that Dhoni had the nick under control, was busy getting back to his crease and yet Gambhir did not halt his charge. An underarm throw found Ben Hilfenhaus, the bowler, who even had time to run towards the stumps before an underarm flick clipped leg stump with Gambhir well short of his ground. At least the Knight Riders captain had pushed his tournament tally to fifty by then.The dismissal
R Ashwin has been a pest to run-scoring with his around-the-wicket line. He almost exclusively operates with the aim of cramping the batsman and in his first over today, he lost control of a carrom ball and lobbed it well outside leg stump. It would have been a wide, but Knight Riders were looking to attack and Jacques Kallis unleashed a powerful sweep. But he stared in horror as Mithun Manhas at deep backward square leg settled under and swallowed it. Super Kings could not believe their luck while Kallis’ walk to the dressing room was punctuated by constant and disbelief-filled shakes of his head.

The sisterhood of the England captains

Charlotte Edwards and Clare Connor talk about captaining England, rooming together, and how they used a 15-year-old to plot the downfall of Australia

Interview by Izzy Westbury24-Aug-2014Since 1990, England Women have had just three permanent captains. For almost 15 years it has been the duo of Clare Connor and Charlotte Edwards who have overseen the most successful and transitional period of the women’s game. With the former now retired as a player to be the ECB’s head of women’s cricket and the latter still skipper of the national side, one of the game’s closest partnership-friendships has continued. Here the two leaders of the revolution talk about their role together in the past, present and future.You two met at England Under-19 trials back in 1992 – Clare was 16, Charlotte 12. What do you remember about it?Clare Connor: She was the youngest by such a long way. It was Under-19 trials and I thought I was going to be quite young at 16! It was all so unknown. I was completely new to women’s cricket. I went through boys’ school cricket – a similar route to Lottie but different because I was at private school. It’s so funny looking back, because the summer of ’93 was obviously when England won the [women’s] World Cup here, but I wasn’t aware of it all that much.Charlotte Edwards: Same for me. In my world it was like, “I’m going to play for the England men’s team,” because I was getting picked for the boys’ county team, I was captain of the boys’ team and I was picked for regional-level boys’ cricket. I think it was only at Under-13 level when I properly had my first moment where I thought, “I’m not quite good enough for this”.CC: All we’d ever done was play boys’ cricket. Now it’s very different and that’s the beauty of Chance to Shine – because now it’s such a different experience for girls playing the game; there are loads of girls doing it. For us it wasn’t like that.You have a close relationship now. Were you always friends from the off? CC: We were actually! I think we were just very like-minded. We loved our cricket. We were just cricket mad. That is something that I only really had in common with probably one or two players. We are just such cricket badgers really, aren’t we? So when we roomed together, both on and off the pitch it was just cricket, cricket, cricket. I suppose that’s probably because of our upbringing: because of our dads, playing in a men’s club, being in that cricket world.CE: Our dads didn’t know each other before, but when we started playing together they would talk. All the time.Can you remember the first time you batted together?

“As a new captain I always turned to Lot. I think because we thought quite similarly about people and about the game, and I suppose the friendship we had bolstered that”Clare Connor

CE: I remember us opening the batting together for England Under-19s. John Major was there. That was a massive day when [Cathryn] Fitzpatrick [Australia’s demon quick of the time] was coming steaming in at us. She really fancied bowling at us two! Or she just liked bowling at Clare… I used to just be like, “Conny, can you just shut up!” because I was at the other end to Clare and she kept winding Fitzpatrick up and I kept on getting all these bouncers! That wasn’t very nice!CC: We did click, definitely. I think it was because I became captain young [at 23], and Lot was this constant in the team, and we’d gone through everything to get there. I was made captain mid-tour in 2000, and that was a bit of a turbulent time. There were lots of senior players around – more senior players than us – and it was not an easy period. I always turned to Lottie, you know, and obviously then she became my vice-captain in ’02. So we did about four years together as captain/vice-captain. How old were you when you became captain?CE: 25.CC: Both quite young. And, it was just a tough time. We’d been to Australia, we’d got hammered out of sight. We had a bit of a blame culture; the batters and the bowlers, it was a bit cliquey. It was really tough – we’d lost for a long time. As a new captain I always turned to Lot. I think because we thought quite similarly about people and about the game, and I suppose the friendship we had bolstered that.CE: I remember once in the 2005 World Cup when I had to go and stick up for Con because Batesy [Richard Bates, then the England coach] was… there was a problem around a tactical thing that he believed in and I remember coming off the field and Conny was really upset in the changing room and I just realised, “I’ve got to step in here”. I went and spoke to the coach and just said, “Listen, we can’t have this. We can’t have you criticising the captain on what she’s doing. She’s trying to do the best”. I remember that being quite a tough time. Clare didn’t have it easy at all when she was captaining, because she took on a senior group of players.After this period that was evidently very tricky, around 2000 – 2005, there was a lot then made of the men winning the Ashes after 18 years, but for you it was 42 years. How did it go from this period of defeat, to this huge achievement?Connor: “When we roomed together, both on and off the pitch it was just cricket, cricket, cricket”•Getty ImagesCE: We beat New Zealand in ’04 for the first time in 12 years. And we’d never beaten New Zealand. We couldn’t even beat them in a game, let alone a series. And we still hadn’t beaten Australia at this point. So we knew that beating them was a huge step forward to beating Australia.CC: Yep, huge confidence booster. By 2005, the Ashes summer, I’d played for England for ten years, and never beaten Australia! They had such a hold over us. And I will never forget the emotions at Stratford. That was the first time we’d ever been on a cricket pitch and beaten them. We just didn’t know what to do with ourselves.CE: I didn’t know where to go, or what to do. It was just the best feeling ever!CC: But that kind of moment was so huge for the team. Going back to the likes of Lydia Greenway, Isa Guha, Jenny Gunn, they were all involved in that. Holly Colvin as a 15-year-old. Arran Brindle…Talking about Colvin’s selection… Charlotte, were you involved in that as well? It was all a bit on a whim wasn’t it?CC: Oh yes, that was hilarious! That was one of our funniest moments! So we were at Hove, Holly was about to go on a geography field trip aged 15. But because the Aussies had a good left-arm orthodox spinner, we brought Holly in to training. We’re in the nets at the top of the ground – and she got everyone out. She got Lot out, she got Tails [Claire Taylor] out, she got everyone out – comfortably. So everyone was sort of looking at each other, thinking, well, this is just a bit outrageous… And we sat on the outfield, you, me and Batesy…CE: Well, you were sat there, and then you went “Lot, Lot, come over here”. I was vice-captain and they said, “If we were to pick Holly Colvin in the XI tomorrow, what would you say?” And I said, “Go for it!” But it was the most ridiculous thing, because she didn’t have a room!CC: Arran Brindle had to move! Holly had to have her own room, because she was under age. There was no space at the hotel, so Brindle and her husband had to go and stay in my flat, in Hove, so that Holly could stay in the hotel! It was the most left-field way of doing selection. It was opportunistic and it worked – she was on a hat-trick in the first innings.So going back to that summer – that summer was so important, because everyone just suddenly believed. And then six months later, I stepped down and Lot took over. It felt perfect. It felt like it was written in – I’d done as much as I could do, Lot was totally champing – ready to take over. Perfect timing for me and for the team and for Lottie to take over the captaincy.Talking to a few players who played under both of you as captains – they were equally full of praise for you both, but they did note your different approaches to the role. Clare, you were perceived as a bit gentler, whereas Lottie you have been described as a bit more hands-on, stamping your authority. Do you think the approaches complemented each other?CC: I think that it was all in the timing. I think that I had to be that. I was 23, I was dealing with a very different dressing room than Lot was. Lot with her huge record as a batter and the fact that the team was in a really good place when she took over, I think that she could kind of just do that and take everyone onto the next level which was exactly what needed to happen. Do you think that’s what it was?

“Conny will push more for us than anyone, like the Chance to Shine contracts, and our professional contracts. It’s brilliant that she’s in a job like this, because she always wants the best for us”Charlotte Edwards

CE: Yeah. I was more than ready, I think, to become captain. It was the next step for me as a person. I’d played for a long time, I’d learnt a lot, I’d roomed with Clare, I felt as though I’d gone through her whole captaincy.CC: Yes, she’d lived it! I’d wake up and whisper over to her, “Lot, are you awake…”CE: “I am now!”CC: At five in the morning, I’d ask, “What do you think we should do?”CE: I lived and breathed it with her for four years. Because she loves her little chat about it all, as I do.How easy have you found it to separate the personal from the business side of things now that Clare is an administrator and Lottie is a player?CE: Really easy to separate, to be honest. I wouldn’t be as successful as I am today without Conny. The stuff that Conny’s done for cricket over the last I don’t know how long! We wouldn’t be in a position like this at all. I take a lot of the plaudits for the team’s success, but without what’s going on underneath us… and that’s not me blowing hot air up her arse… I really do believe that.Clare, you had an extremely successful playing career. Do you ever feel that your own career has been subsumed by both the current team’s success, and your success in your role post-cricket?CC: Oh, no, I’ve never thought of it like that at all. I’ve just felt unbelievably lucky to have done it all in quite a short time frame. I’ve played for England for ten years and then I’ve been in this job for five years, and I just feel unbelievably lucky. I don’t ever have those feelings.CE: That’s one thing that you’re very good at. Conny will push more for us than anyone. Some ex-players think, “Well I never got it so I’m not going to give it to them'” Conny pushes it, like the Chance to Shine contracts, and our professional contracts. It’s brilliant that she’s in a job like this, because she always wants the best for us.Honestly, when I heard about the professional contracts, I nearly crashed my car! Everyone keeps asking me, “Were you banging the drum for it?” And I keep on saying, “No, I wasn’t banging any drum!” I didn’t even know. If you could have seen my face when I got it. I nearly cried! Con always keeps pushing. You speak to her every few weeks and she says, “Ah yes, the next thing, the next thing…”Something that caused a bit of controversy was when Lottie was quoted as saying in January she’d be celebrating the Ashes win by “getting smashed”. Clare how did you feel about this from a management side? Did you have to rap her knuckles?CE: [] She sent me an email saying, “Don’t take your phone out and tell everyone else to leave theirs behind”. I remember sitting down in reception and the girls were so worried that I was in trouble! I didn’t actually think about what I’d said at the time, and then when I went back upstairs everyone was flapping. But that’s not me, and I think that if anyone knows me, that is so not me. But I guess it’s just something that I’ll always regret a little bit.Clare was supportive! She said, “Lot, don’t worry, you made one slip of the tongue in 17 years” and was asking Beth, our media manager, to look after things. That put me at ease because you could sense the girls were worried that I was going to get in trouble, and, well, you do stupid things and you live and learn by your mistakes.CC: I suppose the key thing to come out of it really was that crikey, something Lottie said is now fuelling a debate on BBC Radio 5 live! So it shows I suppose the influence that you now have. The game has got that standing; people are bothered.Any off-field escapades you’d care to describe?Edwards: “I was more than ready to become captain. I’d learnt a lot, I’d roomed with Clare, I felt as though I’d gone through her whole captaincy”•Getty ImagesCE: I don’t know if any are suitable! Oh I know – do you remember waking up Freddo!?CC: Yes! Oh dear.CE: We were on one of the early tours, European Championships in the Netherlands, in Utrecht. It must have been 2:30 in the morning. We were quite young and obviously still buzzing and we woke Sue Redfern [England colleague] up – this must have been 1996 – we had the curtains closed, changed the clocks, had all of our gear packed and managed to persuade her that it was time to go to the match. We got her breakfast and everything, and then we opened the curtains – and obviously it was dark…You’d probably get more tales out of Arran Brindle though. She never drank. I mean we never, ever drank on tour except on the very last night and then we’d all go a bit mental. And Brindle was always the one that used to come out and shepherd us around and make sure we got back safely. Goodness, I remember one time waking up and my room was an absolute state – like a bomb had hit it.CC: Your room always looked like a bomb had hit it.CE: Yeah! Oh, goodness I was so messy and you were so neat!

Most Tests by left-handers, a century after following-on

Stats highlights from the first Test of the two-test series between West Indies and Bangladesh, at St Vincent.

Shiva Jayaraman10-Sep-2014 13 Number of times Bangladesh have been asked to follow-on in Tests including this match. They have lost on all occasions, but this was only the third time they scored enough in their second innings to make the opposition bat. For West Indies, this was the first time since 1995 that they managed to win a Test after asking the opposition to follow-on. Since then, West Indies had asked the opposition to follow-on on three different occasions but let the opposition escape with a draw in each of these Tests. 212 Runs scored by Kraigg Brathwaite in West Indies’ first innings – his highest score in Tests and his second Test hundred. Brathwaite’s double-hundred is the 14th score of 200 or more by a West Indies opener in Tests and the first such score since Chris Gayle’s 333 against Sri Lanka in Galle in 2010. Brathwaite has hit two centuries and one fifty in six innings and aggregates 433 runs at an average of 108.25 in 2014. 116 Runs scored by Mushfiqur Rahim in Bangladesh’s second innings. This was the 18th instance of a captain scoring a hundred after following on. The last such instance was when Alastair Cook got 176 runs against India in Ahmedabad in 2012. Mushfiqur is only the third wicketkeeper-captain to achieve this after England’s Alec Stewart, against South Africa in 1998, and South Africa’s Percy Sherwell, against England in 1907. 47 Number of times Shivnarine Chanderpaul has remained unbeaten in an innings in Tests, including his 85 not out in the first innings; Chanderpaul has now gone past Steve Waugh as the recognised batsman to have remained not out on most occasions in Tests. Overall, Courtney Walsh holds the record with 61 not outs. This was also the 17th time Chanderpaul finished with an unbeaten fifty. Only Allan Border has hit more unbeaten fifties than Chanderpaul in Tests. 157 Number of matches played by Chanderpaul – he has gone past Border to become the left-handed batsman with most Test caps. Among active players, Kumar Sangakkara is closest to Chanderpaul with 128 Test caps. 5 Number of catches taken by Darren Bravo in Bangladesh’s first innings – he becomes only the eighth fielder to take five catches in an innings in Tests. The last fielder to achieve this feat was also from West Indies. Darren Sammy’s five catches in the first innings of the Mumbai Test in 2013 included the catch of Sachin Tendulkar, who was playing his last innings. 6 Number of Bangladesh bowlers to take five-fors on debut, including Taijul Islam in West Indies’ first innings. All of the last-four such instances for Bangladesh have come against West Indies. Sohag Gazi, Elias Sunny and Mahmudullah are the other Bangladesh bowlers to take five-for on debut against West Indies. 5 Five-wicket hauls taken by Sulieman Benn in Tests, including the one he took in this Test. This was his second five-wicket haul in four Tests since making his comeback this year. He has taken 21 wickets at an average of 29.04 in Tests this year. 6 Number of times a Test featured wicketkeeper-captains on both sides, including this one. The last time this happened was in a two-Test series in 2002, involving the same teams, when Khaled Mashud captained Bangladesh and Ridley Jacobs captained West Indies. 4 Wickets by Kemar Roach in Bangladesh’s second innings. This was Roach’s fourth four-wicket haul in his last five innings. Roach has taken four wickets in opposition’s second innings in each of his last-three Tests. His 47 wickets in the second innings of the opposition have come at an average of 21.40. Among fast bowlers, only Vernon Philander and Ryan Harris have averaged better since Roach’s debut. 3 Number of century partnerships West Indies’ first-four wickets put together in their first innings of the Test – only the sixth such occasion for West Indies. The last time this happened was against India in the first innings of the Mumbai Test in 2011. 53 Runs scored by Tamim Iqbal in Bangladesh’s second innings. This was Tamim’s second fifty in 21 international innings this year. He has hit 350 runs at an average of 17.50 in international cricket in 2014. Among 28 openers who have batted in at least ten innings in 2014, Tamim’s average is the lowest.

Replacing Kallis, the bowler

Faf du Plessis assuming Kallis’ No. 3 slot was only one part of the equation solved. South Africa are scouting for someone who could balance attack and defence with ball in hand

Firdose Moonda16-Oct-20143:02

Every match is an indication for World Cup – Domingo

Had Jacques Kallis not retired from international cricket, he would have spent his 39th birthday enjoying a home-cooked meal with the likes of Dale Steyn, Kyle Abbott and David Miller in the picturesque town of Mount Maunganui. Instead, Kallis was likely on a golf course somewhere and at least two of the trio mentioned may have spent their dinner contemplating how to replace him.Although South Africa have already played and won two ODI series since Kallis called time, his absence is still a point of discussion, particularly as the World Cup looms. Despite his flagging form towards the end and talk about how everyone would have to merit their place, Kallis would have been a certain squad member had he continued playing. His value as a two-in-one cricketer was too important to do without, as South Africa have learnt since then. That’s where Steyn and Abbott come in.Faf du Plessis assuming Kallis’ No. 3 slot was only one part of the equation solved, as head coach Russell Domingo readily admitted on the team’s arrival in New Zealand. “We are still trying to find – particularly in the bowling side of things – someone who can match his particular skills,” Domingo said.Kallis brought dependability, and at times aggression to the attack. Although he may not stand out immediately as a wicket-taker, he is the second highest South African on the all-time list , behind Shaun Pollock. Until the end of his career, he remained a go-to man when a partnership needed breaking.A combination of Kyle Abbott and Dale Steyn could help South Africa plug the gap Jacques Kallis has left in their bowling•Getty ImagesNow, Steyn has become that person and AB de Villiers has learnt to use him to suit the situation. Sometimes that means bowling Steyn sparingly upfront so he can be saved for later on, on other occasions – when early breakthroughs have been made – it means letting him puncture the opposition as much as possible.But Kallis’ responsibility was not just to attack, especially towards the end of his career. He was also used to contain or as a stop-gap option, when the captain needed some time to think of a strategy and did not want the game to slip away in the meantime. Having Kallis to push pause offered security and comfort partly because of his experience and partly his demeanor, but now who do South African turn to?Imran Tahir and Aaron Phangiso have been miserly in recent times, and Tahir’s economy rate of 4.25 in ODIs is particularly striking considering his contrasting Test form. Spin may not always enforce a strangle though and South Africa need a seamer who can also hold an end. Abbott could be the answer to that. In last season’s domestic one-day competition, he conceded at 4.16 an over and was third-highest on the wicket-takers’ list. Like Kallis, he can swing the ball, and although he is no top-order batsman, can hold his own. Fitting him into the XI is a different matter.South Africa are still toying with their combinations, although it has not changed too drastically from the one that won the triangular series in Zimbabwe. Vernon Philander is the only addition and he would have played in that series had injury not ruled him out.The consistency in South Africa’s selection hints that their World Cup plans are almost completely in place and Domingo underlined that in New Zealand. “It was quite nice to have to not welcome any new players into the team. It’s quite a settled team at the moment,” he said. “We’ve played a good brand of one-day cricket over the last five or six months and we are pretty happy with where we are at the moment.”Pretty happy but not completely satisfied, because they are still looking for the person who can act as Kallis, the bowler and discover someone with his big-match temperament. This series and the next against Australia could be the perfect setting to unearth both.”New Zealand are difficult to beat at home and we know it’s going to be a tough series for us,” Domingo said. Tougher because the first two matches are in Mount Maunganui, where South Africa, in fact where no Full Member, has ever played before? “We’ve all played in Auckland and Wellington so it’s good to experience different conditions and it looks like a really nice town,” Domingo replied. Even Kallis will toast to that.

The costliest drop in ODIs

Plays of the day from the fourth ODI between India and Sri Lanka in Kolkata

Andrew Fidel Fernando13-Nov-2014The mix up
The first time Rohit Sharma hit a double-hundred in an ODI, he had been late to respond to Virat Kohli’s call for a run, and effectively ran Kohli out. The pair put on 202 together this time, but Kohli was out in the same fashion again. Having hit the ball aerially towards long-on in the 39th over, Kohli set off quickly, but sensed some hesitation from Rohit about the second. That prompted a stutter from Kohli, and the throw came in to have him well short.The shot
There were many astonishing strokes during Rohit’s epic onslaught, but perhaps none more so than the six he hit off Nuwan Kulasekara at the end of the 48th over. Moving across to the off side, Rohit picked up a half-volley that was still half-a-metre wide of him, and through some incredible manipulation of his bat and body, turned his wrists and managed to whip the ball powerfully enough, and with enough elevation, to comfortably clear the wide long-on boundary.The clanger
Thisara Perera had been Sri Lanka’s star player in the series against Pakistan, but India has not been good to him. He has had a mediocre series with bat and ball, but perhaps what he will rue most is his moment of bad judgement in the fifth over on Thursday. Having been muzzled in the previous over, Rohit attempted to crash Shaminda Eranga over the offside field, but the ball seamed away and collected a thick edge. The ball headed towards Thisara at third man, at a comfortable height, but he overran the ball slightly, and in his attempts to readjust, managed to lose his balance, and spilt the catch. Rohit would go on to score 260 more.The stumping
Angelo Mathews had come down the pitch to launch Akshar Patel over the boundary on the fourth ball of the 29th over, but he was out when he attempted to repeat the shot next ball, thanks to some clever bowling from Akshar and quick work from wicketkeeper Robin Uthappa. Akshar perhaps saw Mathews advancing and fired in a short ball, getting it to bounce high enough to hit Mathew’s glove, even as the batsman attempted to bail out of the stroke. The ball then bounced once, on around the popping crease, and was collected by Uthappa, who had taken the bails off long before Mathews had regained his ground.

Man and superman

AB de Villiers may come across as something of a fictional superhero on the field. But his relatively underplayed fallibility off it shows that he is human too

Telford Vice06-Feb-2015In a former life, I worked for a 24-hour television news channel. My job was to threaten writers with violence until they delivered enough scripts and video clips to feed the monster that was the sport bulletin broadcast every half-hour. It is, and will remain, the undisputed lowlight of what I presume to call my career.But it had its moments. Like the day one of the writers was suspiciously desperate to take a lunch hour.”Lunch?” I rasped under a spiked eyebrow.In that godawful place, lunch was foraged out of greasy packaging held in one hand while the other hand continued to bang out scripts and cut video.So, I was not best pleased at this outrageousness: “Lunch? What?””Yes, lunch,” she said with an incongruously sweet smile.Months later I discovered that she did not lunch alone that day. Her date was AB de Villiers.He has this effect on people does de Villiers. He makes them want to do what they should not want to do. Countless bowlers will attest to that, as countless more will, before he hangs up his audacity.West Indies know this only too well. The innings de Villiers unleashed on them at the Wanderers in January proved that even the most innovative batsman in the game is not done innovating.That de Villiers scored the fastest ODI hundred that day was peripheral, the halo on the angel. How he scored it mattered more. There was no way to bowl to him and escape a hiding; no chance of holing up somewhere until the hurricane blew itself out. West Indies needed all hands on deck, and that was not nearly enough to stop de Villiers until the 49th over.De Villiers has not become a better or more assertive player suddenly. It is simply that a light that has for years been hidden under the bushels of players like Jacques Kallis and Graeme Smith has emerged into all its incandescent glory. He has always been this good. Others have just been more trusted in a culture that remains uneasy with the stupendous, and with de Villiers, stupendous comes standard.”You have to read the game to see what the bowler is trying to do,” he said of that innings, but it may as well have been a career mantra. “You can’t just let him bowl at you; you have to try and take the initiative and put him under pressure… you’ve got to take the initiative and take it to the bowler.”Unlike Hashim Amla, who seems to barely move a muscle – and never changes his gloves – to pile up his mountains of runs, or Faf du Plessis, who will bat all day and more and to hell with how many runs he does not score, or Quinton de Kock, whose batting is orthodoxy on steroids, de Villiers is a mad inventor. Unlike Dr Frankenstein’s, however, his creations are seamless and scar-free.From the time the ball leaves the bowler’s hand to the moment it needs to be dealt with, de Villiers is capable of mentally flipping through even the most modern coaching manual, choosing two or three options, deciding against any or all of them, and fashioning something bespoke instead; something that looks like it has been part of cricket for much longer than the nanosecond he has taken to devise it.More often than not, de Villiers’ choice proves perfect – as if he has for years been cartwheeling down the pitch at diabolical diagonals to connect with the ball and propel it way out of reach of any fielder.De Villiers bats like a tightrope walker not bothered to check whether his rope is tight. If it is not, he will die a messy death. If it is, life goes on. Somehow, de Villiers is still flying high in rude health.

Happen upon him at a restaurant and he will wave and smile. So will his wife, Danielle. The son of a doctor, avidly Christian and a wannabe pop singer, de Villiers is that corny thing: utterly middle class and happy to be accepted as such

He does it all without arrogance, without showing off. A small example, extreme in its own way: after lunch on day three of the third Test against West Indies at Newlands in January, de Villiers whipped Sulieman Benn behind square leg and deep into the outfield.On his way back to the crease to complete a second run, he stopped some three metres short of his ground. A spot of disturbed pitch had caught his eye. So he paused to prod it down. The throw was already arcing from the outfield towards the wicketkeeper when de Villiers interrupted his return. He knew this, and still he stood there as if tending his front lawn on a lazy Sunday. But he also knew, by some vectorial instinct, exactly how long he needed to make it back without causing undue alarm. He did.Few in the crowd reacted to this blatant violation of the received wisdom of “Cricket: How To Play”. Perhaps they did not see it. Perhaps they had seen it – or something like it – too many times before to pay it much heed. We are dealing with AB de Villiers, after all and this is too easy.

****

It is away from the crease that de Villiers is most interesting. When he has a bat in his hands, he knows how to get from A to B in record time. Off the field, he walks a crooked line to get there.De Villiers is canny enough not to be drawn into discussions about South Africa’s attempts to undo the damage of apartheid. Officially, quota selections do not exist, which only gives rise to unfair whispers when black players are picked. White players never seem to have their credentials questioned the same way.His silence on the issue would be pertinent if it was not also the default position of his team-mates. The players are neither scared nor calculating by not speaking out: they simply do not care. As the No. 1 Test team in the world, why would they? But their silence prevents them from reaching that far more important goal: a more representative team on the field.There is a more intriguing side, however, as evident in the dithering over de Villiers’ wicketkeeping duties. He has vacillated with something close to impunity between saying he will do anything his team needs and, by voicing his reluctance to keep wicket because of a chronic back problem, not exactly doing anything his team needs.He was not behind the stumps in either of South Africa’s Tests in Sri Lanka last July, and his statements then were strangely ambiguous. “In the last game I had that ‘hammy’ issue. That’s sort of recovered, but my back has always been an issue.”It’s difficult to take on the gloves, especially keeping in mind that I haven’t kept for – what is it – six or seven months now. So with that injury and a two-day turnaround after the day off yesterday, for me to get into shape with my gloves on, and considering my back, would be a little bit unfair.Does de Villiers want to keep wicket or not? Or does he want to do what the team prefers?•Getty ImagesBut: “I’m still willing to take the gloves for the boys. I just have to come in into a series prepared without any niggles. I’d still like to think that I’m a wicketkeeping batsman and whatever the team wants me to do, I’ll do that. If they want me to take the gloves, I’d like to do that.”When de Kock tore ankle ligaments warming up for the third day of the first Test against West Indies in Centurion in December, de Villiers was the logical emergency replacement. But going by what he said in June, he would surely not do the job in the following Test. Yes, he would. And in the third Test too.So which is it? Does de Villiers want to keep wicket or not? Or does he want to do what the team prefers? Or to tell us – and the public – what he thinks we want to hear?Part of this problem is that modern cricketers are conditioned to be positive in the press, no matter what. De Villiers, nowhere near as sensible as someone like Amla, tends to say what he thinks is the safest thing, as per the suits’ wont. But sometimes he forgets who and what he is, and silliness like “We were the better team in Australia” tumbles forth (so how come the Aussies won that November one-day series 4-1?); or, “jet-lag comes into play [flying from Perth to Canberra]”, which is, um, a three-hour time difference.In moments like these it is difficult for those who regularly see and hear de Villiers to curb the cruel thought that he could just be brainlessly brilliant.On the field, he is a certified genius. Off it, he has the manners of an impeccably raised young man and that of the ambassador to Lichtenstein trying to negotiate peace in the Middle East: not a little out of his depth.This is not meant as spiteful. In fact, de Villiers will not take umbrage, mostly because he will not have read it. He knows better than to take notice of what is written about him in the media.Late one night in December 2012, de Villiers and some of his team-mates wobbled into the Lucky Shag, a bar perched on the banks of the Swan River in Perth. Many hours earlier, South Africa had beaten Australia by 309 runs to seal a 1-0 Test series triumph. Our conversation went like this:”Y’know AB, sometimes we have to write not-that-nice things about you.””And? Have I ever complained? You have a job to do. I understand.”That’s the thing with de Villiers: just when he has convinced you he is the epitome of the dumb jock, he proves why he is not. Unlike any number of apparently intelligent, mature players who have no clue why the press are not their fans, de Villiers, it seems, does.So, as capable as he is of making himself look stupid in dealings with journalists, de Villiers also understands the media’s role. This is not because he has been trained accordingly – if he had been, he would not say the things he does – but because, stripped of all that talent, skill and stardom, de Villiers is a basic bloke imbued with more good intentions than bad. Happen upon him in a restaurant and he will wave and smile. So will his wife, Danielle. The son of a doctor, avidly Christian, and a wannabe pop singer, de Villiers is that corny thing: utterly middle class and happy to be accepted as such.However, unlike Dale Steyn, who revels in being one of cricket’s rock stars, or Amla, whose unease at being a public figure thawed only after he became Test captain, de Villiers is comfortable being one of the most recognised figures in the game.

****

As a schoolboy prodigy, de Villiers did amazing things in many sports; on a cricket ground, a rugby field, a tennis court, a swimming pool or a golf course. Why cricket? Rugby careers are shorter and ask a higher physical price, and none of those other sports can be turned into a career in South Africa.De Villiers was famous in his milieu long before he became the giant we know today. And Pretoria is not any old milieu – it is a place where school sport is taken only slightly less seriously than what happens at senior level.So de Villiers’ name, face and exploits have been splashed across newspapers since he was a boy. That he attended the prestigious Afrikaanse Hoer Seunskool did not hurt his assimilation into the ranks of the rarefied.But after the 2011 World Cup, de Villiers went where even he had not gone before. Not at any level had he captained a cricket team. Often du Plessis – who went to the same school and played for many of the same teams – took that responsibility. De Villiers was simply the star, not the leader. When Graeme Smith relinquished those reins, however, de Villiers picked them up.Why? Call it growing up, or answering the call that would have been buzzing inside him because of his conservative, Calvinist upbringing; or even becoming a little bored with the diminishing challenge of flaying attacks.Initially he struggled to get his head around managing an attack in the accepted manner. But Gary Kirsten’s philosophy of spreading the leadership load among the senior players allowed de Villiers the time and space he needed to grow into captaincy. He was always going to set inspirational examples, but the smaller stuff like over rates and field placing tended to trip him up – not unlike the engineers on the Brooklyn Bridge forgetting to check that all the nuts and bolts had been tightened.

De Villiers bats like a tightrope walker not bothered to check whether his rope is tight. If it is not, he will die a messy death. If it is, life goes on

Now the World Cup looms for him like that spire atop the Chrysler Building, a shimmering prize on a towering perch that will take some climbing. No South African captain has been up there, or even ventured as high as the final. Will de Villiers be different? He is already, in that for all his ability to play cricket to a level rarely seen, he can be clumsy in the public glare. And he has had to learn how to captain a team. But despite his missteps he has shown himself to be a keen student of the lessons of leadership.De Villiers is what results when an ordinary man is given extraordinary gifts. He goes to the World Cup with a team that has, by its standards, an ordinary record in major tournaments. But Amla and Steyn and de Villiers himself lend this generation the gleam of the extraordinary. All were present that extraordinary night in Dhaka four years ago when an ordinary New Zealand team found a way to beat South Africa’s extraordinaires in their World Cup quarter-final.That was then. Now the trio are at or near the pinnacle of the game. They know that, just as they know they will never be better players. This may not turn out to be their World Cup, but they will never have a chance as good.So if South Africa do the unthinkable and win it, de Villiers would not be able to claim as much credit as, say, Imran Khan was entitled to when Pakistan triumphed in 1992. He would not want it.

****

At the crease, de Villiers knows no boundaries. But they are strewn elsewhere in his life – when he is captaining his team, or trying to tiptoe around a tricky issue in a press conference, or sitting in a restaurant with his wife. The difference between him and others of similar stature is that de Villiers knows where the invisible line is drawn; where the star ends and the person begins.As long as he does not allow that line to blur, as long as he remembers that he has weaknesses to go with his many strengths, as long as he is who he is, he will not lunch alone.

Australia's top six make 50 plus

Stats highlights from the second day of the fourth Test between India and Australia in Sydney

Bishen Jeswant07-Jan-20155 Australia batsmen with hundreds in four, or more, consecutive Tests. Steven Smith has hundreds in all four Tests this series. The other Australians to do this are Don Bradman (six), Jack Fingleton (four), Neil Harvey (four) and Matthew Hayden (four).2 Number of batsmen with centuries in every Test of a series comprising four or more matches. Prior to Smith in this series, Jacques Kallis scored four hundreds in a home series against West Indies in 2002-03.1 Number of times every batsman in Australia’s top six has made a 50-plus score. The batsmen who made 50-plus are Chris Rogers (95), David Warner (101), Shane Watson (81), Smith (117), Shaun Marsh (73) and Joe Burns (58). Overall, it has happened six times in Tests, four of those against India.24 Number of instances where four Indian bowlers conceded 100-plus runs in an innings. Apart from England (32), no other team has had four bowlers conceding 100-plus runs in the same innings more than 12 times.1 Number of previous instances in the last 84 years where two of Australia’s first three wickets have produced partnerships of 175-plus runs each. Australia’s first and third wickets produced 200 and 196 respectively during the first innings.2 Number of times a team has made 500 plus in every Test of a series comprising four or more Tests. Australia’s scores in this series are 7 for 517 (Adelaide), 505 (Brisbane), 530 (Melbourne) and 7 for 572 (Sydney). The only other team to do this was South Africa, against West Indies in 2003-04.7 Hundreds scored by No. 4 batsmen in this series, three by Smith, three by Virat Kohli and one by Michael Clarke – the most scored by No. 4 batsmen in any Test series.1 Number of Indian bowlers with five-wicket hauls this series. Mohammed Shami returned figures of 5 for 112 in the first innings. Even during India’s previous two tours to Australia only one bowler took a five-for, Umesh Yadav in 2011-12 and Anil Kumble in 2007-08. During the 2003-04 tour, Indian bowlers took five five-wicket hauls.

Anwar's record and de Villiers' sixes

Stats highlights from the Group B game between South Africa and UAE in Wellington

Bishen Jeswant12-Mar-20155:05

Insights – Using DRS effectively

341 South Africa’s total, their fourth 300-plus score at this World Cup, the joint-most with Sri Lanka. They have made a 300-plus score in each of the four games where they batted first this World Cup.0 South African batsmen who made a century today, making their 341 the highest score in World Cup matches without a single individual hundred. The previous record was also set during the 2015 tournament when Pakistan scored 339 against UAE without a single batsman getting to 100.20 Sixes hit by AB de Villiers during this World Cup, the most by any batsman in a single edition. Matthew Hayden struck 18 sixes during the 2007 World Cup. Chris Gayle also has 18 during this World Cup.36 Sixes hit by De Villiers in all World Cups, the most for any batsman. He went past Ricky Ponting who has 31 sixes in World Cup matches.Shaiman Anwar, with 309 from five matches, has the record for most runs by an Associate player in a World Cup•Getty Images309 Runs made by Shaiman Anwar at this World Cup, the most for any batsman from an Associate nation in a single edition. Second on this list is Ryan ten Doeschate with 307 in the 2011 World Cup.11.5 Average opening stand for South Africa in this World Cup, the second-worst for a Test nation, behind Pakistan’s 10.4. South Africa’s six openings stands at this World Cup have been 10, 12, 18, 12, 0 and 17.8.1 Quinton de Kock’s ODI batting average in 2015, the worst for a top-order batsman (Nos. 1 to 7) from a Test nation (min. five innings). De Kock has played seven innings in 2015 with a top score of 26.2-15 De Villiers’ bowling figures in this game, his career-best in ODIs. This is the second time that De Villiers has claimed two wickets in an ODI. Since 2014, he has picked up at least a wicket on five out of the six times he has bowled.

Taste tests, and snoozin' next to Sanath

Our correspondent displays horrific ignorance about the finer things in life, and begs for a lift to McDonald’s

Andrew Fidel Fernando15-Mar-2015February 11
The stereotype goes that Cantabrians are people of strong opinions. Occasionally the word “myopic” is used to describe them, usually by Aucklanders. But two days out from the World Cup, Christchurch’s World Cup expectations are restrained and nuanced. “We look good, but I wonder if Brendon McCullum can play as aggressively as he does against some of the better attacks,” says a man in a café. “I also worry that Trent Boult won’t swing the white ball as much as we expect,” replies his companion.February 12
Tens of thousands turn out for the World Cup opening ceremony, which is more community carnival than global showpiece. It is refreshing, uplifting, and typically for New Zealand, understated. The only high-octane moments of the evening are when the biggest fireworks display Christchurch has seen light up the sky, a little while after mayor Lianne Dalziel stormed the stage and bellowed, “We are back”, like some 1980s hip-hop hype-woman. All she needed was a clock around her neck.February 13
Colleague Andrew McGlashan and I return to our lodgings starving, late in the night. No restaurants save the 24-hour McDonald’s down the road are open. I volunteer to go fetch the food, but to my dismay, only the drive-through is in operation. Too hungry to go back empty-handed, I approach the latest car to pull into the queue and ask if I can climb into the back seat and order and pay from there, since they only allow vehicles into the drive-through. Not only do the couple in the car agree, they end up dropping me back to our apartment. Gnasher is in stitches when I tell him the story. He describes it as the perfect combination of Sri Lankan informal ingenuity and Kiwi friendliness. I reflect I probably shouldn’t try this again outside of those two countries.The opening ceremony in Christchurch•Andrew Fidel Fernando/ESPNcricinfo LtdFebruary 19
Dimuth Karunaratne sees me near the Sri Lanka nets and comes to say hello. He’s trying out a heavier bat. He smiles when another journalist and I tell him that Aravinda de Silva had switched to a much heavier bat during his epic 1996 World Cup as well. Dinesh Chandimal comes over for a chat a little later. Mahela Jayawardene exchanges a few words walking past. A lot of people want to know what the Sri Lanka players are like in person. I can almost never say a bad word. There are no airs, for most of them. They are normal to the point of being a little boring.February 26
Meet a Bangladesh fan in the lobby of the apartment building I’m staying in in Melbourne. She and her husband have flown from Sydney to watch the following day’s game. “My perfect match would be for Sanga to score a hundred, then for the Tigers to win,” she says. She will get half her wish. They have also booked tickets to the Melbourne quarter-final. “I just have a feeling we will get to the quarters this time.”February 28
Arrive at the departure gate to find I’m on the same flight as the Sri Lanka team. I board and find myself sitting next to selector-on-tour Sanath Jayasuriya. He laughs to himself when he sees me. “This is going to be my quietest flight ever, otherwise tomorrow everything will be on Cricinfo.” I retort with: “I’ll just be happy if none of the players try to open the plane door at 35,000 feet” (as a Sri Lanka A cricketer had done last year). He laughs again.ESPNcricinfo’s Match Point set overlooking the Sydney Harbour bridge•Andrew Fidel Fernando/ESPNcricinfo LtdIn the end Jayasuriya is quite chatty, speaking knowledgably about the story of two young Australians currently facing execution in Indonesia for drug smuggling. I fall asleep, hoping earnestly I don’t wake up nestled in his shoulder, a stream of drool on his shirt.March 3
I know nothing about wine. But that does not stop me, or two other wine-ignoramuses from attending a tasting at a Hawke’s Bay winery. As we begin to glug down the samples, we offer questions of profound obtuseness to the young lady hosting us. “Do you chill white wine before you drink it?” And “why is some wine white and others red, when they are made from the same grape?” We pause for a few seconds, as if to aerate the tannins of our own daftness, then let fly with: “What’s the difference in taste between Shiraz and Syrah?” (They’re the same thing, apparently.)There is a moment when I am personally impressed with the apparent grasp of viticulture that underlies one of our queries. This is a delusion. Our hostess is visibly more and more dismayed with the quality of each fresh probe. “Yes, Merlot does actually improve over time,” went one of her particularly downbeat responses. In between these rounds of inane q&a, she leaves us and goes into her office for a few minutes, presumably to weep.March 6
Within 24 hours of being in Sydney, I have already seen enough male cleavage to last me a lifetime. There seems to be a council law that skin-tight plunging v-neck shirts are all men are allowed to wear. I hope I don’t get pulled up and fined. I guess if you’re putting in the work for those muscles, you may as well show them off. The Mardi Gras gay pride parade is in town too. Lots of noise. Lots of exposed skin.Nibble or chomp – there are many ways to enjoy Tasman produce•Andrew Fidel Fernando/ESPNcricinfo LtdMarch 9
Sydney has never been my favourite Australian city, but boy, that harbour is something else. Colleague and liker-of-own-voice Raunak Kapoor shows me around the Match Point set, overlooking the grand Harbour Bridge and Opera House. He was about to go for a run when I turn up, but we end up drinking milkshakes, eating ice cream and having a heavy lunch instead. His plans to exercise apparently pan out much the same way as mine.March 13
I am even more ignorant about cheese than I am about wine, yet here I am again, attending a cheese tasting on Bruny Island, just off Tasmania, with Jarrod Kimber for company. To break the silence as we taste, I offer: “Mmm, yes, that one had quite a cheesy quality to it, don’t you think? I was definitely getting flavours of cheese.” He furrows his brow, tucks his chin in, nods his head and makes an observation whose insight stuns me. “I like that last one better because it was softer than the one before it.”He buys some cheese, hopefully as a gift for people who know more about it than him, and we spend a few hours just driving around Bruny Island, taking in its many dramatic landscapes, gorgeous beaches and imposing eucalypt forests.

Leicestershire's last chance to shine

Wasim Khan has gone from tending to the game’s grassroots to attempting a full-scale revolution at Grace Road. No wonder there is a sense of urgency

Andrew Miller17-Apr-2015″You will always have doubters. You will always get people who think you’re involved in a losing cause. People have said to me ‘how could you take this job?’, but you learn to become a lot more resilient. You gain the belief that, just because nine out of 10 people tell you it won’t work, that doesn’t mean you can’t make it work.”Wasim Khan is standing in the window of Grace Road’s newly refurbished Sky Sports studio, overlooking his vast and distinctly under-furbished kingdom. With a loss of £225,000 for 2014 – and nothing but losses on the field since 2012 – cosmetic changes alone will not save Leicestershire County Cricket Club from bankruptcy.However, as the club’s new chief executive embarks on what may prove to be a make-or-break cultural revolution, he believes that addressing the image problem is as good a place as any to start.”It’s the little things we can change straight away,” he says. “See those red seats over there?” – he gestures towards an unoccupied stand next to the club offices on the north-eastern perimeter – “We’re going to put a canopy over those seats for members, and do something similar on the other side of the ground. We’ve jet-washed the back wall, we’re going to get the top of the Meet painted ahead of the Northants game. It’s all about adding a bit of value, a simple upgrading.”An upgrade in attitude has also been an early hallmark of his regime. By degrees over the previous two decades, the club had become wearyingly used to its second-tier status within the county game, not least when it came to losing its up-and-coming talent, such as Stuart Broad and James Taylor, to larger and hungrier clubs down the road.Wasim Khan has arrived at Leicestershire with a brief to revitalise the county•Getty ImagesHowever, a mass exodus of players at the end of 2014 was the final straw in that regard. For four players to leave within weeks of one another, including such outstanding young players as Josh Cobb, Nathan Buck and Shiv Thakor, told of a malaise that no incoming boss could possibly allow to fester.”Players will always move on, that’s a fact of life, but as long as they move on for the right reasons, I can accept that,” Khan says. “I don’t want to accept second-class status, but neither do I want our club to be a self-fulfilling prophecy.”The atmosphere last year was toxic, but I want to create a winning environment and a learning environment. With a combination of those two factors, our players will believe they can achieve what they want to achieve in the game without leaving.”I say to the batters, average 50, score five hundreds and win us four games, that’s the way you’ll get noticed. Don’t average 35 and then leave because you’ve got England aspirations. No one’s going to pick you if you average 35.”With Andrew McDonald, the former Australia allrounder now installed as an ambitious young head coach, Khan is surrounding himself with people who will be willing to fight the right battles.”I think it brings a real vibrancy when young players, coaches and individuals off the field want to prove themselves,” Khan says. “I’ve tried to create a new approach off the field and Andrew is taking it on on the field. One lad said: ‘I can’t remember the last time we weren’t thinking about defeat’. So it will happen for us, the key thing was for us to come out this year and be competitive, because that’s something we haven’t been, and that’s not acceptable.”

“We have to try to do things differently. It’s important that whatever we do, it has to have some real relevance to the communities and to the club”Wasim Khan

There’s an urgency to Khan’s approach, but it’s the urgency of enthusiasm rather than the sort of harmful hectoring that the club’s players and staff has been subjected to by their rulers in recent years. As the gateman says while discussing the county’s often divisive politics: “I’ve not heard anyone with a bad word to say about him.”After all, the presentation of cricket to the public has become an issue of paramount importance to the sport, as the ECB’s cack-handed PR machine has spent the past year demonstrating. And as a man who has spent the past ten years of his career reconnecting cricket’s severed ties through his award-winning work with the charity, Chance to Shine, Khan knows better than anyone what it takes to put the wind beneath a project’s wings.The first day of the county season was a case in point. Rather than charge an admission fee, the club threw open its gates – even those along Milligan Road, where an austere red-brick and razor-wired perimeter wall feels about as welcoming as Stalag Luft III – and invited the local community in for an open day.Some 1500 people came along for the ride, the county’s biggest first-day gate for a generation. The majority were residents of the rows of terraced housing that lined the streets outside the ground, invited via a leafleting campaign despite never having set foot in the ground before; families with young children, among them Asians, Afro-Caribbeans and even the local Chinese community.In scenes reminiscent of the early days of the Twenty20 Cup, which tend to invite mockery now regardless of how mould-breaking they were at the time, activities such as free coaching, face painting and a bouncy castle occupied the crowds and left the action in the middle somewhat secondary to the day’s focus – no bad thing in the circumstances, as Glamorgan subjected the hosts to another day of toil by racking up 294 for 2.”It’s important we sell an experience, and that it’s not only cricket,” says Khan. “There are probably got 1500 households in the local LE2 postcode, and very few of them have any real interest in cricket. It’s not that we don’t sell it well enough to them, really it’s because we are in a football area, so we have to do different things and engage them differently. Bring them in by other means and then say, oh, by the way, the cricket is on as well.”Grace Road’s vast acreage•PA PhotosKeeping those casual fans, however, is a problem that might require more than just cosmetics. According to some estimates, Grace Road’s playing area is second among first-class venues only to the MCG but for a match such as the one against Glamorgan, when the wicket was set lop-sidedly to the east of the square, its acreage seems inordinate.”It is vast, and in the long term we are potentially looking at how we can bring the ground in a bit,” says Khan. “At the moment, there’s a real waste in how it could be used to create a more intimate atmosphere. We look at Chelmsford, for example, which is a properly close-up and intimidating area, particularly on Twenty20 nights.”We have a capacity of 5500-6000 but any other arena of this size would hold 30,000 easily. But we have to think very carefully about any development plans. There might, for instance, be an opportunity to create a hill atmosphere, like there used to be at Sydney, to make the ground more of an appealing place to sit with your mates and have drinks. Anything that creates a bit more of an informal environment would be massively beneficial.”An adventure playground has been erected alongside the boundary•ESPNcricinfo LtdOne instant hit in that regard has been the erection of a children’s adventure playground at deep midwicket – a wooden pirate ship and slide, and picnic benches, protected by a net (although it is superfluous when the action is taking place some 150 metres away). Installed by precisely the sort of local business with which the club needs to re-engage, it bears all the hallmarks of grassroots focus that Khan cultivated so successfully at Chance to Shine.”We have to try to do things differently,” says Khan. “There are cleverer ways to develop but it’s important that whatever we do, it has to have some real relevance to the communities and to the club.”There are some easy wins, the things we can do straight away, but we’ve got to become more sustainable as a business too, which means having operations that are open 365 days a year. That might mean banqueting on non-match days and developing the facilities. What we can do to make the club open and accessible to all communities.”In a more direct attempt at engagement, and following on from a promise that he made before taking over the role, Khan recently invited 29 local inner-city clubs to an evening at Grace Road to ask how and why the local community may have felt let down by the county in the past. The upshot was the establishment of a development group, with five or six representatives to provide one voice for the local grassroots game.”There’s been a disconnect because I don’t think we’ve reached out enough, and really listened about what their needs were,” he says. “Cricket in the past has been very good at giving what it thought people wanted, but now from a customer and engagement point of view, I think you need to revolve around what people want.Wasim Khan in Warwickshire colours in 1996•PA Photos”But I also challenged those clubs in return: ‘What are you doing for cricket in Leicestershire? What do you put back?’ It’s important it’s a two-way process. You can keep holding your hand out and saying ‘Give us more’, but there comes a time when you’ve got to take responsibility yourselves. I think I was well placed to ask that question.”Indeed he is. Having spent a decade reinvigorating interest in cricket in working-class communities identical to those in which Grace Road is located, his relationship with such clubs is already robust. If the first half of his life as an executive was to bring children back into the game by giving them an opportunity that had been lost in 88% of the nation’s schools, act two is to pull through the cream of the crop, using the channels that he himself has helped to re-establish.”I wanted to be part of that challenge at Chance to Shine, and it’s a similar mission for me here,” he says. “It’s great to be back in the professional game, to feel alive and have a sense of belonging in this environment. There will be different challenges that require time and there may be some dark days ahead, but when I walk away in five or ten years’ time I want to leave the club in a better place.”

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