From Alur to Sharjah, an eventful year in the life of Yashasvi Jaiswal

Last October, Jaiswal made headlines with his feats in the Vijay Hazare Trophy, but his IPL trial by fire has not gone as smoothly

Saurabh Somani10-Oct-20201:54

Did Rajasthan Royals misread the pitch?

It was Sharjah. It was the Rajasthan Royals chasing. There was a batsman whose struggles in the middle meant the task became tougher. However, there was no fairy-tale ending for Yashasvi Jaiswal the way there was one for Rahul Tewatia.In October 2019, Jaiswal waltzed into national cricketing headlines with his feats in the Vijay Hazare Trophy, the BCCI’s 50-overs domestic competition. In the space of a fortnight, he had racked up scores of 113, 22, 122, 203 and 60*, his run only coming to an end when rain knocked Mumbai out of the competition. In October 2020, drenched in sweat rather than rain, Jaiswal’s T20 career stands at 40 runs from three matches, with an unflattering average of 13.33 and a strike-rate (90.90) that’s than his List A figures (91.53).In between, he was named Player of the Tournament at the Under-19 World Cup, scoring nearly one-and-a-half times more runs than the second-highest run-getter at the tournament.The step up from tearing apart domestic bowlers and lording it over Under-19 attacks has not been smooth. Then again, Jaiswal has never faced anything like Kagiso Rabada and Anrich Nortje banging the ball into him at 145 clicks either. It’s one of those things that no amount of net sessions can prepare you for. In fact, before IPL 2020, Jaiswal had never played a T20 match at the senior level, ever.Against the Delhi Capitals on Friday, Jaiswal played his longest stint in a T20 game. His 34 off 36 wasn’t pretty. It was a collection of nudging the ball around, punctuated feebly with across-the-line slogs. It sucked momentum out of the Royals’ chase with the efficiency of a vacuum cleaner.Was his role to anchor the innings while those around him went for their shots? Jaiswal’s shot selection – he didn’t actively seek to hit boundaries – suggested that. Even so, anchoring a chase that needs more than nine runs per over from the start cannot be done with a strike-rate barely touching 100. When asked about his young opener’s role, the captain Steven Smith hinted that Jaiswal was in fact trying to get on with things, but couldn’t.”Yeah, look it’s an interesting one,” Smith said at the post-match press conference. “He’s very young. He’s only played a handful of games so he’s still finding his feet. Today, talking to him in the middle, it was about trying to just keep going, which he was finding hard a little bit. But you know he’s young, and the more he plays the more he’ll learn.”Yashasvi Jaiswal fell to Marcus Stoinis in trying to force the pace•BCCIThe odds were certainly against Jaiswal. He was part of one of the IPL’s weaker batting line-ups, facing one of its strongest bowling attacks. The pitch wasn’t a typical Sharjah wicket, with the ball gripping on the surface. Harshal Patel said after the match that he and Shimron Hetmyer had reckoned 170 would be above par when they got together in the 14th over of the Capitals’ innings; they ended up getting 184.It was a situation every bit as different as the distance between UAE and Alur, the venue of Jaiswal’s October 2019 heroics, represents.In Alur, Jaiswal had ticked off all the boxes that needed checking to be anointed as the ‘next big thing’. He was a top-order batsman in India who has scored big, impressive runs. He played for Mumbai, and therefore had automatically got the ‘Mumbai school of batting’ and stamps. He could drive, but only on the cricket field. He wasn’t yet old enough to get behind the wheels of a car, so a ‘prodigy’ tag was attached too. And he had a heart-warming, rags-to-riches tale.Alur is far enough north in Bengaluru that it feels like inter-city travel to get there and back. It’s the kind of location where you might get an Uber to drop you to, if you are lucky. But not one from where you will get someone to pick you up even if you are prepared to pay in dollars, whose exchange rate with the Indian rupee is likely to rise several points in the time it takes to complete that journey.Still, even in Alur, Jaiswal was watched by keen eyes. The Indian selectors were there. John Wright was scouting for the Mumbai Indians. Malolan Rangarajan had arrived, on the same mission for the Royal Challengers Bangalore. Across those who watched Jaiswal, no one doubted his ability. The Mumbai Indians bid for him at the IPL auctions despite not really having room at the top of the order (or indeed anywhere in the starting XI). Those who really wanted an opener – the Kolkata Knight Riders and Kings XI Punjab – went harder at him until the Royals swooped in late. Jaiswal had four franchises bidding for him during the middle period of the auction, when big monies had already been spent and positions filled.So what’s happened from October 2019 to October 2020? Nothing extraordinary. Jaiswal still has the reservoir of talent that sparked interest a year ago. He’s also still a teenager, albeit one who can vote and drive now. And he’s an 18-year-old who faced his toughest examination yet, in terms of quality of bowling, doing it moreover with the knowledge that an international audience of millions was watching. He has also not been given a long run at the top of the order, with the Royals having decided to go with Smith there for the initial phase of the tournament.The IPL is ruthlessly competitive, but it has also become one of the most lucrative stages for talents to be spotted. The competitiveness of season here and now, will mean that Jaiswal’s spot in the starting XI is up for question, never mind any extenuating circumstances. But the way in which franchises back talent and are proved right – recent case in point Varun Chakravarthy – means Jaiswal’s future is not as uncertain as his present. October 2019 to October 2020 has already been one giant leap for a teenager. What’s needed now is a few small steps in the IPL.

Whatever happened to Craig Simmons, maker of the fastest BBL hundred?

The man who made a century in 39 balls in his first season looks back at that golden summer and after

Alex Malcolm15-Dec-2020Craig Simmons is a mythical figure in the BBL. The West Australian was plucked from grade cricket at age 31 to play for the Perth Scorchers in the third BBL season, 2013-14. He made just 17 runs in his first three innings before scoring the fastest century in BBL history, at the WACA against the Adelaide Strikers. He followed that up with a stunning 112 in the semi-final against a world-class Sydney Sixers attack to help the Scorchers ultimately win their first BBL title.Simmons then signed a three-year deal with the Strikers but only played 13 more matches in the BBL, never reaching 50 again. While he has a reputation as the fleeting shooting star of the league, his contribution to Australian domestic and grade cricket is still going, 17 years after his first-class debut.What are your memories of how it all came about?
I was in the first year of my apprenticeship with Western Power [a major utility company in Perth]. It was a bit of a shock because I’d pretty much thought my cricket days were numbered. I think Western Australia had had a bit of a habit over the year or two previous of wanting to pick 18-19-year-old kids and giving them a bit of a crack. I was just lucky that Justin Langer came in and he wanted to reward blokes from grade cricket.I suppose it was just right place at the right time. Having that apprenticeship probably just freed me up in my mind. I didn’t really take cricket with as much pressure as I had in the past.The first hundred was definitely my last crack. I went out there that day with a pretty open mind to just have some fun. I think I got dropped reasonably early, mishit a couple that went in the gaps, and the rest is history.

“I go out to bat now and I’m facing some 15-year-old kid who feels quick. Yet it was only six or seven years ago that I was facing some of the quickest bowlers in the world”

Rob Cassell, who you played with in the Under-19 World Cup was the Strikers bowling coach and he said they didn’t pay any attention to you in the team meeting before that game. Do you remember that?
I do and it’s fair enough. You look at the Scorchers team and we had some really good batsmen. It’s like any team – you probably put your energy into the top three or four players who you think are probably going to win you the game, and the other guys you probably can gloss over at times. And yeah, I was lucky they didn’t put any or much effort into me, and it paid off, that’s for sure.What was it like playing in front of that kind of crowd?
It was awesome. I haven’t played at the new stadium [Perth Stadium], but the WACA was huge. The atmosphere there was amazing. It was a really parochial crowd, 20,000 felt like 50,000 and once you starting hitting a few out of the middle, the crowd did get up. I remember when I hit that six to bring up the hundred, the crowd noise was huge. And it was a pretty big thrill.I think I was in a bit of shock. I probably didn’t really appreciate it as much as I did afterwards. But I’ve seen the highlights a few times and there were certainly a lot of people on the edge of their seats, making a lot of noise. It was good fun.Do you remember during the innings when you started to think about what you were doing or were you just going as hard as you could go?
Literally, once I got to about 40, I was just in that zone of trying to hit every ball for six. That was my thought. I don’t know why I did that. You probably don’t do that as a bat, but I felt like I was seeing them that well by then that I was looking to try and clear the rope every ball. And even good balls, they were still going for four or one or two. It was just one of those days where everything sort of went my way. Certainly don’t have too many of them as a batsman that’s for sure.Bowling for the Strikers early in 2015. Simmons’ last BBL match came on the last day of that year•Getty ImagesWhat did Langer say to you to after the innings?
After every game they would have a bit of a chat. Pump up the blokes that had done well or whatever. I remember quite fondly because he was like, “Simmo, you scored a hundred on the skinfolds yesterday, you scored a hundred on the scales today, and you scored a hundred with the bat, so it was good to bring up the 300!” I certainly wasn’t in my physical peak playing, so the guys had a bit of a laugh.Two innings later you got a hundred in the semi-final, against an attack that was Brett Lee, Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood, Sean Abbott and Trent Copeland, and you hit 11 sixes. Was that better than the previous one?
Yeah, I always cherish that one more. The first one was literally just an all-out attack with really not much pressure. It’s just a pool game, go out there and try your luck. The semi-final, I remember it, it was really tough work early. The ball was swinging a bit and the wicket was a little bit tacky, and I think I might have been six off 16 balls – so I certainly took my time. I copped a bit of stick from the Sixers players about how slow I was going, but again I was lucky enough to have blokes like Simon Katich and Adam Voges down the other end, and they’re always pretty free-scoring players, so they took a bit of pressure [off].As a player, you want to perform in the big moments. Semi-final, away ground, to get the Scorchers into a final and to go on to win was pretty big.Do you look back at the attack, given where all those bowlers have ended up?
I do, and I certainly let blokes know who was bowling! I go out to bat now and I’m facing some 15-year-old kid who feels quick. Yet it was only six or seven years ago that I was facing some of the quickest bowlers in the world. I definitely look back on it very fondly. And again, on that day, I didn’t really feel troubled after that first six overs. It was a pretty special achievement for me, that one.

“At this stage of my career I can do well with the ball without having to put in as much yards. Whereas with the batting side of it, I think once you start to get a little bit older, it does get a little bit harder”

I wondered how you felt when people were talking about how you had come from nowhere. You played your last first-class game only 18 months earlier. You made your first-class debut in 2003. You had dominated grade cricket, played a lot of List A, first-class and T20 cricket for both WA and NSW. Did all of those experiences help you in that scenario in the BBL? And secondly, were you frustrated that people had forgotten that you had had ten years in professional cricket?
It definitely helped. I was around for a long time and just not playing much cricket. I was lucky enough to be at New South Wales and get to work with blokes like Simon Katich, Michael Clarke, and some of Australia’s best cricketers when they were around for New South Wales.In terms of people saying I’d been plucked from grade cricket, it probably was a bit frustrating, but it’s probably just the audience that watches the Big Bash. There’s a lot of people who probably wouldn’t have much to do with cricket and they would probably think, “Geez, this is amazing, they’ve picked some bloke who has probably hardly played any cricket at all.” I think it’s definitely changed over the last few seasons. People are starting to get more and more into it and the player profiles in the Big Bash are starting to get bigger and bigger. It’s been a really good thing for domestic cricketers in Australia.Playing in that title-winning season under Langer and Katich, with a great Scorchers side that featured a lot of Western Australia guys – what was that experience like?
We had a really good group of guys there and the Perth cricket community really needed a title. I think they lost the first two BBL finals. We were under a fair bit of pressure to do well, and everyone was really hungry to do well. You look at most of the players in that side and there are a fair few guys that represented Australia a fair bit.That semi-final performance was like a final. Once we got through to the final against Hobart, we probably didn’t see them as a really strong team. They had lost one of their better bowlers and I think we were really comfortable that we were going to perform well that day. We probably put in our most complete performance of the season. So yeah, it was a really good few weeks. It was good to get WA back in the cricketing limelight.Simmons on his way to his 39-ball hundred against the Adelaide Strikers in the 2013-14 BBL season•Getty ImagesHow did things change for you? You got to play in the Champions League and you also played in the Australian 50-over domestic tournament the following October for Western Australia. Did you start to reconsider going back into cricket?
I didn’t at all, to be honest. I was 32-33. I was really happy with the job I had and still do now. I really enjoy my work for Western Power.People [were] saying you’re going to get opportunities in all these different T20 leagues and stuff like that. I suppose my priorities changed. I was happy to play the Big Bash and do whatever. The one-day tournament was okay, same again because it was a two- or three-week period where you could do it. But I knew on the other hand how cut-throat professional cricket can be, so I didn’t really want to go through that. I had a wife and young child on the way, so for me it was about trying to keep everything as solid as possible and just playing cricket because I enjoyed playing it and I just wanted to play as much as I could.I understand it was a tough decision to take the three-year offer from the Adelaide Strikers. How difficult was it to move away from the Scorchers after just one season?
It was really hard. My preference would definitely have been to stay with the Scorchers, but the financial differences were just ridiculous – like, it was six times the amount of money. You don’t play for the money but as a 33-year-old that has put 14-15 years of effort into trying to play cricket, it was just a time where I thought, well, it’s probably my time to get a little back from the game I love. Yeah, I made that decision. It probably didn’t work out as well as I would have liked but I still had a pretty fun three years in Adelaide. I got to meet some pretty good people and have a bit of fun over there as well.You obviously still loving playing. How long do you think you’ll keep playing for?
I’ll play for as long as I can. For me it’s not necessarily just about playing first grade or second grade, I just enjoy playing cricket. If it means next year I’m playing third grade or fourth grade down the track, it’s not something that really worries me, because I think for a club, if you can get older guys to keep playing and pass on experience to the younger guys, it’s only going to help them. It’s probably something that I encountered as a young guy, when it felt like every team you played against had three or four really experienced blokes that made your life really hard. So I’m definitely not going to leave our young blokes in the same state, by leaving them without any experience.

“My preference would definitely have been to stay with the Scorchers, but the financial differences were just ridiculous – like, it was six times the amount of money”

Are you a bowler or a batter these days?
To be honest, I prefer bowling. Because at this stage of my career I can do well with the ball without having to put in as much yards. Whereas with the batting side of it, I think once you start to get a little bit older, it does get a little bit harder. I definitely prefer being classed as a bowler, and it takes the pressure off your batting. I go out and play with a fair bit of freedom these days, which is good.How do you view where Australian cricket has got to in terms of the development of players and the domestic competition and what needs to be done in terms of handling young guys but also rewarding grade cricketers?
I think there definitely needs to be an emphasis on grade cricket. WA went through it where they really didn’t value grade cricket and people did lose a bit of faith in the system. People dropped off. Performances weren’t being rewarded. I think if they can really keep that focus on, reward blokes from one level, play 2nd XI, then reward that and go forward. I think that’s really the best way to go about it.But at the end of the day sometimes you just get freak young kids who they feel it’s just their time. You probably don’t unearth blokes like Ricky Ponting or whoever it is if you don’t take chances as well. It is a pretty fine balancing act but hopefully Australian cricket is on the right path and I think we might have a good one with Cam Green hopefully playing the first Test this week.Final one: who do you support now?
It will always be the Scorchers for me. The Strikers was good fun and it was a good little payday, I suppose, but I’m a really parochial WA supporter in Shield cricket, one-day cricket, and the Scorchers. I’m really keen to see them do well.I see my role now as trying to get blokes at my club up to speed as well, so hopefully in the next few years, there might be a young kid from Rockingham Mandurah who is playing at that level.

Are England vs Sri Lanka contests underrated?

Three of our mightiest talents get to burrowing

18-Jan-2021Andrew Fidel Fernando, Sri Lanka correspondent: I know when we decided we were going to do a discussion on England v Sri Lanka contests, we were talking about cricket, but just so you are warned, I’m going to be bringing up Governor General Robert Brownrigg and his brutal crushing of the Sri Lankan hill country rebellion into it at every available opportunity.Andrew Miller, UK editor: Seems utterly reasonable to me.Alan Gardner, deputy editor: What is a discussion of England-Sri Lanka rivalry without a mention of “Big Nose” Brownrigg, eh?Related

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Fernando: This is the kind of guilt I was hoping you’d both come in here with.Miller: As we all know, England getting duffed up by colonials makes the world a better place, so hurrah for that.Fernando: Should we do this chronologically? Though Sri Lanka weren’t much of a Test team in the ’80s (due respect to Roy Dias, Duleep Mendis, the Ratnayake non-brothers, and the rest of the clan).Gardner: Sri Lanka gave a more than decent account of themselves against Keith Fletcher’s boys on debut.Fernando: They were even excellent on their Lord’s debut, where Sidath Wettimuny very nearly got a first-innings double ton, and Duleep Mendis kept hooking Botham and Co into the stands. Sri Lanka’s batsmen were so good in that game (on a flat bed, admittedly), Botham was reduced to bowling offspin in the second innings.Gardner: Would be rude not to link an excellent I Was There piece that a colleague – I won’t name names – produced a while back.Sidath Wettimuny made 190 on Sri Lanka’s debut at Lord’s in 1984•Adrian Murrell/Getty ImagesMiller: Nineteen ninety-eight is probably the obvious starting point, because everything tilted on its axis from there.Fernando: Yes, and we’ve had so many memorable series since then, that even the very good showings of the ’80s and ’90s kinda pale into insignificance.Miller: Sri Lanka were basically a rest cure for a decade, 1984, 1988 and 1991, they were quiet comedowns after a bruising West Indies series, and Sri Lanka were patronised on every visit.Gardner: Didn’t the BBC cut to the horse racing, or the news, before the winning runs in 1988? Kim Barnett’s only Test?Miller: I particularly remember Graham Gooch meting out some outrageously bored strokeplay against Don Anurasiri in 1991. He seemed to spend two-thirds of his 174 trying to get out with what we might now classify as switch-hitting, but they were basically reverse slogs.Ratnayake and Ramanayake were interchangeably average. And if Aravinda de Silva was obviously of the highest class, there seemed no inkling that this would become one of the most captivating rivalries of the 21st century; 1998 changed that.Gardner: Sri Lanka, Murali, late summer at The Oval… England might as well have walked into the ring with Mike Tyson and stuck their jaw out, right?Fernando: England had beaten South Africa earlier in the summer and were on a high. And Sri Lanka had never come close to beating them at home. They were the world champs and everything, but I don’t get the feeling England were worried. The game was kind of an annoyance after a long summer.Gardner: And they probably felt they were safe enough after scoring 445 in the first dig…Miller: Indeed. Graeme Hick and John Crawley, two men seemingly competing for one Ashes berth, both made hundreds. And as for Murali, if you will bowl 60 overs in an innings, of course you’re likely to get seven wickets. Big deal …Fernando: They’d kept Sri Lanka in the field for 158 overs. Almost third-new-ball territory.What floors me even now is the confidence Sri Lanka had in that match. To put England in because Murali needed a rest between innings (and they didn’t want to get into a situation where they’d need to think about enforcing a follow-on!), and then to concede almost 450 and still see a path to victory.Enter the berserker: Jayasuriya cut, drove and savaged his way to 213 in response to England’s 445 at the Oval•Getty ImagesMiller: Never better exemplified than by Sanath Jayasuriya’s response in Sri Lanka’s innings. As you all know, Angus Fraser holds a special place in my affections, but Jesus, the treatment he received was beyond contemptuous.Gardner: The only seamer not to concede a gallon, so…Fernando: You don’t often say this about Jayasuriya innings, but he drove beautifully that day.Gardner: Mark Butcher getting stumped off a big-ragging turner in the second innings told you things might be about to go pear-shaped. As Butch put it himself on Switch Hit a while back: “What the hell is going on here?”Fernando: I don’t think there was any other team in the world that would have, at that stage, done what SL did. I don’t think anyone else would have conceived this strategy, or at the very least, believed that it would be their best chance of success.Miller: The confidence was intoxicating. Like Adelaide ’06, but with even more certainty. Had any team ever before gone into a game more or less predicting their spinner would take 16 wickets and that every other facet of their performance was geared towards making it happen? And it became their standard game plan for the next decade!Fernando: Yeah, everything was just a funnel toward Murali getting those wickets. (And this was pre-doosra, even pre-greatness, Murali.)Miller: But it lit the blue touchpaper on a ferocious rivalry. Suddenly we were back at Adelaide the following winter, engaging in such an acrimonious follow-up that we even did a whole day of retro commentary to do it justice.Fernando: Before we get there, do we need to fawn over Murali’s 9 for 65? It’s been talked about a lot, as a major event in the Murali story. But to get those nine wickets he had to bowl 54.2 overs (taking the tally up near 115 for the match). This would essentially become his cricketing life for the next decade. Ridiculous numbers of overs bowled. Ludicrous expectations from his team, which he frequently exceeded. All while getting sniped at about his action.Miller: It was his wrist that got me every time, not his elbow. How on earth did he do that?! He was, as Nasser Hussain would spend his captaincy career harping on about, the definitive mystery spinner. And in a pre-slo-mo era, when exhaustive analysis was impossible. The uninitiated had no choice but to play him from the pitch, and fail time and time again.England’s loss to Sri Lanka in the 1996 World Cup was epochal•Getty ImagesGardner: That wrist moved like a helicopter… and the fizz on a couple of those deliveries, such as Graeme Hick’s lbw, eesh. You’d need a protractor and set square to play that.Miller: Going back a little, though, there was the small matter of Sri Lanka’s World Cup win too. The arse-on-plate-handing at Faisalabad was a truly epoch-defining contest for both teams, but still the England board couldn’t bring themselves to accept that the “little Lankans” belonged at the top table. Or, more pertinently, were enough of a box-office draw, which seems laughable now, given the majesty of their line-up in the early 2000s.Fernando: I’ve never previously drawn this line, but perhaps it was how utterly emphatic that Faisalabad win was that led to the events of The Oval 1998.Miller: Almost certainly. Jayasuriya carried on tonking it as if Phil DeFreitas was still bowling offies.Gardner: Getting royally dumped on by nations you have previously colonised is pretty much standard operating procedure for English cricket. And it can inspire a sort of reverse Stockholm Syndrome. Sri Lanka became one of my default picks to play with on , and I would also manage Lancashire on purely to oversee Murali wheeling away for hours.Fernando: Now on to one of England’s rare glories of that era – their series win in Sri Lanka in 2001.Gardner: This must have been a series you loved, Fidel – one of the massive underdog successes. Plucky Nasser and his boys rocking up and sticking it to the man.Fernando: Truly. And I mean this with no sarcasm, because at the time I thought the whole point of England was that there’s a team everyone could feel sorry for.Gardner: Just look at Sri Lanka’s top order: Atapattu, Jayasuriya, Sangakkara, Aravinda, Jayawardene, Dilshan, Arnold. Then Murali and Vaas to mop the plate.Fernando: Arguably Sri Lanka’s greatest top order.England’s 2000-01 series win in Sri Lanka: an underdog story?•Getty ImagesMiller: Without equivocation, that 2000-01 series win (and Asian double after beating Pakistan earlier that winter) was England’s greatest victory in more than a decade. And to think the rivalry hadn’t even been acknowledged until it was red-hot. I’d put the win in India in 1984-85 as the only comparable achievement. The 1986-87 Ashes was the most low-grade nonsense ever.Fernando: And they got properly ruined in the first match at Galle too. Innings victory. Jayasuriya got eight wickets in that game. Murali was surely going to be picking his teeth with the bones of his opponents by the end of the series.Gardner: Instead, it became his last home series (after 1994) where his strike rate was above 100 (hat tip to the ‘s Rob Smyth for that stonker).Miller: Sangakkara also announced himself as a natural-born Test cricketer from the outset.Gardner: And a massive wind-up merchant behind the stumpsMiller: Not least with Mike Atherton. Who, though he manages to wear his learning pretty lightly in his newspaper columns, did rather enjoy going onto the field knowing he was the most intelligent man out there. But suddenly this gobshite Lankan lawyer was out-brainsing him on debut and he didn’t much like that!Fernando: Sanga at the time did wear his learning lightly. His early career sledging and wicketkeeping hijinks are an entire separate Rabbit Hole.Gardner: England were on the receiving end of some absolute howlers in Galle. Although, much to the chagrin of the home side, BC Cooray somewhat evened the scales in the second Test, at Kandy. Nasser Hussain’s blood-and-guts 109 – his first hundred in 15 months – had just a couple of rather fortunate bad-pad let-offs, to put it mildlyFernando: What I will not understand about the second and third Tests of that series is how Robert Croft got all those wickets. Croft probably wouldn’t have made it into a Lankan XI made entirely of spinners at the time.Gardner: Such arrogance. You’ve learned the lessons of empire well, old boy.Fernando: The third game was even more crazy, in a way.Thorpedoed: Graham Thorpe’s 113 in the second innings in Colombo propelled England to their win in the 2000-01 series•Getty ImagesGardner: Thorpe’s Colombo masterclass. Peter Falk couldn’t have played it better.Fernando: Eighty-one all out in the third innings. This is a batting order with at least five batsmen who are now considered serious Sri Lankan greats. One or two all-timers.Gardner: And now you’ve been done by the King of Spain, too. Ashley Giles with 4 for 11, having barely been able to buy a wicket all tour.Fernando: You’ve got Murali getting two wickets in the match, while Giles and Croft are combining to take 11 against one of the top Lankan top orders. What’s wrong, Murali? Can you only get wickets at The Oval?Miller: Probably needs a doosra in his armoury, to be fair. To compete with such classical assassins.Thorpe’s mastery of all conditions that winter, in fact that 24 months, up to and including his ninja-quick double-century in Nathan Astle’s Test in Christchurch, was astonishing.Gardner: Thorpe’s 145 runs without dismissal in the match were clearly the difference. That winter he was an absolute don, having seen England home in the dark in Karachi, too.Fernando: Gotta be one of England’s great series comebacks, no?Miller: Easily. I still rate it every bit as high as the 2005 Ashes. Because it was a far more flawed England team, only recently ranked as the worst in the world. Normal service resumed three years later, when England were crushed in Colombo by an innings and 215, then their third worst thumping everFernando: Speaking of comebacks, Sri Lanka’s 2006 series in England…Gardner: The summer that broke Andrew Flintoff?Miller: Indeed, as I may have spelled out previously, that Lord’s Test rearguard by Sri Lanka marked the most emphatic of full stops on one of the mightiest mini-eras any player can have enjoyed.Sri Lanka’s tour of England in 2006: The beginning of the end for Andrew Flintoff•Getty ImagesFifty overs with a dodgy ankle, in a futile victory bid, and Fred was never the same.Fernando: It didn’t help that England insisted on dropping every Sri Lanka player who came to bat in that innings. Part of a colonial reparations project?Miller: You’re trying too hard to shoehorn the references now.Fernando: Any excuse to throw in a link of Mahela Jayawardene playing. God, what a batsman.Gardner: Eight Test hundreds against England, more than any other team. Although they did all come in SL or at Lord’s, so…Gardner: The 2006 tour I recall most vividly for another ODI pasting – 5-0 and Sri Lanka so dominant that they might as well have been riding around on palanquins while being fanned by shirtless Barmies.Miller: Jayasuriya again… his nonsense did span the ages.Gardner: Saj Mahmood’s series figures: 21 overs, 3 for 173.Fernando: Hah. I remember following that Headingley game on Cricinfo. I saw England had made 320 or something. Then checked back hours later, and it took a full two minutes for my brain to compute what was going on. Such a breathless and unceasing pants-ing.Gardner: Thirteen overs to spare!Fernando: I recall in a Jayasuriya interview a couple of years later him saying how he felt sorry for the England opening bowlers that day, because they hadn’t (at that stage) played for England again after he had shamed them so thunderously. But anyway, any other enduring memories from 2006?Miller: Oh yes. KP’s switch-hit at Edgbaston. Off Murali no less.When left is right: Kevin Pietersen launches into his switch hit at Edgbaston•Getty ImagesFernando: I recall KP’s gloriousness at Edgbaston. And that was against probably the best attack Sri Lanka ever took to England – Chaminda Vaas, Lasith Malinga, with Farveez Maharoof and Nuwan Kulasekara also around. Plus main man Murali of course.Miller: KP was magisterial that summer. His first flowering of utter greatness. Post-2005, most of England’s main players wilted for one reason or another – Flintoff, Vaughan, Trescothick, Simon Jones, ultimately Strauss too. But KP just seized his stage. He took it from Flintoff, in whose shadow he’d previously been, much to his badly disguised chagrin.Gardner: Of course, Sri Lanka’s upgrade from playing just one Test at the end of the summer was to being the hors d’oeuvre, welcomed over in May when hand-warmers were almost as useful as mystery spinners. Perhaps it shouldn’t have been a surprise that they won at Trent Bridge, because it was actually summer by then.Fernando: I just remember watching Murali bowl his first couple of overs on that fourth that day and essentially knowing the game was finished.Gardner: The doosra going through England like a week-old kebab.Fernando: But while we have time, we should probably move on to talking about my favourite England-Sri Lanka series of all – 2014.Gardner: A discussion truly worthy of the great iceberg of a rivalry – acres of beef lurking below the surface. I’m just having fun reminiscing.Fernando: Me too. There is an unreasonable amount of good cricket played by these sides. I guess they’ve often been at around the same level? Middling teams, essentially.Gardner: The 2014 tour, then. It was one of cricket’s more niche sub-genres: a two-Test classic. Payback for 2000-01? England’s erratic genius against the old-school tie of Sri Lankan conformity?Fernando: Sri Lankan teams would never do something as prosaic as interpret a series win as an serving of decades-old revenge. They’re more interested in days-old revenge. They felt properly wronged on that tour, because in the ODIs leading up to the Tests, they had run out Jos Buttler backing up and it had become the usual media frenzy. And Sachithra Senanayake was reported for his action (and few have needed to be reported more).The face of a five-for: Dhammika Prasad celebrates•Getty ImagesMiller: So many chips on so many shoulders.Gardner: I personally loved how King Sanga set out his stall well before the tour to get himself on the Lord’s honours board. Signed up for a county spell with Durham (the sort of place where Sri Lankans had previously been sent to do penance during the English spring), came in super-prepared, made scores of 147, 61, 79 and 55.Fernando: It was very on-brand for Sanga. I wonder if he would truly have felt whole as a batsman if he’d not got there that day.Miller: And there was the context of English cricket in the post-KP fall-out. As toxic as any context has been.Fernando: True, I remember every bloody conversation on tour being about KP.Miller: But thanks to KP, England had gone from being the team that the rest of the world wanted to see lose to being the team that the rest of the world half of England wanted to see lose. His saga basically foreshadowed Brexit. Alastair Cook clinging on by his fingertips, with Giles Clarke’s endorsement of him as having the “right type of family” hardly helping his cause.Gardner: I had a real soft spot for Dhammika Prasad, who took five wickets in the win at Headingley – such a meme-worthy look of delight on his face when celebrating.Fernando: I still have a soft spot. He’s one of the great over-actors in cricket. Everything from the run-up to the appeal to the celebration.Gardner: I have a fetish for unsung Sri Lankan pace bowlers: Nuwan Zoysa, Dilhara Fernando, Chanaka Welegedara, Suranga Lakmal, Nuwan Pradeep, Dhammika.Fernando: Let’s talk about Pradeep in that Lord’s match, though. As a batsman only.Gardner: Dismissed headbutting his stumps in the first innings.Miller: Happens to the best of us.See stumps, hit stumps: Nuwan Pradeep meets the stumps head-on•Getty ImagesGardner: And then not-quite dismissed off the final ball of the match.Fernando: The fact that he even had to face up was because Rangana Herath had done the most Rangana Herath thing imaginable. He was batting nicely and had five balls left to see out the draw. Stuart Broad bowls one that’s a back of a length. It kisses Herath’s glove on the way to the keeper. Herath, with a match to save, and knowing that Pradeep the hit-wicket artist was in next, walks without waiting for the umpire. Turned out his glove had been off the bat and he wasn’t out.Gardner: Herath is, to borrow the nickname given to David Steele, literally the bank clerk who went to war. Although you sense he only signed up for the free rations.Fernando: The confidence in Pradeep’s review of the lbw decision against him on the penultimate ball was memorable as well. As Chris Martin had gone by then, he was probably the biggest bunny in Test cricket. But the force with which he formed that “T” – he was almost scoffing at that decision. And he turned out to have hit the ball, of course.Gardner: Imagine if it’d been back in the days of BC and Rudi making the decisions, without DRS.Fernando: I think everyone went to Headingley thinking, wow, SL got away with one there, but they are going to get decked on this pitch (as South Asian teams are wont to do).Miller: And how we laffed. (Me included, as I was a KP-er at the time.)Fernando: Not laughing anymore? Is this like Bregret?Miller: Even I accept he would probably not be in England’s first-choice XI right now.Gardner: I’m sure we can all agree that it was better this way. Headingley was operatic in its story arc: Sri Lanka batting again 100 runs behind, fall to 277 for 7, only for an Angelo Mathews epic (and Rangana’s 48) to turn the game around. Then England begin day five five down, and not a prayer of saving the Test…Fernando: It was truly a dramatic opus. Moeen Ali was almost Dravidesque on that final day – such was the manner in which he married style and grace to a resplendent doggedness.Gardner: Instead of being flat-capped to death, it became one of the great wins by a touring side in England. But how twitchy did you get during the full 20 overs of defiance put together by England’s last-wicket pair, Fidel?Rebel in a losing cause: Moeen Ali’s maiden Test hundred couldn’t save England at Headingley in 2014•PA PhotosFernando: I was certain that the ball would come. I had thought it would be from Herath. James Anderson had to bat an entire hour. It just didn’t seem like he would. And then in the last three overs, every ball was electric. It was such a dramatic final day that you’d almost forgotten that Mathews had played the innings of his not-insubstantial career the day before.Gardner: Almost tragic, in retrospective, given how flighty Moeen’s batting has become – partly down to England making him bat No. 8 a lot of the time).Miller: It was as if the hurt of failed doggedness was too great for him to risk being dogged ever againGardner: And then it was another unheralded SL seamer who pulls it out – Shaminda Eranga with the perfectly directed bumper.Miller: We’ve completely overlooked the 2012 series, where Herath bowled Sri Lanka to victory in Galle, and another KP classic in Colombo.Fernando: There was also that one fantastic period of play from England at the SSC in 2018, where Ben Foakes and Adil Rashid combined to derail Sri Lanka.Miller: Total cricket!Fernando: I still don’t understand this term. Is other cricket less than total?Miller: That is because you are not as clever as Ed Smith. Or Sanga. Or Athers.Fernando: A veneration of the England chief selector’s unattainable intelligence is as good a place as any to end.Gardner: Great. I’m off to read up on Pradeep Mathew.Fernando: I’m going to go seethe about Brownrigg some more.Miller: And I’m off to recall Jason Brown’s performances in the tour warm-ups in 2000-01.

India seize the attitude of champions as England's focus on learning goes awry

Mitigating circumstances aplenty for England, but formulaic nature of defeat is a concern

Andrew Miller23-Mar-2021The strut of champions is an indefinable attribute for a sporting team. You can project it without actually having a trophy to back up your confidence, as Eoin Morgan’s men managed to such convincing effect in the months leading up to the 2019 World Cup. And you can lose it just as quickly, even while the big prize is still glinting in your cabinet, as Liverpool for example have been demonstrating in this season’s Premier League.So, what should we read into the post-match musings of Morgan and Virat Kohli in Pune, as the captains of England and India put very different spins on their first ODI encounter of the new World Cup cycle?Morgan, in keeping with his very procedural take on England’s white-ball evolution, insisted he was happy once again to write off a pretty thumping defeat as a “learning” experience – even if he did have to rely unusually heavily on management buzzwords at the post-match presentation, as he called on his players to “upskill”, “execute better” and “push the envelope”, among other less-than-rousing exhortations.Kohli, by contrast, was not mincing his words, or his excitement, at getting one over the World Champs in such a surging fashion.”One of our sweetest victories in recent past … I am a really proud man right now,” he gushed, with particular reference to his latest debutants, Krunal Pandya and Prasidh Krishna, who emulated the efforts of Ishan Kishan, Suryakumar Yadav and Axar Patel, among others this season, by finding their feet on the big stage at the very first time of asking.Perhaps, like Scotland’s victory at Wembley in 1967, it was a bit too convenient for Kohli to over-state such a performance at precisely the wrong moment in a World Cup cycle. But then again, England as a team and a fan-base lapped up the thrill of watching Morgan’s men go toe to toe with Australia and New Zealand in the summer that followed the 2015 World Cup. You might quibble at the timing but never at the intent, and besides, that projection of attitude didn’t exactly go to waste in the long run.Either way, the excitement, and the energy, was as palpable in India’s moment of victory as it has been absent in England’s somewhat formulaic demises in their past three games – with three failed run-chases across two formats in Ahmedabad and Pune, ostensibly their favourite form of slam-dunking a white-ball contest.Virat Kohli was pumped up by India’s performance against the World Champions•BCCIAnd yes, there are mitigating circumstances (entire bio-bubbles full of them, in fact) as well as some live and kicking evidence of the team’s enduring class and threat – most obviously in another sensational opening partnership from Jonny Bairstow and Jason Roy, an alliance that has now racked up more than 2500 runs in 42 innings, at an average in excess of 60 and a run-rate of more than seven an over.But, once that platform had been set, there’s no escaping the fact that England’s performance was defined by the follow-up that they lacked – most notably, the absence of Joe Root at No.3, who would have been able to stroll out to the middle at 135 for 1 in the 15th over, and tiptoe his way to a run-a-ball 30 before anyone had noticed he’d arrived.Instead, there was a short-lived appearance from Ben Stokes in his stead – an experiment that surely had more to do with his lack of traction during the T20I series than any suggestion that this will be his long-term berth in the 50-over format – and a pair of failed auditions for finishing roles from the returning Moeen Ali and the luckless Sam Billings, whose jarred collarbone had distressing echoes of his shoulder dislocation in the final months before the last World Cup.At least they got time in the middle, which is one of the most problematic aspects when it comes to stress-testing middle-order options in the 20-over format. And at least the absence of Jofra Archer at the death ensured that Tom Curran – and, to a less destabilising extent, Mark Wood – were exposed to the realities of death-bowling against India’s IPL-trained lower-order.Related

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But Curran, perhaps more than anyone in this England squad, is a player who leans on a mental projection of confidence as much as the skills that he can bring to an exacting role. He’s had a bruising time of it in recent months – at the IPL as much as with England – and right now, with his faith in his methods eroded, he’s living proof that the strongest teams are only as good as their weakest links.England are very capable of fighting back in this series, of course. But the manner of Tuesday’s defeat was markedly different from the round-for-round haymaking that the two teams indulged in four years ago, when England lost the ODIs 2-1 but not before they had posted scores of 350 for 7, 366 for 8 and 321 for 8 in consecutive innings – each one of them higher than the 318 they were set for victory here.And their deliberate retreat from the psychological high ground brings with it dangers of a different kind. Winning is a habit, as England discovered on their march to the summit in 2015-19, and confidence begets confidence along the way. Losing for the sake of learning, on the other hand, tends to become known simply as losing if you get too used to the feeling.”We actually don’t guard the No.1 status at all,” Morgan said. “Everything is built towards planning on being competitive at a World Cup and trying to improve our skills over that period of time.”The competitive nature in which we operate isn’t always about learning and making mistakes,” he added. “Sometimes people take how much quality you have to produce in an international game for granted. You can’t just have a good plan and win a game, or you can’t just learn along the way and lose a game. It has to work simultaneously.”

Bangladesh's new, positive outlook bodes well for their Test future

In Pallekele, they fielded five specialist bowlers and opted to bat first – not usual for the team at all

Mohammad Isam26-Apr-2021Mominul Haque, the Bangladesh Test captain, expects his team to improve in Tests if they take positive decisions. Like picking five specialist bowlers, as they did in the first Test against Sri Lanka. They also decided to bat after winning the toss. It was a rare occurrence for Bangladesh on foreign soil, considering the greenness of the Pallekele pitch, and it was another positive call.As such, the look of the pitch meant little, scores of 541 for 7 declared, 648 for 8 declared, and 100 for 2 proving that. But the two sides, especially the visitors, would not have known this when they chose their XIs or took a decision at the toss.”If you want to win a Test match in Sri Lanka, you should always have five bowlers in the team,” Haque said. “We were playing a Test after two months, so if someone bowled poorly or got injured, we would have been in more trouble. To get ahead in Test cricket, you should play with five bowlers and six batsmen.”You will always want five bowlers if you want to take 20 wickets. Also, having six batsmen makes everyone take a bit more responsibility. But, while there was some advantage in this decision, there was some risk too. We usually don’t play with six batsmen, but I think we should always play with five bowlers. That’s what big teams do.”The best teams also take first-day conditions head on. Batting first reflected the mindset of the Mominul Haque-Russell Domingo firm. So far, Bangladesh have chosen to bat on all three occasions they have won a toss in an overseas Test.Related

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Why that is interesting is that Bangladesh hadn’t done such a thing in ten Tests, in more than ten years, prior to the tour of India in November 2019, when they opted to bat in Indore and Kolkata. Between July 2009 and November 2019, Bangladesh only ever fielded first when they had the choice. Mushfiqur Rahim and Shakib Al Hasan were the captains during this period.It’s true that Bangladesh have usually batted first at home or in the subcontinent, but overall in overseas Tests, they have bowled first in 40% of the times they called the coin correctly. And never have they shown an inclination to have first strike when the pitch has looked pace-friendly.But the new way – in India – was criticised. In his first Test as captain, in Indore, Haque was left frustrated by all the questions, while Domingo was belligerent in his responses when asked the same question during the Kolkata Test.”I think when we played overseas (during those years), most of the conditions were bowler-friendly,” Habibul Bashar, the former Bangladesh captain, told ESPNcricinfo. “I think that’s why we used to prefer bowling first. But recently, we have been playing in the subcontinent where it gets difficult to bat in the fourth innings. Maybe this is a reason why we have batted first.”I wouldn’t call it a defensive mindset but we considered the given conditions. In places like West Indies, New Zealand, England and South Africa, there is sideways movement early on in Tests, so often we have tried to take advantage of those conditions.”Over the last couple of years, Bangladesh have mostly been without Shakib, but have still had a very one-dimensional spin-only bowling plan at home. Domingo has stressed on the need to have a more balanced attack at home https://www.espncricinfo.com/story/bangladesh-ditch-all-spin-home-attack-as-domingo-calls-for-balanced-pitches-1217049 so that they can have a proper bowling attack for overseas Tests.It would be interesting to see what type of pitch is dished out for the second Test in Sri Lanka, also in Pallekele, starting on Thursday, But Bangladesh would feel encouraged from the first Test. And that might push them to take more such positive, bold decisions – that is the sort of thing that helps a struggling side get better.

ICC CEO: 'We need to provide a WTC pathway to all 12 Test teams'

Geoff Allardice talks about the future of the ICC’s big events: the WTC, the World Cups and the Champions Trophy

Interview by Nagraj Gollapudi 18-Jun-20213:44

Geoff Allardice: ‘Our preference would be to have a T20 World Cup with crowds’

When he took charge as the ICC chairman last year, Greg Barclay said the World Test Championship might go back to the drawing board. You must be happy the ICC board recently agreed to retain the WTC as is for the next eight-year cycle?
Yes, we are. The finish to the World Test Championship, not just [from] a fan interest point of view, but even the players were engaged, [wondering] are we not qualifying or what do we have to do to qualify. That’s the sort of result we were after when the World Test Championship was created.In terms of the future, in our preliminary discussions with the Full Members around the Future Tours Programme [FTP] beyond 2023, there was universal acceptance that the World Test Championship should continue. The same assumptions around a two-year cycle and a final at the end of it have been supported by the Full Members. That’s been really positive.I know that midway through the cycle, with Covid rampant in so many countries, there was a lot of uncertainty around the cricket schedule and the future of the Test Championship. But we have seen the fruits of why it was created in the last few months. And, certainly, the [thinking] among the members is that it should continue.Related

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Will it continue in the same format – top nine Test teams playing six series each on a home-and-away basis?
This [second WTC] cycle [2021-23] is locked in and it’s the same format – nine teams and six series [each, over that period]. The fixtures were finalised in 2018. We are now looking at the cricket calendar beyond 2023 and the structure of the World Test Championship. We’ve got other Test-playing countries who are keen to be involved, but on the other hand, the number of series you can fit in a two-year period is probably not going to increase.The calendar is congested and some countries have introduced new T20 leagues, which takes their national team out of action for a period of time. Realistically, six series is going to be the number a team will play. How many teams in the competition is still being considered amongst the members.Afghanistan, Ireland and Zimbabwe will be hungry to prove their mettle. Is revisiting the two-tier model an option?
We had that discussion back in in 2016 or 2017. And it [the two-tier model] didn’t have support then. The most important thing is that we provide a pathway for all the Test teams. There’s nine in the Test Championship at the moment, and there’s three more who want their Test matches to have context. How that translates into competition structures is something we’re still working through.

“In our preliminary discussions with the Full Members about the FTP beyond 2023, there was universal acceptance that the World Test Championship should continue”

How do you help these three countries who want to play more Test cricket?
There’s a couple of issues. One is that the volume of Test matches per year that’s needed to be part of the World Test Championship in its current structure is six Test matches [per year], home or away. Up until now none of those three countries are playing that volume of Test cricket. So how do you get them up to a point where they are playing that volume and [have] the potential to be involved in a league in the future? They are obviously playing among themselves: Zimbabwe and Afghanistan played two Test matches recently in Abu Dhabi. You’ve got Zimbabwe having just played Pakistan [at home] as well. They have also got finite resources.They have an opportunity to qualify for World Cups and there’s expanded tournaments in the next cycle, too. They have to decide which formats they prioritise as well. Whether they play the volume of Test cricket needed to be part of the championship is one of the things we’ll be keeping an eye on over this [2021-23] cycle.Are there plans to bring back the Intercontinental Cup?

The recent decisions to expand the ODI and T20 World Cups for men and women is likely to see the focus being on developing more competitive Associate member teams in those two formats rather than the four-day format.R Ashwin suggested that to provide more context to the WTC, the series within it could perhaps be played at neutral venues. What is the primary challenge there?
The beauty of bilateral cricket is that it’s designed to satisfy the desires of cricket fans in each country. Generally, they want to watch their national team playing. Probably all of us are seduced by cricket when you are watching your heroes play, and your heroes are generally your national team players. That would be missing if you were to play the World Test Championship at neutral venues. That’s why having the same number of series home and way is important. I don’t think that the opportunity to play in front of home crowds is something the members would consider giving up.Geoff Allardice: “The only reason the Champions Trophy was discontinued between 2019 and 2023 was to create the opportunity for a T20 World Cup every two years”•Christiaan Kotze/Getty ImagesAnother factor that plays a role in bilateral series is the type of the ball used. In the WTC there are three types of balls being used across regions. Some people ask, why not have one ball, for a level-playing field.

One of the things we have always looked at over the years is, we don’t try to standardise pitches in each country, and we don’t dictate which balls members use for their conditions. When we were considering the arrangements for the final, the decision was that we would use the ball used for Test cricket in the country hosting the final. Once the final was in the UK, it was going to be a Dukes ball regardless of who was playing.Can you expand on the percentage points system that will be used to rank teams going forward in the next cycle of the WTC?
The next cycle of the WTC, starting with England vs India in August, will see a change to the points system. Instead of each series being worth the same number of points, 120, irrespective of whether the series is played over two Tests or five Tests, the next cycle will see each match being worth the same number of points – a maximum of 12 per match. Teams will be ranked on the percentage of available points they won from the matches they have played. The aim was to try and simplify the points system and to allow teams to be meaningfully compared on the table at any point, though they may have played differing numbers of matches and series.Recently the ICC board decided to expand the men’s ODI World Cup back to 14 teams and to increase the T20 World Cup to 20 teams. How are you looking to balance expansion and commercial interests? A high number of mismatches was among the reasons why the ICC decided it limit the ODI World Cup to ten teams after the 2015 edition.
That’s been one of the discussions over the last few months. Do you structure the events to grow the sport and provide opportunity for your member countries to compete in the flagship tournaments? Or are they primarily an opportunity to drive finances? They are always going to be both, but the view of our members – and it was quite a strong view across both the Chief Executives Committee and the [ICC] board – was that we were looking to expand our ODI World Cup and the T20 World Cup as well.Over the last couple of years, the changes around the structure for T20 cricket have been quite significant: in terms of giving all the countries T20I status for the men’s and women’s national teams; to have a global ranking system for men’s and women’s T20I teams; to have a T20 World Cup every two years for all of our members to aspire to; and to have a qualification pathway that makes participation in the major events achievable.

“Realistically, six series is going to be the number a team will play over the two-year WTC cycle”

So in the future, it might be only two steps, at worse three, for any country to get into a T20 World Cup. Those changes around expanding are very much looking to the future of the game and trying to create incentives in the pathway that drives competition.The board also decided to bring back the Champions Trophy, which was stopped after the 2017 edition. Former ICC CEO Dave Richardson said in 2018 that the tournament would clash with the 13-team ODI Super League. In the past, too, Full Member boards like the BCCI had said they did not want a Champions Trophy because it would hurt their bilateral revenues. So what made the ICC board bring back the tournament?
It provides a high-quality event in the ODI format at a time when there’s a lot of T20 cricket. The only reason it was discontinued between 2019 and 2023 was to create the opportunity for a T20 World Cup every two years. We had a very successful Champions Trophy in 2017 from all measures – whether it was on-field, attendance, ratings.It was a question of whether that event in the calendar added to the ODI pathway, which we felt it did. Again, it’s the same format: eight teams, two groups of four – so a short, sharp, high-quality ODI event. It provides a focal point for that format between World Cups.So what happens to the ODI Super League now?
Like the Test championship, the ODI Super League is one of those points of discussion with the members around the next FTP. The ODI Super League was about to start pretty much at the time that Covid struck and it’s been significantly disrupted. As we push towards the [2023] ODI World Cup and series start happening on a more frequent basis, the context around those matches will be important. Eight teams out of 13 are qualifying for a ten-team World Cup in India in 2023. What it looks like qualifying for a 14-team World Cup in 2027 still needs to be decided.Can you talk about the removal of the bidding process to determine the hosts for global events? It appeared as if the ICC had made a u-turn on what had been originally agreed in October 2019?
The hosts’ [selection] process is now underway. The most important part was finalising the calendar of events and the time of year in which those events would be played. What we have asked for is a preliminary technical submission. Which events is a particular member interested in hosting? Do they plan on hosting it on their own? Are they planning on hosting it in combination with another member country? Which venues are they proposing to use?On playing WTC matches at neutral venues: “I don’t think that the opportunity to play in front of home crowds is something the members would consider giving up”•Getty ImagesThe reason that finalising the calendar was important was because the number of matches and the length of the tournament has a knock-on effect on the number of venues used. The number of matches in the ODI World Cup and the T20 World Cup are quite high – 54 and 55 matches respectively. That’s going to take hosts with a fair degree of venue infrastructure to deliver those tournaments. With more teams, that also means training facilities and everything else. So there are going to be other events better suited to countries with a small number of venues.The Champions Trophy is potentially where venues are much more manageable, from the point of view of a host. We will get these preliminary submissions, look at the time of year, and how suitable playing cricket is at that time of year for each of the countries. Then we will invite a small number to put together a detailed submission, including all the necessary commitments a host needs to make to the ICC. Then the board will make a decision in September.This process is for men’s events?
Yeah. The process has started for the eight senior men’s events. For women’s events, Under-19s, Test championship finals, the process will kick off later in the year.So there will be no bidding process for the men’s events?
Each interested country will be invited to put in a submission. In terms of bidding, if you’re saying, putting together the best proposal or the best submission, then yes, absolutely [there is bidding]. If you’re implying it’s just whoever gives the most money, that will not be the case. That’s not dissimilar to what happened in 2006, when potential hosts for the cycle from 2007 to 2015 needed to put in submissions.

Steven Smith's vice-captaincy may not be universally popular, but it makes sense

Enough time has passed since the ball-tampering for him to be an injury away from leading the team

Alex Malcolm27-Nov-2021Despite being only “a heartbeat away” from the United States Presidency, John Nance Garner, Vice-President under Franklin D. Roosevelt, once described his job as “not worth a bucket of warm piss”.There will be some in Australia who feel the same way about Steven Smith’s leadership with the anger of ‘Sandpaper-gate’ and what he supposedly did to the once sacred office of Australia Test captain still fresh in their minds.But as of today, Smith has become one of the most powerful vice-captains in Australian Test history and is only a hamstring away from the top job once more.Pat Cummins’ appointment as Australia’s 47th Test captain, while widely heralded, comes with the knowledge that fast bowlers are fragile. And while Cummins has played in Australia’s last 20 consecutive Test matches and 33 of the last 35, he did miss 64 after his debut as an 18-year-old due to an endless string of injuries.Australia have rifled through Test vice-captains in the last three years since Smith was last captain, with Josh Hazlewood, Mitchell Marsh, Travis Head and Cummins himself all taking turns in a game of musical chairs with Cricket Australia feeling safe in the knowledge that nobody would have to step in at short notice. But the time has come for Cummins and they have appointed Smith as his deputy knowing full well he is likely to be called upon to lead again.There will be a great many who feel uncomfortable about this fact, especially given he has ascended to the role after his successor, Tim Paine, has resigned in different yet equally ignominious circumstances.Related

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But the fact that Cummins has handpicked Smith as his deputy, adamant that he needs Smith’s experience and guidance, is a sure sign of how far Smith has come. He is not the 26-year-old batting virtuoso who knew nothing but cricket when he was first appointed permanently in 2015, nor is he the 28-year-old burnt-out leader of 2018 who had become isolated from his teammates, and subconsciously or otherwise a little threatened by vice-captain David Warner’s performance as T20I skipper.Smith is now 32 and has learned some of the harshest lessons any cricketer could ever be made to learn about leadership and life in general.It would take the coldest of hearts and narrowest of minds to think that he hasn’t learned from those experiences and isn’t better for them. Team-mates speak of him in a different light now. Heading back into the rank and file of the Australian team has been good for his soul. He has become a more willing participant in the fun and frivolity in the rooms. The experiences of Cape Town, and to a far lesser degree but significant in its own way, not being the best player in the T20 World Cup winning side, has taught him humility and given him a different perspective on what the team needs from him.Smith noted as much when he spoke alongside Cummins after his appointment.

This will be a tightrope for Smith to walk, to do the job his captain asks of him without making the team feel like there are two skippers out there at once pulling the ship in different directions

“I’m truly honoured,” Smith said. “I think there’ll be some negativity from some people around it. I understand that and I get that. But for me, I know that I’ve grown a great deal over the last three or four years. I’m a more rounded individual. And in turn, I think it’s turned me into a better leader and I’m excited to be in this position next to Patrick.”Smith is the most experienced Australian vice-captain in terms of leadership credentials since Adam Gilchrist was Ricky Ponting’s deputy. The power dynamics between captain and vice-captain have been sources of tension within the Australian rooms ever since. Michael Clarke’s relationship with Ponting, and then his own relationship with Shane Watson, as well as Smith and Warner’s dynamic all prime examples.Australia’s philosophy on the vice-captaincy has been to use it to develop young leaders. But having aspiring leaders in the role can often be problematic.Vice-captaincy isn’t a warm bucket of you know what, but it is a very unusual role in a cricket team. While they are officially a leader, the job requires subtlety and subservience. Vice-captain’s need to lead without undermining the captain. They need to be a conduit between the players and the captain while appearing to side with both. It requires emotional intelligence as much as tactical nous, and ego must be checked at the door.Steven Smith will need to walk a fine line in a more extensive vice-captaincy role•Cricket Australia via Getty ImagesIt is a role that Smith can do better than anyone currently in the team. Having led Australia 93 times in all formats and 34 times in Test matches he knows better than anyone what a captain needs from his deputy and what a team needs from theirs.But Smith has a greater challenge in that Cummins has asked him to be “an elevated vice-captain”. Cummins knows his role as the team’s talismanic fast bowler will require all his energy at times and has already declared that Smith will be called upon like no Australian vice-captain has been before, to make tactical decisions and bowling changes while the captain is on the field.This will be a tightrope for Smith to walk, to do the job his captain asks of him without making the team feel like there are two skippers out there at once pulling the ship in different directions.”I’m completely guided by Patrick and whatever he needs out on the field,” Smith said. “That’s my job. If there’s times where Patrick hands to me and wants me to take over and do some different things out in the field, I’m there for that. My job is just to support Patrick as much as I can and ensure that you know, we’re getting the best out of the team.”It will be a high-wire act, and there will be a great many waiting for the fall.But as another US President Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt, once said, “It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena.”Steve Smith is now back in the leadership arena.

Young openers earn reward while second chance looms for Renshaw and Maddinson

They may not force their way in this season against England but opportunity could come next year

Andrew McGlashan19-Nov-2021Henry Hunt
The South Australia opener has made a big impression over the last two seasons to vault himself into national consideration at the age of 24. He scored his maiden century in his fourth first-class match in 2019 and this season he has made two hundreds, including a superb 134 against Tasmania in bowler-dominated conditions out of a total of 220. It matches the two he made last summer when he was the standout performer in another poor season for South Australia and the four centuries have come in his last 13 first-class innings.”I think Henry’s form over the last couple of weeks has been fantastic, but in many respects it’s backed up what we’ve been seeing from him,” national selector George Bailey said. “He’s well organised, his game’s in really good order, he’s got a lot of fight in the way he goes about it, he’s determined and he’s a gun fielder.Related

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Bryce Street
The left hander has made a name for himself at the top of Queensland’s order with his stickability at the crease but this season he has also worked on expanding his stroke range as witness during his century against Tasmania which included the first sixes of his first-class career. Three of his four hundreds have come from more than 300 deliveries while the other took 281. He also stood up to New South Wales’ Test-strength attack in last season’s Sheffield Shield final with 46 off 203 deliveries which allowed Marnus Labuschagne to take charge. In recent weeks his form has tailed a little – a top score of 23 in his last five innings – but Street’s qualities remain sought-after in this era.”For a young guy, Streety is bloody difficult to dismiss and that’s a great trait as an opening batsman,” Bailey said. “And the flow-on benefits of how hard it is to get him out is that his teammates are often the beneficiaries of his hard work, so we love the determination, we love the grit he brings.”Which of Nic Maddinson, Bryce Street, Matt Renshaw and Henry Hunt could break into the Test side?•Getty ImagesMatt Renshaw

Renshaw made a terrific start to his Test career including a big century against Pakistan at the SCG in 2017, but has not played since being hastily called into the Johannesburg Test in early 2018 following the fallout from the ball-tampering scandal. He was in line to play against Pakistan in the UAE but suffered a concussion. A difficult couple of seasons followed and he was dropped from the Queensland side then took a break from the game. He has returned and reinvented himself into a middle-order batter with considerable success averaging 55.92 since the start of last season. The selectors have an eye on his skill against spin with the subcontinent tours scheduled for next year.”I think he’s worked his way really nicely into the start of this season, he looks really at home in that number five role and he’s an excellent player of spin,” Bailey said.However, speaking this week, former captain Steve Waugh said he thought Renshaw should return as an opening batter. “I don’t know why he is batting in the lower order because he did a great job for Australia opening He’s got a good technique but for some reason he is not the flavour of the day. But I thought he made an amazing Test debut under lights in Adelaide in difficult conditions. He scored slowly but survived. He hasn’t got the credits he deserves while playing. I wouldn’t rule him out.”Nic Maddinson

Maddinson’s career has been rejuvenated by his move to Victoria where he has averaged 63.41 to put himself firmly in the frame for a Test recall having struggled during his first opportunity in 2016 (he made his debut in the same match as Renshaw). He was the closest of the Australia A group of batters to earning a place in the main squad. Chris Rogers, the Victoria coach, has spoken of the maturity Maddinson has brought to his game on and off the field, something further emphasised by his recent promotion to captain of Melbourne Renegades in the BBL. His innings of 87 against New South Wales earlier this season came in for significant acclaim in a match where few other batters could score as freely and he followed that with a century at the MCG. He has been troubled by the short ball during his career but has worked on that aspect of his game.”It’s one of those things, you get to the second half of your career and you start to probably look at things differently,” Rogers said this week. “You think more about your game, how you’re structuring your innings, all those kind of things. You probably balance your personal life out a bit as well. He just seems really calm, that’s the thing that stands out for me. From the innings I’ve seen this year he’s been completely calm from ball one, and he’s looked like a senior player, an old pro, and that doesn’t come easily.”

Travis Head grabs chance to make a place of his own

Batter produces the innings of his Test career in a thrilling final-session counterattack

Andrew McGlashan09-Dec-2021Travis Head knew well before the opening day in Brisbane that he had earned the nod for Australia’s final batting position, but No. 5 remained the most debatable spot in the XI. That was until today when Head produced the innings of his Test career to halt an England fightback in a thrilling final-session counterattack.England’s attack was on its knees late in the day, two of the bowlers were limping and the ball was old. But this was a brutal momentum-seizing innings of which Adam Gilchrist would have been proud. When Head on-drove Chris Woakes in the first over with the second new ball he brought up his third Test hundred from 85 balls with all the runs coming the final session. It was the third-fastest Ashes century after Gilchrist’s 57-ball onslaught at the WACA in 2006-07 and Gilbert Jessop’s 76 balls in 1902.”It’s still a pinch-myself sort of thing, still can’t quite work out what transpired over the last couple of hours,” Head said. “It’s an amazing feeling to get a Test hundred. Think I said to Starcy [Mitchell Starc] as it happened, I couldn’t believe what was going on. I rode my luck in parts but was able to put Australia in a great position and very privileged to be able to do that.”Related

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There was a lot in favour of Usman Khawaja’s credentials for this place in the line-up, but Australia’s selectors have always felt there is plenty of growth to come from Head. Before this display his record was far-from shabby with two hundreds, including a Boxing Day century against New Zealand, but there hadn’t quite been the defining innings.His first incarnation as a Test cricketer was briefly interrupted when he was left out of the final match against England in 2019 when Mitchell Marsh was preferred to balance the side. He was back for the following summer against New Zealand and Pakistan, but last season against India was dropped after two Tests. He was in the squad again for the postponed tour of South Africa thanks to prolific returns for South Australia.A disappointing season for Sussex was a speed bump, but he was consistent in the Sheffield Shield this summer including a century in the game before the squad assembled in Queensland. There was a sense, however, that he needed to make the most of this opportunity.While England ended the day looking broken, that was not the case when Head walked to crease. Steven Smith had fallen in a superb spell from Mark Wood. Head hadn’t faced a ball when they walked off for tea, and a few moments after the break he watched David Warner drive to mid-off and Cameron Green shoulder arms at his first ball. At 195 for 5 England had a chance of keeping the lead to manageable proportions, but in the space of two hours they were left in the sort of bedraggled state of many of their predecessors.Head flashed and missed at his second ball after tea, a 146kph/91mph flyer from Wood, and his first boundary was a squared-up thick edge that evaded the fifth slip of England’s packed cordon. Three balls later he wasn’t far from guiding one off the face to the catchers. But Joe Root couldn’t keep using Wood, Woakes and Ollie Robinson all the time and turned back to a clearly struggling Ben Stokes in the 62nd over. Two half-trackers and a ball on the pads and Head was away.Travis Head played a free-flowing innings•Getty ImagesStill, when the last recognised batter – Alex Carey – fell, he was only on 29. In the next over he took a painful blow on the arm from Wood which for a moment looked like causing significant discomfort but he shook it off swiftly. A full toss from Wood was driven through cover to bring up a fifty off 51 balls – his next half-century took just 34 deliveries.”I got opportunities to score and I was able to take them today and put pressure back on bowlers,” he said. “I took some chances along the way especially into the new ball but with my technique and mentally I feel really composed. To be able to be in that moment is a great feeling. I found the first 20 runs really, really tough. The game opened up and I was able to take opportunity… I put myself in that position which was pleasing.”Like the batters before him he plundered Jack Leach, aided by four overthrows as England became increasingly ragged and forlorn. In many ways it was the type of innings that first made his name when he emerged into Australia’s limited-overs set-up in 2016. Sometimes in the early stages of his Test career his eagerness to play shots has proved his downfall; it may now have been the making of him.He looked keen to reach the milestone before the new ball, but no matter. After leaving the first delivery from Woakes he met the next with a straight bat and sent it rocketing down the ground. The helmet came off, the arms held aloft, team-mates and the crowd were on their feet. There was a scary moment to follow when he was felled by a beamer from Wood, but the glove had taken enough of the sting from the delivery that it ended up being a glancing blow to the chin. He was back on his feet having floored England.

How South Africa won the pace-bowling battle at the Wanderers

Thanks to their being a lot taller than India’s attack, they were able to extract more out of a pitch with extra bounce

Karthik Krishnaswamy07-Jan-20224:51

Manjrekar: ‘India’s bowlers attacked the stumps too much’

A decade from now, Dean Elgar’s unbeaten fourth-innings 96 will probably come to dominate recollections of the Wanderers Test of January 2022. Understandably. Apart from being a high-quality knock on a challenging surface, it was also the standout performance on the winning side, the number that leaps most readily out of the scorecard.But, as is true of all Test matches, the key difference between the teams probably lay in the bowling. South Africa took 20 wickets in 123.2 overs, and India only 13 in 147.2 overs.Having been neck-and-neck with South Africa over the first three innings of the match, India fell away in the fourth, as their bowlers struggled to create chances on days three and four. Across both innings, their experienced strike bowlers, Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Shami, picked up just one and three wickets respectively, and South Africa may have won by an even bigger margin had Shardul Thakur not turned in the performance of his life and picked up seven first-innings wickets.It wasn’t that India bowled poorly, as such; for all their lack of wickets, Bumrah and Shami beat the bat plenty of times, particularly during a riveting second morning. But there was an argument to be made that South Africa’s quicks were simply more potent on this Wanderers surface.Height matters
When India toured South Africa four years ago and lost the Test series 2-1, commentator Mike Haysman highlighted a key difference between the two teams’ pace attacks: the height of their release points.Haysman observed that during the second Test in Centurion, the average release point of South Africa’s seamers had been roughly 20cm higher than that of their India counterparts, and that this gave them a 15cm advantage in bounce by the time the ball reached the other end. Inconsistent bounce had been a feature of that Centurion pitch, and South Africa’s victory owed a lot to their bowlers’ greater ability to exploit it.Four years later, the composition of both pace attacks has changed, but South Africa’s height advantage hasn’t. Marco Jansen, Lungi Ngidi, Kagiso Rabada and Duanne Olivier are all over six feet tall, the first three significantly so. All of India’s quicks are under six feet tall.ESPNcricinfo LtdAnd this was reflected in the wicket-taking strategies employed by the two teams. Short leg was routinely in place when South Africa bowled, and their quicks looked to hit the pitch hard and find extra bounce from just short of a length to test both shoulders of the bat. Cheteshwar Pujara, Ajinkya Rahane and Hanuma Vihari, India’s Nos. 3, 4 and 5, were all consumed by extra bounce in their first innings, at a time when the bounce was both steep and spongy.Thakur’s first-innings success was aided by a crack that he routinely aimed at, but while he got a few balls to rear at the batters, he predominantly looked to use the crack to extract sideways movement rather than bounce. This was the main mode of operation for Shami, Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj as well. They also looked to swing the ball, with Shami often canting the seam towards the slips rather than deliver it bolt upright as he traditionally does.You can’t fault India’s quicks for bowling like this, of course; they were simply backing their strengths. But on this Wanderers pitch, you were probably better off being a hit-the-deck bowler rather an exponent of swing and seam.Rahul Dravid, India’s coach, agreed that South Africa’s height advantage had proved useful to them.”It just felt like the ball seemed to misbehave a little bit more for them, and that could be [because of the] fact of the height,” he said during his post-match press conference. “On up-and-down wickets sometimes just having that extra height might tend to make a little bit of a difference, so it just felt for us [that] the balls didn’t misbehave as much.”Some did, of course there were some balls that did misbehave even for us, but probably not as many as it did for them. I guess they have that natural height advantage. We are bowlers who tend to pitch the ball up a little bit more, we look for swing, we kiss the surface a little bit more.”South Africa’s bowlers, who are much taller than India’s, were able to exploit the variation in bounce at the Wanderers•AFP via Getty ImagesDampened spirits
Dravid’s quote didn’t end there.”So yeah, for us, obviously having to bowl with a slightly wetter ball today meant that area of being able to swing the ball probably was slightly negated a bit, but yeah, it just felt like maybe that is a bit of an advantage in these kind of conditions, when the ball does go up and down, having that little bit of height advantage does make a difference.”India began day four needing eight wickets. South Africa began needing 122 runs. The home team were probably already in the advantage, but the weather would cement this advantage further. After the first two sessions were washed out, play began with the outfield safe to run around on, but still slightly damp.The ball picked up moisture whenever it rolled into the outfield, and this, as Dravid observed, reduced the amount of swing India could generate.It also negated their spinner. R Ashwin had bowled a probing spell on the third evening, dismissing Keegan Petersen and causing Rassie van der Dussen enough discomfort to get Rishabh Pant cackling excitedly behind the stumps. When the fourth day finally began, India started with Ashwin from one end, knowing that the ball wouldn’t remain dry for long.”We saw the ball spinning yesterday for Ashwin,” Dravid said. “We wanted to get him in [when] the ball was dry, to see in the first couple of overs if he was able to get some spin, especially when the wicket had been under covers. For a while, sometimes if it’s a little damp, and with a dry ball, maybe we felt that he could get a wicket in the first two or three overs.”We tried that because we knew as the ball got wet and damp, it would become very difficult for the spinner to come into the game, and we saw that, so that was a little disappointing as well. Ashwin bowled beautifully yesterday, bowled a really good spell yesterday, and we thought he was troubling van der Dussen, so the gamble was to try and give him the dry ball, first thing, and see if he could get a wicket in the first few overs, and then see if that could do things, but once that didn’t happen we obviously went back to the traditional seam-up option.”South Africa got to use the heavy roller twice in the fourth innings, which made the pitch slightly easier to bat•AFP/Getty ImagesWas winning the toss inconsequential?
While uneven bounce was evident right through the Test, batting didn’t seem to get significantly more difficult as it progressed. The control figures for the match told a tale – from roughly 82% during both teams’ first innings, it fell to 75.6% in India’s second innings, before rising to 84.7% during South Africa’s chase.It would seem, then, that the pitch did not deteriorate to any great extent, negating whatever advantage India gained from winning the toss and batting first. But, as we’ve explored earlier, India may have simply been less skilled at exploiting the uneven bounce on offer, and the effects of rain may have also negated their strengths on the final day.South Africa also got to use the heavy roller twice during their chase: once before their innings began, and once again at the start of day four, at a time when they had already seen off 40 overs and got nearly halfway to their target.At the end of day three, Cheteshwar Pujara had observed that the heavy roller had been giving the batting team a window of time during which inconsistent bounce was relatively more manageable.”I feel when you take a heavy roller, the pitch settles a bit, it takes a little bit of time for the cracks to open up,” he had said. “There are some dents as well, so when there’s a heavy roller, [the pitch] settles down a bit, but after an hour or so we start getting variable bounce.”For all this, though, luck may also have played a part. In their first innings, India played 69 false shots and lost 10 wickets. During South Africa’s chase, India induced 62 false shots and only picked up three wickets. Yes, South Africa’s quicks probably exploited the conditions better than India’s did, but the difference may not have been quite so stark.India’s bowlers certainly made South Africa feel uncomfortable, but that didn’t translate into wickets•AFP/Getty ImagesA twinge, a body blow
While India have won Test matches all over the world of late, a common thread has run through quite a few of their defeats: a relative lack of fast-bowling depth compared to their opposition. Christchurch 2020 and Southampton 2021 were notable examples of this.India shouldn’t have had that issue at the Wanderers, since their attack and South Africa’s had the same composition, with four quicks and a spinner. But India’s bowling depth was compromised late on day two, when Siraj pulled up with a hamstring strain while bowling his fourth over of the match.Siraj soldiered on gamely, earning Dravid’s praise for his willingness to bowl through pain, but only sent down 15.5 overs across the two innings. This led to increased workloads for Bumrah and Shami, in particular. They bowled 38 overs each during the match, broken up into longer spells than initially planned, probably, with smaller gaps in between. That effort is bound to show as the series progresses.And while he bowled well, India also had to use Ashwin for a greater proportion of their overs than they may have ideally wanted to on this pitch, particularly in the first innings. Ashwin sent down 10 first-innings overs and 21.4 overall. South Africa’s spinner, Keshav Maharaj, bowled just one over in the entire match.

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