Wolvaardt and Ismail in the top 10 in women's T20 rankings

England’s Sophie Ecclestone becomes the second bowler ever to break the 800 rating points mark

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Feb-2023South Africa’s on-field gains during a sensational and emotional Women’s T20 World Cup campaign have been supplemented by those from off the field as well with two of their key players rising to significant positions in the ICC rankings. Laura Wolvaardt, who finished the tournament as its highest run-getter, is now at No. 6 among the batters while Shabnim Ismail, who produced the spell that turned the semi-final, is up to No. 7 among the bowlers.This South African women’s team became the first from their country to make the final of a cricket World Cup at the senior level. They got there despite starting the competition with a loss and facing must-win situations even before the knockout stages ever began. Rising to that challenge were the same players who have now been recognised with better seeding by the ICC.Wolvaardt struck half-centuries in the final and in a make-it-or-break-it game against Bangladesh and as a result has moved up eight places. Her opening partner Tazmin Brits, who was named player of the semi-final for a half-century and four catches, is up five places to No. 12. Among the bowlers, Ismail, having been down at No. 11, has broken into the top 10 and her new-ball partner Ayabonga Khaka is hot on her heels, rising from 21st to 14th.Related

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Australia who won the Women’s T20 World Cup for the third time in a row witnessed gains among their own players as well. Ashleigh Gardner, already the top-ranked allrounder, consolidated her position by scoring 110 runs and grabbing 10 wickets in the tournament. Also, with seven wickets at an economy rate of 5, Darcie Brown moved up five spots to No. 3 on the bowlers’ rankings.England’s Sophie Ecclestone remains No. 1 and having had a good tournament herself – 11 wickets in five matches – she is now just the second person in history to go past 800 rating points in the Women’s T20I bowlers’ rankings. Australia fast bowler Megan Schutt peaked at 805 in 2019 and is the only other woman to reach that barrier. Ecclestone is currently on 801 rating points.These ranking updates came on the same day it was confirmed that Australia, South Africa, England, India, New Zealand and West Indies have earned automatic qualification to the 2024 Women’s T20 World Cup.

Barcelona left with Lionel Messi advice regret after former transfer target leads Tottenham to Europa League glory

Barcelona may be left ruing a transfer decision that saw them decline Lionel Messi's advice to sign one of his Argentina team-mates.

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Lionel Messi wanted Barcelona to sign Cristian RomeroVoted Serie A's best defender in 2021Joined Spurs instead & won Europa LeagueFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

According to Xavier Bosch (h/t MundoDeportivo), before Messi joined PSG, he wanted Barcelona president to sign Cristian Romero, who was playing for Atalanta at that time and had been voted Serie A's best defender for the 2020-21 season.

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Messi wanted to bring in the Argentine defender, as he considered him a necessity for the club at a time when the Catalan side was experiencing shortcomings in defence, with Gerard Pique and Samuel Umtiti both out of action. However, the Barcelona president did not heed Messi's suggestion, and the Argentine star later went on to sign for PSG in 2021.

DID YOU KNOW?

Romero captained Tottenham Hotspur to their first European title in 17 years. The Argentine international was named the tournament's best player by the UEFA Technical Observer Group. Romero was also named as the man of the match in the Europa final against Manchester United in Bilbao.

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Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT FOR CRISTIAN ROMERO?

The Argentine hero has been a transfer target for Atletico Madrid and Real Madrid. Reportedly, coach Xabi Alonso is a "big fan" of the Spurs defender. Atletico's Julian Alvarez has openly shown hope and wishes that the Argentine joins Atleti. The Premier League concludes on 25 May, with Spurs set to face Brighton.

Emi Martinez breaks silence on his future after appearing to bid farewell to Aston Villa fans as Man Utd transfer links intensify

Aston Villa goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez has broken his silence on his future as links with Manchester United continue to intensify.

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Martinez linked with move to Man UtdAppeared to bid farewell to Villa fans after Spurs gameSpeaks out on his future Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Martinez has slowly but surely become one of the best shot-stoppers in the game after swapping Arsenal for Aston Villa in 2020, impressing in the Premier League while also helping Argentina win the 2022 World Cup. As such, the goalkeeper has often been linked with top clubs; however, the likelihood of the 32-year-old leaving Villa has never been higher than it is heading into this summer transfer window.

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Martinez appeared to bid farewell to Aston Villa fans after their penultimate Premier League game of the season against Tottenham amid links with Manchester United and Barcelona. While the Catalan giants have decided to move for Espanyol goalkeeper Joan Garcia, the Red Devils still seem to be mulling a swoop for Martinez, and the Argentine has now broken his silence over his future.

GettyWHAT MARTINEZ SAID

Speaking to the media after reporting for international duty, Martinez said: "My future? I don’t know, I come here to play for the national team, and that’s the only thing that matters to me right now.

"Do I want to move to a new club? The transfer window just opened, so there’s still a long way to go."

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WHAT NEXT FOR MARTINEZ?

For now, Martinez's focus will be on Argentina's upcoming World Cup qualifiers, despite the defending champions having already confirmed their spot in the 2026 tournament. However, after the two games against Chile and Colombia, Martinez will be free to make a final decision on his future.

Sam and Tom Curran thrash fifties as Surrey thrash Middlesex

Brothers put on 118-run stand to give south Londoners spoils on derby night at Lord’s

ECB Reporters Network25-May-2023The Curran brothers Sam and Tom put Middlesex’s bowlers to the sword as Surrey won the T20 Blast London derby at Lord’s by 77 runs.Sam, who’d hot-footed it back to London from an underwhelming stint at the IPL with Punjab Kings, took out his frustration on the Seaxes with 68 off 47 balls, including two big sixes in Surrey’s total of 199 for 6. Tom, playing these days under a white-ball only contract, was if anything even more belligerent with 50 off 33 balls with eight fours as the siblings added 118 in 11 overs. Will Jacks earlier blasted a quickfire 43.Three wickets in the final over for Tom Helm gave him 3 for 38, while left-arm spinner Nathan Fernandes took 1 for 27 from three overs on debut.Jacks then starred with ball in hand, returning 3 for 17, backed up by Gus Atkinson’s 3 for 20 as the hosts could only muster 126 in reply despite some defiant striking by Max Holden who top scored with 43.Jacks, who had made two swashbuckling half-centuries in his last three innings against Middlesex at Lord’s in the format, came out swinging from ball one and while he played and missed at a few the England man took heavy toll of a full toss from Helm, belting it back past the bowler for four.Teenager Fernandes, thrown on in the powerplay, struck second ball when pinch-hitter Sunil Narine hit him straight to cover, but Jacks sent two drag-downs from legspinner Luke Hollman into the stands, before a brilliant catch by Helm on the fence at long-on ended his revelry.The Currans’ progress was steady initially, but the 12th over bowled by Ryan Higgins changed the complexion as Tom Curran dispatched the allrounder to all parts, hitting five fours in succession. Not to be upstaged Sam Curran then cut loose, denting Fernandes’s excellent figures to that point with consecutive sixes.Blake Cullen, back on Middlesex first-team duty for the first time in more than a year, was rusty and his 11-ball over, including a waist-high full toss and four wides only added to Surrey’s momentum.The 100-stand came in 56 balls, and we were in the penultimate over by the time Tom top-edged a steepling catch back to grateful bowler Higgins. Sam, too, left before the end as the south Londoners finished one shy of 200.For Middlesex much depended on skipper Stephen Eskinazi, but he departed for just 1, run out following a mix-up from the fourth ball of the innings.The exciting Joe Cracknell deposited a short one from Sean Abbot into the second tier of the Mound Stand only to perish trying to repeat the feat meaning both openers were gone with 27 on the board.Pieter Malan, back from injury, also found the stands before departing to Atkinson for a breezy 30, and Jacks then struck twice in his first over, removing the dangerous Higgins, caught at mid-off before bowling Hollman round his legs.Throughout this period Holden had hit bravely, smiting two big sixes at a strike rate approaching 200, but when Narine bowled him for 43 the game was up.

Ollie Robinson makes way for Mark Wood as England retain two spinners

Bashir and Hartley both retained in spite of expectation of seam-friendly conditions in Dharamsala

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Mar-20243:07

Harmison: No surprise that Robinson is out

England have opted against reinforcing their seam-bowling contingent for the fifth Test against India in Dharamsala, and have named an XI featuring just one change – Mark Wood for Ollie Robinson – from the side that lost by five wickets in Ranchi last month.The talk in the lead-up to the Test had centred around the likelihood that England would play at least one extra seamer, given the cold conditions anticipated in Dharamsala, and the fact that the surface for this match is the same as was used when all 36 wickets fell to seam in a recent Ranji Trophy match between Himachal Pradesh and Delhi.However, following a final inspection of the wicket, carried out by the management team of Ben Stokes, Brendon McCullum, Marcus Trescothick and Jeetan Patel, England have opted to retain the balance that kept them competitive in Ranchi, with Shoaib Bashir’s offspin retained alongside Tom Hartley’s left-arm spin.Related

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That is despite a cut to Bashir’s spinning finger that he sustained in the course of his 70-over workload in the fourth Test, but which England do not believe will hinder him unduly. However, they are a little wary of stomach complaints which meant neither Bashir nor Robinson were present at England’s last training session of the tour.Both woke up on Wednesday morning with “slightly upset stomachs”, and the decision was made to leave them back at the team hotel to prevent the bug spreading to rest of the squad.”You don’t want to put anybody at risk so we’ve decided to keep them away from the team,” Stokes explained. “It’s the sensible thing to do. When you’ve got so many people contained in the same space all the time you want to limit the chance of it spreading. So to keep the two guys who are slightly unwell back at the hotel away from the guys is the sensible thing to do.”Stokes strongly believes Bashir will get over the illness, with no contingency plan set in stone. Fast bowler Gus Atkinson and Dan Lawrence, who bowls part-time off spin, are the other two members of the now 14-man group.”If that’s the case [that Bashir is too ill to play], we’ll have to consider what we think is best. I’ve not thought too far ahead. It’s not a major issue, we just wanted to safeguard against anything spreading to someone else.”Robinson’s omission, a decision made before Wednesday morning, comes after a fallow performance in the fourth Test, in which he suffered a back strain while batting in England’s first innings and was not used at all in India’s successful run-chase. He makes way for Wood, England’s fastest bowler, who was rested in Ranchi after a heavy workload at Rajkot.”It looks like a wicket that could have a bit of pace and carry in it,” said Stokes. “Having a fresh Mark Wood on a wicket that you feel is going to offer some pace – it’s something that’s been consistent whenever we’ve gone with two seamers. Looking at having a bowler like Jimmy but wanting to have some pace and firepower to break the game open. With having two spinners, it allows us to play either conditions at different times throughout the Test.”The absence of a specialist third seamer hints at a return to bowling fitness for England’s captain, Stokes, who has been increasing his workloads in the nets on this tour, having undergone knee surgery over the winter. Stokes, however, dismissed that notion: “Every time we’ve picked the team this tour it hasn’t been with any expectations of me bowling. If I do bowl any overs in this game it will again be a bonus.”England’s attack will once again be led by James Anderson, who will be playing his fourth consecutive match of the tour at the age of 41, and who needs two more wickets to reach 700 in Tests.”It’s phenomenal to think about, especially as a seam bowler,” said Stokes of the milestone. “An amazing career to date, and I can’t see him stopping.”I have played with Jimmy for a long time and I’ve never seen him as physically fit as he looks right now. Being 41, showing that hunger and desire to get better every single day is a testament to his attitude and commitment to the game.”England XI 1 Zak Crawley, 2 Ben Duckett, 3 Ollie Pope, 4 Joe Root, 5 Jonny Bairstow, 6 Ben Stokes (capt), 7 Ben Foakes (wk), 8 Tom Hartley, 9 Mark Wood, 10 James Anderson, 11 Shoaib Bashir

Euro 2025 Team of the Tournament: Three Lionesses feature in GOAL's best XI – but there's no room for Ballon d'Or contenders Aitana Bonmati and Mariona Caldentey

England beat Spain on penalties to retain their European title, and it is no surprise that those two are the best best-represented nations in our XI

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This summer's European Championship was certainly a memorable one, with more goals scored than ever before, extra-time and penalties deciding games at an historic rate and the tournament's attendance records tumbling in a month that ended with England retaining their European title, thanks to a dramatic shootout win over Spain in Basel on Sunday.

It was a tournament that saw such a variety of players soak up the spotlight along the way. There were young players who announced themselves on the big stage for the first time, world-class talents who performed as brilliantly as many expected and breakout stars in their mid-to-late twenties who took the chance to make a name for themselves.

All types feature in GOAL's Team of the Tournament, which has plenty of representation from the two finalists…

Getty ImagesGK: Hannah Hampton (England)

Hannah Hampton had huge shoes to fill at this tournament, following in the footsteps of Mary Earps after the England icon had been the best goalkeeper on show at Euro 2022 and the 2023 Women's World Cup. In Switzerland, though, Hampton proved why Sarina Wiegman made her the Lionesses' new No.1 with some outstanding performances on the way to the title, fully justifying the manager's decision to make such a headline-grabbing change.

Only Livia Peng, the talented Switzerland shot-stopper who is actually a new team-mate of Hampton's at Chelsea, had a more positive differential between her expected goals against statistic and the amount she actually conceded, with the numbers showing that Hampton prevented 2.69 goals over the course of Euro 2025.

And then there were the penalty heroics, with the 24-year-old making two huge stops in both the shootout wins over Sweden and Spain, plus the crucial double-save before England's late equaliser against Italy in the semi-finals. When the pressure was at its greatest, Hampton stood up tall and delivered, marking herself out as the best goalkeeper at a tournament that had plenty of top performers.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesCB: Lucy Bronze (England)

While Euro 2025 was a tournament for goalkeepers, in part due to the record-breaking amount of penalty shootout drama it served up, it wasn't quite one for defenders. More goals were scored than ever before at this European Championship, making it no surprise that it's not easy to come up with too many contenders for the backline of GOAL's XI. As such, a rogue formation is required, as is the need for Lucy Bronze to occupy a centre-back role she's not entirely unfamiliar with.

The England full-back was by no means flawless in Switzerland, with lapses in concentration particularly costly in the opener against France and the final, but no defender was. What sets Bronze apart is how she made up for those errors. Her all-round contributions at the back made for a rather steady level of performance away from those moments, with no one winning more aerial duels at the tournament than the 33-year-old, who also ranked in the top five for possession won and clearances made, and in the top 10 for tackles won and interceptions made.

Then there was performance against Sweden in the quarter-finals, which saw Bronze play a huge role in the most miraculous of England's many escape acts. The Lionesses were staring elimination in the face until the defender headed home the first goal of their late comeback from 2-0 down, and it was her thumping penalty in the shootout that swung the momentum in England's favour again. Throw in that she played the whole tournament with a fractured tibia and it only adds to how extraordinary Bronze's summer was.

Getty ImagesCB: Rebecca Knaak (Germany)

It's been quite a year for Rebecca Knaak. Aged 28, she got the first big move of her career in January when she joined Manchester City and, amid an injury crisis that placed real emphasis on her hitting the ground running, her performances in England were so impressive that she earned her first Germany cap in February. It was a timely entry into the national team picture, coming just before a European Championship that she would not only go on to be selected for, but regularly catch the eye in.

Germany had some serious defensive issues this summer. Star full-back Giulia Gwinn saw her tournament ended by injury in the first match, her replacement Carlotta Wamser picked up a red card in the final group-stage game, centre-back Kathrin Hendrich was sent off in the quarter-finals, Wamser's successor Sarai Linder got injured in that same match and then Sophia Kleinherne limped off in the semi-final defeat to Spain.

While all that chaos was unfolding around her, Knaak stood impressively tall. Again, she was by no means perfect in Switzerland, but she was a big reason why Germany were able to reach the last four of this tournament – and only lose that game in extra-time – while having such a patchwork defence.

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Getty ImagesCB: Cecilia Salvai (Italy)

This was a monumental tournament for an Italy team that has underwhelmed plenty since reaching the quarter-finals of the 2019 Women's World Cup, with them only two minutes away from an unprecedented final in Switzerland. Michelle Agyemang's 96th-minute equaliser, and the subsequent heartbreak in extra-time, was a cruel way for the Azzurre's campaign to end, but they should certainly hold their heads high after the way they played.

Contrary to stereotypes, it was often Italy's attack which caught the eye, but the defence certainly played its part in this incredible run too, with Cecilia Salvai the star back there. No one made more clearances at Euro 2025 than the 31-year-old, who also led her team in interceptions and blocks. That her best performance of the month came in the semi-final, in what was the biggest game of her career, said a lot too, even if the result didn't go Italy's way.

Sri Lanka facing unknown territory

With the bold axing of Sanath Jayasuriya, Sri Lankan cricket finds itself in uncharted territory. Charlie Austin investigates

Charlie Austin11-Nov-2005

Dropping Sanath Jayasuriya, just when he has started to regain his fitness, is a major call with three weeks to go before the first Test © AFP
The announcement of Sri Lanka’s one-day squad to tour India passed with barely a whisper last month. The squad was settled and there were no surprises. But the unveiling of the Test squad for the first tour of India since 1997 is sure to create a storm of debate – and may have serious long-term implications for the future.The four-man selection panel, answerable to the Sports Minister and headed by Lalith Kaluperuma, have dared go where no panel has gone for a decade – they’ve axed Sanath Jayasuriya, one of the first choices on a Sri Lanka team sheet ever since a blistering hundred against Australia at Adelaide back in 1995/96.The decision, justified by the selection panel on the basis of poor form coupled with his slow recovery from a dislocated shoulder, is an extremely bold move that poses the obvious question: is this the beginning of the end for one of Sri Lanka’s most influential and exciting batsman in history?Ironically, Jayasuriya is undoubtedly the batsman that India fears most. He has won countless matches against them over the years and his scalp, even despite his wretched form in this series (85 runs in 6 matches), is the one they celebrate most keenly, knowing full well his dangerous potential and his talismanic influence upon the Sri Lanka batting.With hindsight, Jayasuriya should not have played at the start of the one-day series, after a banana-boat accident on a team jolly just before the tour aggravated the shoulder he dislocated during the Indian Oil Cup in August. His tentative fielding – including one embarrassing self-preserving pullout from one particular catch – showed he had not recovered sufficiently to play international cricket.But to drop him now, just when he has started to regain his fitness and even begun bowling again, with three weeks to go before the first Test in Chennai, is a major call. At 36 years old he is no spring chicken, but during the last two years his performances in Test cricket have surpassed his career average (during his last 10 ODIs he has averaged 44.94 compared to a career average of 42.17) and during Sri Lanka’s subcontinent tour, to Pakistan in 2004, he was their most prolific batsman.If the selectors have dropped him on the basis of fitness, in consultation with the team’s medical team, fair enough. But if he’s been sacked because of a run of low scores in one-day cricket then it makes little sense. Touring India is one of cricket’s hardest challenges and a team that travels without one of its best and most destructive players is taking a huge gamble. Put it this way – India must be over the moon.Jayasuriya must now ponder his future. He clearly wants to bow out at the 2007 World Cup and this, despite his relatively old age, is an achievable objective. But in one-day cricket he must reconsider his indifference to dropping down the order. His vast experience and allround ability could make him an invaluable cog in the middle order in the West Indies where the pitches can be expected to suit Sri Lanka’s style of play. However, an insistence on opening may hasten the end of his career.

Chamara Kapugedera: ‘a teenage middle-order batsman with immense potential’ © Cricinfo Ltd
Moving on, the selectors’ decision to fast-track Chamara Kapugedera, a teenage middle-order batsman with immense potential, is praiseworthy. The dearth of upcoming batting talent in Sri Lanka is so worrying that the selectors were right to hand an opportunity to someone who has had development coaches drooling with excitement for several months now. The inexperience, even if he doesn’t play, should prove invaluable.The decision too to promote Malinga Bandara ahead of Upul Chanadana is also justifiable. Bandara, ironically Chandana’s overseas replacement at Gloucestershire, has excelled during the past year with the A team and in County Cricket and he deserves a chance to restart a Test career that began and ended way back with a solitary Test against New Zealand in 1998.Sajeewa Weerakoon’s leapfrogging Rangana Herath as the No. 1 left-arm spinner in the island is recognition of his prolific wicket-taking in first-class cricket and with the A team. Whether he has the variation and the nous to trouble India’s fleet-footed batsmen – especially on flat pitches – is, however, a concern.But the selectors had one more surprise in store for the Test series: the axing of Mahela Jayawardene as the vice-captain. Of all the decisions made, this is the one that may ultimately prove the most significant. Unfortunately, it smells so strongly of politicisation that several very senior players are severely concerned.In Jayawardene’s last eight matches against India, he has played match-winning innings in three of them – not bad by anyone’s standards. Moreover, in Atapattu’s occasional absence, he has led the team astutely, displaying a clear ability to communicate well with the players and shrewdly read the game. So why has he been cast aside?Chaminda Vaas has been a loyal servant for Sri Lanka cricket for many years. His supreme skill is now acknowledged throughout the world. But there are question marks over his captaincy pedigree on the field. Vice-captains can no longer just drum up morale within the dressing room. With the international calendar so heavily congested, they inevitably have to captain the side on occasion and Vaas’s tactical acumen as a leader, based on his recent experience as Western Province skipper, appears limited.

There are few doubts as to Vaas’ class as a bowler, but question marks remain over his ability as a captain © AFP
It is no secret that Vaas has long pursued the vice-captaincy with behind-the-scenes lobbying, both personally and from his supporters, who argue that his fine contributions as a bowler merit the recognition of leadership status. For some time the considerable political pressure exerted has been resisted by the selectors. But suddenly, this has changed and it is unclear why. There are, though, two theories.The first is that Vaas’s politicking has finally struck a chord with Jayantha Dharmadasa, the interim chairman of Sri Lanka Cricket, a man that people hoped would bring meritocracy and professionalism to the cricket administration, but who has instead showed an increasingly worrisome penchant for employing his own supporters in key positions.The second theory is that the selectors, frustrated by the team management’s unwillingness to tow the line with regard to the selection of the final playing XI on tour – specifically in this tour the refusal to drop Jayasuriya – wanted a man in the team management (which includes the captain, vice-captain, coach and manager) they could control.It is unclear which theory holds the most weight at this stage – or whether either theory holds a semblance of truth for that matter – but it is clear that the decision could impact upon the internal dynamics of the team. The selectors’ job is not to make the players happy, it is true, but all their decisions must at least have a sound, rationale basis. In this case such reasoning is hard to fathom. Is Vaas being groomed as the next captain, or is he being rewarded for yeoman’s service? If it is the latter than Murali, a player that has never pursued official title and concentrated instead on taking wickets, should be the vice-captain.Sri Lanka have been thoroughly outplayed in this series. This cannot be denied. They also have issues to solve with the make-up of the team, especially the batting order, but it should also be acknowledged that playing India at home – especially an India team enlivened and rejuvenated by the end of Sourav Ganguly’s tenure and the return of Sachin Tendulkar – is incredibly difficult.Sri Lanka are a small cricketing nation with serious structural issues. School cricket appears to be in terminal decline and first-class cricket, bloated to 20 teams this year in a post-tsunami compromise, is a joke. For such a small island national the density of talent is amazing. But the resources are not so rich that mismanagement can be afforded.The squad chosen for the Test series is a massive gamble. Only time will tell whether they have chosen wisely. But the omens are not good. A squad that was settled and united before this tour, so crucial for all teams but especially those in Asia where politics plays such a depressing part, is now internally fragile. The No. 2 one-day side in the world just two weeks ago is now staring into unknown territory.

The young fox

Less than three years since he made his international debut, Mohammad Asif is a seasoned master of the crafts of guile and deception that separate the good from the merely fast

Osman Samiuddin11-Aug-2007

Nobody who has seen Asif doubts that he is the most promising pace bowler in the world today. If everyone knows it, why wouldn’t he? © AFP
A thin line separates supreme self-belief from tasteless arrogance. Sport blurs it evermore and it is readily transgressed. Almost the entire Australian team has taken up residence near this line, making regular sorties on either side. In years gone, the West Indians were original tenants. Success only makes the line less important, but it remains.Mohammad Asif is a new resident. Five or six years is all he will give to cricket, he states. At Port Elizabeth early this year, Barry Richards watched Asif run up for another spell and coolly predicted, “This, folks, is a 400-Test wickets man right here.” The shortest amount of time it took any of the 10 bowlers who have reached 400 wickets to do so is about nine years. “So what’s the problem? At my current rate I can do it in that time.”It is no new skin. A school friend was once promised, while watching Pakistan play at Sydney on TV that he, Asif, would play at the ground for Pakistan. He went one better and debuted there.In only his fourth first-class game in 2001, he bowled alongside Shoaib Akhtar, and though awestruck enough to not ask for tips, he wasn’t intimidated. “I was bowling and had a longer run-up then. Our over-rate was slow, so Shoaib says, ‘Hurry up, bowl quickly.’ I worried and bowled one over quickly, but he said that’s still too slow, get quicker. He was coming from such a long run-up, he thought he could save time by getting to cut my run. Eventually I said, ‘Shoaib , bowl yourself. I can’t do this.'”Then there is the recent, more celebrated, encounter with the late Bob Woolmer. It goes like this. Asif makes a tight, wicketless Test debut, until Adam Gilchrist appears. Asif is dropped for the ODIs. Fatherly Woolmer tells new charge not to get dispirited. Work hard, keep the chin up. Young charge responds, “Bob, this is my place. Nobody can take it. I am going away for a bit, but I will be back soon to reclaim what is mine.” Then adds that he was picked for the wrong Test: “Had they picked me for Perth, I would’ve done something.”He is not the freakshow that is Andre Nel, nor the shrinking violet that is Irfan Pathan. He chats up batsmen like a helpless flirt. “I ask what type of shot is that, to drive – just engage them in normal conversation.” He grins and says it works well.You decide, then, what side of the line he is on. Take into account what Woolmer said once: “He is humble and confident; very determined, hates to lose, and backs himself.” Certainly he has in himself, in his abilities, absolutely no doubt. Take into account, too, that he is young, and youth gets leeway. But, most of all, consider that nobody who has seen him doubts that he is the most promising pace bowler in the world today. If everyone knows it, why wouldn’t he?*** Asif’s bowling soul is that of the craftsman. It is this craft, the chiselling of men’s techniques, the chipping of their resolve, deceptions in line, length, seam, that holds him, that he cannot stop thinking about The craft has decreed that Asif is the antichrist of pace, the anti-pace superstar. Since 1976 Pakistan has obsessed over pace. When boys hit puberty, they grow whiskers and pimples, the balls drop, so too the voice, and they extend run-ups, add a leap, a glare, and a yard or three of pace. They want to break stumps, hit heads, shatter toes, crack bones, and knock the wind out of you. Even those without genuine pace strut around pretending otherwise. Of each new speedster, the first question asked is of his pace. Always there is a rural legend, some villager who can’t count the steps in his run-up, doesn’t have shoes, doesn’t know what a cricket ball looks like, but scares the bejesus out of batsmen.This to Asif is death a million times over. It boils his blood, makes his skin crawl. An innocent question – about whether his optimum speed fell after injury – induces this magnificent rant: “See, you are asking that question. Pace is nothing. All I’m concerned about is how batsmen get out. I don’t want to scare or hit him. Who gets out by being hit on the head? I want him out, I don’t care how it happens. Legbreak, offbreak, fast, slow ball, I don’t care.”People say my pace is slow and are not happy. People are not happy with God either, so why listen to them? People have this thinking, that we need pace. Basically this is my opinion: our batsmen are scared of pace. Older players were scared of fast bowlers, so they think only they can get wickets.”He argues, correctly, that Wasim Akram wasn’t about pace, but maybe not so correctly that Waqar Younis of the late nineties (era rather than mph) was better than the rapid, afro-ed original. Unsurprisingly those upright beanpoles Glenn McGrath, Shaun Pollock, and Richard Hadlee are used to prop up the case against pace.***Asif’s bowling soul is that of the craftsman. It is this craft, the chiselling away at men’s techniques, the chipping of their resolve, deceptions in line, length, seam, that holds him, that he cannot stop thinking about. Dismissals are built, nurtured over time, over by over, session by session, with nip n’ tuck, then put away, zealously guarded in his head until the next encounter.At Colombo last year, in his breakthrough series, he enacted upon Kumar Sangakkara the seamer’s three-card: go across, make him leave, go across, make him leave, bring it in, watch him exit, bowled offering no shot. When recalled, he corrects it. “Not three balls but three overs I worked on him. I got him so on one line that when I brought one in, he had no option.” VVS Laxman was twice bowled by offcutters in Karachi last year, a gap between bat and pad Asif had been eyeing from the previous Test.Details matter. He plans spells a day in advance, strategies even before. He is already preparing for tasty challenges against South Africa, India and Australia. He has decided he their batsmen, what they do in situations, how they react. The game has to be upped.He has odd takes on batting. Rahul Dravid is good to bowl at, “because you can settle into a rhythm against him”. Virender Sehwag is too unpredictable, yet Kevin Pietersen, who Asif so memorably mastered, is ideal because “he rushes, attacks too much too soon. It becomes easier for me.”

“People say my pace is slow and are not happy. People are not happy with God either, so why listen to them?” © Getty Images
He plays patience: I have it, do you? He’ll bowl over after over of one swing, before suddenly changing tack, for surprise. Jacques Kallis annoyed him because he has his bubble. “He said he wouldn’t play a shot against me, even though I kept telling him to.” Kallis waited it out, just, but it was a mighty running battle. Patience is not a Pakistani bowling virtue, though admittedly, they haven’t often needed it.There is occasional trickery but, like a magician, the secrecy of his craft – or what secrecy there can be in this age of super slo-mo – is paramount. English commentators picked up a cute sleight of Asif’s bowling hand: nearing his delivery stride, he shows the batsman one side of the ball before apparently flipping it around with his ring finger as the arm goes over. Maybe.”Tim Boon [the Leicestershire coach] spotted it in a match. The ball was reversing and the batsman was picking it from its shine at the start of my run. One ball which he left came in and bowled him. The shine was on the outside at the start but it came in. Boon asked how it was done. We had a bet on about dismissing him with the old ball. If it was with the new ball, I would’ve gotten him out within three balls.” So how you do it? “I can’t show people.” It’s not unique, as Andy Roberts and Rana Naved-ul-Hasan have apparently practised it, but it’s special.He attended the MRF Pace Academy in 2005 for 10 days, and though it wasn’t much use, he says Dennis Lillee offered him one golden nugget, “which if anyone applies to their bowling will benefit them greatly”. Naturally he doesn’t say what it is, on, off, or around the record.***All that is Asif comes essentially from Sheikhupura, an hour’s drive on a good day from Lahore. It isn’t as nondescript as it might first sound, though neither is it as royally blessed as it once was. Alexander visited, and the Mughal emperor Jahangir used to hunt there. It was his town, initially called Jahangirupura. The current name comes from the nickname Sheikhu baba that Jahangir’s father Akbar gave him. Mughal traces are plenty. Waris Shah, who gave the world , was born here, as was Guru Nanak Devji.More famous are the town’s fast men, though they jarred fashion rather than followed it. Aaqib Javed provided unrewarded intelligence in a time of pace, bluster, and reverse. And until form heartlessly deserted him, Rana had less speed but a heftier bag of tricks and greater spirit than most.Asif, born nearby in Machipur, is of this bent. Cricket happened on the Sheikhupura roads near the school with a tape ball, and the famed Gymkhana Club was where he began learning the craft, under the tutelage of first-class cricketer and hearty leggie “Cuptaan” [Mohammad] Haroon. There is occasional trickery, but like a magician, the secrecy of his craft is paramount. Nearing his delivery stride, he shows the batsman one side of the ball before apparently flipping it around with the ring finger as the arm goes over. Maybe “He instilled many traits,” says Asif. “Using the crease, angles, the seam – he got that into me early. As captain he kept four slips on cement pitches. That’s great for the confidence of any bowler. He taught me a lot about the brains behind bowling.” The club was, he remembers, intensely competitive, brimming with age-group- and full internationals: among the likes of Aaqib, Rana, and Kashif Raza, Asif “got competitive” and tried to break through. “The competition was such that in big games big players sat out. When we had a chance, we bowled our hearts out because we wouldn’t get another easily.”Here emerged the base of the easy, loose, non-strenuous, eminently repeatable action. It’s been touched since, but lightly. He points out that since his success, talk of the front arm falling and some such has been absent. The stamina he remembers always having, energy forever conserved in spells. Colombo’s overbearing humidity couldn’t prevent a 12-over mid-afternoon spell (“only I know how bad I felt after”). In South Africa 12 seemed the minimum spell, and in ODIs 10 on the trot happens often.His first-class debut duly came in October 2000 against Peshawar, his fortune being that Sheikhupura was then a first-class team. Khan Research Laboratories (KRL) employed him the following season, where Mohammad Wasim and Ali Naqvi took him in. Prominence arrived with a six-wicket haul the next season, and thenceforth he grew. KRL reached the 2002-03 Quaid-e-Azam final with Asif’s 28 wickets. Victims and plaudits came readily, among them Rashid Latif early on, impressed with Asif’s accuracy and seam.The radar still defines him, though not so much in ODIs presently. Still it’s worth noting that he sent down the first Twenty20 international maiden. Only three others have done likewise, none taking two wickets in the over as he did.It is no trick, he says. Take what you can from the heavens and mix with sweat and blood. As with Akram and Imran Khan, nets are a serious business. “When I practise, my aim is that batsmen shouldn’t go back or forward. Between front and back foot is the length I want.”Aaqib et al drool about the wrist position and the seam, how it comes out wobbly, thus disguising itself, yet uncannily always lands straight. “Swing, batsmen can pick, but seam is not so easy to spot. Some is god-gifted, but basically I work damn hard in nets.”In 2004 he broke through big. Sheikhupura was no longer first-class, so he moved to Sialkot via Quetta. In the midst of a 28-wicket burst in five games in October and November that year, he was called for a fast bowling camp. Woolmer, overseeing, concluded: “He swung the ball a lot and bowled good players out. He looked comfortably the best.”Mohammad Yousuf told Asif first of his selection for Australia. Could you believe it? “Of course. Why wouldn’t I?”

The drugs saga makes for an uneasy footnote, but it reveals much about how Asif is viewed that he elicited more support than Shoaib Akhtar did © AFP
The story since is more familiar, though there are unheard tidbits. He maintains firmly his satisfaction with a flat debut: “I batted two hours on that pitch, so what chance did I have? Yet people said I was a Fokker.”There was hard work at home thereafter, where, he insists, he didn’t change anything: “What change? Everything was fine. I took nearly 100 wickets in all matches. My comeback wasn’t magic, just hard work.”He surfaced again nationally in a side match against England in November 2005, taking 10 wickets and prompting Michael Vaughan to wish him luck for the Test. He wasn’t picked for the entire series, but the rivalry with KP began with that game.”When he came, Strauss was batting. Pietersen asked what I was doing. Strauss said outswing, so obviously I brought it in and trapped him plumb.” He says it as might a fox. Over the next year much the same happened to other batsmen globally, so often that he judges all the spells of his last seven Tests equally memorable.There is a blot, one that will require many years like the one past to wipe away. He won’t talk about the drugs that should have seen him out of the game for a while. He was distraught then, barely audible on the phone, and he’s still not quite so firm when saying “No questions”. He mutters something about humility and how the fever of celebrity that once afflicted him is gone. An uneasy footnote it makes, though it reveals much about how he is viewed that he elicited much more sympathy than Shoaib did.He launches briskly into a soliloquy about the domestic game, before revealing that people doubted his talent early on. No pace, too skinny, what would he do? “People kept telling me from the start, I can’t be a cricketer, can’t be a bowler. The more people say this, the harder I try to prove them wrong.”Did the experience dent him? Difficult to say, but few doubts hover over him now. Greatness, in fact, is expected. He has to prove everyone right, which may be harder than proving them all wrong.

Boundary-less fifties, and Yuvraj in run-chases

Stats highlights from the eighth match of the CB Series, between India and Sri Lanka in Adelaide

S Rajesh and HR Gopalakrishna19-Feb-2008
Mahendra Singh Dhoni became only the fourth Indian batsman to score an ODI half-century without a single boundary © Getty Images
Kumar Sangakkara’s 128 was his seventh ODI hundred, but only three times have his knocks helped Sri Lanka win. On four occasions – two of which have been against India – his centuries have been in losing causes. In fact, Sangakkara has a higher average against India in losses (39.76) than in wins (37.00). The 153-run stand for the third wicket between Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene is the 17th 150-plus stand for that wicket in ODIs for Sri Lanka. Jayawardene has been involved in nine of those. It was also only the fifth time that Sri Lanka put together a 100-plus stand for the third wicket after losing the first two with less than ten runs on the board. Sangakkara became only the second overseas wicketkeeper – after Pakistan’s Kamran Akmal – to score an ODI century in Australia. In all, his hundred was the 50th by a wicketkeeper in ODIs. Yuvraj Singh found his form again in his 200th ODI after having undergone a wretched patch in Australia. His 70-ball 76 is his 43rd fifty-plus score, of which 32 have led to wins for India. He also proved, once again, his ability to deliver during the pressures of a run-chase – he averages 39.52 when batting second, and 34.06 in the first innings. In successful run-chases, his average shoots up to 64.86, at a strike rate of more than 86. In unsuccessful run-chases, on the other hand, he only averages 21.23, which indicates how important his runs are to the team’s cause. Sachin Tendulkar, on the other hand, hasn’t quite been able to turn it on in run-chases of late. In his last 50 innings, going back to August 16, 2006, he averages 62.10 when India have batted first, but just 26.92 in run-chases. Mahendra Singh Dhoni helped India to the win with his 22nd fifty-plus score in ODIs, which was quite unusual for the fact that it didn’t contain a single four or six. It was only the 28th such fifty-plus score in ODIs, and the fifth by an Indian – Mohammad Azharuddin is the only player to score a boundary-less half-century twice. In terms of strike-rate, Dhoni’s knock ranks seventh among these 28 innings – Saeed Anwar’s 62 off 67 balls against New Zealand in the 1996 World Cup comes on top, the same game in which Aamer Sohail, his opening partner, needed ten fours to score 50 from 62 balls. India’s win was their 50th against Sri Lanka – it’s the first opposition against whom India have won 50 one-day internationals. The most wins by any team against a single opposition is Australia’s 78 against New Zealand. Sanath Jayasuriya became the first opener to get 25 ducks. Herschelle Gibbs and Adam Gilchrist are next with 17 zeroes each.

A hit in the park

Dileep Premachandran watches Rahul Dravid get down to business at the RSI ground in Bangalore

Dileep Premachandran31-Oct-2007

It may have been a warm-up, but Dravid’s approach was as meticulous as ever © Getty Images
Strolling around to a shady spot under the trees, I was just in time to watch theshot of the afternoon. Coming off a long run, the pace bowler pitched the ball afraction outside off stump. The batsman leaned forward and the bat arced gracefullydown. Both the fielders in the covers started to move but then froze as the ballsped between them to the boundary. Even from that distance the high elbow and theflourish with which the stroke was played were unmistakeable. This time, though, theyweren’t accompanied by any frenzied applause from the crowd. In fact, there washardly a crowd, just a couple of dozen stragglers, a handful of journalists, and acamera crew waiting for their exclusive.Rahul Dravid came down the pitch to pat it before settling back into his stance. Asthe men he had led for two years prepared for a marquee one-day series against Pakistan,he was back where it had all began, with his Karnataka team-mates, preparing for theRanji season and the two matches that he will get as practice before the three-Testseries against Pakistan starts on November 22.The opposition was provided by a Kerala team on its way to Nagpur. As their coachwatched from a bench, taking notes every so often, he was joined by Tinu Yohannan,one of Indian cricket’s recent what-might-have-been stories. Four years beforeSreesanth made his debut and became the focal point of Kerala’s media and garishadvertising hoardings, Yohannan had been a trailblazer, dismissing MarcusTrescothick on an impressive debut at Mohali.Unlike Yohannan, who faded so fast that he no longer even inhabits Indian cricket’sfringes, Dravid is far from finished. And even though this was the playing field ofthe Rajendra Singhji Institute and not the Eden Gardens, his approach was asmeticulous as ever. Good deliveries were patted back, the time between overs spentworking on the stance, and the loose balls put away across an outfield that was morecabbage patch than Bermuda grass.With spin at both ends, Dravid found the gaps easily enough, even playing a finelap-sweep that raced to fine leg. On a pitch so sluggish that most cuts went throughthe covers, and against bowlers who weren’t in the class of Mohammad Asif or DanishKaneria, the only danger appeared to be a lapse in concentration. When he miscuedone off the leading edge to midwicket, there were a few chirps of encouragement forthe bowler. No one dared, however, to sledge the batsman.Just before tea, as Sunil Joshi – another man who owns an India cap or two – crasheda few fours himself, the Kerala side had their moment in the sun. Dravid rocked backto cut a delivery too close to him, and the edge was smartly taken at slip. BPrasanth, the left-arm spinner who got the wicket, will no doubt treasure the momentfor a lifetime.Dravid walked off slowly, staring ruefully at the outer edge of the bat. As practicewent, it had been a decent outing – 49 runs from 86 balls in a shade under two hours. When he emerged from the tiny dressing room minutes later, thetea was waiting, in little plastic cups rather than bone china. As he was sipping it andtalking to Joshi, who continues to be a domestic titan a decade after hisinternational career fizzled out, he was immediately besieged by the TV crew.”For two years all I’ve done is talk for the cameras,” he told them with a smile.”Just leave me be for now. Let me just enjoy playing a match and spending some timewith my friends.” Having warded off the lenses, he took his time to sign a handfulof autographs, including one from a man whose pocket diary had a picture of Dravidon the front page.As a press photographer clicked away, Dravid even found time for some levity. “Make sure you don’t stop here. Anil Kumble will be here tomorrow. You’d better be around totake pictures of him as well.” Even from that distance the high elbow and theflourish with which the stroke was played were unmistakeable. This time, though, theyweren’t accompanied by any frenzied applause from the crowd The next three weeks will be devoted to the serious business of rediscovering the form that deserted him against a relentless Australian side in the recent one-day series. “I have two games, one against Mumbai [starting on November 3], and another against Himachal,” he said. “It will be good to spend some time in the middle.”The brow was no longer creased with worry, and there was more than a laugh or two ashe caught up with old mates and young hopefuls who were clearly delighted by the opportunity to spend time with one of the game’s greats. In some ways, with the open space, the traffic noises from the MG and Cubbon Roads, and the huge trees dotting the ground, it was a surreal image – a bit like catching Mick Jagger and Keith Richards playing on a street corner in Soho.Four years ago Shane Warne started his rehabilitation in the wake of the drugs ban in thesimilarly nondescript surroundings of St Kilda’s Junction Oval, in a match for Victoria’s second XI. He went on to enjoy three glorious years before the triumphant exit in Sydney last January. If the final chapter of Dravid’s career is anything near as productive, this little piece of parkland in the heart of Bangalore would have done Indian cricket a huge favour.

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