Ruturaj Gaikwad uses timing to boss middle-overs battle against Umran Malik

The opener’s assault against the fastest bowler in IPL 2022 changed the complexion of the game

Hemant Brar02-May-20222:40

Vettori: Gaikwad looks fearless against pace

Ruturaj Gaikwad doesn’t have the big frame of Kieron Pollard. Nor does he possess the bulging biceps of Andre Russell. He has a “six-pack” but he doesn’t muscle the ball. And on Sunday, against Sunrisers Hyderabad, he showed he need not, as he took down Umran Malik – the fastest bowler in IPL 2022 – with sheer timing.The pitch for the game in Pune was slightly on the slower side, but this being Gaikwad’s home ground, he knew that once he got his eye in, things would become easier.He started slowly. At the end of five overs, he was on a run-a-ball 18. After he reached 90, he slowed down again, scoring only nine runs off the last seven balls he faced. In between, though, he smashed 72 off 32 balls, his onslaught against Malik changing the complexion of the game.Related

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Chennai Super Kings were 47 for no loss after seven overs when Kane Williamson gave the ball to Malik. Most teams turn to their spinners to control the middle overs but Sunrisers rely on Malik’s pace. His 12 wickets are the most by a seamer in overs 7 to 16 this season.However, Gaikwad decided to take Malik on. On the fast bowler’s very first ball, he skipped down the track, and even though he didn’t get the timing right, he got enough on it to clear mid-off for a couple of runs.But then, as if a switch was flicked. Two balls later, Malik bowled one short outside off. Gaikwad stood tall and slapped him over covers for four. The next ball was fuller around off. Gaikwad wasn’t caught on the back foot. He planted his front foot forward and punched it over long-on for a six.Malik is an out-and-out fast bowler. He rarely bowls a slower one, but here he tried that variation too. Gaikwad was up to it, though, and dabbed it towards backward point with little fuss.Ruturaj Gaikwad holds the pose after hitting Umran Malik for a six over long-off•BCCIThe best was yet to come. In his next over, Malik bowled a 154kph thunderbolt – the fastest delivery of IPL 2022 yet – only for Gaikwad to drive it on the up towards long-on, where a misfield gifted him a boundary. That was followed by a top-edged four, which took him to a 34-ball half-century.Sunrisers were also handicapped by the absence of Washington Sundar, who once again hurt the webbing on his right hand while trying to prevent a boundary. T Natarajan too had a niggle, for which he was off the field for quite some time and, therefore, was allowed to bowl only towards the end of the innings.This resulted in Aiden Markram bowling to a well-set Gaikwad, who lined him up for back-to-back sixes. Gaikwad’s all-out attack meant despite Devon Conway languishing on 29 off 28 balls, Super Kings reached 100 inside 11 overs.Then came, arguably, the shot of the match. In the next over, the 12th of the innings, Malik pitched one fuller. Gaikwad took a short stride forward and extended his arms to drive it over mid-off. Such was the timing that the ball sailed all the way.In all, he took 33 off 13 balls against Malik, without playing a shot in anger. All he did was maintain his shape, and convert timing into power.”I thought the wicket was a little bit slow, and he provided the right pace [to bat against],” Gaikwad said of his attack against Malik. “So I just tried to put him under pressure right from his first over.”

“I don’t like to believe in form because in every game, you start from zero. Irrespective of whatever you have scored in the last game, you have to start again”Ruturaj Gaikwad

He eventually fell for 99 off 57 balls, and while Sunrisers did manage to pull things back somewhat at the death, his innings had already set up the win for Super Kings.This is Gaikwad’s third IPL season. In 2020, he had scores of 0, 5 and 0 in his first three outings before notching up three successive half-centuries. In 2021, he started with 5, 5 and 10 and still finished as the leading run-scorer for the season. This year, it was 0, 0 and 1 and now he has scores of 73 and 99 among his last four knocks.To outsiders, it might feel as if he has a magic wand to turn his form around. But the man himself had an even interesting take.”Personally, I don’t like to believe in form,” he told Star Sports, “because in every game, you start from zero. Irrespective of whatever you have scored in the last game, you have to start again. I believe in that, I believe in starting from zero in each and every game. That’s what has helped.”

'This really hurts'

Reactions on social media to the devastating news of Andrew Symonds’ death

ESPNcricinfo staff15-May-20222:52

‘When times were tough, Roy made it easier on his team-mates’

How Deepak Hooda turned things around (with a little help from Irfan Pathan)

A year ago, he didn’t have a domestic team and things were looking grim. Then came the upswing

Shashank Kishore22-Jul-2022In February 2021, Deepak Hooda contemplated stepping away from cricket. He had just been suspended by the Baroda Cricket Association (BCA) following a run-in with the captain, Krunal Pandya.He was in a spot. His IPL career hadn’t yet taken off, and the pandemic threatened to make things worse, with the uncertainty it brought to the domestic calendar. Memories of Hooda’s big hitting in his debut IPL season, 2015, which had brought a flood of “Hurricane Hooda” headlines, were starting to fade.Hooda needed a helping hand. He found one in Irfan Pathan, the former India allrounder and Baroda alumnus and captain. Irfan had backed Hooda when he left Baroda, and called the BCA’s decision to reprimand Hooda in the wake of his spat with Pandya “shocking and disheartening”.Related

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” time ” (Your time will come) Irfan said to Hooda.In February this year, when Irfan scrambled to find an adequate mobile data signal while on the road, to watch Hooda being handed his India cap by Rahul Dravid in Ahmedabad against West Indies, Hooda’s time had indeed come.”It was like my debut again,” Irfan says. It felt that way because he has mentored Hooda since the youngster moved to Baroda as a 15-year-old when his father, Jagbir, an officer in the Indian Air Force, was posted there in 2010.Hooda’s roots are in Haryana and he represented that state in the Under-16s. He was also eligible to play for Services (which comprises players who or whose families serve in the army, air force or navy) but decided to try his luck in Baroda and made it into the side.Now, his exiting that team has coincided with a remarkable change in fortunes. An India call-up came in February, following his first season with Rajasthan, his new domestic team. That was followed by a breakout IPL season with Lucknow Super Giants, where, having patched things up with Pandya, he played alongside him in the line-up; Hooda made 451 runs at a strike rate of 136.66. Last month he made first century for India, in a T20I against Ireland. Recently the BCA made public their wish to see him back playing for them.In the absence of senior team-mates, the upcoming limited-overs series in the West Indies, and possibly one in Zimbabwe after that, could set Hooda up nicely to be in the fray for India’s T20 World Cup side. Apart from offering the flexibility of being able to bat up and down the order, he also bowls handy part-time offspin.His 451 runs this IPL put Hooda among the top ten run-scorers for the season•BCCIAt the IPL, Gautam Gambhir, Lucknow’s mentor, was impressed with Hooda’s desire. “Gauti told him, whatever happens, you will play all the games,” remembers Vijay Dahiya, the assistant coach at the franchise. “Deepak was pleasantly surprised, because it’s the kind of backing he hadn’t got in the IPL.”The turnaround started in June 2021. Hooda had been a part of every IPL season since 2015 but had faced over 100 balls only once in a full season. Not getting opportunities to prove his game smarts as a proper batter bothered him.Signing for Rajasthan was something of a move born of desperation. Their current form was far from his mind. And he wasn’t thinking about the turmoil in their set-up either; different factions have claimed to be running the game in the state, and there has been financial mismanagement, which has forced the BCCI to form an ad-hoc committee to administer cricket.”He wanted game time, and we wanted a batting allrounder,” Rajasthan Cricket Association (RCA) secretary Mahendra Sharma says. “He wasn’t fussed about money. He didn’t ask for [the kind of] fee that professionals do. He said, let us mutually benefit each other. In return, we were happy to have someone who could lend their experience to our junior cricketers.”Before the domestic season began, the Pathan brothers helped Hooda get his mind back on cricket. They put together an intensive camp for him. “The idea was to first get his mindset right,” Irfan Pathan says.”Yusuf is the kind of person who would see a positive even in the direst situation. Having someone like that helped. One of us ensured we were around. If I was away with media commitments, we’d speak regularly on the phone, while Yusuf would take him through his training.” On such days, Irfan would also analyse video footage of Hooda in training.Look ma, new headgear: Hooda shows off his India cap on his international debut, in Ahmedabad in February this year•BCCI”I told him, if you are playing and training expecting something in return, it’s never going to work,” Irfan says. “You have to train your mind in a way where you’re giving your best without expecting anything in return. If something comes your way, great. Else, keep at it.”Every day, for two months, Hooda would be in the nets by 7am sharp. A two-hour conditioning session would be followed by multiple gruelling batting sessions. On days he was to train on black-soil surfaces, he’d train at the police grounds. On days he was to bat on red-soil wickets, he’d head over to the Moti Baug grounds. The training sessions were so in-depth that there was even a throwdown specialist, brought in by Irfan.”He started becoming calmer because this set routine didn’t give him time to ponder about his future,” Jagbir says. “I could see he was agitated and he was making an effort to do better, but until he reached out for help, he wasn’t in a good frame of mind. As parents we tend to feel sorry for our child. But all he needed at that time was the confidence, and I couldn’t be more thankful to Irfan and Yusuf.”Irfan began to notice a marked improvement by the time the domestic season came around. “He always had the range of shots, but we wanted to maximise his stay at the crease.”His off-side play was a bit of a hindrance. He needed to keep his hands relaxed and not jab. His hands needed to be more fluid. And when he started playing with loose hands, he could access different parts of the ring.”We also made adjustments to his stance, depending on the format. He worked on using the crease to maximise scoring opportunities in different areas, hitting boundaries along the ground by finding gaps – we simulated all of this.”Hooda started his first-class career with a hundred in his first game, and the next in this one, his sixth, against Karnataka, where he made 142•PTI Hooda kick-started the domestic season in style, finishing as the second-highest run-scorer in the Mushtaq Ali T20s. His 294 runs in six innings came at a strike rate of 168 and Rajasthan made the quarter-finals. In the Vijay Hazare one-dayers, though his overall numbers were slightly underwhelming, he made a sensational 109 against favourites Karnataka in a pre-quarter-final.It happened to be a game several IPL talent scouts were at. On auction day, as many as six teams raised their paddles before Hooda was signed for Rs 5.75 crore (about US$725,000) by Lucknow.”He’s a keen student of the game,” Dahiya says. “He wants to get better every day. There is purpose to his training, the hunger is immense. But sometimes, he could become too intense for someone who is keen to do well. He can be hard on himself at times.”The shorter formats can be unforgiving, so we had to speak to him a few times to let go and be less intense. The thing with such a mindset is, when things are going well, you aren’t going to find too many issues, but when things don’t come off, that is when it could get tricky. But he’ll learn, he has a tremendous work ethic, and it’s all part of his development as a player.”Hooda’s remarkable turnaround doesn’t surprise Irfan, who says he should serve as a role model for players who don’t break through early.”Two years ago, Hooda himself wondered if the India cap would come. Today, he is a shining example of someone who has proved if you accept your shortcomings and make a conscious effort in working on it, that’s half the battle won.I am excited at what he can possibly offer to the Indian team. He’s just 27. If he offers India six-seven good years, he has the potential to achieve a lot more.”

Luke Wood savours the occasion after starring role on debut

Fast bowler shows he’s not content with stand-in status after stealing the show in Karachi

Matt Roller21-Sep-2022Pakistan is the spiritual home of left-arm fast bowling so the team-sheets in Tuesday’s night opening T20I seemed incongruous: England picked three left-arm seamers in their side to Pakistan’s none.Along with Reece Topley, who was unavailable for the first game of the tour due to an ankle niggle, Sam Curran and David Willey will both travel straight from Pakistan to Australia ahead of the T20 World Cup, but the left-armer who will fly home to the UK from Lahore in two weeks’ time was the star of the show’s first act.Luke Wood had known for a couple of days that he would make his England debut in Karachi. After getting the nod from Jos Buttler, he told his parents, then had to check his dad would keep the news quiet – “he’s quite keen on Facebook, he likes to post things”. Buttler duly presented him with his cap in the pre-match huddle.Buttler’s injury meant that Wood had the familiar feeling of being captained by Moeen Ali – they won the Blast together in 2018 when Wood was on loan at Worcestershire – but the sense of occasion was not lost on him as he stood at short midwicket. He had played at the National Stadium for Quetta Gladiators earlier this year, but the crowd was then capped at 25% by Covid-19 restrictions.”The start got delayed because they were moving behind the bowler’s arm so you got a full chance to take it in,” Wood said. “I remember being stood at midwicket thinking ‘this is proper’. It was so loud. You know they love their cricket but it was pretty special. To have that on your debut makes it even better – it’s like ‘wow, this is international cricket’.”The crowd were vocal throughout the first half of Pakistan’s innings but died down as England’s bowlers dragged the game back. They fell collectively silent when Wood took his first international wicket, ripping Mohammad Nawaz’s off stump out of the crowd before leaping and punching the air in celebration.He finished with figures of 3 for 24, conceding only 12 runs from his two overs at the death. His second and third wickets were less spectacular – both caught in the deep, one off a full toss and the other off a slower ball – but were just as important in restricting Pakistan.”Your first wicket is the one that stands out in your memory and thankfully it was a good one,” Wood said. “That’s how I always play my cricket: there’s always a smile on my face and that’s something I really pride myself on. It just shows my love for the game. It was just about trying to enjoy my debut as much as I could.”Wood is well aware of Pakistan’s tradition for producing left-arm seamers, having idolised Wasim Akram growing up – “him and Ryan Sidebottom were my two” – and had the chance to pick Wasim’s brains at the PSL earlier this year: “That was pretty cool. I’ve always wanted to meet him.”He is also keen to play his part in busting the “huge myth” that left-arm seamers are only picked to provide variety. “Teams can play four right-armers but can’t play four left-armers? I’ve just never understood that,” he said.Related

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“Obviously England have a lot of good left-arm fast bowlers now so the options are there, but also, we’re all different: different heights, speeds and attributes. Just because they’re all left-arm, it doesn’t make a difference.”Wood earned his place in this squad through an impressive domestic season, playing in the final of both English short-form competitions. He took 14 wickets for Lancashire in the Blast and 10 for Trent Rockets in their victorious Hundred campaign, regularly hitting 90mph/145kph and bowling aggressive new-ball spells.He is one of several England players in an unusual situation during this series, one mirrored in Australia’s tour to India: even if he finishes as the leading wicket-taker on either side, he will not be part of their World Cup squad, barring an injury to one of England’s first-choice seamers.But he knows that strong performances will come in handy down the line. “We had a big chat before this series started about the fact it’s not just about this series, but going forward. Being pretty new into the squad, it’s about trying to perform and showing what I have. Everything changes so quickly.”And after missing out on an England cap in the Netherlands earlier this year – he was the only unused squad member during their ODI tour – Wood is not taking things for granted. “I would have loved to have made my debut there,” he said, “but at the same time, I feel like because they don’t just give them out, you feel you have earned it. In a way, it makes it feel more special.”

Two worrisome trends return for India in Mirpur

Oppositions have been able to push back from positions of struggle while batting and India’s top four are not as prolific as they used to be

Sidharth Monga24-Dec-20222:29

Jaffer: ‘Intent of Indian batters disappointing’

India might still win this one. In fact they are still favourites to win this Test because their in-form batters are yet to come out to bat, but the third day’s play in Mirpur was like a teaser in which what once were faraway clouds slowly get darker.This is a team in transition. Their main batters are past their best, they rarely get a pick of their first-choice bowlers, and they don’t have a fit captain. In this year alone, India have had three captains in seven Tests. There is a revolving door in the bowling department because of fitness issues and the odd debatable selection.This team is not that ruthless clinical side that used to rarely ever let an advantage go. In four Tests this year, India have been in situations they used to close out matches from with eyes closed, but they have lost three of those and are 45 for 4 chasing 145 in the fourth.Two worrisome trends made a comeback in Mirpur on day three where India effectively had Bangladesh at 26 for 6 in the third innings thanks to their 87-run lead in the first innings.Now it’s not like India never conceded partnerships in their golden run, but they always kept a lid on the scoring rate. It used to feel like they automatically knew when to bowl dry and when to attack more. There are many examples of this, not least the Johannesburg win in 2017-18 when Hashim Amla and Dean Elgar added 119 for the second wicket in a chase of 241, but they never ran away, going at little over two an over. In Bengaluru in 2016-17, after getting bowled out on day one, India showed similar control bowling against Australia on day two.The worrying sign is that in this year, teams have been able to push back from positions of struggle and push back at a pace that India have not been able to arrest.Defending 239 in Johannesburg in the first Test of the year and 211 in the second, India lost in 67.4 and 63.3 overs respectively. They went searching for wickets instead of just bowling well for long spells, which brought them success earlier. At Edgbaston, England chased down 378 in 76.4 overs at nearly five an over.Litton Das led Bangladesh’s fightback•Associated PressIn Mirpur, too, it was not so much that Bangladesh added enough runs to make a match out of it, but the pace at which they did so. That, and some good fortune as it showed in Virat Kohli missing three-and-a-half catches, is partly the nature of counterattacks, but when Bangladesh did counterattack it didn’t look like they were having to take a lot of risks.Overall, India bowled well in the third innings. In fact they produced false responses more frequently than Bangladesh did in the fourth, but during the two partnerships that got Bangladesh 106 runs in 20.4 overs they often failed to bowl to their fields, conceding easy boundaries despite in-and-out fields.It didn’t help that India didn’t have a third spinner, which seems like a case of having misread the pitch. Axar Patel bowled a 19-over unbroken spell, and India rarely ever could have two spinners in tandem.On another day, one of the four catches sticks, and we are not talking of this, but that might just cover up the other small cloud on the horizon. The batting of this team in transition has needed Nos. 5 to 8 to bail them out more often than they or their leadership will find acceptable.Since the start of 2020, India’s top four have averaged 31.58; only South Africa, Bangladesh and West Indies have worse numbers. In the matches that India have played over this period, the opposition top 4 has averaged only marginally better, which points to the conditions being tough where India have played.After a point, batters can do only so much if the bowling is unerring in difficult conditions. That is the nature of Test cricket. Now unless India’s bowlers have been way better than the opposition’s over this period, the batting cloud is not as dark as it might seem.It still is a cloud. When India dominated Test cricket from 2016 to 2020, their top four averaged twice the opposition’s top four, a little over 50 as against a little over 25. So unless the bowling has dipped dramatically over the last two years, the batting has. Kohli is averaging in the 20s since the start of 2020, Cheteshwar Pujara is barely in the 30s, and only Rohit Sharma is in the 40s.There has been a dramatic dip in the averages of India’s top four, and a small rise in the opposition’s top four in this period as compared to the four golden years before that.A transition has to be delicately handled, and India’s World Test Championship hopes also rest on winning four out of five Tests, including this one. Usually you would think India are the favourites to make the final considering the remaining four Tests are at home, where they have lost just two Tests in the last 10 years. However, this batting transition and the occasional bowling profligacy might make their fans more nervous than they should be given their record at home.

Welcome to the IPL, England-style

The ECB’s resistance for the IPL has vanished in the last few years, with Englishmen now playing key roles at almost every franchise

Matt Roller12-May-2023It’s 6.15pm at Bengaluru’s M Chinnaswamy Stadium, the evening before Royal Challengers Bangalore play Kolkata Knight Riders. The teams are training on either side of the square and in between them, two men are chatting – one in KKR’s training kit, the other in an RCB polo.James Foster, KKR’s assistant coach, is catching up with Mo Bobat, who has come to India for a week in his role as a performance consultant for RCB. Foster has regularly worked with England as an assistant coach in the last three years, while Bobat is the ECB’s performance director.David Willey walks past them and towards the changing rooms, having finished his pre-match net. When he re-emerges, ball in hand, he wanders over to RCB and England white-ball analyst Freddie Wilde and the pair discuss plans for the following evening: how should Willey attack Jason Roy?Related

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On the other side of the square, Roy is waiting to bat in the KKR nets, having started his session slightly later than his team-mates because of media duties. “To play here, in front of these crowds… it’s incredibly special,” he said, the night before hitting a 22-ball half-century. “The passion over here is second to none.”Back home in the UK, KKR are being supported remotely by Nathan Leamon, Wilde’s predecessor with England. James Bell, a psychologist who works regularly with England teams, is available to RCB’s players remotely, before joining them during their stretch of five consecutive away games.Welcome to the IPL, England-style. Eight years ago, after England failed to reach the quarter-finals in an abject ODI World Cup, only two of their players – Ravi Bopara and Eoin Morgan – made an appearance in the IPL, and contributed 332 runs and six wickets between them.Now, there are Englishmen playing key roles at almost every franchise – both on and off the pitch. “It’s been a big shift,” says Moeen Ali, who has played in each of the last six IPL seasons. “Before, you had some English guys playing but definitely not as many as you would do now.”On Monday, Chris Jordan became the 17th England player to have been under contract at some stage in IPL 2023, a record for a single season. Nine of the league’s ten teams have fielded at least one Englishman over the last six weeks; the only exception, Gujarat Titans, have one as their director of cricket.After the 2015 World Cup, in which England were eliminated before the quarter-finals, Strauss noticed a huge contrast in IPL experience between England’s squad and the four semi-finalists (Australia, India, New Zealand and South Africa). It confirmed his belief that the benefits of spending two months alongside the world’s best white-ball players were competitive, as well as commercial.Players were actively encouraged to enter the IPL auction, even though it meant missing two months of County Championship cricket in the build-up to the first Test series of the summer. Where going to India had once counted against players in the selection, IPL form was now actively considered: Jos Buttler won a Test recall in 2018 after five consecutive half-centuries for Rajasthan Royals.And gradually, the ECB’s desire for players to experience the IPL has been reflected financially, too. Since inception, centrally-contracted players were deducted a percentage of their annual retainer for every day they spent at the IPL; in the last few years, that arrangement has quietly been dropped.Now, England’s status as double world champions – the first men’s team to hold the 50-over and 20-over World Cups simultaneously – means that franchises are desperate to tap into their white-ball culture. “It just shows that we’ve been quality for a number of years in international cricket so, most of the time, teams are going to want to pick your players in the IPL,” Moeen says.Three of the top five buys at December’s auction were English (Harry Brook, Sam Curran and Ben Stokes) and while none of them have had the tournaments they envisaged, Brook scored this season’s first century and Curran was entrusted with the Punjab Kings captaincy when Shikhar Dhawan was unavailable.ESPNcricinfo LtdBut now, even players who are not guaranteed selection in a full-strength England team find themselves in demand. “It is great to see even guys like Phil Salt step up, take his opportunity, start making some scores – guys that aren’t always regulars on the international scene start making their way in this tournament,” says Root, who himself has not played a T20 international for four years.And now, the transition extends beyond the pitch. Take Bobat, for example. “I’ve worked with Mo for three years now,” says Mike Hesson, RCB’s director of cricket. “In white-ball cricket, England have without a doubt made a good transition. Obviously in 2015 – which I was part of [as New Zealand coach] – England were not at their best.”And we certainly saw from a New Zealand perspective, how England changed. I saw it first-hand, with Brendon [McCullum] and Eoin being great mates and sharing a lot of similarities. That flowed into white-ball cricket, and now it’s a big part of their red-ball stuff. Mo has been a part of that journey, in terms of how that transition has happened. We’re lucky to have him.”Where once Australians dominated among IPL backroom staff, Englishmen are gradually replacing them. After working closely with the franchise while Jofra Archer was returning to fitness, Ben Langley left the ECB to become Mumbai Indians’ global head of sports science and medicine earlier this year.The fear, in the medium term, is that others could follow him. The expansion of IPL franchises overseas means that staff are signing year-round contracts; it is only a matter of time until players follow suit, with informal discussions already underway in some cases.RCB’s performance consultant Mo Bobat with their spin-bowling coach S Sriram•RCBIn the ECB’s financial statements for 2022-23, the “emergence and growth of global franchise leagues and pressure on player wage inflation in a highly competitive market” is identified as a “major risk”. The board is in the process of overhauling its central-contract system, recognising that the T20 leagues’ pulling power is not going anywhere.But if IPL franchises trust Englishmen much more, so too do England trust franchises. Both Archer and Stokes were cleared to travel to India for the 2023 season, and the ECB has managed their injuries with their respective franchises throughout this campaign; Rob Key, the managing director of men’s cricket, believes the competition is “only good” for players to be involved in.Perhaps the most influential Englishman in the IPL is among the least heralded. Vikram Solanki left his role as Surrey’s head coach 16 months ago to become Titans’ director of cricket: in their first season, Titans won the IPL; in their second, they are the league’s pace-setters.Solanki personifies the shift in English cricket’s relationship with the IPL. Once, England were laggards in T20 cricket; now, they have never more influence at the format’s cutting edge.

Five years after Sandpapergate, what has changed in Australian cricket?

The amount of reverse swing on offer down under has dropped significantly, and so has the amount of sledging

Cameron Ponsonby22-Jun-2023The sandpaper incident is a painfully taboo subject. For this article, cold approaches for interviews were either ignored or politely declined, while even warm introductions were largely given cold responses. Ultimately, three former international cricketers agreed to speak anonymously, though several more spoke off the record. Each was asked the same question: in the five years since the sport suffered its most controversial fallout in recent memory, what has changed in cricket?Accounts were consistent across the board. Sandpaper may have been a global news story but its ramifications were domestic. In Australia ball-tampering was all but gone overnight, with players speaking of a drastic dip in the amount of reverse swing seen in matches. Sledging continued to decline, in contrast to just after 2016, when Matthew Wade’s selection as wicketkeeper – due to his quick wit behind the stumps as much as his quick hands – aligned with a slight rise in on-field sledging.Related

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“It certainly reverberated down the channels in state cricket,” says one former Australia international. “There were things like Rick McCosker [who led the cultural review] coming around and interviewing people on CA’s behalf, about ‘What the hell is going on? How have we got here?’ And not just about ball-tampering, but that was a series [in South Africa] where there was a lot of animosity and on-field verbal stuff going on.”[But] I think there’s a couple of important distinctions to make. Has cricket changed? Yes, it has. Was the punishment that was handed down by Cricket Australia over the top to send a message to everyone [that] the unspoken culture and history of Australian cricket is worth more to us than anything the ICC can govern? I think it was absolutely done based off that, rather than fair process.”

****

Australia was late to adopt reverse swing. The skill arrived in the country through English professionals playing at grade clubs in the 2000s. And until Cape Town in 2018, the techniques used had been in line with the rule-bending found everywhere. A touch of lip balm applied to the ball here, the odd scratch of the nail there, maybe a quick brush of the ball against a zipper.Copping it rough: David Warner gets taunted by sandpaper-waving fans at the Edgbaston Ashes Test in 2019•Tom Jenkins/Getty Images”It was pretty similar,” says one player of his experience playing in Sheffield Shield cricket compared to the County Championship. “I wouldn’t have said either were doing it more than [the other].Such was the severity of the punishment handed down to David Warner, Steven Smith and Cameron Bancroft by Cricket Australia – Smith and Warner received yearlong bans and Bancroft nine months – that the attitude to ball-tampering changed overnight.”I know in our [Shield] dressing room we talked about it and said, ‘We’re not risking anything.’ Dry shine, sweat shine. Like, no sweat with sunscreen on. It wasn’t like anyone was suggesting we might have wiped the ball on excess sunscreen on our arm. We’re talking about, you can’t see [sunscreen], it literally looks like sweat on your arm – we’re not using that. Just back sweat and anything under the shirt. No risk around that stuff was the line we took.”Another player speaks of how using things like lip balm incidentally while applying saliva on the ball, “to add a layer of really buffing the leather” went from being common practice to “basically not there”. He said, “I think it’s at a point where it’s not worth the risk and also really not how we want to be viewed anyway.”The decision to leave the lip balm at the door, however, wasn’t without risk: although teams could guarantee what their own manicure routines would be, they couldn’t second-guess what others would do. “Absolutely, that was a concern – we were a skill-based bowling attack,” said the player whose changing room had taken on a no-risks mantra.The use of sandpaper itself, however, is cricket’s bogeyman. Either side of the equator, players have heard talk of how it has been used, but claim never to have seen it actually done themselves.While it might not have been a surprise that Cameron Bancroft was implicated in the execution of the Newlands ball-tampering, the manner in which it was carried out was shocking to many•Harry Trump/Getty Images”I’ve never in my life seen someone take sandpaper onto a cricket field at any level of cricket,” says one player. “I was absolutely bewildered by the thought that anyone would think that’s a good idea.”Another said: “I was always admiring of people who could [get the ball moving]. So I would have watched and watched and watched and definitely picked up on that. That would have been one of the things that I would have been a dog with a bone about. I’ve never seen it, genuinely.”Players were shocked at the means but not the intent. Ball management has been, and in reality will continue to be, part of every dressing room in professional cricket, and in much of the amateur game too.Teams have long had specified ball managers, and for some within Australia, the fact that the role was given to Cameron Bancroft was no surprise at all.”He was the ball manager for Western Australia for a long time,” says one player. “That’s how we saw it in our dressing room… so he’s experienced in that area. I was still shocked he took a bit of f**king sandpaper out on the ground!”Despite sightings of sandpaper being rare to non-existent, stories persist. During the 2017-18 Ashes series, England suspected foul play, with Warner’s strapped hands attracting attention.”Just back sweat and anything under the shirt. No risk around that stuff was the line we took,” an Australian domestic player says about the post-Sandpapergate zero-tolerance approach to anything that might be seen as being in the ballpark of tampering•Mike Hewitt/AFP via Getty ImagesThere are a number of theories about how sandpaper is used, but the premise is the same. You place the rough side of the ball in your palm, either layered in or occasionally stuck on top of, the strapping on your hand, and as you shine one side, the sandpaper roughs up the other. Two for the price of one; every batter must go.The arrival of Covid-19 further underlined the change in the wake of the Cape Town scandal: use of saliva on the ball was banned entirely and greater scrutiny was placed on the number of players who were touching what the former British prime minister Boris Johnson called “the vector of disease” between deliveries. Nevertheless, senior Australian players are clear that where there had been ball-tampering during the 2017-18 season, from the 2018-19 pre-Covid season it had all but gone. Meanwhile younger players, whose debut came after the whole ordeal, say candidly that they struggle to even wrap their heads around the idea that saliva was once allowed to be used on the ball at all.

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Ball-tampering was, of course, only half the story, the other being how Australia had allowed an environment to develop where such a thing could happen. The fallout made as much for a cultural introspection for Australia as a cricketing one.That 2018 series with South Africa was vicious to the point of vile. The two teams had history. In 2014, Faf du Plessis described the Aussies as a “pack of dogs”, a comment that Warner barked his approval of on the pitch in response. In the first Test of the 2018 series, there was the infamous stairwell incident, where a fight nearly broke out after Quinton de Kock allegedly directed a crude comment at Warner regarding his wife.”Watching the Australian team and what happened through that period,” a former Australian international said, “I feel it started from the national team point of view to get a bit ugly.The ball-tampering affair was seen as such a scandal in Australia at the time that the likes of the prime minister, Malcolm Turnbull, spoke about it publicly. “It beggars belief,” the PM said•Getty Images”I don’t reckon I’d seen it get that ugly at first-class level – I couldn’t name a time where it had. You know, players doing things that I thought were out of character was really stealing my attention.”A guy like Nathan Lyon, who I wouldn’t have said is overly provocative. What he is, is a bit of a court jester sometimes, starts conversations about weird stuff… but when AB de Villiers got run-out in that series and [Lyon] dropped the ball on his chest when he was lying on the ground, that’s like, things were getting out of control.”And so the hammer came down on Australian cricket. McCosker conducted the cultural review, Iain Roy the Cape Town investigation, and Malcolm Turnbull the prime ministerial sideline swipe.”I have to say,” Turnbull said on television, “that [to] the whole nation who holds those who wear the baggy green up on a pedestal, about as high as you can get in Australia… this is a shocking disappointment.”How can our team be engaged in cheating like this? It beggars belief.””Matthew Wade’s selection as a keeper,” recalls one player, “where he replaced Peter Nevill in 2016, and it was sort of an [endorsement of an] attack-dog mentality. Matt was and still is an incredible cricketer, so it’s not a slight on him – it’s more like, it was outwardly spoken by a team hierarchy that we wanted a keeper that was going to get in people’s faces. Bring that attitude that we drive the contest. And that was, without necessarily explicitly saying it, very much part of the process.”Matthew Wade’s (left) selection as Australia’s Test wicketkeeper to follow Peter Nevill was seen in many quarters as the team deciding to consciously be more abrasive in the field•Ryan Pierse/Cricket Australia/Getty Images”I wouldn’t necessarily disagree,” replied another player to the idea that the symbolism of Wade’s selection (though mouthy Australian wicketkeepers have historically not been rare) had had an impact on sledging in the Sheffield Shield. “Like, yes, it might have been a little bit of an upturn, but I reckon if you’re looking at a stock-market worm, it may have just been a little uptick for a little while. I’d still say it wasn’t really a patch on the stuff that was going around earlier in my career.”The world has changed rapidly since then, to one where domestic opponents can also be domestic team-mates, depending on what the colour of the ball is, and international opponents can be franchise team-mates. The idea that the people you play against each week are consistently the worst blokes in the competition no longer rings true.”You are now not just a state cricketer, you’re basically on the market as a free agent. And if you’re a f**kwit, people know about it – you get delisted, you don’t last.”Sandpaper’s impact on sledging in Australia was to yank the steering wheel back in the direction in which the game had already been travelling – and would continue to do so around the rest of the world.”Everyone still gets in the contest,” concludes one Shield player. “It’s not like it’s an Under-12 game of cricket. But it’s more I think all of this coupled together, and [also] a bit of a realisation from everyone that we can’t carry on, we should play with smiles on our faces and remember why we play cricket in the first place.”

“You might get ‘You’re a f**king shit player’ or something like that. And that’s probably about it.”

****

So ball-tampering in Australia is gone. Good. One for the good guys. Except, it isn’t that simple. One of the reasons that players are so reluctant to talk about the issue is the disparity between the attitude towards tampering within the professional game as a whole and outside it. The line between ball management and tampering is vague. Something that a professional may consider as part of the game, the average fan on the street may interpret as tampering, and therefore, cheatingFor an example of the confused state in which ball-tampering exists within cricket, consider Bancroft’s punishment for his involvement in the saga of Cape Town. The ICC, the sport’s literal international governing body fined him just 75% of his match fee. His own board banned him for nine months – although admittedly, the players’ subsequent attempted cover-up played a major role in the harshness of that decision.Nevertheless, get caught tampering and you can be an international news story, banned by your own board and criticised by your own prime minister, while still getting paid (as Bancroft was for that Test), all at the same time.It’s why players from outside Australia largely reflected on the sandpaper affair with a shrug rather than anger. A look down the nose at an over-the-top act they considered weird as opposed to important.It would be easy to come to a shocked and startled conclusion that the game not shifting in attitudes to ball management elsewhere should be an indictment of everyone else and a gold star for Australia. But ball-tampering being so common in Australia, rather than in the UK, for example, wasn’t down to a difference in attitudes but a difference in conditions.Though the amount of reverse swing seen in the Australian game has declined markedly since 2018, bowlers have been able to make up: batting averages in the four years since then dropped by about a run over the period preceding•Chris Hyde/Getty ImagesThe UK uses the Dukes ball and conditions tend to be damp. So the name of the game is to keep the ball as pristine as possible so that it continues to swing conventionally for as long as possible. Whereas in Australia, it is dry and the less bowler-friendly Kookaburra is used, so more work is required on the ball to extract any movement.”I think, largely, reverse swing has gone out of the game,” explains one player of the Sheffield Shield post-sandpaper.”I think the danger – not that I’m advocating for ball-tampering one bit – is, we’re looking at probably 15 to 20 overs of genuine swing then no reverse swing. Literally no movement off the straight at all. You’re just pushing s**t uphill to try and get something to happen in Australia.”However, since 2018, batting averages against fast bowlers in overs 50 through 80 in the Sheffield Shield have actually dropped ever so slightly from 29.59 in the four seasons preceding, to 28.43 since. A figure that suggests despite reverse swing largely disappearing, bowlers have nonetheless managed to find a way to extract advantage successfully without the aid of a nail or some lip balm.Overall, ball-tampering carries with it a mystery, and because it’s illegal, some excitement. But to some extent it is fans getting giddy over someone going a mile per hour over the speed limit. Within the game, players who are known for their ability to get the ball moving are known as magicians as much as cheats. Revered as much as they are reviled.”I’m of the opinion,” concludes one player, “that I want to see the greats move the ball off the straight at pace and do things that I can’t do. We’ve got to be very careful that the game needs to be played on the edge – of course it does. We don’t want to cross over that. But we need to see the cool bits of the game as well.”Sandpapergate crossed a line and a necessary overreaction came in response. And as a result, Australia woke up with a stinking hangover, and vowed to never drink again. It’s just that much to everyone’s shock, it appears that, so far, they’ve stuck to their promise.

Teenage quick Mahika Gaur dreams of finishing matches like the other Mahi

The 17-year-old UAE international is set to make her England debut after a stellar summer

S Sudarshanan30-Aug-20232:08

Mahika Gaur talks about her idols, MS Dhoni and Mitchell Starc

Left-arm seamer Mahika Gaur was only 12 when she made her international debut for UAE. Four years on, she is set to become a double-international after being called up for England’s white-ball series at home against Sri Lanka.If you were to create a left-arm seamer in a lab, the ideal ingredients would be a tall frame, lean build, and an ability to move the ball, all of which Gaur, who is over six feet tall, has. In terms of pace, she is not yet Mitchell Starc, one of her idols, but in a short span, she has been able to use her height and discipline to trouble some of the top batters in the game.In Gaur’s first match at this year’s FairBreak Invitational Tournament in Hong Kong, she got a length delivery to lift off the surface and jag back into the hard-hitting Deandra Dottin, who swayed away but could only glove it to the keeper. In her second match in the Women’s Hundred, Gaur kept Oval Invincibles openers Suzie Bates and Lauren Winfield-Hill on a tight leash with her swing while mixing her lengths. She bowled 15 of her 20 balls inside the 25-ball powerplay for only seven runs and got the wicket of Winfield-Hill.Born in Reading in the south of England, Gaur was inspired to take up cricket after watching an IPL match in Jaipur in 2011: Shane Warne had starred in a Rajasthan Royals win over Delhi Daredevils and the atmosphere at the Sawai Mansingh Stadium captivated Gaur so much that she wanted to play as soon as she got back to England.”I was practising bowling in the garden. I think my dad was just surprised that I could roll my arm fully without chucking the ball,” Gaur said on the sidelines of the Fairbreak Invitational in April this year. “He was a left-arm bowler in college but never got to do his cricket thing. But when he saw that I have potential, he’s always been on board.”Three years later, when the family moved to Dubai, Gaur enrolled in the ICC Academy, where she met Chaya Mughal, who later became UAE Women’s captain. “The first time I went into ICC [Academy], she was training indoors and the coach over there, Adnan [Sabri] sir said that I can bowl to her.”I was bowling loopy full tosses and she was defending them. She was the first person I bowled to there and I was star-struck. My dad told me she’s from the UAE national team – that was pretty cool.”In 19 T20Is for UAE, Gaur took nine wickets and conceded 5.15 runs an over•Alex Davidson/ECB/Getty ImagesMughal also remembers her first sightings of a young Gaur, whom she went on to captain in 16 T20Is for UAE. “A young girl, taking a long run-up, high-arm action, left arm – I was surprised to see a full package,” she said. “The first thought that came to my mind was, ‘Wow, she is going to be a fantastic player for the UAE side!'”She was continuously hitting the hard length and wanted the ball to come into me. I was amazed to see such a talent and she was putting in a lot of effort in every ball. She wanted to do something new in every ball she bowled. The spark she had took me aback.”Twelve-year-old Gaur didn’t quite grasp the significance of her international debut, in 2019, and wondered why her parents and older sister were “making such a big deal of it”. She only realised how momentous her debut was when Theertha Satish and Khushi Sharma, two of her best friends in the UAE set-up, got their T20I caps in 2021 at ages 17 and 19 respectively.But the major turning point in her life came in 2020. After a training session with UAE was cancelled, Gaur found herself bowling in a masterclass session with Manchester Originals at the Dubai Expo. Lancashire men’s captain Keaton Jennings and former wicketkeeper Warren Hegg, the cricket operations executive at Lancashire and Originals, were impressed by what they saw.”[Hegg] was just talking to me and found out I have a British passport,” Gaur said. “So I could play in England as a domestic player. They got in touch with my parents and I moved to Manchester in December 2021.”The following June, Gaur took 11 wickets for UAE in the Under-19 Women’s T20 World Cup Asia Qualifiers – the most among fast bowlers and second overall, and her economy rate of 1.36 was the best for any bowler with at least four overs in the tournament. Originals picked her in their squad as a reserve and she made her Hundred debut this August.By then there was already enough indication that England were also interested in the tall seamer. In June this year Gaur was selected to play T20s for England A against Australia A in a shadow tour alongside the Women’s Ashes. She also took 11 white-ball wickets for her domestic side, Thunder, in 13 innings during this period.Gaur says she learnt a lot from her more experienced team-mates, including Nicola Carey, Bismah Maroof and Ayabonga Khaka, during the FairBreak Invitational Tournament earlier this year•Yu Chun Christopher Wong/Getty ImagesWhat has stood out in most of these appearances is her calm and her ability to keep batters in check with the new ball. In May at Old Trafford in a 50-over domestic game for Thunder against Sparks, she prevented a set Davina Perrin and Grace Potts from scoring eight in the final over; the match was tied.Gaur’s calm perhaps comes from wanting to emulate the other “Mahi”, MS Dhoni.”One of the players I looked up to was Dhoni,” she said. “He is the CSK captain, so I am a big CSK fan. We would watch all his finishes. My first ever cricket jersey was a picture of Dhoni and on the back it said ‘Mahi 7’ because he’s Mahi and I am Mahi as well.”I think it’s why I started liking cricket, because he was making the team win from impossible situations. When I was younger, I would also dream of finishing matches like he did.”Her other idol, Starc, sent her a video message on her 16th birthday that “made my day”.”I was just in shock. That was really kind of him, and hopefully in the future, I’ll get to meet and talk to him about bowling.”For now, Gaur is enjoying learning from her more experienced team-mates across the world. At FairBreak, she shared a dressing room with Australia’s Nicola Carey, Pakistan’s Bismah Maroof and South Africa’s Ayabonga Khaka.”I prefer to know about how [the experienced players] approach something,” she said. “We were in trouble chasing a tall total against Tornadoes when Nicola Carey went out to bat. From the dugout we just watched how she took responsibility and made us win comfortably when it looked like we were not going to win.”Similarly, in one of the games, Bismah played a great innings but we lost. I asked her about what she was thinking on that surface that was tough to bat on.”Ayabonga Khaka was telling me about when she goes to her yorkers and when is the right time to bowl a slower ball. When I got hit, she would tell me what I could have done [differently]. Just small stuff like that, not overcomplicating it. They just keep it super simple.”Gaur narrowly missed out being part of the inaugural Women’s Premier League in March in India. Gujarat Giants put in a late bid for her at the auction but they had already exhausted their overseas quota. Had she been picked, she might have played as the fifth overseas player in the XI, since she was from an Associate side. Still, she was happy a team had bid for her.Outside the game, Gaur is continuing with her education – she’s studying biology, maths and psychology – but says juggling school and cricket has been difficult. “As much as I want to study, I don’t want to just always be studying when we’re in a new country [for cricket]. It’s good to go out. I am not too upset that I haven’t been studying that much. It is good in a way because I’m always busy, [either] studying or playing cricket.”Bigger challenges await her as an England international. There will be more competition for a spot in the XI, but also more game time compared to her UAE days, which means more opportunity for the opposition to dissect her skills. However, FairBreak and the Hundred have shown she has the appetite to put up a fight.

Edwards leads from front as Netherlands nail their big moment

First World Cup win over Test nation fired by calculated rescue act with bat and assured captaincy

Vithushan Ehantharajah17-Oct-20231:26

Where does this Netherlands win rank among upsets?

You don’t get to choose how you win a game of cricket, regardless of how seismic the result. Netherlands know that much.A first victory in any format over South Africa in last year’s T20 World Cup was confirmed when Anrich Nortje flayed the final ball of a botched chase to deep extra cover for four. It took nothing away from the achievement, but such moments deserve screentime for the victors, not shots of a lonely ball on a pointless journey into some forgettable advertising boards.Thankfully, their second over the same opponents – a first ODI World Cup win against a Test nation – made amends. A succession of air shots landing in no-man’s land suggested the Dutch might be due another un-highlightable highlight. Until Logan van Beek banged one in short to Keshav Maharaj, and Scott Edwards took the resulting catch. South Africa were bowled out, 39 shy of their target. And Netherlands were, rightly, the centre of attention.Related

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This dismissal will sit alongside the replays of Ryan ten Doeschate and Edgar Schiferli scampering that second run after Stuart Broad’s missed run out. Just like those two, van Beek and Edwards have cemented their place in history.Their contributions make them all the more worthy of sharing that final money shot. Having missed the game against his native New Zealand with a hamstring injury, van Beek’s 3 for 60 was essentially a series of hugely significant moments. The destructive Heinrich Klaasen was caught around the corner at deep fine leg, before an offcutter struck David Miller’s off stump – the moment the Netherlands went from “believing” to “knowing”.It was Edwards, however, who took them to “believing” and facilitated “knowing” from a hopeless place. South Africa won the toss, opted to bowl first, and were coasting to victory as early as the 21st over when Netherlands’ captain arrived at the crease with the scoreboard reading 82 for 5. He finished unbeaten on 78, lifting his charges to a score of 245 for 8 with vital assistance from Roelof van der Merwe and Aryan Dutt. He then nailed every tactical call behind the stumps to cap off a remarkable night in Dharamsala.Edwards’ team-mates will tell you he leads from the front. “One of those guys you just want to follow,” is how van Beek put it earlier this month. Maybe it should not be a surprise someone who flirted with an electrical apprenticeship is a handy conductor.The stats show as much too: averaging 48.12 since becoming captain in 2022 after Pieter Seelaar’s retirement, and guiding the Dutch through the qualifiers for this tournament earlier this year with 314 runs at 62.80.Even so, you wondered how much leading could be done from No. 7, especially having called on the line-up to give a better account of themselves after successive failures to start the competition. A “free role” has seen Edwards assume every spot from opener to No. 8. With van Beek returning to the XI, he took the decision to move himself down to seven in his 38th ODI innings, which felt like a waste of his talents. And then all of a sudden, Netherlands were five down. Maybe he knew all along.Scott Edwards was required to do a rescue job for his team•ICC/Getty ImagesThe rescue act was as calculated as it was calm, and essentially all about pride at the start. His third sweep off Keshav Maharaj – one of seven boundaries slapped to the leg side – took him to 25 and, more importantly, beyond Extras (24) as the top-scorer at the time. That was both a summation of South Africa’s dominance with the ball, and a nod to their error-strewn finish to come.Born in Tonga and raised in Australia, Edwards’ grew up idolising Adam Gilchrist. Beyond keeping wicket, there is not that much in common between the two. Edwards loves sweeps and seems too polite to whisper a few somethings into a batter’s ear. But the acceleration when he sensed South Africa were losing their way, signposted by smashing a short-length delivery outside off stump from Kagiso Rabada over square leg with disdain, was a Gilchrist-like assertion of dominance.He has a long way to go if he wants to replicate the confidence of the Aussie great. Stands of 64 with van der Merwe and 41 with Dutt brought 105 from the final nine overs, though Edwards shied away of taking credit for any of it, even while holding the Player of the Match award. He praised van der Merwe’s striking to unusual areas, then mused that Dutt’s six-heavy 23 meant his part in the stand was minimal: “It was pretty easy on my behalf – I just got him on strike.”The strings pulled in the field were of equal importance against a batting line-up that had already shown itself to be one to fear. The reduction to 43-over innings because of the morning rain required recalibration, given only three bowlers could bowl nine overs (two a maximum of eight) along with the threat of dew in the second half. So recalibrate he did.Edwards opted for seven overs of spin in the rejigged nine-over powerplay with a view to restricting the scoring of openers Quinton de Kock and Temba Bavuma by taking pace off the ball. Not only did it limit South Africa to 39 with just two men in the outfield, but the bonus of de Kock’s wicket – pouched by Edwards – came with the last ball of Colin Ackermann’s three overs of bit-part offspin.Once the field went out, the seamers played a fuller part with a straighter line of attack, utilising the variable bounce evident in the first innings but not used all that much. Edwards had clearly made mental notes while batting, and along with those written down on a piece of paper stored in Max O’Dowd’s pocket, gave the Dutch a palpable sense of control they did not relinquish.They were altogether more disciplined – eight extras to South Africa’s final tally of 32 – more willing in the field and braver in their approach. All character traits embodied by Edwards, even if he would go on to shower others with praise in his remaining media engagements.As it happens, the three catches taken moved him to 50 ODI dismissals, beating the previous Dutch record of 48 held by Jeroen Smits. It was an extra, deserved feather in the cap of a skipper who had not just overseen Netherlands’ third – and best – victory at an ODI World Cup, but given them reasons to believe they can break further ground in the competition, knock off some other big-timers and add a few more clips to that highlight reel.

India vs England has been a tale of two very good captains

Rohit Sharma has led inspiringly and with tactical skill. Stokes is aggressive but has a task on his hands

Ian Chappell24-Feb-2024Despite the absence from the India-England series of star players Virat Kohli and Mohammed Shami, very good cricketers KL Rahul and Ravindra Jadeja missing Tests through injury, and the resting of elite pace bowler Jasprit Bumrah, India are still a very good team.They’ve unearthed talented players in opener Yashasvi Jaiswal and middle-order batter Sarfaraz Khan. Shubman Gill is a skilful batter and more responsibility on his shoulders should eventually pay dividends.While the spin bowling has been in the capable hands of R Ashwin and Jadeja for a long time, the realisation that Kuldeep Yadav is a reliable wicket-taking option is a bonus for India.Related

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One area of concern is fast bowling and the future support for the crucial trio of Bumrah, Shami and the feisty Mohamed Siraj. However, debutant Akash Deep quickly answered some of those questions, producing some skiddy fast bowling with the new ball in the fourth Test.In the sudden shuffling of the Indian side after a prolonged period of selection stability, the leadership of Rohit Sharma is often overlooked. Rohit, in his quiet but efficient way, is a very different leader from the aggressive and highly visible Ben Stokes. His capable handling of the many changes to personnel and the tough loss of the first Test shows his resilience. He also produced a masterful century when the Indian team needed it, at the start of the third Test, to confirm he wasn’t a ceremonial captain.Rohit has a pedigree of leadership success and his reputation helped him guide a fluid Indian line-up in the right direction. Any failure in his leadership could easily have led this Indian team to faltering when the going got tough. Thanks to Rohit’s strength under fire, it is now England who look to Stokes to provide the leadership to ensure there isn’t a serious letdown after two consecutive Test losses, the second of which was a flogging. There is no doubt the elite skill of Bumrah and the talent of Jaiswal and the other inexperienced players India introduced to the team is helpful. However, it required the leadership guidance and the tactical nous of Rohit to ensure that a changing team retained belief in their cricket.His clever use of Kuldeep during the third Test in the absence of Ashwin was a masterstroke in turning a potential disaster to the team’s advantage. Rohit’s ability to remain unyielding and calculating after a depressing loss in the first Test has helped his side bounce back against a competitive English team.

The elite skill of Bumrah and the talent of Jaiswal and the other inexperienced players India have introduced is helpful. However, it required the leadership guidance and the tactical nous of Rohit Sharma to ensure that a changing team retained belief in their cricket.

The outstanding success of Jaiswal at the top of the order has been crucial to India’s new-look team finding success. Jaiswal will no doubt have down periods but he has the shots and all-round skill to be an overall success in any format. His tremendous success has been symptomatic of the evolution of the Indian team under Rohit.By meekly capitulating against spin in the second innings of their devastating loss in the third Test, England left themselves vulnerable to another trial by slow bowling in the fourth match. This became pretty obvious once talk of Bumrah being rested reached a crescendo.Part of the task for Stokes was convincing the batters – mainly Joe Root – to be more judicious if they must employ any “fancy” shots. Root was a mammoth and quick scorer batting traditionally and I’m not sure why he wanted to employ any premeditated and therefore risky shots. Whether he personally decided it or Stokes prompted some introspection, the talented batter returned to his roots to produce a telling century on an engaging first day, dragging England out of a perilous situation to ensure the visitors provided a challenging first-day total in Ranchi.Captaincy didn’t suit Root but sensible batting does.Whatever the result, England have displayed their resilience under Stokes and the ability to not fold like a tent after a debilitating loss. Ranchi is shaping as yet another highly competitive Test featuring two very good Test captains.

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