Is the ICC's pitch-rating system fit for purpose?

Why is Brisbane 2022 below average, while Ahmedabad 2021 is not? Here’s why using technology to assess pitches would help weed out many of the shortcomings of the current process

Scott Oliver30-Mar-2023No other sport obsesses quite as much as cricket over the surfaces on which it is played. Pitches are not only a perennial object of fascination but also the subject of controversy. Take the preliminaries for the Border-Gavaskar Trophy series, with the usual dance of pre-emptive suspicion and defensiveness. A bullish Ravi Shastri called for pitches that turned from the outset, and Ian Healy talked up Australia’s chances thus: “I think if they produce fair Indian wickets that are good batting wickets to begin with… we win. If they’re unfair wickets … then I think India play those conditions better than us.”Then the covers came off in Nagpur and it was apparent that the pitch had been selectively watered, mowed and rolled, and that this “differential preparation” – which left bare patches outside the left-handers’ off stump on a spinner’s length at both ends – had ostensibly been tailored to suit the home team, who had one leftie in the top seven to the visitors’ four, and two left-arm spinners to the visitors’ none. Australia’s players maintained a strategic silence, but was this pushing home advantage too far?The match referee, Andy Pycroft, ultimately decided that the pitch was not worthy of sanction, yet questions around pitch preparation were nevertheless again brought into sharp focus. In the age of bilateral series, with World Test Championship points on the line, will pitch-doctoring become an ever greater temptation, as Rahul Dravid observed recently? And, more broadly, what is a “good” or “fair” pitch, and how is it determined?Related

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ICC rescinds demerit point for Rawalpindi pitch that hosted Pakistan-England Test

How the ICC’s pitch-rating system works nowThe ICC’s Pitch and Outfield Monitoring Process was introduced in 2006 and updated in January 2018 in an effort, they say, to reflect the variety of conditions worldwide and make member boards more accountable for the pitches they produce, as well as to introduce greater transparency in the rating of pitches.One of six potential ratings applies to both pitch and outfield for each game: very good, good, average, below average, poor and unfit, with the bottom three incurring demerit points (1, 3 and 5 respectively for the pitch, 0, 2 and 5 for the outfield). Pick up five demerit points in a rolling five-year period and your ICC ground accreditation is suspended for 12 months. Pick up ten and it is two years without international cricket. Hugely consequential for the local association, perhaps less so for the national board. In situations where a pitch underperforms, match referees must consult umpires and captains before assigning a rating.The Rawalpindi pitch for the England Test in 2022. Below average? Okay. No, wait…•Anjum Naveed/Associated PressA pitch is deemed to be “below average” if there is “either very little carry and/or bounce and/or more than occasional seam movement, or occasional variable (but not excessive or dangerous) bounce and/or occasional variable carry”. Fine, but how do you determine this?A pitch is deemed “poor” if it “does not allow an even contest between bat and ball”, whether that favours batters or bowlers. The ICC’s guidance goes on to invoke “excessive seam movement”, “excessive unevenness of bounce”, “excessive assistance to spin bowlers, especially early in the match” and “little or no seam movement or turn at any stage in the match together with no significant bounce or carry” as well as “excessive dryness” and “excessive moistness”. Fine, but how exactly do you determine all that?The notes for “clarification” in Appendix A to the ICC’s literature for the ratings tell us that “Excessive means ‘too much'”. Sure, but how exactly do you measure that?Too much is left to interpretation in the pitch-marking processThe truth is that it is rare for pitches to be given any of the bottom three marks. From the men’s World Cup in July 2019 to the end of 2022, only six Test pitches out of 135 (and one outfield) were given a “below average” rating, five of them in 2022. Two of 2022’s “below average” marks were for Rawalpindi. The first was given by Ranjan Madugalle when Australia’s visit in March produced 14 wickets across the five days for 1187 runs. The second was given by Pycroft after England’s visit last December, although this was subsequently overturned on appeal, which is heard by the chair of the ICC’s Cricket Committee, currently Sourav Ganguly, and the ICC general manager for cricket, currently Wasim Khan, the former CEO of the Pakistan Cricket Board. How did they arrive at this judgement?Ahmedabad 2021: A mini dust storm when the batter plays the ball? No problem, that’ll be an “average” rating•BCCIThe official explanation was that, “having reviewed footage of the Test Match, the ICC appeal panel […] were unanimous in their opinion that, while the guidelines had been followed by the Match Referee […] there were several redeeming features – including the fact that a result was achieved following a compelling game, with 37 out of a possible 39 wickets being taken. As such, the appeal panel concluded that the wicket did not warrant the ‘below average’ rating.”This is a curious logic. Ben Stokes’ team scored at a historically unprecedented rate (921 runs at 6.73 runs per over) to “put time back into the game”, thus drastically increasing the chance that wickets would be lost (every 43.2 balls to Pakistan’s 75.6), and they won with just ten minutes’ light remaining on the fifth evening. It is almost certain that England’s strategy was devised after contemplating the Australia Test match in March. Is the ICC saying that such a pitch is adequate provided the Bazball approach is adopted?When approached, in the spirit of transparency, about exactly how much of the match footage was reviewed, the ICC would only refer to the press release.According to the pitch-ratings guidelines, an “average” pitch “lacks carry, and/or bounce and/or occasional seam movement, but [is] consistent in carry and bounce”. Fine, but consistency is a property determined by frequency, and adjudicating on this implies one would watch the whole game – that is, have the full data set, as would a match referee – to be able to assess how regularly deliveries misbehaved. Was this done by the appeal panel?What emerges from all this is a sense that the process for marking pitches contains too much “interpretative latitude” in the criteria, and as such, lacks empirical robustness – borne out by how the judgement of a person who watched an entire game (and, presumably, consulted umpires and captains, as per ICC protocol) can be overturned by those who did not. This makes it likely that a match referee who has had a “below average” mark rescinded on appeal will, the next time he finds himself deciding between “average” or “below average”, be inclined to play safe, not least because the criteria plausibly allow it. Why put one’s neck out?The Indore pitch from earlier this year on the morning of day two of the Australia Test•Getty ImagesPycroft’s next two Tests after the Rawalpindi appeal verdict was returned in January were the first two of the Border-Gavaskar series. Both the “differentially prepared” Nagpur strip (on which a wicket fell every 47.1 deliveries, albeit with Australia only selecting two frontline spinners, one of whom was a debutant) and the pitch in Delhi (a wicket every 38.8 deliveries, both sides playing three front-line spinners) were marked as “average”.The pitch for the third Test, in Indore (a wicket every 38.5 deliveries, same spin-bowling line-ups) was rated “poor” by Chris Broad, initially incurring three demerit points. The strip for the bore draw in Ahmedabad (a somnolent 1970s run rate of 2.9 and a wicket winkled every 115.7 deliveries, 22 in five days on a surface that barely changed) was rated “average”, entirely understandable after the Rawalpindi overrule but surely not healthy for Test cricket.The BCCI appealed the Indore decision; Ganguly had to recuse himself from the review process, nominating a proxy, Roger Harper. It mattered little, as the outcome was again the same: Wasim Khan and Harper “reviewed the footage” of the match and despite feeling that “the guidelines had been followed” by Broad, ultimately decided “there was not enough excessive variable bounce to warrant the ‘poor’ rating”. Not enough. Okay then.As opaque as all this sounds, it was evidently a good outcome for the BCCI, although one can imagine circumstances in which it may not even have bothered appealing – after all, it is not really the national board that is being sanctioned but the local association, which loses both revenue and prestige. And here is where the scope for abuse lies: Crucial matches with WTC points at stake could, in theory, be assigned to a country’s second-tier grounds, with instructions to produce doctored, advantage-seeking pitches in full knowledge of the risk, or even likelihood, of demerit points, and the venue’s potential loss of ICC accreditation – taking one for the team, as it were – would be duly compensated by the board.Why not use ball-tracking to refine and add precision to the pitch-rating process?Ultimately, the subjective, interpretative element, the lack of empirical rigour in the pitch-ratings criteria, does little to help match referees (none of whom are permitted to express an opinion about the system), and in some instances could place them under an onerous degree of “political” pressure. Presumably, then, they would welcome a more objective and data-driven framework for their assessments.The solution, potentially, is staring cricket in the face: not neutral curators but the ball-tracking technology that has been a mandatory part of the infrastructure at all ICC fixtures since the DRS was introduced in November 2009.Essentially, match referees are rating a pitch’s performance properties: pace, bounce, lateral deviation, consistency, deterioration over time. The majority of these are already measured by ball-tracking technology providers for use in their broadcasts. It is not beyond the realms of technological possibility that these properties could be given precisely calibrated parameters, within which pitches must fall to attain the various ratings, beyond which they are considered extreme.How much better would the pitch-ratings system be if its judgements were based on data from Hawk-Eye’s ball-tracking?•International Cricket CouncilThe first step would be a deep dive into those 13-plus years of ball-tracking data (565 Tests and counting), establishing the relationships between the quantified performance properties exhibited by the various pitches and the marks assigned them. Cricketing common sense would suggest that there ought to be a fairly coherent set of correspondences between referees’ verdicts and the data.From there, you start to build the parameters. There would be some complexity here, even if some of the variables ought to be straightforwardly amenable to “parameterisation”. In particular: loss of pace after pitching, consistency of pace loss (and its deterioration across the match), bounce, consistency of bounce (and its deterioration). Beyond certain thresholds, pitches would be sanctioned accordingly.Less amenable to parameterisation, and thus more difficult to use to build a regulatory framework, would be lateral deviation, for both seam and spin (even if one would expect the deep dive to yield strong correspondences between pitch ratings and the ball-tracking data for sideways movement). Deviation upon pitching is immediately visible, of course, but the bowler’s skill plays a big part. For spinners, the relevant input variables producing the degree of turn are numerous: the revolutions imparted on the ball by the bowler, the axis of rotation, the pace of the delivery, the angle of incidence with the pitch, and the age of the ball.These variables can overlap and interact in ways that offset each other and potentially resist any one-size-fits-all parameterisation. For instance, a pitch may show “excessive” turn (once this has been defined) but it might be fairly slow turn with relatively uniform bounce. One might, in this instance, use the technology to model a relationship between pace loss and degree of turn for spinners, which would be calibrated against consensus notions of bat-ball balance.For all the complexity around lateral deviation (where do you set the parameters, and how rigidly?), a couple of things need to be said here.First, however difficult it is to create the framework, none of this lies beyond the scope of the existing technology. (Whether for contractual or commercial reasons, Hawk-Eye declined to comment on the viability of using its technology to assess pitch performance.)How green was my valley: the Brisbane pitch for the South Africa Test last year tries hard to blend into the background•Bradley Kanaris/Getty ImagesSecond, the goal is to improve the existing system, not make one that is absolutely prescriptive and infallible. The difficulties in devising an all-encompassing model should not be seen as a weakness but rather a simple recognition of complexity. Seatbelts don’t prevent 100% of road-accident fatalities, but having them is better than not. Thus, while it might be justified to mark down a surface on the basis of a precisely quantified pace loss after pitching, it might not be desirable to do so automatically on the basis of a fixed amount of lateral deviation. Other factors would have to be weighed up – but this would be done, precisely, by using the information provided by the ball-tracking technology.Third, nothing is necessarily going to change. These are heuristic tools that make for a more robustly scientific way of using the criteria that are already in place and the values set out there in relation to the balance of the game. However, by supplementing the qualitative (the ICC’s pitch-ratings criteria descriptions) with the quantitative (ball-tracking data), you would inevitably increase match referees’ confidence in their assessments, particularly in the face of querulous and powerful national boards, and thus boost the public’s confidence in the process as a whole. As such, those 565 Tests would perhaps serve as “legal precedent” of sorts: “Pitch X was marked ‘poor’ because it exhibited an average of n degrees of lateral deviation for seamers’ full-pace deliveries on the first day, similarly to Test Y in city Z.” And these verdicts would be reached independently of how the teams played on the wicket, since the latter involves facets of the game such as intent, strategy and competence that ought to be extraneous to the pitch-rating process.Will developing a technology-backed framework for marking pitches mean pitches become homogenous across the international game, bleeding it of variety? No. The ball-tracking technology would simply establish a set of rigorous performance parameters a pitch would need to reach in order to be classified as “average”, “good”, “very good”, and so on. It then becomes a question of the optimal way of achieving those in any given environment – which would also build knowledge about pitch preparation that could be hugely beneficial to the emerging cricketing nations, where such expertise is thinner on the ground.A technology-backed pitch-ratings method would reduce cultural tensionsOf course, if sanctions for substandard surfaces impacted national teams (through the docking of WTC points), it would immediately remove the incentive for their boards to “request” egregiously advantage-seeking pitches whenever it became expedient – be that for sporting, political or other reasons.Less conspiratorially, developing a more precise, data-backed framework would increase the confidence of and in referees around what is often a politically charged issue. This might prove analogous to the introduction of neutral umpires (or even the DRS, which potentially obviates the need for match officials needing to be seen to be neutral).And here is arguably the most important, though perhaps least tangible, benefit: The type of cultural tensions that crop up when pitch ratings are discussed – the defensiveness and suspicion, the accusations and denials – would be deprived of most of their oxygen. Sensitivities would be defused. This is not a trifling point in the age of social media, which have proven to be state-of-the-art antagonism machines. As the not-so-old joke has it, in a poll asking whether society had grown more divided, 50% said yes and 50% no.An example of these simmering sensitivities being stirred came with the most recent pitch before Indore to pick up a demerit point: last December’s Brisbane Test between Australia and South Africa, completed inside two days. Close observers were quick to point out the game’s almost identical duration (especially the distribution of overs across the four innings) to the day-night Ahmedabad Test between India and England in February 2021.

Before the Gabba pitch had even been marked, the defensiveness and pre-emptive sense of grievance kicked in. Wasim Jaffer tweeted a meme comparing likely reactions to a two-day pitch in the SENA nations (South Africa, England, New Zealand, Australia) and the subcontinent, in essence implying that if that two-day Brisbane result had come on an Indian wicket, the cricket world would be up in arms. If social media is an animosity amplifier, Jaffer was perhaps equivalent to the populist leader using a straw man to roil up a sense of victimhood among his base (1.2 million Twitter followers now) – though the idea of victimhood is a somewhat quaint notion for Indian cricket in 2023.

Of course, the irony is that Brisbane was marked “below average” by Richie Richardson, with both sets of players and even the curator agreeing it was wholly merited, whereas that Ahmedabad pitch – the shortest Test since 1935, a surface on which Joe Root took 5 for 8 – was rated “average” by Javagal Srinath, standing as match referee due to Covid travel restrictions.This is not to suggest anything improper from Srinath. After all, a year later he assigned a “below average” rating to the Bengaluru Test pitch, a day-night match that lasted 223.2 overs. It is simply to emphasise how, given the interpretative latitude baked into the ICC’s pitch-ratings criteria, any referee’s assessment of a pitch teetering between “average” and “below average” ratings might ultimately be a matter of perception, unconsciously influenced or conditioned by cultural background (“This isn’t a turner, mate!”), a point on which Jaffer is inadvertently correct.A further factor here is that, although the Gabba surface was overly damp to begin with and thus became pockmarked, producing variable bounce at speed as the surface baked, in general terms, pitches with excessive seam movement early in the game are not equivalent to those with excessive spin. In theory, the former can improve as the game develops. A pitch that is excessively dry and crumbling at the outset is not going to get any better. (Nevertheless, where a pitch has been prepared in rainy conditions and the curator is fully aware that it is overly damp to begin with, and thus fearful of a demerit, yet the umpires are keen to start the game in front of a full stadium, there would have to be some latitude in the referee’s pitch rating to reflect this expediency.)A more objective pitch-rating process would help prevent abuse of the systemOne would hope that the ICC has a keen interest in tightening all this up, in using the resources that are already available. Because ultimately there could be far more on the line than defusing cultural sensitivities or preventing WTC chicanery. Relieving the potential pressure on referees to reach the “correct” verdicts in certain circumstances might be about protecting the pitch-ratings process from possible abuse or even corruption.The Rawalpindi Test produced the result it did largely because England Bazballed their way through it•Aamir Qureishi/AFP/Getty ImagesConsider the following hypothetical scenario. A massive stadium named after a firebrand populist leader finds itself on four demerit points six months out from that country hosting an ICC tournament in which the stadium has been earmarked to host several games, including the final. Before then, however, the ground stages a marquee Test match and produces another slightly questionable surface, jeopardising its ICC accreditation. Given sport’s utility as a vehicle for a regime’s “soft power”, the wider interest in the rating assigned to the pitch in these circumstances would be intense, the pressure on the match referee potentially overwhelming.Or another hot-potato scenario, more economic in nature. A ground on one of the Caribbean islands sits on the precipice of suspension. It is hosting various games in the Under-19 World Cup, but in a few months’ time will stage a Test match against England, with 10,000 Barmy Army members expected to visit. Should a fifth demerit point be accrued, the hit to the economy would be substantial. Again, one imagines local politicians would be unusually invested in the difference between a prospective “average” and “below average” pitch rating in one of those U-19 World Cup games.Even if a match referee were impervious to whatever pressures might be exerted, as well as to any temptation to play safe (which surely increases every time a pitch verdict is overturned), a national board can always exercise its right of appeal and potentially bring its influence to bear. After all, if Pycroft can watch every ball of the Rawalpindi Test and have his considered judgement overruled by officials deducing the nature of the pitch from the scorecard, tail wagging dog, then why not roll the dice and appeal? If Broad, having seen a ball in the first over of a game he watched in its entirety explode through the surface and rag square, only to have his verdict overturned by administrators watching “footage” and deciding on that basis whether the variable bounce was acceptable or “excessive”, then why not see if those wholly unscientific definitions can be stretched and bent a little more favourably?Both Rawalpindi and Indore show that the pitch-ratings system urgently needs greater empirical heft and objectivity, not least to save match referees from being regularly thrown under the bus, but also to prevent a wider loss of credibility in the system. The ICC for its part says it is comfortable with the process that’s in place, but does its executive really have the clout to change things for the better, even if they wanted to?In the end, the barrier to reform may well be precisely what the Woolf Report identified in 2012: that the ICC executive is ultimately toothless in the face of the national boards, and the latter – notionally equal, though some clearly more equal than others – might not want change, whether it helps the game or not. It simply may not be in the interests of some powerful members to close off the possibility of a little pitch-doctoring, a little advantage-seeking skulduggery, particularly those with a surplus of international venues and the potential, therefore, to game the system.In such circumstances, the canny, careerist member of the ICC executive may reckon that the smart move is to rock the boat as little as possible, to keep the big boys sweet, to take the path of least resistance. Without any real regulatory bite over bilateral cricket, the ICC effectively becomes what Gideon Haigh described as “an events management organisation that sends out ranking emails”. And so inertia reigns and, as far as marking pitches is concerned, vagueness prevails, with the result that grievance festers and cricket, ultimately, loses.

'All hail Lord Rinku Singh' – Virender Sehwag and more pay tribute to KKR match-winner

Even though they needed 29 off the last over, the finisher took charge and got them through

ESPNcricinfo staff09-Apr-2023

Rinku!

— Brendon McCullum (@Bazmccullum) April 9, 2023

SUPER STAR RINKU SINGH @KKRiders

— Harbhajan Turbanator (@harbhajan_singh) April 9, 2023

How about that!!! @rinkusingh235 you beauty!!! That was just mental!! What a finish!! #korbolorbojeetbo #kkr #kkrvsgt #IPL2023

— Robin Aiyuda Uthappa (@robbieuthappa) April 9, 2023

RINKU

— Ben Stokes (@benstokes38) April 9, 2023

Singh a song of six pence!!!!#KKRvGT

— Brad Hogg (@Brad_Hogg) April 9, 2023

Rinku. Rinku. Rinku Singh!!!#IPL2023

— Mpumelelo Mbangwa (@mmbangwa) April 9, 2023

Rinku Singh

— Ashwin (@ashwinravi99) April 9, 2023

Rinku Singh

— Ian Raphael Bishop (@irbishi) April 9, 2023

Unbelievable hitting by @rinkusingh235 What a win by KKR.

— Irfan Pathan (@IrfanPathan) April 9, 2023

Unbelievable hitting from Rinku Singh. 6 6 6 6 6 4 6 from his last seven balls. #IPL has witnessed one of the most dramatic finishes ever. @KKRiders

— Yusuf Pathan (@iamyusufpathan) April 9, 2023

All hail Lord Rinku Singh. 5 sixes in 5 balls in the last over of a run chase. One of the best last over hitting in a chase that you would ever see. #KKRvGT

— Virender Sehwag (@virendersehwag) April 9, 2023

What an unbelievable game of cricket by @KKRiders
Needed 29 runs off the last over & enter @rinkusingh235

— @BrettLee_58 (@BrettLee_58) April 9, 2023

It seemed all over after Rashid's hat-trick but 6, 4, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6 in the last 7 balls he faced by Rinku Singh has seen @KKRiders pull off one of the greatest heists in IPL history!#KKRvGT #TATAIPL

— zaheer khan (@ImZaheer) April 9, 2023

Unbelievable performance by @rinkusingh235! 5 sixes in the final over to seal the victory. What an absolute beast! Congratulations #IPL2023 #GTvsKKR

— Suresh Raina (@ImRaina) April 9, 2023

Rinku Singh !!!
Naam toh Suna Hoga ?!#GTvKKR #TATAIPL2023

— Dhawal Kulkarni (@dhawal_kulkarni) April 9, 2023

I’ve never seen anything like it!!! #kingRinku #KKR

— Aaron Finch (@AaronFinch5) April 9, 2023

Today Rinku Singh changed the definition of final over thriller. Last ball six wala climax suna tha, last five ball sixes sapne mai bhi nahi socha tha. Rinku, what a finisher #Rinku

— Mohammad Kaif (@MohammadKaif) April 9, 2023

5 sixes to win in the final over! Have never seen something like this before. Take a bow @rinkusingh235 @KKRiders #GTvKKR

— S.Badrinath (@s_badrinath) April 9, 2023

KL Rahul puts tough days behind him to essay match-winning role

India’s wicketkeeper-batter came into the game on the back of immense scrutiny of his Test form that eventually led to him losing his place

Shashank Kishore17-Mar-20232:41

Jaffer: When he’s on song, Rahul is a treat to watch

“Strike rates are overrated.”It’s a KL Rahul quote that gets played out often on social media even if the context in which he said it tends to get ignored conveniently.But if there is an innings he could pick out to throw light on what he actually meant – not that he needs to – Rahul need not look any further than his match-winning 75 not out in the first ODI against Australia in Mumbai.Rahul walked in with India’s top order having been blown away in a small chase of 189. At 16 for 3 after the fifth over, India needed a rescue act. There was swing, zip off the pitch and lateral movement, elements that make Mitchell Starc menacing.Related

  • Rahul, Jadeja stay cool to seal tough chase of 189

It couldn’t have been a tougher return. Rahul at No. 5 has been prolific as a finisher in ODIs over the last two years, but the Rahul who came into this series was doing so on the back of immense scrutiny of his Test form that eventually led to him losing his place to Shubman Gill for the last two Tests.However, that he was played as a frontline wicketkeeper despite Ishan Kishan’s inclusion in the starting XI in Mumbai was a mark of the team management’s confidence. All said, this wasn’t a role that came about because of Rishabh Pant’s unavailability.Rahul had been backed to do the job even with Pant in the mix. This was, in a sense, a mere reiteration of the management’s belief in Rahul’s abilities. After all, the Rahul who now runs the ship did a similar job two decades earlier for the sake of team balance.The day began with an excellent catch diving to his right to dismiss Steven Smith. Rahul moved swiftly to cover enough ground to his right before putting in a dive to pouch Smith’s slash and celebrated wildly, the satisfaction of having pulled off the catch showing. The awkward landing, however, may have twinged a neck muscle or two, something that became apparent as he walked out to bat later.Needing to avert a Starc hat-trick, Rahul allayed nerves by opening his scoring with a neatly-timed cover drive first ball, but soon enough found himself challenged by Sean Abbott’s away-swingers. But Rahul had decided he wasn’t going to be bogged down.At the first sign of the bowler dropping short, Rahul brought out the cut. It’s a shot he profited the most from during his 91-ball knock in which he had an impressive control percentage of 83, as per ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball logs.A perfect high-elbow push through off from KL Rahul•Getty Images”I saw three wickets fall early, and Starc was really swinging the ball. When he gets the ball back in, he’s a dangerous bowler,” Rahul told Star Sports after India’s five-wicket win. “So I just wanted to bat through the first 15-20 balls and take it from there.”I wasn’t really thinking about runs, it wasn’t a big total, so I just wanted to give myself time, play normal cricket shots and not go searching for runs. A couple of boundaries early on settled my nerves a bit and got me going.”Just as Rahul began to settle in, he saw Gill get out to a loose drive to backward point. At 39 for 4, India were in dire need of a partnership. Rahul managed to find that support, first putting on 44 with Hardik Pandya and then an unbroken 108-run stand with Ravindra Jadeja, who was playing his first ODI in eight months. Rahul had a slice of luck on 41, when an outside edge flew wide of Smith at slip. That aside, it was a blemish-free knock.”Whoever I batted with, the talk was there’s a bit of help in the wicket, but we can’t go into our shell and look to play out a certain bowler,” Rahul explained. “[The mantra was to] just be positive in your mind and if the ball is there and if you can play proper cricket shot and gets some runs, that’s the only way you could put the pressure back on the bowlers.”We didn’t want to go into our shell and keep defending. We wanted to run hard, and put the loose balls away. We spoke of what are the shots we can play on this pitch. Any width we get, we can play the cut and if you’re good with your footwork, you can still survive get some runs and survive and get some runs. The guys I played with did that beautifully, it was fun batting with Hardik and Jadeja.”Rahul was particularly pleased batting alongside Jadeja. They ran well, and the left-right combination that can often throw bowlers off gear with their lines played into India’s hands. Adam Zampa may have prepared for a match-up with Virat Kohli and Suryakumar Yadav, but here he was to contend with a left-right pair in Jadeja and Rahul. He delivered six wicketless overs for 37.”The minute a left-hander walked in, I got a few loose balls as well, and that happens to the best of bowlers,” Rahul said. “A left-hander walking in helped at that stage. He’s been in great form and he batted beautifully. He’s played a lot of cricket and knows exactly what to do at that position. We enjoy batting together. He runs fast, and I love someone who can run fast, run hard and put the pressure on the fielding team and bowlers. I’m happy we could do that today.”Nothing, however, brought a bigger smile to Rahul’s face than when he was asked about his wicketkeeping. Did he enjoy it?”Yeah, I did,” he smiled. “When there’s bounce, I really enjoy keeping. On low wickets, it’s a challenge physically. I enjoy playing here at the Wankhede. It was fun. The ball was doing a bit but as a ‘keeper, I was always in the game.”There were edges coming, and a few balls were down leg. On wickets where there’s help, you know the fast bowlers are going to try a little extra and spray the ball here and there times. That gave me an opportunity to dive and showcase my keeping skills which was fun.”

Rashid Khan: 'Every day is the best chance for me to entertain'

Spinner’s non-stop schedule epitomises the nature of the T20 franchise circuit

Matt Roller31-Jul-2023Rashid Khan looked tired. There were bags under his eyes as he sat in a hotel room in North Carolina and logged onto a Microsoft Teams call. No wonder.In the last eight months, Rashid has played 69 games for eight different teams in eight different countries, across innings lasting 10, 20 and 50 overs. Since the start of the Covid pandemic, he has played 199 games with full T20 status, the most of any player in the world – and it’s not even close.Two weeks ago, Rashid played a T20I in Sylhet, Bangladesh one day, and in Major League Cricket in Dallas, Texas the next. “Straightaway, from the ground, I went to the airport then flew from Sylhet to Dhaka, Dhaka to Qatar, Qatar to here,” he explained. “I reached the hotel, I took a shower and changed in 15 minutes, went to the meeting, then straightaway to the game.”Such is the life of a T20 globetrotter who, at 24, has already played more than 500 professional games. “It was very hard,” Rashid reflected, “but mentally it was a good preparation. That was a flight of more than 20 hours and still I was feeling very fresh, like I’m ready to go and can deliver for my team.”That team was MI New York, one of the three Mumbai Indians affiliates – along with MI Cape Town and MI Emirates – who have been formed in the last 12 months. Rashid has played for all of them; in between times, he played against Mumbai Indians themselves three times in IPL 2023, taking 2 for 33 to help knock them out in the second qualifier.Rashid played a key role in MI New York’s victory in the MLC•SportzpicsIt is unsustainable, a scenario which sums up why franchises are increasingly keen to tie players to year-round contracts. “Sometimes you are in the same team; next, you are in the opposite side,” Rashid said. “It’s the same with the national team: playing with them, then tomorrow in the leagues, you’re playing against them. That’s what T20 is all about. It’s a great franchise to be part of.”Rashid was speaking as part of the launch of KP Snacks’ community cricket pitches initiative, which will fund 100 new pitches over the next three years. It is part of a tie-in with the Hundred, where he was due to represent the defending champions Trent Rockets on Tuesday night – another quick turnaround, having claimed 3 for 9 to help win the inaugural MLC final late on Sunday night. Related

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He was locked in to play three games for Rockets this season before flying to Pakistan for a three-match ODI series, as Afghanistan ramp up their preparation for the Asia Cup and the World Cup beyond – but, on the eve of the opening game, he pulled out of the tournament at the 11th hour due to an unspecified injury.Even before his withdrawal, Rashid conceded that he could use a break. He missed two ODIs against Sri Lanka last month with a back injury that he says is “still to be fully recovered” and his upcoming schedule is relentless. “There is so much cricket,” he said. “Asia Cup is there, World Cup is there. We have 20-21 ODIs in the next two or three months. It’s a big task.”So why does he do it? “You just need to look after yourself, and try your best to make sure you enjoy your skills,” he explained. “That’s what I have been doing. Every day is the best chance for me to entertain the crowd, entertain the fans all around the world and that is something which gives me the motivation and makes me prepared for the next game.”Trent Rockets won the 2022 Men’s Hundred, despite Rashid’s limited involvement•ECB via Getty ImagesWherever Rashid goes, Afghanistan fans follow. “It gives me so much energy on the field when I see my own flag and the people in the stands cheering for me. That is so beautiful – even here in the US as well. It’s the same in the UK. It’s a positive energy for me when I see them in the ground. I just try my best to give something to make them smile.”Rashid was the only Afghan player due to be involved in the Hundred this season, and hopes that will change in future. “As the T20 captain of Afghanistan, I feel if we get more batters in the Hundred and they get the opportunity to get better and better, it’s going to be a massive help – and also great for the fans in the UK, where they come to see the best players.”[Rahmanullah] Gurbaz has been playing around the world. Ibrahim [Zadran] has been delivering so well so far. There is lots of young talent as well in the Under-19s… Hazrat Zazai is there as well. Good talent is there but it’s just about the opportunity. I feel like the best opportunity for them is now the Asia Cup and the World Cup where they show their talent and everyone is watching.”This will be Rashid’s – and Afghanistan’s – second 50-over World Cup, but he is still chasing his first win. “It’s the best conditions you can ask for, as a team who has a very good spin attack,” he says. “We have been contributing in the World Cups, but we don’t have many wins.”This year, we are not just going to be part of the World Cup. We are going to be a team which win games – and not only one or two. If you see the schedule, we have most games on good tracks where it spins as well. I think it’s going to be a good opportunity for us where we can beat the teams and we can create history.”KP Snacks are funding 100 new community cricket pitches over the next three years. To find out more and search for a pitch visit: www.everyonein.co.uk/pitchfinder

A hard-fought home-team win to savour

A fan watches his side go head to head with Australia and comes away with renewed admiration for them

Sudhindra Prasad09-Oct-2023Choice of game

From 3-2-1 to 9-1-1 to 11-2-1 – that’s how my CWC game attendance planning has progressed in recent World Cups. This year, besides the nine India group games, I plan to be at two matches in my hometown, Bangalore, plus both semi-finals and the final. I did investigate the possibility of matching my 2022 FIFA World Cup haul of 22 matches, but the extensive travel that would call for, in addition to a day off work for each game, added up to an impossible amount of time away from my corporate job.Team supported
The home team. My first memories (via TV) of World Cup cricket were of the India vs Australia game in Madras in 1987, and the everlasting image from that game for me is of the dust-streaked trousers of Allan Border’s Australia team, who scrapped hard to earn that one-run win. To watch those two teams match-up again at the Chepauk, and for me to be there in person this time around, 36 years later, rekindled some bittersweet memories.Key performer
This was clearly Ravindra Jadeja. His dismissals of the three dangermen in the Australia line-up changed the game altogether. Steve Smith and Marnus Labuschagne had the skills to play through on this tough wicket and set up a challenging chase for India. But Jadeja’s guile got the better of them. As I watched from behind the bowler’s arm, the Steve Smith dismissal had quite the magical spinner’s touch. The Chennai crowd screamed their throats out in appreciation of their favourite (adopted) son.Wow moment
Mitchell Marsh’s dismissal. This dismissal had it all. Subtle away movement from Jasprit Bumrah induced the edge and Virat Kohli took a screamer at first slip. It looked extremely impressive in real time, from the batter’s end. This dismissal set the tempo and will have done much to ease the big-tournament nerves for India, if they had any.The scorcher
Chennai was hot to start with, but an over by Bumrah, the 33rd in the first innings, raised the temperature. He came steaming in, with a packed off-side field and just missed Cameron Green’s outside edge first ball, eliciting loud ooohs from the crowd. The next four deliveries were played respectfully, maybe even tentatively, and one of them allowed a run off a misfield. The over ended like it began, and this time Glenn Maxwell was the one lucky to not edge it to KL Rahul. An Indian fast bowler almost toying with proper Aussie batters, with sheer pace and some movement – it made for a great sign of India’s fast-bowling prowess.One thing I would have changed
I would have sent in Rahul instead of Shreyas Iyer at No. 4. Pitches and situations like this need proper technique and an ability to put one’s head down and grind. While Shreyas is just as talented, his high-risk aggression might be better put to use when the team score is stable and ready for a lift in tempo.Crowd meter
The stands were full with India supporters almost exclusively (although David Warner got some love for his Indian dance moves) and there weren’t any Aussie flags around. The fans were mostly dressed in various India replica jerseys and this added quite a blue tinge to all the stands. The loudest cheer was for the crowd favourite, Kohli, when he departed after his dismissal (although the cheer for Marsh’s dropped catch off Kohli, came rather close).The stadium DJ on the day he kept the crowd going with songs, dances, chants and Mexican waves.Catch of the day
The six hit by Pat Cummins off a slow turner from Kuldeep. A member of the ground crew caught it just outside the rope and extended his arms out, as if to say, ‘How easy was that?’ Some fans in the stands behind him gave a standing ovation for the effort.The Mitchell Marsh drop was one of the loudest crowd moments of the night•ICC/Getty ImagesShot of the day
In the 36th over Rahul hit a straight drive for four and just at the point of contact, he slightly changed the angle of the bat to send it between the bowler and mid-on. It was an indicator of his sound shot judgement and his mental clarity. Ominous signs for the oppositions in the games to come, if you ask me.Songs and chants
The KL Rahul song, which we debuted during the 2019 World Cup, was in demand and came up for encores. Towards the end of R Ashwin’s spell in his last World Cup game at his home ground, it was satisfying to repeat a chant that was first used during the 2011 India-West Indies World Cup game. The crowd gleefully joined in.
“, Ashwin ” [“Ashwin is anything but ordinary”, roughly].Brain drain
Historically the crowd at Chepauk has been known as knowledgeable. Today, though, the crowd and the DJ/presenter did not initially seem to pick up on any of the three partnership milestones between Rahul and Kohli. The cheers eventually came along a few deliveries and runs later, once the DJ announced it. This was very odd. I don’t know if the absence of traditional ticketing options leaves out the less than tech-savvy, but knowledgeable, fans out.Marks out of 10
9 A low-scoring thriller is always good for cricket. India’s chase was gripping, edge-of-the-seat stuff and each run was counted down.Before this game, I wasn’t sure if this Indian team had the wherewithal to overcome early losses. The start of the India innings was reminiscent of the 2017 Champions Trophy final (6 for 2) and the 2019 World Cup semi-final (5 for 3), but India’s fightback was outstanding and almost brought to mind an era when they had Yuvraj Singh, MS Dhoni and Suresh Raina bossing such chases by controlling the middle order.I think this Indian team will go a long way and I tip India to be in the final on November 19. See you there!

Forget Bazball, this was Gurbazball

Afghanistan opener played with the freedom to dream about what could go right, against a team debilitated by the fear of what might go wrong

Matt Roller15-Oct-20231:22

‘Gurbaz is gutsy, brave and aggressive’

The ball skidded past Mark Wood’s bat and into the stumps, and Rashid Khan stood with his arms outstretched, arching his back and facing the night sky. It was a moment to savour, one which will reverberate across Delhi, India and far beyond: Afghanistan had not only beaten the world champions, but thrashed them.This was the performance of a team with no fear or inhibition, attacking first with the bat and then with the ball. Afghanistan had won once in their 17 previous World Cup matches, a one-wicket victory over Scotland eight years ago: they were a team with nothing to lose, who gained everything.Amid political turmoil and humanitarian crises, India has become a home away from home for Afghanistan. This, their most famous night as a sporting nation, came in front of over 25,000 fans in a city with a substantial Afghan diaspora. Many of them waved Afghanistan flags and danced along as played over the PA system.For England, this was a throwback to the bad old days. They picked the wrong team, opting for an extra seamer on a pitch where spin dominated. They were sloppy from the very first ball, which Chris Woakes sprayed down the leg side and Jos Buttler let through his legs for five wides. And they batted without purpose, pushing and prodding their way to a 69-run loss.Related

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The white-ball revolution prompted by England’s early exit at the 2015 World Cup was characterised by their attacking batting, their embrace of risk and their ability to take pressure off themselves and put it onto the opposition. But if those ideas were personified by anyone in Delhi on Sunday, it was Rahmanullah Gurbaz.The players’ entrance at the Arun Jaitley Stadium is through the Virender Sehwag Gate, which bears a silver plaque. Underneath a depiction of Sehwag is a quotation attributed to him, reading: “The best thing I ever did was to believe in myself.” Whether Gurbaz noticed the sign or not, he was imbued by that same self-assurance.He hit the sixth legal ball he faced for six, pulling Woakes over the short leg-side boundary for six. It was one of four sixes he hit in the 57 balls he faced, heaving Sam Curran over square leg, upper-cutting Wood over deep third and slog-sweeping Adil Rashid over midwicket. England managed to hit only one, by which point they were six wickets down in the 31st over.There were sumptuous boundaries too, not least a brace off Woakes through the off side. His early six forced Woakes to bowl wide outside the off stump and protect the short leg-side boundary; instead, Gurbaz pumped him through cover and sliced him through point. “He put us under a lot of pressure,” Buttler conceded. Forget Bazball: this was Gurbazball.1:16

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There have been times when Jonathan Trott, Afghanistan’s coach, has found himself frustrated by Gurbaz’s attacking predilections, which jar with the instincts that served Trott so well in his own playing career. He has often told him not to worry if he scores 30 off his first 40 balls: “The longer he bats, the more chance we have of winning – that’s what I say to him as well.”Yet in Delhi, it took Gurbaz only 33 balls to reach 50 – and but for a needless run-out, he would surely have converted his 80 off 57 into his first World Cup century. Trott could only admire his strokeplay: “It was amazing, the shots that he played… for him, the sky is the limit.””My mindset was only one thing: just to be positive,” Gurbaz said. “I was really well prepared for that game – not only for that game, but for this competition. I was just trying to be positive against everyone.” It was the innings of a player emboldened by the freedom to dream about what could go right, against a team debilitated by the fear of what might go wrong.Even when Afghanistan imploded after drinks, losing their middle order to England’s spinners, they retained their courage. Ikram Alikhil, a 23-year-old playing his third international in four years, wore Wood’s bouncer on his shoulder and picked himself back up to reach 58; Rashid and Mujeeb, relative veterans of this side, combined aggression with impudence.Buttler, by contrast, has spent the last five weeks telling his players to “fall on the positive side” whenever they are unsure how to approach a situation, as those trying to reinvigorate an ageing team. But his message seems to have gone unheeded: their dismissals again resulted from the tentative shots prompted by an abundance of caution, rather than over-aggression.Joe Root prodded at one that kept low from Mujeeb; Dawid Malan chipped to short cover; Liam Livingstone was trapped lbw while playing down the wrong line; and Sam Curran poked tamely to slip. Tellingly, the one batter to assert his authority was the youngest man in the squad, Harry Brook – who was only brought in four weeks ago.England were clearly surprised by conditions, opting to bowl first on a pitch that played much more like a traditional Feroz Shah Kotla surface than the two served up earlier in the tournament and got slower and lower in the absence of dew. Yet champion sides should be able to adapt, and England are caught out in this manner far too often.But this was not a night about England’s defeat. It was the night that Afghanistan turned their talent and promise into something concrete, a result that meant more than two points. For a country in mourning for the victims of an earthquake, whose name has been associated with war, hardship, turmoil and loss, this was a moment of rare joy.

Matt Henry among the best, and has got better – the numbers show it

The New Zealand quick is playing his third ODI World Cup, but the understated way he goes about things means he doesn’t always get the acclaim

Andrew Fidel Fernando21-Oct-20233:22

Why has Matt Henry been so successful recently?

Four matches into this 2023 ODI World Cup, Matt Henry has nine wickets at an average of 18, and an economy rate of 4.84. This leaves him sandwiched between Jasprit Bumrah and Shaheen Shah Afridi (who also has nine) – two of the biggest names in fast bowling.Henry, 31, made his ODI debut in 2014, before Bumrah, and long before Afridi. His average of 25.67 and economy rate of 5.15, is broadly in the vicinity of Bumrah (23.52 and 4.61) and Afridi (23.17 and 5.50).Is he close to being among ODI seam bowling’s biggest names, then?Related

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Uhhh.Top ten?Eeeish.Has he played in two ODI World Cup finals – two more than Bumrah or Afridi have appeared in? Oh wow.Henry slides low, partly, you suspect, by design. No branded celebrations here, no dazzling actions, the limelight is fine way over there, thank you. He has been party to New Zealand’s greatest cricketing era as well as their finest fast-bowling years (closely linked phenomena, obvs), but has not known the popularity that Trent Boult and Tim Southee enjoy, not bowled with the fire that Neil Wagner hails from the skies, and not had the open-mouthed gasping over pure pace that Lockie Ferguson and Adam Milne before him have had.Henry is a seam bowler from New Zealand’s great 2010s and early 2020s, but feels like a New Zealand seam bowler from the 2000s. Which is to say, aww well, y’know, he runs in every ball, bungs it down on a good length, and gets the new cherry to move in the air quite a bit and, oh, maybe he’s pretty good on his day don’t you worry. Often he has been the spare broom in the closet – the seamer New Zealand reach for when the higher-profile bowlers are unavailable.Over the last few years, however, he has won a place in the starting XI, displacing the likes of Southee, through sheer consistency of performance.Since the 2015 World Cup, only Boult has a better ODI average among bowlers with 35 or more wickets in the opening 10 overs. In that powerplay, and roughly the last eight-and-a-bit years, Henry averages 21.13, with 59 wickets and an economy rate of 4.19.Matt Henry has always been good with the new ball, but in this World Cup he’s striking in the middle as well•AFP/Getty ImagesIndia will remember him from the semi-final at Old Trafford four years ago. On as drizzly and miserable a Manchester morning that still allowed cricket could be imagined, Henry moved one away deliciously late to Rohit Sharma and took his edge, did virtually the same thing to KL Rahul, and had Dinesh Karthik caught at backward point. This was all in the first 10, which as we know, Henry dominates.He was less impressive when the swing disappeared, but even outside of Old Trafford, this has been the theme of his career. Since the start of the 2019 World Cup, his average through the middle overs (between the 11th and 40th overs) rises to 37.50.Yes, it is spinners who are expected to take wickets during this phase, but just to put Henry’s numbers in context, his average is worse than that of uninspiring dobblies merchants such as Dasun Shanaka and Colin de Grandhomme, but also Shardul Thakur who, by the way, is crushing this category, averaging 23.21 during the middle, which perhaps helps explain his ongoing inclusion by India.Even at the death, Henry has been modest. He’s had a worse economy rate than South Africa’s Andile Phehlukwayo, or West Indies quicks such as Sheldon Cottrell or Alzarri Joseph, whose team of course did not make this World Cup.But in this World Cup there has been an upending. Henry has been menacing when he has bowled early, sure. But in the middle and the death – this is where he has shined. If shining isn’t exactly Henry’s vibe, then glowed.Some highlights include the massive wicket of Jos Buttler in the 34th over of New Zealand’s tournament opener, when Henry got the ball to dart away a touch off the deck. Against Mushfiqur Rahim two games later, he bowled a slower one that deceived a supremely experienced batter, and rattled his stumps. This was in over 36.And then against Netherlands, two of his wickets came at the death.Of his nine wickets in this World Cup so far, six have come after the 33rd over. And he is about to bowl against India at a venue at which seamers tend to prosper even outside the first 10, in which Henry is a specialist. In 14 ODI innings in Dharamsala, seamers have taken 69 wickets at an average of 27.66.New Zealand, the only other team so far to go unbeaten apart from India, have plenty going for them outside of Matt Henry. But for once, it is impossible to ignore that Matt Henry has been instrumental to their advance.

Bazball may be facing its toughest task yet

England may have won eight of 10 chases, but none will have been on a trickier surface than this

Vithushan Ehantharajah03-Feb-20241:59

Manjrekar: ‘Very difficult for England to win from this position’

Many fingers and laptops have been burned writing off this England Test team.An impressive record of 14 wins out of 19 under Ben Stokes, aligned with some engaging cricket, has earned them a great deal of credit behind the bar and in the hearts of supporters. And considering they have won five out of eight matches in which they have given up a first-innings lead, they will believe they are still in this game. It was only last week they turned over a 190-run first-innings deficit to win the first Test in Hyderabad. What’s 143 in Visakhapatnam?Well, it is definitely not nothing. Especially with England batting last on a pitch starting to bounce irregularly. They may have won eight out of 10 chases, but none will have been on a tougher surface than this. “We believe we can chase anything, and we’ve showed that before,” said Zak Crawley.England had started day two well enough, needing just 19 overs to take India’s four remaining first-innings wickets, conceding just 60 in the process. James Anderson put on his usual clinic with the second new ball, taking 2 for 17 in an eight-over spell, accounting for both overnight batters, double centurion Yashasvi Jaiswal and chief rouser Ravichandran Ashwin. Five hours later, the 41-year-old seamer was back out there sporting his bowling boots and a Danny Glover esque grimace, ready to start India’s second innings. By stumps, the hosts had increased that lead to 171 for no loss.Related

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It is not ignoring England’s powers of recovery to say they should not be in this position. Or that they let slip an opportunity to really flex their muscles. Restricting India to 396 in their first innings was a success, and felt broadly like an extension of their graft from the first Test.They had chipped away 32 off India’s 396 inside just six over before lunch, then onto 50 off 51 after the break. Ashwin, who had started the day getting under Anderson’s skin, was whisked out of the attack unceremoniously by Rohit Sharma after his first eight overs went for 40. Even Jasprit Bumrah, who would go on to have the final say as he always seems to do, saw his fourth over taken for four boundaries.That England were in the ascendancy was down to Crawley. The opener looked in supreme touch, characterised by two straight drives in that 16-run Bumrah over – one off a full-pace delivery, the other off a slower off-cutter, which is usually one of the Indian quick’s more potent variations.A defensive push for an eighth boundary off Kuldeep Yadav’s googly was followed two deliveries later by a leisurely six to midwicket, moving to a 15th score of 50 or more from 52 deliveries. It seemed a targeted attack on the wrist spinner after his wicket maiden in the previous over which accounted for Ben Duckett. Nothing was out of Crawley’s control – and by proxy, this game was there to be reshaped by England after India had the best part of four sessions with it.Zak Crawley was dominant, especially against the quicks•Getty ImagesAlas, an innings of clarity and KP-esque chutzpah was finished in disappointing fashion. England were 110 for 1 at the drinks break, going along at five an over, when Axar Patel was introduced for the first time.Crawley was always going to approach this one way, waiting just one ball before stepping down the track and hacking Axar through midwicket. Attempting to assert more dominance the ball after, a skewed hack off a delivery that turned and bounced more than anticipated ended up brilliantly taken by Shreyas Iyer running back from point.It was, unfortunately, the only shot Crawley mistimed. By his own reasoning, it was in line with an approach that has served him well recently. And the numbers bear that out: averaging 51.92 with a strike rate of 91.09 since the start of last summer. Checking himself, he reckons, would have been regressing to the opener who averaged 27.60 from their first 33 caps.”If I start doubting myself in those situations and not backing my instincts, then I revert back to the player I was a couple of years ago, really not scoring many runs for my team.”I wasn’t happy to get out when I did but I’d definitely do the same thing. If that one doesn’t turn and I hit him over his head for six, then suddenly he’s under a lot of pressure, and I can milk him for two hours or whatever. there’s risk and reward there.”Amid the unwavering belief in the process, there was still regret that he could not motor on, or prevent what ended up being a match-tilting spell from Bumrah. Crawley would be the first of six wickets to fall for just 68, as Bumrah, with some help from Kuldeep, ripped out the heart of England’s batting card.”I was disappointed with myself,” said Crawley, “especially when the wickets fell after. But I’ll keep telling myself to back my aggressive game because that’s what got me here.”Shreyas Iyer took a smart running catch to send back Zak Crawley•AFP/Getty ImagesFor all Bumrah’s brilliance and England’s belief in the principles that have held them in good stead throughout Stokes’ tenure, this feels like an opportunity missed. This is likely to be the worst Indian XI they will face in this series. While there remains uncertainty over Virat Kohli’s participation, Mohammed Shami and KL Rahul are likely to play some part in the back three Tests. Both improve the hosts, as would the rested Mohammed Siraj, whose deputy Mukesh Kumar was taken for 44 in his wicket-less seven overs.Crawley’s positivity spilled over into the press conference. And already he was looking forward to the fourth innings, England’s favourite bit: when the scoreboard simply tells you what you need to win.”It’s a quick scoring ground, really small boundaries and a quick outfield,” he said. “Even the guys at the end showed if you put them under pressure you can get on top of them.”With a good couple of partnerships in the second innings we can really put them under some pressure but we’ve got to bowl well first. that’s all that’s on our minds now.”I’m not certain to be honest but I feel like it’s not breaking up like last week. I don’t think it’s going to be like last week, where it’ll turn that much. It will obviously turn more than now; that’s always the case here, but I don’t think it’ll be as tricky as it was in the fourth innings for them last week, so I feel like we can chase a decent score.”There is a long way to go until we get to that point. Keeping that number down will be tough enough. Achieving it might be their longest shot yet.

ChatIPL – An AI-powered peek at the league that defies logic

What’s old, what’s new, and what’s well over head height at the IPL this year… don’t say you know, because “Sachin” says you don’t

Alagappan Muthu20-Mar-20246:09

Pooran, GIll, Rashid: Who will be the IPL MVP?

AL: Aw, they remembered me.Icome in message: Wanna hang out and talk about the IPL again?AL: Sure.: I wanna introduce you to someone. This is our new IPL AI. We’re in the final stages of rolling them out and I wanted to have an expert like you make sure they’re properly functioning.AL: What’s their name? Bet you’ve given them a dumb name. Like an acronym or something.The AI: No. I’m Sachin.AL: That’s copyright infringement. Probably. So what do you want me to do exactly?Related

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Icome: Just talk about the IPL with them. See if they can offer a user all the information they might ever need about the tournament.AL: Brilliant. Um, okay. So what do we have to look forward to this season?Sachin: The captains. There’s Hardik Pandya, who got traded to Mumbai Indians on a chaotic deadline day and it soon became clear why he jumped ship from a team on which he was already imprinting himself. The chance to do the same thing at one of the most successful franchises in T20 history.Even his coach – now former coach – Ashish Nehra knew there was nothing he could say to convince Hardik to stay at Gujarat Titans. “I could have stopped him had he been going to some other side,” he said recently, staring off into the middle distance, sighing wistfully. Mumbai made him. And now that he’s risen high enough, he has the chance to make them. How cool is that?The five-time champions have already gone through a rebuild the last few auctions, developing a younger, fresher look. Now they’ve handed control of it to someone who is younger and fresher too. Someone who is chill like MS Dhoni and appreciates structure like Rohit Sharma. It’s been three years since Mumbai made it to an IPL final. That’s longer than any previous wait they’ve endured between titles. They won it back-to-back in 2019 and 2020. And since then, their closest rivals, Chennai Super Kings, have joined them, winning a fifth trophy last year. Change was, perhaps, needed and it has arrived, though taking over from a long-standing, highly-successful, charismatic and beloved leader is never ever easy.AL: Yeah, you guys got anything that can help him?Icome: Course we do.AL: Well?Icome: You know what they say, never ask a man for his salary, a woman for her age, and an advanced alien civilisation for proprietary tech.: There’s also Rishabh Pant. Just the mere fact that he’s back playing cricket is massive. Delhi Capitals might be the one team for whom it might not actually matter whether they win this tournament or not. They have the heart and soul of their team back. India have their point-of-difference match-winner back. But bigger than all that, he has his life back. March 23 will mark the culmination of so much hard work. It wasn’t that long ago that Pant was learning how to walk again, and at that time, in that low, this is what he would’ve pictured to keep himself going. He’s never known anything else. He’s rarely loved anything more. So while there’s a chance he may not be as good as he was, after multiple reconstruction surgeries, even 50% of what he can do – what he did do at the Gabba – will be enough to win 75% of most other games. I’ve done the math.Icome: Imagine being him when he walks out for the toss in *checks* Mullanpur. Wow! They really take this tournament to all parts, eh?Sachin: It will be the 36th venue to host an IPL game.AL: I was just about to ask that. Can they read minds?1:36

‘2015 season with MI was life-changing’ – Hardik

Sachin: I’m still not done. Shreyas Iyer will be hoping for a big season. It is hard to imagine another player who scored a World Cup semi-final century sink as far as he has in the pecking order, with fitness issues also clouding the truth. Shubman Gill had the IPL of his life last year. Now he has to do that and captain the Titans and prevent them from feeling the loss of both Hardik and Mohammed Shami. Pat Cummins might be a world champion but will even that be enough to successfully lead a team that keeps restructuring itself at the end of every auction? Sunrisers Hyderabad used to have an identity – they were a seriously good bowling team, often capable of defending totals of 150 or so. Now what are they? Oh, and Dhoni’s back. Though, he won’t be leading.AL: Wait, why’d you say it like that?Sachin: Oops. I forgot. You guys don’t know he’s a bot.Icome: They sprung big for his new hair.AL: He looks gorgeous.Sachin: Do I need to give you two a moment, or shall we get on with a culture clash that’s about to happen this IPL?In January, India’s chief selector Ajit Agarkar flew to South Africa to talk to Rohit and Virat Kohli about their place in the T20I side. Both of them had been iced since the end of the last World Cup but now it seems they’re back in the fold. BCCI secretary Jay Shah even mentioned that he had full faith Rohit will captain India to victory when the next T20 World Cup takes place in June. It is clear that the golden generation wants their crown; wants to stop the toxic conversation that surrounds them where no matter how well they do they get beaten with a stick for the lack of ICC trophies. It’s been over ten years since India stood on the podium as champions of anything.AL: But is it wise to block off two spots in an 11-man sport with the same profile of player? Especially when there are so many versatile options to choose from thanks to the growth and reach of the IPL? YashasviJaiswal was keeping up with Kohli last IPL season. Rinku Singh was coming up on David Warner’s rear view. The tipping point has already happened. The Gen Z era is already here. It is going to be fascinating to see if India are willing to pull the trigger. They probably won’t. Because at a World Cup, experience matters.But, on the 0.00001% chance they do and Rohit and Kohli retire without helping India add to their trophy cabinet, they will still have a hand in winning it. As leaders, as batters and as people, they’ve shaped the future of Indian cricket. It’s just… that kind of praise feels hollow when compared with a shiny gold trophy that they get to hold or the “world champion” tag that they get to wear. Forever.Sachin: So, long story short, India will spend this IPL looking for a lot of super-specialists to round out their batting order. Spin-hitters like ShivamDube, pace-hitters like Rinku, quick starters like Jitesh Sharma. I wonder if it’s weird for them when they realise they’re getting so good that they’ve begun putting pressure on their idols and their place in the national team. Or that their success may very well be partly responsible for the increased investment in uncapped talent.Sameer Rizvi (20, CSK), whom Michael Hussey already sees as a potential replacement for Ambati Rayudu, Kumar Kushagra (19, Delhi Capitals) and Robin Minz (21, Gujarat Titans, although he may not play this year) have all been sold for life-changing sums of money even though they’ve only shown glimpses of what they can do.3:38

How will CSK cope without Conway? Who will be Royals’ fourth overseas player?

Icome: So who’s winning it this time?Sachin: Why’s everybody looking at me? I’m just kidding, I know I’m the all-powerful AI capable of accounting for every eventuality in order to predict an accurate future. But this is such a bonkers tournament. It’s had a final that was spread out over three days. A Super Over on top of a Super Over. Impossible chase after impossible chase and incredible choke after incredible choke. Last year they brought in the Impact Player rule to mess with things even more. And it’s very likely that teams will now have a much better handle of it, instead of simply packing their batting or bowling depending on the toss. The expansion to ten teams ran the risk of diluting the league – Titans looked very light on paper the year they came to be, only to then go on and win the title. I’m sorry, but I can’t figure this thing out. It keeps defying logic.AL: I think you broke them. Also, I like Mumbai. With Jasprit Bumrah and Suryakumar Yadav fit again – well, mostly fit again – it’ll be nice to once again live in a world where they make us question all the basic tenets of reality.Sachin: KKR look real good. Their bowling attack, especially. Mitchell Starc… *fans self*Icome: Dude should be in the thirst trap hall of fame. Dissed the IPL for eight years straight but as soon as he became available, 99 bids in the auction and INR 24.75 crore (USD 2.981 million) in probably a very heavy bag.Sachin: He’s chosen a good time to come back actually. The IPL will be allowing two bouncers an over – as opposed to one, which had been the norm for like ever.AL: And his first match will be up against Cummins, the second most expensive player ever. There’s a page turning there too, right? Many of the overseas picks at this auction are players just starting out on their careers. It’s like the whole world is in transition. And these new guys are savvy too. Phil Salt basically proved that public shaming works and got himself a nice fat IPL contract. Spencer Johnson used to be a landscaper. Then he did this. Now he’s an Australian cricketer and an IPL millionaire.Sure, the established stars are still here. Rajasthan Royals will be deeply dependent on what Jos Buttler and Trent Boult can do. Both Delhi Capitals and South Africa will be really happy Anrich Nortje is no longer strung up on the medic’s table, damned to have played only one international since the end of the ODI World Cup. And Maxi’s gonna’ be doing Maxi things. But the young ‘uns aren’t bad either.Gerald Coetzee with the head bands and the nerve popping gives off pure Dale Steyn vibes. Dilshan Madushanka is Lasith Malinga+Chaminda Vaas. Nuwan Thushara is Lasith Malinga with scarier outswing. And Matheesha Pathirana is Lasith Malinga’s skill+MS Dhoni’s brain. Sucks they’re all under simultaneous injury clouds.Sachin: Anybody got CSK? They had a strong auction, adding one of the most versatile batters in the world into their middle-order.Icome: RCB to do the double. Kohli bringing that dad x2 energy.AL: Finally gonna prove front-loading can win titles, are they?Icome: Seventeenth time’s the charm.Sachin: Lucknow Super Giants came so close to making the highest ever IPL total last year and they have their captain back. Looks like KL Rahul will be wicketkeeping and batting in the middle order this time, as a sort of audition for the World Cup. Their batting line-up slaps.AL: You guys, this is fun. Guess I can tick being first choice to quality test an artificial intelligence off the list.Sachin: Actually we asked Sidharth Monga, Nagraj Gollapudi, Karthik Krishnaswamy, Fidel Fernando, Alan Gardner, Firdose Moonda and none of them were available this close to the start of the season.Icome: Yeah, how come you’re always free? Are you horrible at your jo–AL: Shhhhh! Not so loud.

For South Africa, and those who know what they know

A far-from-perfect country has enjoyed remarkable sporting success over the last two years. The men’s cricket team have now given themselves the opportunity to do what so many before them yearned to

Firdose Moonda28-Jun-2024They don’t know what we know.This phrase was made famous by UFC champion Dricus du Plessis, turned into a song by Afrikaans pop sensation Kurt Darren, used as a mantra by the world champion Springboks, and is now a South African proverb.. Sounds arrogant, right?It’s not. It’s pain.South Africans don’t believe the world understands us and everything we go through as a nation that has chosen to continuously open and redress our wounds. Of course, South Africa was not the world’s only colony, or the only place to suffer from exploitation of its natural resources and the resulting poverty. It is not the only place where race-based segregation was legal; where crime is rampant and increasing and where there are shortages of electricity, water and understanding. But it is one of few places where none of that is hidden away.Related

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The problems South Africans endure are on display for all to see, to unpick, and to attempt to piece together. It is a nation that speaks out, not always kindly, about everything that is wrong (and there is a lot wrong, and sometimes there are different wrongs for different people) while also marvelling at how many things have gone right. South Africa, which could have fallen apart so many times, is still, somehow, in a sporting sense, stunning on the world stage. So no, they don’t know what we know, and that means, according to Dricus and the Boks, that they won’t know what this means to us.A men’s team in a cricket World Cup final – 18 months after the women got there, a year after the women’s football team reached the last 16 of the World Cup, six months after the men’s football team finished third at the African Cup of Nations, seven months after the Springboks won a record fourth Rugby World Cup – means we are rising, relevant and ready to show the world that sometimes, even in the briefest of moments, shared success is possible. But for once, we’re not screaming about it. We’re holding our breath, because cricket has not given cause for much else.The disappointments of seven World Cup semi-finals defeats is one reason that South Africans are cautious when it comes to cricket, but there are others. Cricket South Africa’s recent history of managerial turmoil, financial malaise and social justice introspection was received by fans as a betrayal. They like their sport to pretend it can stay about sport, and not get enmeshed with the mess that is everything else even if, deep inside, they know it is enmeshed with everything else. Still, escapism is important and most of our sporting codes provide it at some level.It’s why the SA20 is better supported than international cricket in South Africa. The SA20 is seen as untouched by administrators, it does not have a transformation target, it doesn’t carry CSA’s branding and it attracts international stars who praise it and the South African experience. The national team is not.It hasn’t been easy for the average South African to watch the T20 World Cup back home•Getty ImagesAs recently as six weeks ago, there was a transformation furore over the fact there is only one black African in the current T20 World Cup squad and the bulk of complainants were politicians. Ordinary South Africans see the ruling African National Congress (ANC) fingerprints all over things like the national team and don’t like it, so much so that for the first time since democracy the ANC has not secured 50% of the vote. The results of May’s election will bring a coalition government and news on the composition of the cabinet is what’s making headlines.Visit any South African news website and that will be the top story. Open any newspaper, and you’re living somewhere else because the media industry has shrunk to the point where the only dailies in circulation are largely being given away (not bought) and one media group is closing four papers next month. Like much of the world, South Africans get their news through social media so a scroll through X, Facebook or Instagram will show you what the algorithm has designed for you but in general, there is more interest on those streets than the actual ones.Around the country, it was a fairly normal Friday, perhaps slightly quieter than usual because of school holidays. It’s a South African thing to turn Fridays into national team days when there is a major tournament, and though rugby is more successful at getting people to buy in, cricket has tried. This Friday, CSA held an event at a popular shopping mall in Johannesburg and handed out flags. That was the extent of CSA’s awareness-creation and that’s not a slight on them. The short turnaround between the semi-final early on Thursday morning and the final on Saturday afternoon has made it tricky to do much but there have been some last-minute plans.In Johannesburg, the Wanderers is hosting a watch-party, for anyone who wants to enjoy the final with other fans. In Durban, the Kwa-Zulu Natal Cricket Union have teamed with South African Breweries to do something similar at Crusaders Sports Club, about eight kilometres north of Kingsmead. Both events have free entry, which should tell you about the number of people the organisers expect to attend. It’s not that people don’t care, it’s that the sports watching culture is different.In South Africa, people tend to watch sport in their homes, invite friends and family over, have some drinks and a braai. Doubtless, many people will be doing exactly that on Saturday, helped by the fact that the final is more than likely to be available on free-to-air television. The T20 World Cup until now was not.Only those with a Multichoice subscription (essentially cable television) could watch all the games and that is an ever-decreasing number. Multichoice has seen a 400,000 subscriber dip in the last year, which amounts to 5% of its audience, as disposable income decreases. That means fewer South Africans have regular access to cricket on television. Considering both domestic and international cricket is only shown on pay-television, that means people simply don’t watch enough to become properly invested. Instead, there seems to be more attention on the Euros (also only available on the paid service but more likely to be screened in bars or cafes with regularity) and on the Springboks, whose international season starts properly next week.And that’s what makes South Africa, as a sporting nation, different to their opposition in the final: India. Where cricket has often been described as religion in India, it isn’t in South Africa, and certainly not the main one. Where cricket, along with Bollywood, makes up both social fabric and celebrity culture in India, it is seen as a small part of myriad options for entertainment in South Africa. That’s why the hype has been hushed and there is no nation-wide rallying cry, and no big noise led by former and current players, who are one of the groups that will have more invested in this final than most.The South African women’s team are playing a Test in Chennai and might watch the final with the Indian players•PTI The classes of 1992, 1999, 2007, 2009, 2014 and 2015 (apart from Quinton de Kock and David Miller, who are at this tournament) had to accept they would not be the generation that would win a World Cup. Many of them described it as the biggest disappointment of their careers. They will be watching and living this final as though it was their own, albeit most from a distance and one not at all.Allan Donald, who was involved in that run-out in 1999, is back in the UK preparing for a coaching stint in the Legends League and will watch the final from there. He told ESPNcricinfo he regards it as the “biggest cricketing day of my professional career as an ex-player and now coach,” because reaching the final “puts to bed a lot of things.” What about his partner in that run-out, Lance Klusener? “Haven’t watched a ball,” he admitted from a hunting trip. “Will catch the result some time.”Graeme Smith, South Africa’s most successful Test captain who played in 2007 and 2009, is holidaying with his children on the Greek island of Skiathos. He tried to get flights for all of them to Barbados but could not find any availability and is now trying to gather a group of South Africans to watch the game with. Makhaya Ntini, South Africa’s first black African player, will be working on isiXhosa commentary in the television studios. Dale Steyn and Shaun Pollock, will be on commentary in Barbados but AB de Villiers and Faf du Plessis, both former captains, are likely to be watching from afar.The South African women’s team, who were the first national cricket side to get to a World Cup final, are in the middle of a Test match against India in Chennai. They are aiming to get together with their opponents to watch the final but the inside track is that they will see how their own match is poised before deciding whether they want to spend more time together.When the current South African squad talk about what this means to them, they speak first about wanting to win the World Cup for these players, who laid the foundation but did not experience the building going up. Then they speak about wanting to win the World Cup for South Africans – for those who know what they know – because that is what matters.

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