All posts by h716a5.icu

'Australia, you beauty'

Twitter reacts to Australia’s outstanding win in Pune, Steve O’Keefe match-defining performance and perhaps Steven Smith’s best Test century

ESPNcricinfo staff25-Feb-2017Australia on song, Steve O’Keefe the star.

The victory song anyone?

Steven Smith’s third innings century will not be forgotten in a hurry

Crazy Gang ready to battle the odds again

ESPNcricinfo previews Northamptonshire’s prospects for the 2017 season

Alan Gardner01-Apr-2017Last season:

In: Nathan Buck (Lancashire), Max Holden (loan, Middlesex)
Out: Olly Stone (Warwickshire)
Overseas: Rory Kleinveldt (SA), Seekkuge Prasanna (T20)2016 in a nutshell
Northamptonshire had what some critics are calling “their most Northamptonshire season ever” in 2016. They went in with barely 15 men on the playing staff, faced continued uncertainty over their financial position (“we’re counting every loo roll,” said the chairman in May), recovered from a turgid start to finish mid-table in the Championship, lost a thrilling Royal London quarter-final by one wicket off the final ball of the match and lifted the NatWest Blast trophy for the second time in four seasons. Ben Duckett epitomised Northants’ uninhibited approach to the uncertainties around the club, plundering more than 2700 runs in all formats and walking off with the PCA Player of the Year and CWC Young Player awards. The highlight was T20 Finals Day, when their Moneyball approach (perhaps that should be “no-Moneyball”) saw them triumph against the odds once again.2017 prospects
Could well be another rollercoaster. Promising young fast bowler Olly Stone has left for Warwickshire (though he missed most of last season with injury anyway) but Nathan Buck has come in from Lancashire and may prove an inspired signing – still only 25, he was on the radar of England Lions five years ago. What Northamptonshire lack in squad numbers they will attempt to make up for in camaraderie, with continued success in white-ball cricket the primary focus, highlighted by the recruitment of former England batsman James Taylor as a consultant for the Royal London Cup. No team has managed to retain the T20 title but, if Northants can become the first, they will also draw level with Leicestershire on most wins (three). Championship success looks less likely, although they did finish 2016 impressively with four wins out of their last six.In charge
Since taking over in 2012, things have seldom been easy for David Ripley but he has achieved some extraordinary successes. An unexpected Championship promotion came the following year, as well as a first T20 title (Northants’ first trophy in 21 years) as the club began to embrace a data-driven approach to the format, led by their “statto” head coach. Alongside the shrewd captaincy of Alex Wakely, Northants seems to have found an ideal blend, encompassing modern tactics, attention to detail and old-fashioned team bonding. Along with bringing Taylor on board for 50-over cricket, former Wantage Road favourite David Sales is now helping out part-time as batting coach.Key player
Rory Kleinveldt, back for a third season as overseas player, has become symbolic of performance trumping perceptions at Northants. Kleinveldt’s brief international career is now behind him and, although his kit size looks a little closer to XL these days, he is still a vastly effective allrounder at county level. He has taken 124 wickets across all formats for the club, to go along with more than 1200 runs, and is a respected voice in the dressing room where what you can do is valued more than how you look.Bright young thing
Duckett blazed a trail from talented youngster to England international in little more than a season, while 18-year-old allrounder Saif Zaib has long been highly regarded in Northants circles. Hopeful of making a big impact will be Middlesex loanee Max Holden, a year older than Zaib but yet to make his senior debut. A left-handed opener, Holden captains England U-19s in the long format and, on their tour of India earlier this year, scored 170 as part of a record 321-run stand with Somerset’s George Bartlett. Ripley has been a fan for years, having tried to sign him for Northants’ academy in 2011.ESPNcricinfo verdict
When it gets down to brass tacks, you’ve got to credit the Steelbacks. They won’t be much fancied, as the betting suggests, but that will not bother Ripley and Wakely as they look to mastermind further success on a shoestring. The question of whether Duckett finds his groove again, after a mixed winter away with England, might determine how far they go in the white-ball formats and a lack of depth could limit their Championship chances – but for county cricket’s version of the Wimbledon “Crazy Gang”, up against it is how they like it.Bet365 odds: Specsavers Championship: 14-1; NatWest Blast: 12-1; Royal London Cup: 16-1

How Australia's women got here

A World Cup is a celebration of how far the women’s game has come, yet it should not be forgotten that many advancements were a long time coming

Daniel Brettig22-Jun-2017In all the ugliness of Australian cricket’s pay dispute, there has been shared acknowledgement of the growth of the women’s game down under, recognition of its vitality and its equality with men’s cricket. Specifically, members of the national team, state squads and WBBL teams, stand to earn far more money than they currently receive.That shared realisation comes at a time when women’s sport in Australia is experiencing a major upsurge. The inaugural season of the AFL Women’s competition earlier this year was a vibrant success. Netball has undergone a reinvention in the shape of the new Super League. Amid this mood, some have wondered why the AFL’s new collective bargaining agreement does not include women, while Cricket Australia’s next MoU with the Australian Cricketers Association – however long it takes to emerge – will do so.In the days and hours before the start of this year’s women’s World Cup in England, it should not be forgotten that the first global limited-overs tournament was a women’s affair – staged in 1973 with the financial assistance of the businessman, philanthropist and sports lover Sir Jack Hayward, whose name emblazoned the initial trophy.The fact the women’s game had a showpiece of that kind before the men is something to be proud of, but it also serves as a reminder of how long its players and administrators have had to fight for the sort of pay and conditions that had for long been awarded to the men’s game. Were the AFL to follow the same trajectory as Australia’s Women’s National Cricket League, for example, it would be another nine years before any of its players were paid anything at all.It was in 1988 that Australia’s women’s team first gained a coach – Ann Mitchell – before lifting that year’s World Cup at home. Whereas the men’s event had been held more or less every four years since 1975, the women’s equivalent was, until the last decade, held at all manner of intervals in a variety of formats, due to the challenges of finding money for both its organisation and the travel and expenses of competing teams.Similar constraints afflicted the Australian Women’s Cricket Championships, which began in 1930-31, and for more than 65 years were restricted to a two-week carnival affair. When it was finally replaced by the more expansive WNCL in 1996-97, the players continued to take part on annual leave from their day jobs, as they did whenever representing Australia. The season after the inaugural WNCL, that leave was taken up by a visit to India for the 1997 World Cup, an event that featured two moments of transformative significance.The first of these was the uniforms: female players had long worn numerous styles of culottes (split skirts or shorts), a uniform taken to a wider audience by the allrounder Zoe Goss when she made a neat 29 and then dismissed Brian Lara in a charity match at the SCG in 1994. For reasons of health and safety relating to abrasive outfields, competing teams took to wearing pants during the 1997 tournament, and soon found that in terms of fielding especially, the game would go to another level.As was the case for Allan Border’s Australian men’s side a decade before, the team led by Belinda Clark found themselves going all the way to the tournament final, at Eden Gardens. To their surprise and delight, the cricket-loving public of Kolkata turned up in enormous numbers; the estimated crowd of 70-80,000 is still by a distance the largest assembled for a women’s match. Clark’s Australia defeated New Zealand to lift the trophy, then emulated Border and company by making an enraptured lap of honour.A 1993 World Cup match. Till recently, women’s World Cups have been irregular, ad hoc events•PA PhotosThat same year Malcolm Speed was appointed as chief executive of the Australian Cricket Board, and after negotiating his own pay fight with the nascent ACA, he began looking towards the amalgamation of the governing body with the Australian Women’s Cricket Council, later Women’s Cricket Australia. This process, pushed in part by the desire of the Australian Sports Commission to ensure that men’s and women’s sports worked more closely together, was largely smooth, albeit with one hold-up – the ACB’s state-appointed board members were opposed to adding a director from the women’s organisation. Ironically their opposition meant that the chair, Quentin Bryce, went on merely to become Australia’s Governor-General.By way of compromise, a women’s cricket committee was set up, while the ACB’s legal counsel, Andrew Twaits, worked with Bryce and WCA’s executive team on a staged amalgamation. Among other things, this meant opening up access for female players to programmes and facilities like the National Cricket Centre (then known as the Cricket Academy). The national team also benefited from a greater level of support staff. These were steps forward from the dismissive words of the former ACB chief executive Graham Halbish in response to questions about why there were no women at the Academy: he said it was “unashamedly elitist”. At the same time, work began on ways to ensure that women had a pathway into the game beyond the introduction of mixed-gender Kanga Cricket.The ICC followed suit in the mid-2000s, and organisation of women’s global events and development came under the same umbrella as the men. Among the most tangible signs of this change was how events were covered by television; the semis and the final of the 2005 event were broadcast, then ten games were covered in 2009, and more have been at each event since. The World T20 has meanwhile been played as a dual event, with the women’s matches watched by male team-mates. In 2010, Australia’s teams made it to both finals, but it was the women – by now referred to as the Commonwealth Bank Southern Stars – who came up trumps.

Whereas the men’s event had been held more or less every four years since 1975, the women’s equivalent was, until the last decade, held at all manner of intervals in a variety of formats, due to the challenges of finding money

While amalgamation meant bigger events and broader coverage, matters of pay and conditions were still a long way from satisfactory resolution. New South Wales led the way in Australia, first paying the Breakers team small wages for the 2005-06 season, coincidentally (or perhaps not) beginning a run of ten consecutive WNCL titles for NSW. Lisa Sthalekar, the spin bowler so pivotal to the success of both NSW and Australia during this period, remembers the change that wrought.”We weren’t paying for flights and accommodation to play, but it was expected this was the amount of time we had to take off from work and we had to use our annual leave,” she says. “Up to that point, it cost players thousands of dollars a year [in lost work] to represent their state.”It was to be another three years before the national team was remunerated above basic expenses, initially offered retainers of A$5000 to A$15,000. One player who missed out on the modest windfall was Cathryn Fitzpatrick, the fast bowler who retired in 2007 and would later coach Australia to the 2013 World Cup victory in India. This lag period was the cause of some consternation, and there were numerous other flashpoints as the women began to assert their rights as fellow cricketers. Talks with the ACA, eventually leading to full membership in 2011, began in 2006.That was also the year in which the national women’s team felt slighted on Allan Border Medal night, when Clark’s peerless batting record and many years of service to Australia were not recognised in any meaningful way. Alex Blackwell was moved to write a letter to CA’s chief executive, James Sutherland, questioning the oversight. Clark, who has gone on to a vaunted role as head of the NCC in Brisbane, was more suitably recognised with induction to the Australian Cricket Hall of Fame at the 2014 awards presentation.Class of ’97: Belinda Clark and her triumphant side take a victory lap around Eden Gardens•Craig Prentis/Getty ImagesThe forming of a relationship with the ACA allowed players the benefit of access to financial support for university study, an option taken up far more readily by the women, who were used to juggling cricket and other pursuits. “The male players were purely focused on cricket rather than study,” Sthalekar points out. “There was a big push to get them to do other things, but the female players obviously always had a career and cricket was just the ‘hobby’ so to speak. Financially that helped out so many players because it meant they didn’t have to work as much as they had to previously.”On the field, other nations had closed the gap with Australia and the other two traditional powers, England and New Zealand. The 2009 home World Cup was something of an disaster in terms of results for Australia, while away from the middle the team was riven by differences between players and coaching staff.”The 2009 World Cup was our worst ever,” Sthalekar remembers. “We came fourth, lost to India twice, lost to New Zealand via Duckworth-Lewis, and even when we won, we weren’t dominating games. South Africa and the West Indies pushed us a lot more than we would have expected.”That was a bit of a wake-up call. That was when we felt like everyone’s caught us. Also from 2005 to 2009, we still won series but we weren’t dominating.”A bit like the men’s team around that similar period, you had a lot of stars of the game. They left, and so it took some time to regenerate. In 2009 we brought in a lot of younger players for their first tournament, rather than having a mix of youth and experience, which I think hurt us as well.”

“There were some players who had the superstition that if they didn’t have a good night’s sleep, they’d play well. So if you’re rooming with someone like that, it makes things kind of difficult!”Lisa Sthalekar on problems with sharing rooms on tour

Yet out of the chaos, a new breed emerged. Meg Lanning, Ellyse Perry and Alyssa Healy, to name three, had looked likely to be major contributors from their junior years, and in the more integrated environment developed over the preceding decade, were carefully guided through to places at the top level. In Lanning, Australia found a batting talent to rank with Clark, while Perry’s all-round skills and considerably pacy bowling made her the sort of all-trades performer the men’s team envied in the years after coming off second best to Andrew Flintoff in 2005.While the performance of the team improved, there remained areas of consternation. Australia’s men had stopped needing to share twin rooms on tour as far back as 1998. Likewise well-planned itineraries and business-class seats had been central to the sort of environment encouraged by Pat Howard when he became CA’s team performance manager following the Argus review in 2011.”One thing I remember a group of us advocating for in 2012 was single rooms on tour,” Sthalekar says. “We felt that everyone has their different time clocks when you’ve got jet lag, and also when one person got sick, everyone got sick throughout the team. There were some players who had the superstition that if they didn’t have a good night’s sleep, they’d play well. So if you’re rooming with someone like that, it makes things kind of difficult!

In the days and hours before the start of this year’s women’s World Cup in England, it should not be forgotten that the first global limited-overs tournament was a women’s affair – staged in 1973

“So we spoke about that in 2012 and there was a period of time where CA weren’t going to do it. We mentioned as well the class we were flying, because, for instance, in 2012 we won the T20 World Cup and that evening we got on a flight back home from Sri Lanka. We didn’t really get a chance to celebrate, we were all in cattle class, having played a game, a couple of girls were sick, we were exhausted tired and sore, then a week later we started the WNCL. So that wasn’t great.”Now the girls are flying business class and things like that. It’s good to see those changes happen, because all of that helps. As much as people think it is a bit of a luxury, recovery is a huge part of any athlete’s armoury.”Lisa Sthalekar dives to take a catch. Professional contracts have allowed the current generation to “put their whole focus” on cricket, she says•Getty ImagesThese advancements took place in 2013, the year of the most recent World Cup, and following on from similar moves in England. They arrived at the time that CA announced vastly improved payments for the national team and also state players. These ranged from A$25,000 to A$52,000, plus tour payments and marketing bonuses for the national side, fully funded by CA to the tune of just over $1.5 million a year, rising incrementally each year. With the wages came a new mindset.”A lot of girls around that time chose cricket to be their profession for the first time,” Sthalekar says. “That meant a lot of the girls in pre-season were up at the National Cricket Centre, training for longer periods of time. It’s only in the past two or three years that’s happened. This World Cup campaign, they had three weeks and then two weeks. The level of training and preparation they can do is so different to, say, 2005 when we went to India. That was a seven-week tour and maybe a one-week camp before. Because players are getting paid a decent wage, it means they don’t have other work commitments so they’re allowed to put their whole focus on that.”The next step is in many respects the final one. From amateurs meeting at the behest of Hayward in England in 1973, Australia’s players will return home from this campaign in the confident expectation that they will be paid fully professional wages from 2017-18 onwards. Not only that, they will be incorporated into the same pay deal as the men, an outcome driven as much by the years of sweat and toil put in by the forebears of Lanning, Perry and company as by the reforming spirit of Australian women’s sport in 2017.”Both parties believe they should be in this MOU, one agreement for all players regardless of gender,” Sthalekar says. “Then you have CA just recently changing the name to the Australian women’s team rather than being known as the ‘Southern Stars’. It’s not just that but also saying it’s not the Australian team anymore, it’s the Australian men’s team and the Australian women’s team. As little as it cost to do that, I think it sends a very strong message.”

'From a business standpoint it's chaos'

Paul Marsh, the former Australian Cricketers’ Association chief executive, shares his views on the pay dispute between CA and Australia’s players

Daniel Brettig21-Jun-2017Having just completed the AFL deal, what’s your perspective on where the cricket negotiation is at?They don’t even appear to be at first base from my understanding of it. With CA not supplying financial information to the ACA it is very hard for them to negotiate a deal. That’s how I see it at the moment.The AFL deal has been reported as being imminent for a long time yet it still took time to finalise. What are your thoughts on CA’s lead negotiator Kevin Roberts going on a roadshow to state squads less than two weeks from the expiry of current MOU?Wouldn’t you think his time would be better spent getting in a room with the ACA, giving them the information, and actually start moving on this? Our agreement has taken a long time to get to where it has got to, and it’s taken us five weeks just to draft the agreement – how these guys get this thing done in the next nine days and mitigate all the risks that come with it not being done, it’s hard to comprehend how it could happen.You mentioned financial information as an issue – how is that a problem for the ACA in trying to reach a deal?No players’ association can responsibly represent its members if you don’t understand what the financial forecasts look like. Historically CA – and the last MOU in 2012 was the best – gave us incredibly detailed and rigorous financial forecasts for their business, for the state associations and for the BBL teams. The reality of it is that your forecasts will end up being different to your actual results, almost by definition it is impossible to look five or six years into the future and get that absolutely right.But in CA’s case they have to be accountable to something, and that’s why the percentage model is so important. If the actual revenues of the industry end up being different to what the forecasts are, then you’ve got something you can tie the players’ payments to. A share of revenue could be more or less than what it has been, that’s all part of the discussion, as is what goes in and what goes out, but it’s about tying what the players get to the actual revenues of the game rather than what the forecasts are.There’s no accountability for CA if they don’t. They can give you whatever set of numbers they want to give you, and if they end up being significantly inaccurate – as they have been for every MOU negotiation since 1998 – then the players are getting shortchanged. Right now CA aren’t even giving the ACA a set of forecasts. That to me is fundamental, and all CA have done is lost the trust of the entire playing group because it looks like they’re trying to hide something.What was the AFL’s attitude to information sharing?I think there’s an acknowledgement from the AFL that they want to do a long-term deal with us for industry stability, but they understand it is impossible for us if we’re being responsible to tie what the players get just to a set of forecasts. They understand that point, and the second that players keep talking about in both sports is partnership. Incentivise us with a model that helps us to both grow the game together. Our model isn’t where the cricket model is currently at because we’ve got 28% of forecast revenue, 28% of the AFL upside and only 11.2% of the clubs’ upside. The ACA at the moment have roughly a 26% share of everything.The club piece is a bigger challenge in the AFL but that’s all up for discussion. The principle of tying player payments to the industry is common to both models now. We think we’ll end up getting a better result for the players and the game, and that’s the galling part of what’s going on at the moment in cricket. Surely the players are going to get a lot more money in this MOU through the percentage model, or the review mechanism as we’re calling it in the AFL, but let’s not lose sight of the fact that for every dollar the players get, the game gets three. Why are they [CA] trying to strip that off? It smacks of pure greed.

I’m incredibly frustrated, as someone who did the last deal and helped convince the players to put $20 million of their own money [from the 2015 World Cup] back into growing the game. Yet the very next MOU the players are told ‘we don’t want to give you this revenue percentage anymore’.

When you left the ACA in 2014 the game’s landscape had already changed enormously due to Twenty20 tournaments and that process is only getting faster. Are you surprised to see this sort of dispute arise when players have more choice than before? Certainly more than AFL players have.I think it’s crazy. For the services of players, cricket is now a seller’s market. The players can choose where to go, and that’s a reality the AFL doesn’t have, players can’t pick up their trade and go somewhere else. But the cricketers can, and for the majority of countries now they can make a lot more money doing that than playing international cricket. I think international cricket is at risk of falling over if the big countries have a period for whatever reason where they don’t play international cricket.Nearly all successful professional sports are club-based, cricket is now half-and-half and could very quickly become a club-based sport. There are some parts of the cricket model at the moment that don’t work for players – say the best player in the world is a West Indian or a New Zealander, what they get for playing for their country may well be less than what an Australian state cricketer gets. So to think they are not going to chase the T20 dollars and get paid what they’re worth is just complete naivety. It seems to me that CA are at risk of pushing the players down that path.The other thing I find incredible is that CA relies on its commercial partners to generate income, and they as of next week no longer have the players locked away from the perspective of protecting their commercial partners. It’s a slippery slope to companies saying ‘we don’t want to invest in cricket because of the risk here, because players can go off and do things with our competitors’, then the whole business model of cricket falls over. Stability and certainty means everyone knows where they stand, CA can go away and do commercial and broadcast deals and organise tours. If they haven’t got that, from a business standpoint it’s chaos. That’s the thing where you look at it and think ‘how could it get to that point?’.One of CA’s major arguments against revenue sharing is that they say it becomes very difficult to invest in new projects when a percentage of all investment must go to players. How can that issue be addressed?The ACA has historically been responsible. If CA have put arguments around needing flexibility around the revenue-sharing model in order to invest in the game, all I’m hearing from the ACA is ‘we’re happy to talk about that’. And it can be negotiated, you can exclude certain revenue streams, and we’ve done that with the AFL deal like in the case of Etihad Stadium. We’ve given the AFL a six-year exclusion to take any money they generate from Etihad that won’t go into our pot.If the clubs make money from it that will be included, but that’s giving them [the AFL] a chance to pay off that investment, and hopefully beyond six years everyone will benefit from that. I think any players’ association will look at good arguments and work those things into the model. But the argument is ‘we don’t want to give you a share of the upside because we might want to spend it, and we’re not going to give you the forecasts because we don’t want to’.I think it is impossible for a responsible players’ association to do a deal on that basis. Certainly if I was in the ACA’s shoes I couldn’t possibly consider anything more than a one-year deal, and even that would have to be under the principle of revenue share – it is just too open to be gamed. CA have all the information, they know what the future looks like as their best guess, and they won’t even share that. It is incumbent on CA to put the details to the ACA to try to work through what sorts of investments they want to make.Another issue is the adjustment ledger. CA have said it is reasonable to take adjustment-ledger money from the current MOU into the next one because that is what happened in 2012. Why was it done then?We did a one-year rollover deal for 2011-12, and it was a season with an India tour. We could have paid the players 26% of the money from that year, but what would have happened was a massive increase for that one year, and then a decrease for the next year and so on. It was only done that way so the player payments were evened out rather than what would have been irresponsible and unfair to most of the players, spiking one year then going down the next.’As much as CA will claim it is Australia’s favourite sport and all that, now I’ve been removed a bit, it doesn’t get the column inches that other sports get, it isn’t necessarily in the consciousness of the Australian public like it used to be’•John Walton/PA PhotosI’m incredibly frustrated, as someone who did the last deal and helped convince the players to put $20 million of their own money [from the 2015 World Cup] back into growing the game. The players took a very responsible decision to invest back into the game. There wouldn’t be another professional sport in the world where the players took that decision, yet the very next MOU the players are told ‘we don’t want to give you this revenue percentage anymore’. I find that incredibly disrespectful and unprofessional in my view.We negotiated that share of revenue fair and square, and the players could have put all of that money in their pocket, and they didn’t. That shows how serious the players were about this partnership, so to then have that thrown back in their face… For CA to use money from this MOU that the players have earned – despite the fact they’ve given $20 million back – and then try to say ‘we’re going to take more money out of what we have to pay you and put it into the next deal’, it’s just contemptible from where I sit.When you left cricket in 2014, did you have much of an idea that CA was moving in this direction in terms of what it wanted out of the next MOU?I was certainly conscious of [CA chairman] David Peever’s business history. I knew David’s philosophies were anti-union, or not seeing the need for a union, which perhaps is a lack of understanding for the difference between a players’ association and a normal employee-type union. There’s differences in 100% membership, players being through these fights before and being incredibly united. I had an inkling there may have been a change coming from CA, but there certainly won’t be one from the players. The irony of what’s going on right now is it will only make the playing group stronger and more united.In terms of the changes CA are seeking, the AFLPA was coming from a similar perspective in terms of wanting to change a system that had existed fairly consistently for a number of years. How did you go about that?CA wanted to change the model, as we [the AFLPA] did, and we had to take the AFL on that journey together. I don’t think CA have done that at all with the players. You’d think they’d be saying ‘guys this is what it all looks like, these are our concerns with the model, we want to meet with you and discuss it’. Instead it looks like ‘here’s our deal, we’re not going to discuss the financials, take it or leave it’. It’s laughable, and if they think they’re going to change the players’ minds now, it just shows how far removed they are from the players’ psyche. By trying to work around the ACA, all they’ve done is make the ACA stronger – the players appoint them and pay them to look after their interests so they don’t have to get involved in all this. By going to the players direct they’ve almost done the ACA’s job for them. It defies belief.So what do you think happens next?There’s no doubt the players have got very strong resolve here. I can’t see a deal done before June 30, so from that point the players become uncontracted, the commercial rights fall away, and potentially we’ll see players going off and doing their own commercial deals, looking for opportunities in tournaments overseas. I think the big tipping point here will be the India tour. If the players haven’t got contracts then, from where I sit that would be one they shouldn’t go on. They’ll effectively be locked out, it won’t be a strike.CA’s approach here is purely and simply trying to bully the players into an outcome that CA want. ‘We won’t give you the financial information, we won’t give you this model, here’s our deal, take it or leave it’ – that’s been the approach to this point. How can it possibly be seen as a ‘win/win’ here? I can’t see how, and from a human-behaviour perspective you just ask who’s going to agree to that then, how will the players say ‘we’re happy with that deal’ and the same for CA. It’s now a win/lose scenario and in my experience, if you’re going to have a relationship with someone, win/lose just doesn’t work.Do you have a different perspective on where cricket is at having been removed from it for a few years and involved in a rival sport?Cricket’s not going that well that it can afford to throw itself open to this. As much as CA will claim it is Australia’s favourite sport and all that, now I’ve been removed a bit, it doesn’t get the column inches that other sports get, it isn’t necessarily in the consciousness of the Australian public like it used to be, and I just think it is a very dangerous game to play.

'Economics alone cannot dictate Test cricket' – BCCI CEO

Rahul Johri, the BCCI CEO, talks to ESPNcricinfo about the proposed Future Tours Programme, which he says will ‘ensure the best possible content and context’

Nagraj Gollapudi15-Dec-2017Now that you’ve wrapped up fleshing out the proposed FTP, where does the BCCI stand on the health of Test cricket?The BCCI is committed to Test cricket. It is evident the existing calendar, too. We played an extended Test season at home. We are playing South Africa, England and Australia in 2018-19 (before the World Cup).In the new proposed FTP, India will play 24 out of their scheduled 37 Tests – or nearly 65% – against England, Australia or South Africa. Were there any parameters used to determined the opponents as part of the Test league since points would be at stake?If you look at the framework for the Test league that has been created, we have to play at least six opponents in two years home or away and a minimum of two Tests per series. It is with us the prerogative of how many do we play and with who. We are looking at good content for the Indian fans, the cricketers, for the broadcasters, for all the stakeholders. It is our responsibility to ensure the best possible content and context.Is it true that the operations team focused on performance and stature of the opponent, as some media reports noted, before penciling in the opponent?That is not how we approached it. We have to provide the best cricket for the benefit of BCCI, for the benefit of all our stakeholders. And we feel that if we can deliver the highest quality of cricket then your previous question on [the health of] Test cricket gets answered. Our focus is to deliver the best value for all our stakeholders. With that premise we have built the FTP.India will play 12 out of 19 home Tests and 12 out of 18 away Tests against Australia, England, South Africa. Do you look at this as the marquee series?The top team is India, firstly. For India to have the best context we believed [playing those teams is] the best way forward to build the FTP. There is no doubt India remains a popular opponent but unfortunately it is not possible to play everyone.The media rights for Indian cricket are up for renewal from April 2018. India do not play much cricket till the 2019 World Cup at home. Was that a factor, too, when you chalked out the new FTP?Our ambit was clearly 2019-23 in the new FTP. From the media rights standpoint a good balance between home and away which ensures quality content at home is of paramount importance. Delivering the best value for all stakeholders was a significant premise in every possible way. So we have to strike a balance between all the variables.In this proposed FTP India will play on average two fewer Tests per year than in the current FTP.That is incorrect. If this new proposed structure was not there, under the existing FTP, India were scheduled to play 15 Tests at home and 21 away. But in this new proposed FTP India are scheduled to play 19 Tests at home and 18 away – so overall we are playing two more Tests actually.

“The BCCI sets global benchmarks in terms of revenues or rights fees for every format. A lot was said before the IPL media rights tender too, but the [eventual] IPL rights proved the pre-eminence of Indian cricket and set the benchmark for cricket leagues. I am extremely confident when the BCCI bilateral media rights tender opens it will once again set a benchmark for international cricket.”Rahul Johri

But do you agree that there has been a deep, growing concern about the health of Test cricket and its future in the present form? Did you and other CEOs take that into consideration when you sat for numerous meetings before fleshing out the FTP?Our stance remains to stay committed to Test cricket. The mandate given to us in the BCCI is that Test cricket is a very important component of the overall cricket structure.Cricket Australia CEO James Sutherland recently said “alarm bells” have started ringing for Test cricket. According to Sutherland the commercial value of Test cricket has fallen especially in the Indian market. Do you agree?That is James Sutherland’s view. Not for me comment on it. As CEOs of our boards, our primary responsibility is to execute the directions given by our boards. We are not cricket specialists. While economics plays a role in sport, only economics cannot dictate how Test cricket is played.Even Uday Shankar, CEO of Star India, the global broadcaster, says the “economics of Test cricket” do not work. He feels the popularity of the game drives the economics. And the popularity has been falling. How do you look at it?The BCCI bilateral media rights will be out soon. The result of that will deliver the answer. We are extremely confident that we will deliver the best value for Indian cricket. The BCCI sets global benchmarks in terms of revenues or rights fees for every format. A lot was said before the IPL media rights tender too, but the [eventual] IPL rights proved the pre-eminence of Indian cricket and set the benchmark for cricket leagues. I am extremely confident when the BCCI bilateral media rights tender opens it will once again set a benchmark for international cricket.During your tenure BCCI has stuck massive contracts from title sponsorship to team sponsorship to IPL media rights. Do you reckon those deals would play a positive influence on the bilateral media rights next year?The positive trajectory that has been set will continue.Can you talk about what the players and Indian team management have told you on Test cricket specifically. What is their vision of India in Test cricket?We have a constant dialogue with the team management. We take their feedback extremely seriously. And our actions manifest from those conversations.Are the players in favour of five-day Test cricket or are they open to four-day Test cricket?The ICC Cricket Committee has made robust recommendations on this subject. And we endorse those suggestions.The ICC Cricket Committee is not yet in favour of four-day Test cricket. You support that, then?Yes.What about the players on day-night Test cricket? India are the only big Full Member country to not have played pink-ball cricket.I feel it would be too premature to jump the gun on this. It needs a lot of deliberation and hence I said the general body of BCCI will discuss day-night Test cricket threadbare. And whatever decision the BCCI general body takes, we will implement it.You tried playing the Duleep Trophy under lights once, but discontinued that experiment. Why? Did the BCCI’s technical committee weigh in with their thoughts and what were they?The BCCI is an organization which is at the forefront of innovations. We played the Duleep Trophy to experiment with pink-ball cricket. That experiment continues. How it manifests itself is the decision left to the BCCI general body. Once the specialists decide, we will implement it.

More strokemakers not the answer for England but Jonny Bairstow injury may offer partial solution

If Jonny Bairstow plays purely as a batsman in the fourth Test it may pave the way for England to restructure their batting line-up

George Dobell22-Aug-2018It seems hard to imagine now but, not so long ago, England used to be chastised if they won Tests too slowly.During the summer of 2013, in particular, they attracted criticism for the manner in which they won the Ashes – a 3-0 victory, no less – and a 247-run win over New Zealand at Headingley. Their game, it was said, lacked aggression, style and entertainment value.Well, it sure has all those now. You can barely take your eye off England when batting – they have lost 10 wickets in a session three times in two years – as they react to almost every challenge by trying to hit their way to safety. Ollie Pope, inexperienced and batting out of position, can probably be forgiven his second innings dismissal – ugly though it was – but Joe Root’s back foot force was unworthy of such an experienced player.So, as the team management use Thursday morning to pick a squad for the fourth Test, you wonder what they would give for a Geoff Boycott or Chris Tavare now. Players who would happily bat all day for 90. Players who could leave well, defend well and relished batting time.Instead, as they look around the counties, they find a surplus of middle-order strokemakers. There’s James Vince, who scored (another) century in the latest round of Championship matches, Moeen Ali, who did the same, and Joe Clarke, who is sixth in the Division One run table and has scored those runs at a strike-rate of 66.76. Not so long ago, that was considered respectable in ODI cricket.But England don’t need another middle-order strokemaker. They need a blocker. They need someone to dare to be dull. They need the batsman Alastair Cook used to be.County cricket doesn’t produce many blockers any more. There simply isn’t any money in it. So a batsman like Jaik Mickleburgh, who scores centuries for fun in Minor Counties cricket, can’t win a second chance in the first-class game because he is seen as a one-format player. Andrew Umeed, who made the second-slowest century (in terms of minutes) in Championship history last summer against an attack including James Anderson, hasn’t been picked for a first-class game this year. Nick Compton has fallen out of favour to such an extent that it appears his career is over.It is an absurd situation that sees Pope, who bats at No. 6 for Surrey, asked to bat No. 4 for England. Especially with such a fragile top-order above him. Pope had never come into bat before the 23rd over of a first-class innings before he made his Test debut. Now, in the three Test innings he has had, he has come to the crease in the nine over, the 12th over and the 13th over. It is unfair to expect a 20-year-old to cover for the flaws of those above him. Unfair and potentially damaging.It could be that England have stumbled upon a partial solution. If, as expected, Jonny Bairstow is unable to keep wicket in Southampton due to his fractured finger, it is likely he will relinquish the gloves (not literally; they can afford a pair each) to Jos Buttler but retain his place in the side as a specialist batsman. He could then be pushed up to No. 4 and told to curb his natural aggression just a little. Pope would be able to slip down at least one place as a consequence and if Ben Stokes – who looked as if he had the best technique in the side at Trent Bridge – was also pushed up a place, Pope could revert to No. 6.Moeen Ali’s all-round show•ESPNcricinfo LtdIt’s not a perfect solution. Bairstow has spent most of his career at Yorkshire batting at No. 5 and, with a propensity to push at the ball, remains better suited to a middle-order position. If anyone doubts how much easier batting can become, it’s worth noting that, in the first, third and fourth innings of the Trent Bridge Test combined, only one wicket fell between the 31st and 70th overs for a combined total of 387 runs.But the suspicion remains that Bairstow has not quite maximised his potential with the bat. He currently has a Test career average of 38.55, after all, and in the 25 innings he has played in the last year, he has reached 50 only four times. This summer he averages 31.75. The requirement to tighten his game and take more responsibility with the bat might just be the making of him.It would help England’s middle-order, too, if their top-order performed better. It seems there is little chance of Cook being jettisoned at this stage, but Keaton Jennings is at risk. Jennings is only four Tests into his recall but, having appeared unreliable in the field – he dropped two relatively straightforward chances at Trent Bridge – his frailties outside off stump have also been exposed by an India attack that is brilliant against left-handers.His return of 123 runs in six innings gives him an average, since his return to the side, of just 20.50 and suggests he has been unable to improve the technical deficiencies that resulted in him being dropped a year ago. His career average – 23.16 from 10 Tests – is bolstered by that century on debut which saw him dropped before he was scored. Had it been taken, he would be averaging 16.94 in his Test career.His recall looked hasty at the time. Following the decision to drop him last August, he went 20 first-class innings without reaching a half-century. He then made two centuries in successive innings – one of them a fine effort against a decent Nottinghamshire attack; the other on a very flat pitch against Somerset – and was immediately recalled. In retrospect, that looks premature.But it’s his catching that’s the real worry. It hints at a scrambled mind and brittle confidence. And with Rory Burns continuing to score heavily – he has 104 more runs than the second-highest scorer in Division One this season – there is a viable alternative in decent form.There are other options. Daryl Mitchell, the Worcestershire opener, is the third-highest run-scorer in Division One and a more than decent slip fielder. He is experienced, phlegmatic and right-handed. He would let nobody down. But it seems unlikely the selectors will look much beyond those involved in the Lions set-up. They might be reluctant to look to a 34-year-old, too.Rory Burns plays the cut•Getty ImagesCould Ian Bell be an option at No. 3? He could. He is 36 now but batting beautifully. It might be remembered, though, that Bell averaged 38.00 at No. 3 and 48.25 at No. 5 in Test cricket. He doesn’t really answer the question England are asking right now.It’s not impossible there could be a new look to the spin attack, though. Jack Leach might have been considered the man in possession at the start of the summer but was unavailable for the Pakistan series due to injury and the start of this India series as it was believed he required more bowling to recover his rhythm. Having claimed 8 for 85 in Somerset’s victory over Essex it seems safe to assume he has now done so.Moeen is pushing hard, too. As well as the runs he is scoring – in the last week, he has followed a 51-ball century in the Blast with a Championship double-hundred against Yorkshire – he has also taken five-fors in his last two Championship matches. He was already in the squad and might be considered either as a replacement for Bairstow, if required, or a second spinner. It seems most unlikely the experiment of using him as an opener will be revisited.But Adil Rashid – with seven wickets in the series at 26.71 – has done little wrong. So unless England feel they require cover for Cook (who may need to depart on paternity leave at some stage) or Bairstow (finger) the only tough decision may centre on whether Jennings should make way for Burns.

Marcus Harris steps up to give Australia a foothold

Marcus Harris took guard first up in Perth, for the first time in first-class cricket. Selflessness and teamwork on display, and it did the trick for his side

Daniel Brettig in Perth14-Dec-20181:51

‘Harris looks like a long-term player for Australia’ – Martyn

Amid all the unknowns awaiting both sides in the inaugural Test match at the cavernous Perth Stadium, Marcus Harris stared down one of a most personal batting nature when he took guard to face the opening over of the first morning.In a first-class career as an opening batsman that has spanned 70 matches, Harris had never faced the first ball of a match, habitually taking up his post at the non-striker’s end until a run was scored or the second over began. But with Aaron Finch – a relative top-order novice – as his partner and Ishant Sharma having twice created early troubles for the right-hander, Harris chose to part with seven years of habit to place himself as the primary bulwark against the new ball.As a decision and a gesture it spoke of selflessness and teamwork, reflecting that in the strange new world of Australian cricket after Newlands, it was possible to have a 26-year-old in Harris taking a leadership role in relation to a 32-year-old in Finch, while also facing a challenge he had never met before himself. Whether to do with Harris’ left-handedness, Ishant’s residual soreness from his Adelaide exertions, or the combination of a glaring sun and a fresh pitch, the move worked grandly: the over passed without batting incident, and both Harris and Finch went on from there to form a 112-run stand that should only grow in importance as the match goes on.Unquestionably, India’s pacemen did not start well, varying lines and lengths far too much despite the assistance available in the pitch, and allowing Harris and Finch to cruise to 45 without loss in the first hour. By the time they improved their radars after drinks, Harris and Finch were established, and even while finding batting increasingly difficult, they were able to survive well into the second session. As the Australian bowling coach David Saker put it:”You’re wanting to hit the top of the stumps as many times as you can, so you’ve just got to try to find a fuller length,” he told Seven. “If you’re bringing batsmen forward on any wicket you’re always a chance and that’s the one thing India haven’t done this morning is bring us forward as much as they did in Adelaide and probably haven’t been as consistent.”You could also say the batting has been better so it’s put a bit of pressure on the opposition, but you’re just trying to bring the batsman forward as much as you can. If they’re playing off the back foot they’ve got time to leave the ball, the ball’s generally going over the stumps so it needs a batsman error to get out. If we’re to get the wickets then you need to bring them forward probably everywhere in the world.”And even though the balance of the Australian batting order squandered starts – four of them, Harris included, were out playing variations of the cut shot – their strong start and collective contributions allowed Tim Paine and Pat Cummins to contemplate taking the hosts to 350 and beyond on the second morning. It had all started with Harris and Finch resolving to switch around their opening formula in the first Test, as Finch dropped down from No. 1 to No. 2. Harris’ sure-footed start, blooming into an innings speckled with 10 elegant boundaries warmly received by a crowd of 20,641, provided ample evidence the right call had been made.ALSO READ: Marcus Harris in Perth: the return of the prodigal son”Sometimes you’ve got to change it up, don’t you! I asked him if he wanted to take it in his first Test and he said no, I said ‘well now you’ve played one Test you can have it’,” Finch joked. “There was none of that chat, with Ishant first up he was happy to take the first ball.”I think what everyone’s seen from him so far, not a lot fazes him, he’s a pretty chilled out character, who just goes with the flow and that’s the way he’s always been. He’s a great guy, but I think the tightness of his technique, covers his off stump, looks to hit down the ground and for such a short guy that can be quite unique at times. He’s definitely got all the shots, but I think the way he adapts his game and his game plan depending on the wicket, depending on the attack, I think that’ll hold him in great stead.”As team-mates for state as well as country, Finch and Harris have been able to establish a rapport even though, prior to Adelaide, they had never opened together. “When you have a good relationship with somebody that stuff takes care of itself,” Finch said. “Whether it’s been over the last few years with Victoria, whether you’re having a beer at the bar and you’re chatting about cricket or whether you’re out training and talking technique or strategy or different movement patterns – it’s all just building up a relationship and we have got along really well for a few years now.”Batting out in the middle is always good fun with him, he keeps it pretty simple pretty relaxed, we just keep reminding each other to focus on what our game plan is and what our strengths are.”How valuable the Harris-Finch union will be shall become clearer as the game evolves, with so little known about a venue that has hosted only one previous first-class match, between Western Australia and New South Wales in the Sheffield Shield earlier this summer. But that small sample size alone provided reason for Australian optimism: their stumps tally of 6 for 277 is already the highest innings tally at the venue, besting the Blues’ ultimately match-winning 261.And as Harris himself recalled in the lead-up to this match, the evenness of an undermanned Australia and a seasoned India, cancelling out the conditional advantages usually able to help the hosts win comfortably, means that every player must find ways to contribute as much as possible. “I think it got down to 30 runs,” he had said of the Adelaide loss. “I know when I looked at it as a batter I thought ‘I wish I could’ve got 60 or 70’, so we got pretty close.”In taking the first ball and then going on to the score he had wished for himself in Adelaide, Harris possibly took a giant leap towards a long and fruitful Test career.

Ugly UAE numbers led to Nathan Lyon's 'ugly' spin style

Four years after a pummeling at the hands of Younis Khan and Misbah-ul-Haq, the offspinner returns to the UAE as a smarter bowler who has learned to tailor his style to Asian pitches

Daniel Brettig24-Sep-2018Nathan Lyon’s previous visit to the UAE for Test matches was a horror show. In two Tests in late 2014 he was outright bullied by Pakistan – swept with impunity by Younis Khan in Dubai, thumped out of sight by Misbah-ul-Haq in Abu Dhabi – and finished the series with the following set of numbers: three wickets at 140.66, at a cost of 3.83 runs per over.While Lyon would go home to be the match-winner of the memorable Adelaide Test against India, the ugliness of his domination by Pakistan would be an early step on his long road to learning how to bowl fruitfully in Asian conditions. The term he coined in concert with his mentor John Davison was “bowl ugly”, a conscious abandonment of the topspinning, flight-and-drop method he favoured in Australia to embrace the flatter, tighter, “trap them on the crease and hit the stumps” ways of spinners raised in India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka or Bangladesh.Four years later, Lyon has returned to the UAE as Australia’s undisputed No. 1 spin bowler, and also the most experienced member of a touring team shorn of Steven Smith and David Warner by the Newlands ball-tampering scandal. While the coach Justin Langer, captain Tim Paine and selection chairman Trevor Hohns must find a way to cope without the two men who topped Australia’s Test aggregates and averages in 2014, Lyon at least knows what he must do, in concert with Jon Holland and the pacemen.”I think I’m a better cricketer and a better person to be honest,” Lyon said in Dubai. “The amount of cricket we play, you keep learning, and if you’re not learning that’s where you start getting in a little bit of trouble. But I’ve definitely learned a lot from past experiences in Sri Lanka, India and Bangladesh, even going back to Dubai here. So I feel like I’m in such a better place, very happy with the way I bowled today, very confident the way they’re coming out, and that’s in my terms the ugly style.”For me, this is my term, it’s about bowling ugly over here, going away from what I’ve fallen in love with, the offspinning ball, spinning up the back of the ball with that nice shape. We have to find a way to hit the stumps, and that may be bowling square or round-arm or whatever it may be. It’s having those conversations and we’ve got a brilliant lead-up here before the first Test match. The four-day game here in a few days is going to be a great time for us to experiment, and also to see the way they’re going to play us.”I know four years ago they really tried to attack me last time they were here, so I’m expecting pretty much the same type of batting. They’ve got different guys rather than Younis and Misbah, but they’ve still got a very talented batting line-up, some superstars in there already, so it’s going to be a great challenge. They’re going to bring the game to us, and that’s going to be an exciting part.”

“It’s about bowling ugly over here, going away from what I’ve fallen in love with, the offspinning ball, spinning up the back of the ball with that nice shape. We have to find a way to hit the stumps, and that may be bowling square or round-arm or whatever it may be.”Nathan Lyon

Recognition of the callowness of the squad, save for Lyon, Mitchell Starc and the recalled Peter Siddle, arrived in the first few days of acclimatisation after the Australians landed in Dubai. Lyon and Starc sat together and pondered their roles as bowling leaders, before broadening the commission to help ensure every bowler – whether Holland, Michael Neser or even the youthful Brendan Doggett – is up to the task, whether it is to attack, defend or somewhere in between.”I know Starcy and I spoke a bit about that sitting in I think it was his room the other night, but it’s just about providing good examples and leading the way as we try to do each and every game,” Lyon said. “The big thing over here is we’re going to have to bowl well in partnerships. The fast bowlers are not just here to make up the overs, they’re here to attack and defend in whatever the roles may be at the right times.”There’s not just one certain person who has to stand up here, it’s the whole bowling unit. It’s going to be a great challenge, and if we can bowl well in partnerships and really put the Pakistan batting lineup under pressure and make sure they’re being asked questions of their defence, that’s going to be the biggest thing.”I’m a big fan of Jon Holland. He’s done extremely well in the Shield back home over the last few years, he’s a very talented bowler, he spins up the back of the ball, which I love. It’s my absolute mantra, especially bowling spin, so to see him doing that out here, we’re good mates as well, so our communication and bowling out in the middle today was brilliant. Hopefully we can really build that relationship here and really take that out into the middle. That’ll be a massive key for us.”While Lyon spoke of being open to playing three spin bowlers, the selectors have rather shown their hand by leaving Ashton Agar at home to play extra domestic limited-overs matches before he joins the Test squad this week. Travis Head, Marnus Labuschagne and the seam-bowling allrounder Mitchell Marsh will be the extra balance components for the touring team. Additionally, Lyon noted the fact that in 2014, it was not so much the breadth of spin as the flatness of the pitches that helped Pakistan wear the Australians down.”If it’s going to be a Pune [in India in 2017] wicket, why wouldn’t you play three spinners,” Lyon said. “But going off the last tour here, they were pretty flat, they were hard work, and with the two guys in my eyes vying for batting five or six, Marnus and Travis Head, and they both offer us a spin component as well, I think we’re going to have a minimum of three spinners in the side no matter what anyway, and whether they want to go with three frontline spinners is totally up to Cracker [Trevor Hohns], JL and Tim Paine, what type of way they play their cricket.”Out here it was pretty flat, Abu Dhabi was pretty flat last time and looked to spin later in the game, but if you look four years ago we got beaten on the inside of the bat, so we actually got out when the ball was going straight on, so good luck to the selectors…”

Battles of the Ranji final: Pujara v Umesh and Jaffer v Unadkat

On the eve of the final on Saturday, there were two sets of a pair of players engaged in animated conversation in the nets sessions in Nagpur

Saurabh Somani in Nagpur02-Feb-2019On the eve of the Ranji Trophy 2018-19 final on Saturday, there were two sets of a pair of players engaged in animated conversation when both Vidarbha and Saurashtra were having their nets sessions at the VCA Stadium in Nagpur.Saurashtra’s Cheteshwar Pujara had walked up to Vidarbha’s Wasim Jaffer, and both men talked fairly long and earnestly, but with smiles all through. Perhaps about how much each one should levy property tax on the other for spending inordinate amounts of time in the middle.A little while later, Vidarbha’s Umesh Yadav and Saurashtra’s Jaydev Unadkat were in a similar tête-à-tête, maybe discussing the rival merits of the joy of moving one away from the batsman after slanting the ball in, versus having him hopping on the back foot, and poking limply.Whatever the content of the conversation, from Sunday onwards the bowlers will be trying their best to get the opposing batsman out. And how those two contests pan out could be the key moments in each team’s innings.Cheteshwar Pujara v Umesh YadavPujara and Umesh have faced each other just once in the Ranji Trophy before, in February 2016 in a quarter-final. While Saurashtra won that game in Vizianagaram by an innings and 85 runs, Umesh had Pujara caught behind for 47 on the way to a five-wicket haul.Theirs is the clash that will headline this contest. Pujara is coming on the back of 131* in the fourth innings in the semi-final, in a tough chase against Karnataka who kept coming hard at him throughout. That knock came after he had hit 67* in the previous fourth-innings chase, in the quarter-final against Uttar Pradesh. And those two matches, of course, have followed after a historic, Man-of-the-Series batathon against Australia.Pujara’s might be among the most-prized wicket in world cricket right now, given how bowlers are being driven to despair trying to dislodge him. He played one match for Saurashtra in November before leaving for Australia and later rejoining the team for the knockouts. Umesh hadn’t played any match for Vidarbha earlier this season, but he too joined the team upon returning from Australia.BCCIUmesh played only one Test in Australia, but showed absolutely no rust after coming back. He went one better than Pujara, getting the Man-of-the-Match awards in the quarter-final and the semi-final. On a track without much life in it, he took nine wickets against Uttarakhand. When there was juice in the pitch, against Kerala, he blew the team away with 12 wickets in the match.Rajneesh Gurbani, Umesh’s team-mate at Vidarbha, had lit up their title run last season by getting those awards in the quarter-final, semi-final and final. Umesh is on track to replicate that feat.If Umesh hasn’t yet bowled to a batsman of the calibre of Pujara in the knockout stages, Pujara hasn’t had to face any bowler as devastating either. One of them has 21 wickets in two games at a bowling average of 9.14. The other has 254 runs at that same stage at a batting average of 127. Individual contests within matches can sometimes be more about hype than effect, but without losing sight of the fact that it’s still a team game, there is an underlying ‘this-is-it’ feeling about whoever triumphs when Umesh’s irresistible force meet’s Pujara’s immovable object.Wasim Jaffer v Jaydev UnadkatPTI While Pujara and Umesh are the natural cynosures when Saurashtra bat and Vidarbha bowl, an equally important battle will take place when the teams switch roles.The paeans to Jaffer being an ageless wonder have been repeated too often, but that’s only because he keeps living up to them. He’s not only been his team’s primary batsman – again – but also scored 1,000 runs this season – again. Sure, teams didn’t have as many matches in a season in the early decades of the Ranji Trophy that they do now. And true enough, the best batsmen in the country don’t play full seasons of the competition because they are playing for India. But it’s still remarkable that Jaffer is the only one to make more than 1,000 runs in a season twice in 85 years that the Ranji Trophy has existed. It began in 1934-35 and neither World War II nor domestic crises have stopped it from being held since then.In all that time, no one has amassed more runs or centuries than Jaffer, and he’s not done yet.As for Unadkat, he’s not only the first Saurashtra seamer to get 200 wickets in Ranji Trophy, he’s also eyeing history by become the first Saurashtra captain to lift the trophy. Unadkat’s 35 wickets this season at an average of 16.74, the best for Saurashtra among bowlers who have bowled at least five overs. In the semi-final against Karnataka, he showed how versatile he can be, switching from over the wicket to round and back, bringing the ball in and taking it away, and coming out on top against a top order that had Mayank Agarwal, Karun Nair and Manish Pandey. It was merely an extension of what he’s been doing for Saurashtra all along. Having played just under 40% of his Ranji Trophy matches at home, where the pitches are famously either flat or turners, Unadkat has still got a bowling average of 23.42.Unadkat has bowled to Jaffer in seven matches, five times against Mumbai and twice against Vidarbha. He had never dismissed Jaffer until the last time the two met, in this season’s league game just before the knockouts.The second contest of the match might not have the ‘main event’ status as the first, but it could be just as crucial in deciding the eventual outcome.

Down Marshall Drive, a new West Indies promise to rekindle the old feeling

Five fast bowlers, three explosive hitters, three striking young batsmen, a captain who can do anything: a beguiling prospect for fans, a terrifying one for a shaken South Africa

Sharda Ugra in Southampton09-Jun-2019Within the space of one match against Pakistan, West Indies have made everyone forget about how they had to scrap and qualify for the World Cup. Inside two matches, after having Australia at 79 for 5, they had a generation of cricket fans swooning, reminded of their 16-year-old selves. On the eve of their third World Cup game, at Southampton against a struggling South Africa, West Indies are to the romantic acquiring the status of a squad of superheroes, cricket’s Avengers back and ready to seize the game from the superbats – sorry, superbots – who rule the cricket world.It gets richer: when South Africa hosted its World Cup in 2003, their campaign was upended in the very first match by West Indies, who won by three runs. Between the 2015 World Cup and now, South Africa have only faced West Indies three times in ODIs, during a tri-series also involving Australia, winning once and losing twice (with AB de Villiers in the side, in case you wondered). So their encounters with the new West Indies have been minimal. The road leading up to the Hampshire Bowl is called the Marshall Drive, after the county’s two great Barbados-born Marshalls: opening batsman Roy, and a slightly more famous fast bowler who took 1065 wickets for the county across all competitions (and just, by the way, 533 for West Indies.)The two teams did face each other in a rain-affected World Cup warm-up match in Bristol, South Africa rattling along to 95 for no loss in 12.4 overs. But that was before everything – before the AB bombshell, before injuries to Ngidi and Steyn, before Amla ran into a fog. The West Indians have gone in the other direction, leaving South Africa coach Ottis Gibson reminding the world on Saturday that West Indies “are dangerous in World Cups.”The truth is that between the last World Cup and this one, West Indies didn’t win too much. They won just 19 out of 67 ODIs, didn’t win an ODI series – coming closest with a 2-2 draw at home against England in February – and lost the World Cup Qualifier final to Afghanistan. Only Sri Lanka have lost more.And yet, West Indies stride the World Cup with aura reburnished. This has come from two reasons – the first, that West Indies have been seen and heard of as winning in other formats – the 2016 World T20 in India, a home Test series against England, and making three other tournament finals in the time (even if those have spelt defeats to Australia, Afghanistan and, most recently, to Bangladesh.) In World Cups, it must be said that even though West Indies last won the title in 1979 and made the semi-finals in 1996, they’re ahead of Pakistan and Sri Lanka and South Africa in match victories, 42 out of 73.Gibson reminded the world, “West Indies teams have always been dangerous and this one is no different. They have a lot of players in there that can win matches, they have always had match-winners.” It is the manner in which they are setting up the winning that has the world sit up, “They are going to go on an all-out and they have decided with the team they have set up.” It is simple. When they bowl, it’s five fast bowlers and bam. When they bat, a trio of the game’s most explosive hitters is shuffled around three striking young batsmen and a captain who can do anything. How do you not get beguiled and hypnotised by the idea of this kind of West Indies?Shai Hope smashes one on the leg side•Getty ImagesWest Indies assistant coach Roddy Estwick has seen all sides: a first-class cricketer from 1982 to 1990, half-brother to Sylvester Clarke, and now working with a team trying to respectfully set aside an enormous heritage and create their own. “We can’t keep looking back. We have to respect the past, you know. Our great bowlers of the past obviously they are very important in our history. But what we’ve got now, this group of bowlers now, they have got to find their own identity. They have got to find their own way.”It will be both daunting and inspirational for the West Indians to travel around this country during the World Cup, where the very ground has been touched by the greatness of their predecessors. The Marshall Drive will remind them of it, as will the sight of Bishop or Holding turning up for commentary, or Garner, Robers and Croft dropping by to watch.On the Monday, Estwick knows will not be about sentiment or aura or presence or history, it will be about the boring stuff. “What we must do is play the one-percenters a bit better… It’s [defeat to Australia] nothing to do with the bowlers. We are all in it together. We are not going to single out the bowlers and say the bowlers did a poor job, or the batsmen did a poor job, it is a team. If you are looking for excuses in the cricket game, you can find it wherever you look.”He refused to grumble about the umpiring in Nottingham. “It is history. We can’t do anything about it. You can’t keep looking back. If you keep looking back, you have major problems. We have now got to look forward… Not on the past because past is history. It can’t come back.” The past in West Indies cricket is hard to shake off. In this World Cup, its current team has discovered that in the aftermath of compelling performance, its looming cloud could become an updraft.Estwick took the match and the World Cup out of Southampton and Great Britain and put it across the oceans. “Every West Indian is in this,” he said, “This is big for the Caribbean people.”The team’s management has been asking the team, “to go out and put a smile on the people’s faces in the Caribbean,” Estwick said, “Economically we are struggling a little bit so we want people to wake up in the morning at 5 o’clock and 6 o’clock with a smile on their face, seeing West Indians playing good cricket. And also we want to help the people in London as well, you know, who have had so much pressure cricket-wise in the last 10, 15 years and if we can put a smile on all black people’s faces we will be very happy.”Outside of West Indies’ direct opponents in this event, the cricket world is already beaming.

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