Healy: 'Sloppy' Australia have been made to pay for their mistakes

The Australia captain believes the team can learn a lot from losses such as the ones against South Africa

Andrew McGlashan09-Feb-2024Australia captain Alyssa Healy believes losses like the one they suffered against South Africa can be good for a team that has gone through some significant changes, but has backed them as still “a really good cricket side” as the multi-format series gets set for a potentially grandstand finish.South Africa’s historic first ODI win over the home side on Wednesday followed their first-ever victory over Australia across formats in the T20I series. If they win again on Saturday and take the ODI series, the multi-format scoreline would be 6-6 heading into next week’s Test at the WACA.Australia have now lost three matches across formats this season after also being turned over by West Indies in a T20I at North Sydney Oval when Hayley Matthews produced one of the all-time great innings in a record chase.Related

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In Wednesday’s ODI they crashed to 71 for 8 on a pitch spiced up by a steady drizzle – having earlier dropped five chances in the field – although Healy insisted they still believed they could win from that position.”It’s plain and simple: you can’t afford to be sloppy and not adapt as quickly as we needed to,” Healy said. “We’ve proven that over the summer, that when we’ve let ourselves down, even a little bit, in all three facets we are getting punished. Tomorrow’s a great opportunity to come out here and be really clinical and perform the way we know we can.”We are still a really good cricket side, we showed in Adelaide how good we can be, just got to turn up tomorrow and do the same thing then do it repeatedly for long periods of time.”South Africa, who missed the chance of a series win in the T20Is, are hopeful of taking their opportunity this time.”It is definitely not done,” allrounder Eliz-Mari Marx said. “There’s one game to play and I think it’s all to play for. If we as a team can stick to what we did the previous match, we can go and win the series.”Australia have undergone significant personnel changes in the last 18 months with Meg Lanning and Rachael Haynes retiring and coach Matthew Mott moving on to take the England men’s white-ball job.Plenty of success has continued to follow with the gold medal at the 2022 Commonwealth Games and another T20 World Cup title in South Africa last year. They retained the Ashes in England, though they had to settle for a points draw across the three formats as they lost both the ODI and T20I series.Despite the shock T20I loss they took both series against West Indies and prevailed in the two white-ball formats on the recent tour of India after losing the Test.”I’ve spoken quite openly about the changes we’ve seen,” Healy, who officially took on the full-time captaincy last December, said. “Yes, we’ve kept winning, we’ve kept being successful, but we’ve had a lot of significant change in and around our group over the last 18 months.The second ODI was really about Australia being beaten by Marizanne Kapp•Getty Images

“So think it’s great for our group, you tend to learn a lot more about yourself individually but also as a team when you lose and lose well, like we did [on Wednesday], so even today the conversations have been had about what will take place tomorrow is already a step in the right direction. Think they are really positive signs.”Healy has also been playing long enough to have gone through previous times when Australia’s dominance has been called into question.”There was a period of time where cricket was really challenging for this group,” Healy said. “We’ve had a lot of success over the last five or six years, yes, but there’s been plenty of times within that that this group has been challenged.”Meanwhile, Healy was hopeful that key allrounder Ash Gardner would be available for the deciding ODI after pulling up with hamstring soreness in the second match although there remains a chance she will be rested with an eye on the Test. Ellyse Perry is recovering well from the illness that struck her during the week.

First Viktor Gyokeres, now Eberechi Eze! Arsenal turn attention to £60m Crystal Palace talisman after wrapping up key striker target

Arsenal are reportedly stepping up their pursuit of Crystal Palace midfielder Eberechi Eze after almost sealing a deal for Viktor Gyokeres. Having spent the past two months working to bring Gyokeres to North London, Arsenal are now ready to turn their full attention to bolstering their midfield by targeting Eze, who has emerged as one of their top priorities in the summer.

  • Arsenal set to complete Gyokeres signing
  • Gunners shift their focus to Eze
  • Ready to shell out £60m for the Palace star
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    With the Gyokeres deal effectively in the bag, Arsenal are lining up a formal offer to lure Eze from Selhurst Park. According to the Gunners are preparing a bid worth approximately £60 million ($81m), which could be structured across three payment installments.

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    While this figure falls short of the £67m ($90m) release clause in Eze’s contract, the relationship between the two clubs’ hierarchies is said to be positive, creating a belief that negotiations could proceed amicably. Moreover, the player is believed to be enthusiastic about the opportunity to join Mikel Arteta’s project at Arsenal, which could expedite negotiations.

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    To further sweeten the deal and reduce the transfer fee, Arsenal may consider including winger Reiss Nelson as part of the proposal to Palace. Nelson may find minutes limited next season given the club’s new arrivals, and a switch to Selhurst Park could offer him more consistent playing time, while aiding Arsenal’s pursuit of Eze.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR ARSENAL?

    Eze enjoyed a standout season under Oliver Glasner at Palace, registering eight goals and eight assists in the Premier League. His consistent output and match-winning goal in the FA Cup final against Manchester City were crucial in helping the Eagles reach new heights in the previous campaign. And should Arsenal complete the Eze transfer, Mikel Arteta will hope that he can finally conquer England after coming mighty close in the last few years.

New captains in the spotlight as CSK, Titans brace for first meeting since epic final

Titans have five Tamil Nadu players – Sai Sudharsan, Sai Kishore, Vijay Shankar, Shahrukh Khan and Sandeep Warrier – but CSK have none

Deivarayan Muthu25-Mar-20242:17

‘Mohit one of the best bowlers when the ball is wet’

Match details

Chennai Super Kings (CSK) vs Gujarat Titans (GT)
Chennai, 1930 IST (1400 GMT)

Big picture: Gaikwad vs Gill

When Chennai Super Kings ran into Gujarat Titans in a bizarre three-day rain-hit final in IPL 2023, MS Dhoni and Hardik Pandya were in charge of the teams, respectively. Shubman Gill took over Titans’ captaincy after Hardik had moved back to Mumbai Indians in what is arguably the biggest player trade in IPL history.Then, on the eve of the IPL season-opener, Ruturaj Gaikwad was announced as CSK’s new captain. Gill’s expression at the captains’ conference was roughly how most of Chennai reacted to Dhoni handing over the captaincy to Gaikwad. Gill and Gaikwad, the most inexperienced Indian captains in the IPL, will now face each other at Chepauk on Tuesday.Gill and Gaikwad have already grabbed the headlines with their captaincy. After Titans snatched victory from Mumbai Indians’ grasp in Ahmedabad on Sunday, their debutant Spencer Johnson talked up Gill’s leadership, saying the captain sat alongside him on the bus to help calm his nerves in the lead-up to the game. As for Gaikwad, he rifled through fielding changes in his first game as IPL captain, and one such change, which involved extra-cover moving to sweeper cover, brought CSK their first wicket.Related

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The other interesting subplot in this game is the Chennai boys vs Chennai Super Kings. Titans have as many as five Tamil Nadu players in their side – Sai Sudharsan, Sai Kishore, Vijay Shankar, Shahrukh Khan and Sandeep Warrier. Among the quintet, Sudharsan, Kishore and Vijay are set to slot into Titans’ XI or XII (accounting for the Impact Player). Sudharsan, Kishore and Vijay all have been part of CSK or Junior Super Kings, their grassroots programme. And back in the day, Shahrukh used to be a ball boy at Chepauk for IPL matches. In contrast, CSK don’t have a single local player in their main squad.At his pre-match press conference, CSK coach Stephen Fleming was even asked if this would be a “home game” for Titans. “A few of the players will be at home in terms of conditions,” Fleming responded. “But yeah, it’s hard to say.”Sai Sudharsan should start if Gujarat Titans bat first•BCCI

Team news: Pathirana links up with CSK

Sri Lanka’s death-bowling specialist Matheesha Pathirana has joined CSK’s squad in Chennai, but it remains to be seen if he will be rushed into action after having suffered a hamstring injury. Mustafizur Rahman, who marked his CSK debut with four wickets in a space of ten balls in the season-opener, could keep his place in the team ahead of Pathirana.

Toss and Impact Player strategy

If CSK bat first, Shivam Dube should start, with Mustafizur coming in as an Impact Player in the second innings. It could be vice-versa if CSK bowl first.Chennai Super Kings
Possible bat-first XI: 1 Ruturaj Gaikwad (capt), 2 Rachin Ravindra, 3 Ajinkya Rahane, 4 Daryl Mitchell, , 6 Ravindra Jadeja, 7 Sameer Rizvi, 8 MS Dhoni (wk), 9 Deepak Chahar, 10 Maheesh Theekshana, 11 Tushar DeshpandePossible bowl-first XI: 1 Ruturaj Gaikwad (capt), 2 Rachin Ravindra, 3 Ajinkya Rahane, 4 Daryl Mitchell, 5 Ravindra Jadeja, 6 Sameer Rizvi, 7 MS Dhoni (wk), 8 Deepak Chahar, 9 Maheesh Theekshana, 10 Tushar Deshpande, Gujarat Titans
Having won their first match of the season, Titans might persist with the same XI and Impact Player strategy. Sudharsan should start if they bat first, and could be replaced by Mohit Sharma or one of the bowlers. And it could be vice-versa if Titans bowl first.Possible bat-first XI: 1 Shubman Gill (capt), 2 Wriddhiman Saha (wk), , 4 Azmatullah Omarzai, 5 Vijay Shankar, 6 David Miller, 7 Rahul Tewatia, 8 Rashid Khan, 9 Umesh Yadav, 10 R Sai Kishore, 11 Spencer JohnsonPossible bowl-first XI: 1 Shubman Gill (capt), 2 Wriddhiman Saha (wk), 3 Azmatullah Omarzai, 4 Vijay Shankar, 5 David Miller, 6 Rahul Tewatia, 7 Rashid Khan, 8 Umesh Yadav, 9 R Sai Kishore, 10 Spencer Johnson, MS Dhoni has hit Umesh Yadav for 68 runs off 38 balls in seven IPL innings•BCCI

Stats that matter

  • Gaikwad has a strong head-to-head record against Rashid Khan in the IPL: 95 runs off 60 balls in seven innings at an average of 47.5, and a strike rate of 158.3. Only Sanju Samson (111) has scored more runs than Gaikwad against Rashid in the IPL.
  • Ajinkya Rahane’s first-ten balls strike-rate since the start of IPL 2023 is 158.3. In comparison, his first-ten balls strike-rate between 2018 and 2020 was just 85.1.
  • Dhoni has hit Umesh Yadav for 68 runs off 38 balls in seven IPL innings with just one dismissal at a strike-rate of nearly 180.
  • Since IPL 2023, Titans’ seamers have taken 25 wickets in the powerplay at an economy rate of 8.35. No other team has picked up more wickets in the first six overs during this period. Azmatullah Omarzai, a genuine swing bowler from Afghanistan, has strengthened Titans even further in this area.

Pitch and conditions

The Chepauk pitch that was used on Friday was an atypical one, with not much turn on offer for the spinners. Instead, the ball slid on to the bat nicely, especially in the early exchanges. Believe it or not, CSK’s spinners didn’t take a single wicket in the season-opener. It was only the second instance of CSK’s spinners going wicketless at Chepauk since May 2015.”If you’ve noticed my comments over the last couple of seasons, we’ve been guessing a little bit about the wicket as well,” Fleming said. “But it looks pretty good [today].”

Revenge of the ruled

When it comes to England in India, it’s all too clear who the poor relation is now

Suresh Menon28-Feb-2006


From the India hater of old, Geoff Boycott has turned into an India-lover on television
© Getty Images

The last time England won a Test series in India, under David Gower in 1984-85, the past was still ruling the present. Superpowers England and Australia had the right of veto in the ICC, which was administered by the MCC, a venerable private club whose members hadn’t yet recovered from an attack of modernity in 1965 when the ICC ceased to be the Imperial Cricket Conference.Today, a combination of world-class players, business-savvy officials, a cricket-hungry market and a huge fan base has made India the game’s sole superpower. The media explosion has contributed too. Seven of the 11 who played in the final Test against Gower’s England have turned television commentators, some adding lustre to the profession, others letting the fusion between cricket and language end in confusion.India generates over 60% of the money in the game. That they are attempting to do with money power what England did with colonial arrogance may be a case of bullying by other means, but both England and the ICC have succumbed to the blandishments of the rupee and cannot complain now. You can view at it either as payback, or as the progression of a sport that leaped from the dark ages of colonialism to the modern age of globalisation without a necessary period of enlightenment in between.Gower’s tour is a good starting point. India had won the previous World Cup, and a group of marketing managers had emerged to convert the popular appeal of the game into big money. Colour television had arrived in India only a couple of years earlier, and Indian cricket was at the take-off stage.England lost the first Test after a traumatic introduction to India. Within hours of their arrival, the Prime Minister, Indira Gandhi, was assassinated and the capital was in flames. The England team then accepted an invitation from Sri Lanka to practise there. When they returned, they had dinner with the British Deputy High Commissioner, who was shot dead a day later, on the eve of the first Test. As Gower said, “It’s all pretty grim isn’t it?”Laxman Sivaramakrishnan, the legspinner, claimed 12 wickets in the Bombay Test and the visitors were quickly one-down. They then came back to win two Tests and take the series. Madras prepared a “turner” but it was the medium-pacer Neil Foster who took 11 wickets there to settle the issue. Mike Gatting and Graeme Fowler became the first pair of English batsmen to make double-centuries in the same Test. By then the Sivaramakrishnan bogey had been laid to rest by batsmen willing to play the sweep. The new spin twins Pat Pocock and Phil Edmonds had harried India to defeat in the second Test at Delhi. Pocock was 38 at the time, and Edmonds had a reputation for being “difficult”; he was in the team only because Gower said he could handle him.By the time England next came to India, in 1993, their hold on the game, supported by the mindset of their former colonies, was beginning to slip. First there was the 3-0 clean sweep that Mohammad Azharuddin’s men dealt them thanks to the spinners, particularly Anil Kumble, who claimed 21 wickets. This after a spying mission by Keith Fletcher, and his immortal conclusion that Kumble was no bowler, and that England “had nothing to fear”.India won in Calcutta thanks to some judicious help from the fog, in Madras because the prawns at a Chinese restaurant turned the English stomachs more than Kumble turned the ball, and in Bombay because skipper Graham Gooch didn’t shave. England’s chairman of selectors Ted Dexter then kindly volunteered to set up a commission to study the pollution in Calcutta. He didn’t delve into the eating habits of his players, particularly Mike Gatting who, as on the previous tour, swept all before him. In the end Gooch’s face was left bloody but unmowed. In those days it was still possible to make India feel apologetic about thrashing England.Mike Atherton saw it differently in his book, Opening Up. “For the dusty turners of India we prepared on the hard rock surfaces of Lilleshall. We knew we would be facing a phalanx of spinners, so we left out our best player of spin, David Gower. In Kolkata the pitch looked dry and cracked, so we played four seamers. We knew that the food could be dodgy so we ate prawns in Chennai and got food poisoning,” he wrote. Not surprisingly, Atherton was made England captain soon after.Some weeks after the end of the tour, there was a divorce; the ICC became an independent body, with its own chief executive and its headquarters at Lord’s. Significantly, the veto rights were abolished. Eight decades after the founding of the governing body, there was some measure of equality. The two men chiefly responsible for this, IS Bindra and Jagmohan Dalmiya, have since had a falling out.The manner in which India “stole the World Cup” from under England’s nose in 1987 because the Indian board president four years earlier, NKP Salve, was denied extra passes for Lord’s, is part of folklore. The anointment of Dalmiya as the president of the ICC in 1997 did not go down well with the old order in England. Made to feel like an outsider, Dalmiya decided to hit back every opportunity he got. He scheduled matches in Agartala and Jamshedpur on the current tour. The message was clear – India ruled, and England had better realise that. Some months before the tour, however, Dalmiya was voted out of office, and the new dispensation, which had no personal vendetta, agreed to change the venues.There is no telling just how often Dalmiya would have taken world cricket to the brink with his desire to appear a patriotic Indian who wouldn’t kowtow to the former colonial masters. The media lapped up the posturing, and it was fun, if a bit childish, while it lasted. In the new millennium, though, Dalmiya was already an anachronism, as Lalit Modi, the present vice-president of the board has shown.In the decade during which England did not come to India for a Test series, India’s accent shifted from post-colonial angst to global chic. Personal vendetta is passé. It is not the colour of skin that matters, but the colour of money, and India has been telling the leading cricketing nations something along the lines of, “Behave yourselves, listen to us, and there is enough money for all. Rock the boat, and you go down.”It is to this new India that Michael Vaughan leads the 11th English Test squad (if you don’t count the one-off Jubilee Test which England won). England have won only three of those series – the first in 1933-34, and the second under Tony Greig in 1976-77 when Derek Underwood took 29 wickets and made rather better use of the Indian turners than the famous quartet of Bedi, Prasanna, Chandrasekhar and Venkataraghavan. Greig was all praise for the Indian spinners and named the first three as the best of their type in the world. But except in Bangalore, where everything clicked for India, including a brand new fielder at short leg, Yajurvindra Singh, who clung on to a world-record seven catches, England had the upper hand, having won the first three Tests.When India recently threw the ICC’s Future Tours Programme out of the window, most Englishmen asked why Australia are generally given preferential treatment with regard to venues and dates. There is a simple answer: Australia have usually come to India with their best team, led by their reigning captain.Englishmen pulling out of tours on flimsy grounds have always irritated Indians. Geoff Boycott didn’t tour India until the world-record aggregate was within his grasp. In 1981-82 he played three Tests, went past Garry Sobers’s record of 8032 runs, played one more Test in Kolkata (during which he disappeared to play golf in the middle of the match), and was gently asked to go back home. He wasn’t particularly fussed since that was what he had in mind once the record was his anyway. From such an India-hater Boycott has metamorphosed into the India-lover of television. He loves Indian players, Indian actresses, and even Indian food. Such is the pull of television money. The delicate walls of Boycott’s stomach are now lined with Indian rupees.Douglas Jardine’s only tour following the Bodyline series was to India, the country of his birth, in 1933-34; in 1951-52 England were led by a debutant, Nigel Howard. Howard only ever played four Tests, all as captain on that tour. Freddie Brown, captain in England’s previous series against South Africa wasn’t in the team. Nor were Len Hutton, Denis Compton, Godfrey Evans, Alec Bedser, Jim Laker or Peter May. In the next series, in 1961-62, there was no Colin Cowdrey, Brian Statham or Fred Trueman in Dexter’s side. Mike Smith’s 1963-64 squad did not have Cowdrey originally. A decade later another debutant, Tony Lewis, captained England. When Fletcher came to India as captain, he had been in retirement for four years. Such condescension was not guaranteed to endear English cricket to the average Indian fan who was treated to the Benauds and Borders from Australia leading teams while at the top of their games.Vaughan’s team is not the first that will begin the series as underdogs. India have won five series to England’s three, 12 Tests to England’s 10. From here on, the two teams will play each other home and away in four-year cycles. If India get their math right they could host the 2011 World Cup too.England are not just cricketing underdogs vis a vis India (14-1, in the eyes of some London bookmakers), but in other senses too, with a softer voice in international cricket than their rivals. This is a new situation for both, even if India have been heading for superpowerdom for some time now.The new officials will try to divorce India’s performance on the field from their influence off it – the reverse of the West Indies situation in the 1980s, when they were the best team in the world but had no voice in the ICC. India’s current position may have been built on the successes of their teams, but they have known failure too and their administrators, so full of beans and ideas today, will not want to go around with a begging bowl tomorrow. It is not just the Future Tours Programme that comes in cycles. After the first flush of triumph and triumphalism, the Bindras and the Modis will have to look beyond the market, and that is where the relationships they carve out today will be important. If Gower arrived when the past was ruling, Vaughan arrives when the future is set to rule the present.

Fine legs and dying swans

Dileep Premachandran on the highlights of West Indies’ World Cup opening win

Short Cuts by Dileep Premachandran14-Mar-2007


Dwayne Bravo: a good day in the field
© AFP

Fine leg? Try finer Marlon Samuels and Dwayne Smith may have had them
dancing in the aisles, but Brian Lara was still a class apart. When Shoaib
Malik pushed one down a little quicker, Lara made the deftest of
adjustments, paddling the ball so fine that the man stationed on the circle
for the stroke didn’t bother to give chase. The flat six off
Danish Kaneria was stunning, but this was something way beyond the ambit
of mere mortals.King of Comedy No, he doesn’t look like Robert De Niro, but Kaneria’s
fielding is well worth a few laughs. The overthrow from mid-on that sailed
way over Kamran Akmal’s head was hilarious, but just as funny was the
attempted sliding stop while running across from third man. It appeared
infectious as well, with the usually reliable Mohammad Hafeez also doing a
dying-swan act over a ball that sped on to the fence.Doing an Andy Symonds may still be on the mend, but West Indies showed
today that they possess some all-round quality of their own. Dwayne Smith
first slugged 32 from just 15 balls, and then nipped out both Mohammad
Yousuf and Inzamam-ul-Haq. The Man-of-the-Match adjudicators could have
taken a nap after that.What a beaut The ball that got Yousuf was a peach that held its line and
bounced a little extra. The joyous celebrations in the stands were enough
to tell you that it was a game-turning moment.Fetch that There were some big hits towards the end of the West Indian
innings, but none as eye-catching as the straight wallop that Samuels
produced off Rao Iftikhar. Rao had bowled three maidens by that stage,
with Samuels struggling to work the ball off the square, but with one
elegant swish of the bat, the shackles were shrugged off.“Why did you have to throw a pie?” Presumably, that’s what Inzamam was
saying to Rao after the last ball of the innings. After summoning up a
superb spell of controlled seam bowling, Rao decided to test Corey
Collymore’s ability with a half-tracker. It was a rubbish delivery, and
Collymore gave it the contemptuous treatment it deserved. Inzi’s outraged
reaction said it all.Made in Jamaica Chris Gayle, of whom so much is expected, may have
failed, but there were other local heroes to cheer. Samuels continued the
renaissance that started with a one-day hundred in Pakistan last winter,
and there were probing new-ball spells from Daren Powell and Jerome
Taylor. And with the stakes as high as this, it bothered no one that Smith
and Bravo were from traditional rivals, Barbados and Trinidad.No cable, no wireless Cable & Wireless, who have spent millions on this
World Cup, clearly don’t have a good PR department. Just about every
journalist covering the event has a grouse about the connectivity and the
rip-off rates. A day’s wireless connection at Sabina Park has been pegged
at USD$30, about five times what the grounds in India were charging during
the recent Champions Trophy. Most stadiums in the UK, Australia and India
offer free access, and Cable & Wireless may need to rethink this
own-goal strategy.Wags’ day out No, we’re not talking about Victoria Beckham and friends,
but about the West Indian fan who’s never short of opinion or wisecrack.
The days of “Kill ‘im, maan” and “Knock his head off, Mikey” may be long
gone, but there’s still no shortage of quips and innuendo. “Pakistan be
out for 150 … Taylor and Powell blow dem away” said one of the press-box
volunteers at the lunch break. Soon after, Jamaica’s finest came out and
walked his talk.Pump up the volume Indian fans may be more noisy, but no one does
celebration quite like the folk of the Caribbean. As the Pakistan wickets
fell, the noise levels built up slowly and by the time Bravo took a
sensational return catch to send back Umar Gul, the stands were rocking.
As Lou Reed sang,

Sir Geoffrey's spectacles, and seven left-armers

Seven fronline left-armers in an ODI, six-less careers, most captains in a side and more

Steven Lynch16-Oct-2007The regular Tuesday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questions
about (almost) any aspect of cricket:


Geoff Boycott was dismissed for a pair just once, at the start of his long career
© The Cricketer International

I have been trying to find out the answer to this quiz question for ages: who was the only bowler to dismiss Geoff Boycott for a pair? asked Stephen Robinson from England
It’s not surprising that you had difficulty finding it, as it was a long time ago, towards the start of
Geoff Boycott’s
long career. He was dismissed without scoring 45 times in first-class cricket in all, but only once did he bag a pair of spectacles in the same match – while playing for Yorkshire against Kent at Bradford in 1967. The man who outfoxed him in both innings was the tall Kent fast bowler Norman Graham. The Park Avenue pitch was affected by rain, which washed out the first day and allowed only an hour’s play on the second. Yorkshire were bowled out for 40 in their first innings, and had struggled to 13 for 2 in the second before more rain meant the match ended in a soggy draw.In the recent ODI at Chandigarh India fielded four frontline left-arm bowlers, while Australia had three. Is this a record? asked Rajesh Sanghvi from the United Arab Emirates
Seven frontline left-arm bowlers in a match, as happened at Chandigarh last week, is indeed a record for any ODI (for the purposes of this question we categorised a “frontline” bowler as one who has averaged more than five overs per match over his career). The previous record was six bowlers, which has happened seven times now, all of them since 2000. It was also the 20th occasion that one side had fielded four frontline left-arm bowlers in the same game: 17 of those instances have been by Bangladesh in the last 18 months, while the first two were by Sri Lanka at home to South Africa in August 2004.Glenn McGrath never hit a six during a career of 250 ODIs, in which he had 68 innings. Is this the longest career without a six? asked Shaheer Shikrani from Pakistan
Glenn McGrath’s 250 ODIs without hitting a six is indeed a record – Allan Donald is next with 164 – but India’s Manoj Prabhakar had 98 innings in his 130 ODIs without ever clearing the boundary. (It should be noted that there are still some matches in which precise details of boundaries hit are not available, so the accuracy of these figures is not guaranteed.) Prabhakar (1858 runs), Dion Ebrahim of Zimbabwe (1443 in 76 innings) and Boycott (1082) all made 1000 runs in ODIs without the benefit of any sixes. In Test matches (with the same warning about missing data for some games) England’s Derek Underwood played the most matches (86) and had the most innings (116) without hitting a six, but the leader in terms of runs scored appears to be Vijay Manjrekar of India, with 3208, not far ahead of New Zealand’s Glenn Turner (2991).What is the record for the most captains in any Test or ODI team? asked Vinayak Joshi
There have been 15 occasions on which a Test team has included eight men who have captained their country at some stage, ten of them by Pakistan (three times in 1967, twice more in 1976-77, four times in 1992-93, and most recently against Sri Lanka in February 2000). The first team to achieve the distinction was India, against Pakistan in 1952-53, while England managed it twice against Australia in 1981, and once the following winter in India. The most recent instance is a rather artificial one – the World XI side that lost the unloved Super Series Test to Australia at Sydney in October 2005 included eight men who had captained at Test level. There are numerous occasions in ODIs when a team has included eight former, present and future captains, several of them by composite teams. The most recent instance by a single country was by Pakistan against India in March 2003.


“Bomber” Wells: the tales of this Gloucestershire cult hero are legion, but his batting and fielding were not terribly special
© The Cricketer International

Who was the cricketer known as “Bomber” who played in the 1950s, and did he represent England in Tests? asked Indrajith Karunaratne
This was Bryan Douglas Wells, more usually known as “Bomber”, who was born in Gloucester in 1930. He was solidly built, and bowled slow offspin from a short run-up – but he was good enough to take 998 wickets at an average
of 24.26 in a long first-class career that started in 1951 for his native Gloucestershire and finished at Nottinghamshire in 1965 (he moved to Trent Bridge in 1960). “Bomber” never did play for England, probably because his batting and fielding were not terribly special, but he was a much-loved character who brought a lot of fun to the county game.I keep hearing that if Don Bradman had scored four in his last innings his Test average would have ended up as 100. But wouldn’t that only have happened if he had been not out, or scored 100? asked Rasbihari Mathur from India
No, because Don Bradman started what turned out to be his last Test innings, at The Oval in 1948, with 6996 runs from 69 completed innings, so he was averaging 101.38 before he faced a ball. If he’d managed to score four and then been out, he would have had 7000 runs from 70 completed innings, and averaged a round 100. But the England legspinner Eric Hollies dismissed him second ball for a duck, so The Don was left with 6996 runs from 70 innings, and that famous average of 99.94. If Australia had had a second innings (which was unlikely as they had already shot England out
for 52) Bradman would have needed four not out, or 104 if he was out, to get back to an average of 100.And there’s an afterthought to last week’s question about the record from the first Test of all that still stands, from Charles Davis from Melbourne
“Perhaps the record for the oldest breakable Test record should go to James Southerton, who remains the oldest player on Test debut (49 years, 119 days), set when he took the field on the first day of that first Test in 1876-77, thus pre-dating Charles Bannerman’s record by a day. It is a record that could, in theory anyway, be broken in any Test match. Bannerman also still holds the record for outscoring his best-scoring team-mate (by a ratio of more than nine), and his score remains the highest by an Australian on Test debut.”

Canberra's Test dream started with Fingleton scoreboard

Archival material has revealed the dream of Michael Hodgman, the minister for the ACT from 1980 to 1983, to ‘see the Ashes played right here in the national capital’

Daniel Brettig at the Manuka Oval01-Feb-2019How long exactly before February 1, 2019 had Canberra’s custodians been hopeful of hosting a Test match at Manuka Oval? About 36 years, in fact.The answer has been unearthed in archival material located at the Melbourne Cricket Club, which in 1982 had donated the MCG’s venerable manual scoreboard to Manuka Oval after the decision to upgrade to an electronic model.Committed to Manuka by the MCC’s then secretary and former Australia captain Ian Johnson, the scoreboard was soon to be named in honour of Jack Fingleton, the former Test batsman, journalist and advocate of Canberra, who had died in 1981.Johnson confirmed the MCC’s intent to send the scoreboard to Manuka in a letter to Ray Donnellan, assistant secretary of recreation and tourism for the ACT, on August 6, 1982: “The replacement was not done lightly because the old board has such a wonderful history dating back to 1901, and has all Test and international matches played in Melbourne since that time.”We are delighted to hear that you have agreed to accept our offer as it would have been unfortunate if what, in many respects, has become a national sporting monument, would have been lost to posterity.”There is no more appropriate place for it to be housed than in the national capital. Needless to say, despite its age and history, it remains the best cricket scoreboard in the world.”ALSO READ – A Test debut beyond Jack Fingleton’s dreamsIn response, the minister for the ACT Michael Hodgman not only announced that the scoreboard would be named after Fingleton, but also that it marked a step in the goal of the territory to ultimately host a Test match – referencing the Ashes series to be played between Australia and England in the subsequent summer.”This scoreboard is part of our continual upgrading of Manuka Oval,” Hodgman said. “Eventually, after improvement of concessions and broadcasting we may even see the Ashes played right here in the national capital.”It brings a touch of history to Australian cricket in the heart of a nation of cricket heroes. This monument to the great sportsmen of our past links Manuka Oval with the nation’s most glorious sporting achievements.””Eventually”, of course, turned out to be more than three decades later. Nor was the scoreboard’s passage from Melbourne to Canberra a smooth one – as original cost estimates for transporting it blew out from an initial AUD 60,000 to AUD 110,000.Nevertheless, Johnson concluded the tale by writing to Hodgman on January 26, 1983 – two days after the scoreboard was formally unveiled at the start of a match featuring the touring New Zealand side. Whereas the bean counters had been wayward in figuring out the cost of relocation, the scoreboard’s new operators had been rather more precise.”It was a most pleasant ceremony and the setting for the board is as near perfect as possible,” Johnson wrote. “The operators of the board also did an excellent job and, to my knowledge, did not make a mistake.”Johnson retired as MCC secretary less than a month later; Hodgman would depart his role as ACT Minister with the defeat of Malcolm Fraser’s Liberal government by Bob Hawke and the Labor Party later that same year. His son, Will Hodgman, is now the Premier of Tasmania.

Little time but lots of action

A truncated first day’s play had more than its share of action and ended with the honours tantalisingly even

Sambit Bal in Galle31-Jul-2008

Virender Sehwag’s innings lit up a day that was blighted by rain in Galle
© AFP

How often does such a short day produce so much thrilling cricket? Less than a half a day’s play was possible today but a lover of Test cricket could have hardly asked for more. There was a gleaming, utterly insouciant hundred and plenty of skilful strokeplay that brought a torrent of boundaries, yet the bowlers were never out of the game. And when they eventually found an opening, they went about cutting down a mighty batting order in a manner that can be described as surgical. One way of looking at it would be to lament how rain ruined half of the day; the other would be to reflect on how the elements intervened to create a dramatic twist. Days such as this make watching Test cricket such a rewarding and fulfilling experience.Merely looking at the scorecard is likely to produce some bafflement. India scored at nearly five an over and didn’t lose a wicket till they had 167 on the board, which will point to a featherbed. Sri Lanka grabbed four wickets in four overs, which might point to some trickery from the surface. The truth is that neither was the pitch a batting paradise before lunch, nor was it a minefield after the rain break when India collapsed: it is merely that Virender Sehwag was exceptional all day, while Ajantha Mendis and Chaminda Vaas preyed on the nerves of a tentative middle-order after the breach was made.There is a thin line between audacity and bravado, and Sehwag blurs it with relish. His last three dismissals against these opponents bordered on foolishness. In the Asia Cup final, he survived a first-ball charge against Mendis only to get stumped off the next; in the first innings of the first Test, he ballooned a head-high bouncer from well outside the off stump and in the second, he fell in a most un-Sehwag- like way, padding up to Muttiah Muralitharan on the stroke of lunch. By his own standards, he was an object of moderation against Mendis today, not leaving his crease till the sixth ball though he did try to sweep him out of the ground off the second ball. By the sixth ball he had apparently seen enough to jump down the pitch and hoist Mendis over midwicket. And, as if to demonstrate he was reading the variations, two balls later he arched back to cut a googly past point.But Sehwag makes strokeplay so ridiculously easy that he perhaps fools others into a false sense of security, or plain intimidates them. Despite the economy of foot movement, his shots are mostly conventional. His adventurism often lies in the conception and he can keep belting boundaries without appearing rash. Today, he had a partner who was not willing to merely hustle singles with him but also to play a few bold shots of his own.

Chaminda Vaas struck twice in an over to dismiss Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly after the rain delay
© AFP

For someone who has always been an opener – Sehwag, in contrast, became one in international cricket – Gautam Gambhir is exceptionally quick on his feet against the spinners, and his inopportune dismissals in the first Test, suckered twice by Murali, didn’t dampen his enthusiasm. Till he misread Mendis after the break, he was assured and positive against the spinners.Not for the first time at this ground, though, the Indian middle order wasted the opening effort: in 2001, Sadagoppan Ramesh and SS Das had got India to 79 before Dilhara Fernando and Muralitharan bundled them out for 187. It’s a spinner-opening bowler combination that triggered a dramatic slide today.At the lunch break, Vaas’s future was a matter of animated speculation. He had gone wicketless at the SSC and Sehwag and Gambhir had treated him shabbily in the first session here, with Gambhir repeatedly walking down the pitch to him; that prompted Vaas to call the wicketkeeper up to the stumps, upon which Gambhir cut him for four. Had Lasith Malinga and Fernando been fit, it was unlikely that Vaas would have played this Test. But in damp conditions on a sweating pitch, it was Vaas who was most likely to produce a wicket. And he produced two in an over, both with his trademark ball, the one that straightens after pitching. After Sehwag carted a six and drilled a four off his first over, Mahela Jayawardene might have been persuaded to bring on Murali but he was rewarded for respecting Vaas’s ability to exploit the conditions. Sri Lanka are now within touching distance of bowling India out cheaply – a score of 500 had seemed possible when Sehwag and Gambhir were batting merrily – and India have a problem with their middle order.Rahul Dravid and Sourav Ganguly have looked out of sorts on the tour so far, and Dravid’s career seems to have reached its lowest ebb. He has been dismissed by Mendis all three times in the series and there is no evidence yet that he is anywhere near reading him. A tame prod brought about his dismissal today and he didn’t bother waiting for the umpire’s decision, unlike in the previous innings when he had waited for a referral after an inside edge. He might have had a case today with the replay showing that the ball had bounced off the catcher’s helmet, but no one would grudge Mendis the wicket. He has now implanted a thousand ghosts in the mind of one of the most unflappable batsmen in contemporary cricket.These 45 overs have already produced enough for this Test to be on the edge. Two hours of Sehwag could yet tilt it India’s way, Sri Lanka are only a couple of magic balls away from nullifying India’s toss advantage. It was the sort of day that leaves you in anticipation for the next one. Tomorrow can’t come sooner.

A litany of woe

Anjum Chopra looks back at the sixth women’s World Cup

11-Mar-2009

They’re out there somewhere: Chopra and Co. had to sit in the stands for the 1997 final, though they were special guests
© Getty Images

1997, India
Anjum Chopra

We played the semi-final against Australia at Delhi’s Harbax Singh Stadium. There was no one to move the sightscreen, so with a right-hander and
left-hander batting, the Indian fielders had to run from mid-on or elsewhere to move
it for them.To make things worse, we were fined for slow over-rate and docked two
overs from our chase. After our loss, we were invited by the association to watch
the final between England and Australia at the Eden Gardens. But when we got to the
game, there were no pavilion seats kept for us, so we had to sit in the stands. We
were told to come down to the presentation ceremony after the game but when we tried
to make our way to the ground, we were stopped by security men who refused to let us
through even when we told them we were members of the Indian team.The tournament
was also scheduled poorly – with warm-ups in the warmer south and the World Cup matches in
the cold, foggy north. We spent a lot of our time waiting at airports or at grounds, and
even missed a day of practice because it took so long to get to where we were
staying. I can laugh at it now but back then it felt miserable to be in such a
situation.

Ryder's rise dulls the pain for New Zealand

Sidharth Monga rates the performances of New Zealand’s players in the Tests against India

Sidharth Monga08-Apr-2009Ross Taylor and Jesse Ryder could form the core of New Zealand’s middle-order for years to come•Associated Press8.5
Jesse Ryder
Revelation of the series for New Zealand. The compact technique, the cool head, the wide array of strokes heralded a new Test star on the horizon. Former New Zealand players who saw him bat reckoned he should go on to score at least 15 centuries. He scored two in the first two Tests, coming in at 40 for 3 and 23 for 3. The second was a double. Was perfect at gully and, at times, third slip.8
Chris Martin
Was the spirit that kept New Zealand high. Ran in over after over against the most experienced batting line-up. Made a successful comeback from injury and overcame the selectors’ reported reluctance to field him. Repaid captain Daniel Vettori’s faith by ending as the second-highest wicket-taker in the series.6.5
Ross Taylor
Flashy, rode his luck, but had 322 runs at 64.4 and two centuries to show by the end of the series. If he tightens up his aggression at the start of his innings, he and Ryder can form the core of a solid middle-order for years to come. Was the most impressive slip fielder on view too.6
Brendon McCullum
Very impressive behind the stumps, and did his bit with the bat too. Made sure New Zealand didn’t lose the first Test by an innings. Kept India on the field for long enough with an aggressive century in Napier. His catch of Rahul Dravid in Wellington, moving down the leg even as he shaped to paddle, was spectacular.Iain O’Brien
Didn’t have the results to show for it – nine wickets at 50.22 – but has the makings of an ideal first-change bowler for New Zealand. Hits the seam hard, and could have done with more seam movement from the pitch. His batting improved a lot as he scored 61 runs and helped avert an innings defeat in Hamilton along with McCullum. Had totalled 61 in his previous 14 Tests.5
Daniel Vettori
Big disappointment as a spinner, to the extent that he was more useful as a batsman. Scored a century in Hamilton, from 60 for 6, without taking undue risks. Will irk him that he couldn’t do more in Napier when New Zealand were the only team who could win with two days to go. Led the side fairly well, though.Jeetan Patel
Was the surprise package from New Zealand. Unlucky to have missed out in Wellington, where the pitch was expected to assist the fast bowlers more. Bowled really well in Napier, drifting the ball, getting it to turn too, and dismissing well-set batsmen – Sachin Tendulkar, Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir twice.4.5
James Franklin
Came into the side as a specialist No. 6 batsman, riding on a successful domestic season with the bat. Didn’t contribute much in the first Test, scored 52 in a total of 619 in the second, failed again in the first innings in Wellington, and scored 49 in the second after the series was lost. Was a much better bowler with swing in the air in Wellington, and generally deserved better series figures than 1 for 290.4
Daniel Flynn
Showed his grit in the second innings in Hamilton, and also in trying desperately to get fit in time for the second Test. But scored only 12 runs in three other innings, and got out edging outside off too frequently for a No. 3 batsman.3
Martin Guptill
Showed flashes of brilliant strokeplay, but also showed his inexperience in the longer format of the game. Had already shown his preference for the front-foot play rather unsubtly, and Zaheer Khan kept troubling him with the short ball. But Guptill is not a stickler, and is one of the better top-order batsmen around in New Zealand.2
Tim McIntosh and Jamie How
On evidence from this series, didn’t look good enough for a Test top order. McIntosh got into trouble too often, didn’t use his height as he didn’t bend his knee, and barring one ordinary decision, contributed to his own demise with limp shots outside off.How got just one match and 11 balls, and didn’t do much to help his average of 22.Collectively, the top three, though still inexperienced, gave New Zealand their biggest headache with starts of 40 for 3, 75 for 3, 23 for 3, 80 for 3, and 84 for 3.Kyle Mills and Tim Southee
Neither of them showed signs of having recovered from the beating they got in the one-day series. Mills’ problems with no-balls continued, Southee continued to struggle for swing. Between them they gave away 271 runs for three wickets in one match apiece as Martin struggled for support from the other end.

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