Mariners Make Decision on Game 5 Starter in ALCS

Much was made about whether All-Star righty Bryan Woo would start Game 5 of the ALCS for the Mariners, and now we have our answer.

Woo, who has been dealing with a pectoral injury, was not available to pitch Game 1 of the ALCS. Bryce Miller got the ball instead and went six innings, allowing one earned run on two hits with three strikeouts in the win.

The Mariners will start Miller again on Friday in Game 5, but Woo will be available to pitch out of the bullpen.

But that's Friday. On Thursday night, the Mariners have business to attend to. After taking a 2–0 series lead, the Blue Jays bats came alive in Game 3 on Wednesday to the tune of a 13–4 win.

Seattle will look to bounce back on Thursday, looking to take a 3–1 series lead into Friday night, when Miller could play a key role in potentially sending the Mariners to the World Series.

First pitch in Thursday's Game 4 is set for 8:33 p.m. ET in Seattle.

Multan Sultans eye better form with new buzz; Lahore Qalandars bring renewed hopes with heavyweights

The Sultans have been as unsuccessful as the Lahore Qalandars in breaching the top four in the short while they have been around

Danyal Rasool and Umar Farooq18-Feb-2020Multan SultansTeam overviewIs the general optimistic goodwill the Multan Sultans appear to generate justified by their performances thus far? After all, the Sultans have been as unsuccessful as the Lahore Qalandars in breaching the top four in the short while they’ve been around, finishing below the playoff cut-off line each time around. And not finishing last simply because the Qalandars exist to prop everyone up is hardly a vindication of anything. Their inaugural season saw the Sultans start brightly before fading away towards the end, while under new owners, they were more disappointing in 2019, winning just three of their ten matches.And yet, the Sultans carry with them a particular buzz that hasn’t shrunk to irrelevance. The current owner Ali Khan Tareen has this year thrown his lot behind hard analytics, inspired by the success Islamabad United have enjoyed using a similar strategy. Andy Flower has been roped in as head coach, and perhaps even more significantly, the services of Nathan Leamon were acquired as Director of Strategy. Most of the hype around the side doesn’t emanate from the personnel they’ll have out on the field but the metrics that selected them. And if that was the way the Sultans wished to go, they couldn’t have asked for better people than the ones they brought in ahead of the draft. The homework has been done brilliantly, and as such, there is no reason not to feel confident ahead of the big examination.StrengthsDespite a scare a few weeks ago, it appears the Sultans will have Moeen Ali available for the entirety of the season, and one only needs to look at the recent series in South Africa to understand what a gem he could be for the Sultans. The acquisition of Rilee Rossouw, who is by now a PSL royalty with Shane Watson and Luke Ronchi being the only foreign players to have scored more runs, from the Quetta Gladiators is another shrewd bit of business, as was picking Imran Tahir late in the draft.Expect much of their success, however, to be built around local talent. Their 18-year-old vice-captain Rohail Nazir is perhaps the hottest young prospect in Pakistan; it’s only a matter of time before he takes his bow in international cricket, while Mohammad Ilyas’ pace made him one to watch out for last year. The consensus is he has only improved since then, while the inclusions of seasoned T20 quicks Sohail Tanvir, Mohammad Irfan and Junaid Khan should make the Sultans a formidable bowling unit. Add to it the local spin option of Usman Qadir, who counts fellow Sultans legspinner Tahir as one of his mentors. Should that combination bear fruits, it bodes well not just for the Sultans, but for Qadir’s career in general as well.WeaknessesMore than arguably any other franchise, the Sultans are backing local talent to come good. That might have been part of the noble spirit behind the formation of the PSL, but it isn’t a sure-shot pathway to PSL success. Zeeshan Ashraf, whom owner Tareen backs to the hilt, is 27, and while he has the reputation of a big hitter, his T20 numbers (a batting average of 19.38 with a strike rate of 117) aren’t breathtaking. The jury’s also out on whether the responsibilities that Ilyas, Ali Shafiq and Khushdil Shah will have to shoulder don’t come too soon for them, and for a team so heavily reliant on the data, you wonder about their choice of captain in Shan Masood, who, while a magnificent exponent of red-ball cricket, hasn’t quite amassed the record that would suggest he can replicate that form at T20 level.Fabian Allen was a brilliant pick, and the extent to which he remains unavailable may prove the key to the Sultans’ chances this year, with 36-year-old Wayne Madsen not quite cut from the same cloth. At some point, an ageing squad might yet become a concern for the Sultans, who, besides Madsen, also have in their ranks two 40-year-olds (Shahid Afridi and Tahir), a 37-year-old (Irfan) and a 35-year-old (Tanvir).Squad: Shan Masood (capt), Rilee Rossouw, James Vince, Zeeshan Ashraf, Khshdil Shah, Wayne Madsen, Shahid Afridi, Moeen Ali, Ravi Bopara, Sohail Tanvir, Bilawal Bhatti, Rohail Nazir (wk), Fabian Allen, Mohammad Ilyas, Ali Shafiq, Mohammad Irfan, Junaid Khan, Imran Tahir, Usman QadirManagement staff: Ali Khan Tareen (owner), Andy Flower (head coach), Azhar Mehmood (fast bowling coach) Mushtaq Ahmed (spin bowling coach) Abdul Rehman (assistant coach) Nathan Leamon (Director of Strategy), Richard Halsall (fielding coach), Andrew Leipus (physiotherapist)Sohail Akhtar put on a strong partnership with Fakhar Zaman•PSLLahore QalandarsTeam overviewA team with heavyweights on their roster but seemingly facing a perennial struggle on the field – they have sat at the bottom of the table in all four seasons so far. So far in the PSL, they have played 39 matches and won only 13, never coming close to fulfilling the expectations fans have had of them. They have had some bad luck over the seasons, losing out on key players, but they have also not been able to get their act together as a team. The position of Aaqib Javed as the long-standing head coach has always been a point of debate among fans, but his bond with the franchise has only got stronger.This season, they’ll start with renewed hopes yet again, but they have toned those down from previous seasons. They didn’t go for big purchases and will mainly build around the core of the players they had identified through their nationwide player development programme.They have had big names aplenty, but these players have not always been available to them. In the first season, they had Chris Gayle, but he reached Dubai with an injury. He could play only five games, averaged just 20.60, and was offloaded the next season. That same season, the Qalandars also lost the in-form Mustafizur Rahman to injury. Then, before the second season began, they lost Shaun Tait, Dwayne Bravo and Anton Devcich to injuries.Their hottest pick, Chris Lynn, dislocated his shoulder in Australia’s Big Bash League only days before the start of the third season. However, he is now finally back in the squad, fully fit and firing.Qalandars had also bought in Brendon McCullum, who went two seasons without a fifty, scoring his runs at an underwhelming strike rate of 114. Later, AB de Villiers was also unable to change their fortunes. Finally, last year, Mohammad Hafeez – their platinum pick and captain – got injured in his very first game to miss the entire season.The firepower at the top in this season will be provided by Lynn and Fakhar Zaman, while Hafeez will be eyeing a revival of his career and a possible T20 World Cup spot via a good PSL. Their captain Sohail Akhtar is among the more inexperienced skippers, but he has been a solid player for Qalandars. Across two PSL seasons and a winning stint with Qalandars in the Abu Dhabi T20 Cup, he has scored 556 runs, including a hundred, at a strike rate of 132.38.StrengthsThey have two highly regarded pace bowlers in Haris Rauf and Shaheen Afridi, with both having shown their ability to deliver when it counts. Both are also in-form and should be fired up after their recent performances. The bowling attack has variety, with Samit Patel’s left-arm spin, the offspin of Hafeez and Seekkuge Prasanna’s legspin. There is plenty of experience in that spin attack, with 688 T20 games combined.With the bat, a top order of Zaman, Lynn, Hafeez and Akhtar can be explosive and full of runs, with each man a game-changer.WeaknessesAs is the case every season, it’s about all the pieces coming together. There will be the shadow of past performances hanging over the Qalandars’ heads. The team hasn’t had a settled captain over the years, mostly relying on overseas players to lead, which meant a cohesive bond between the local and overseas cricketers couldn’t be established. This year, they have turned to Akhtar, but he doesn’t have much experience captaining in high-pressure games. While the top order looks secure, there is a lack of fire-power at the death.Squad: Fakhar Zaman, Mohammad Hafeez, Chris Lynn, Shaheen Afridi, David Wiese, Usman Shinwari, Haris Rauf, Sohail Akhtar (capt), Samit Patel, Salman Butt, Seekkuge Prasanna, Ben Dunk, Farzan Raja, Jaahid Ali, M Faizan, Dane Vilas, Dilbar HussainManagement staff: The Rana brothers (owners), Sameen Rana (manager), Aqib Javed (head coach), Mansoor Rana (batting coach), Waqas Ahmed (bowling coach), Muhammad Shahzad Butt (fielding coach), Nabeel Edgar Pace (analyst), Moeen (trainer), Derek Dedgman (Masseur), Simon (Masseur), Brett David Harrop (physiotherapist)

Rahkeem Cornwall: 'In Test cricket the margin is very slim, so you have to always be on the money'

The West Indies offspinner knows bowling spin in England is a tough ask, but he’s up for the challenge

Interview by Nagraj Gollapudi20-Jun-2020West Indies selectors have always believed Rahkeem Cornwall, the 27-year-old offspinner, to be a special talent. Four years ago in a tour game against the visiting Indian side, Cornwall picked up the wickets of Cheteshwar Pujara, Virat Kohli and Ajinkya Rahane, and prompted Kohli to request his presence in the nets before the Tests. When he made his Test debut last year, at home against India, Cornwall bowled long spells and impressed against the strong Indian batting line-up. He then picked up a ten-for in his second Test, against Afghanistan in Lucknow last November.Cornwall is part of the 14-man West Indies squad touring England for the three-Test series beginning in July. In the following interview Cornwall talks about the England tour, understanding his bowling, and his big batting ambitions.How proud a moment is this for you, to be on the England tour?
It is exciting. Always good to be back to play cricket. It was a long break. Excited to get into English conditions to start this Test series. It is always a proud moment for anyone that makes the West Indies team. It’s an honour, so you just have to go there, perform and make sure you be in the team for a long period.Growing up, was England always a special place for you in terms of Test cricket?
It is a good, challenging cricket territory. I played there once for West Indies A team [in 2018]. Growing up, I watched a lot of Ashes series. So it is good to go there [now] and play there. No, I don’t need to pinch myself. I just see it as another tour. Do the right things and the results will come in the end.Did you have to think hard before saying yes to touring?
Just a few calls and a few checks to make sure everything is safe – safety comes first. Once I was comfortable with all the necessary checks that the West Indies board has done, I was ready to go on the tour.This must be a big moment for your family. Were they nervous about it?
I have three sisters and two brothers. We live with our parents. They have always given me love and support for me to go out and perform. We all were on the same page, waiting on CWI [Cricket West Indies] to give us information to see if it is comfortable or not to go. We were not nervous. We were just trying to be safe before we make a decision.

“In my first Test, I bowled to Rahane, and he is a good player of spin. Once I was bowling my stock deliveries and my best deliveries, he understood where I am coming from. Then I needed to be patient and wait for a mistake”

Last year was one to cherish for you: you made your Test debut in Kingston, against India, and then took ten wickets in the Lucknow Test against Afghanistan, where you did better than even Rashid Khan on a pitch Afghanistan had made to suit their spin-strong bowling attack. How did that feel?
It was a proud moment for me, getting my first five-wicket haul in Test cricket. I just knew that going to India, probably the surfaces there would suit my type of bowling, and so I just went there and put the ball in the right areas and tried to be as consistent as I can.It was a special year for me. For a few years I was very close to making the team, it was just a matter of when. Didn’t imagine I would pick up a ten-wicket haul in my second Test match, but I knew I was capable enough to do those kind of things. So it is not a really big surprise to me.ALSO READ: How ‘Big Jim’ Cornwall made it to the big timeCan you tell us about your first Test wicket – Cheteshwar Pujara?
He is a player that plays spin well. He looks to use his feet to the spinners. So basically I was trying to keep him in the crease, and I got a little bit of bounce and he cut it to backward point. Probably catch ‘im a little bit off guard in terms of the bounce, yeah.In fact, you also got Virat Kohli and Ajinkya Rahane out in a warm-up match before the previous Test series in 2016.
That was in a President’s XI game in St Kitts. I got a five-wicket haul in that game as well. I got Kohli lbw and Rahane caught bat-pad. They were basic offspin deliveries with just a little bit of bounce. I also got Pujara bowled in that match – he was attempting a sweep shot.Kohli asked for you specifically to bowl to him in the nets before that Test series started. What was that like?
I see it as a breakthrough moment for me where one of the best batsman in the world is asking for me to come to bowl to him in the nets.”Fielding is something I put in a lot of hard work. I am a very good catcher. I catch the ball well at slips, even midwicket or short cover”•Randy Brooks/AFP/Getty ImagesWhat do you learn from bowling against such batsmen?
You learn a lot. A lot of patience, [that you need to] stick to line and length consistently rather than being all over the place.How did your bowling action develop?
I bowl like that from ever since I know myself, and I go from strength to strength.As a spinner, would you say your height is one of your assets?

That is one of my biggest strengths, but I also get a lot of bounce as well. And the way how I impart spin on the ball. Yes, control is a very big part of my bowling.Has anybody helped you with your bowling?
I did a lot of work with Mushtaq Ahmed. That was in 2019. We had a two-week bowling camp when I learned a lot of different things from him about spin bowling. He didn’t really change much, he just worked on what I already had to see how best we can create that offspinning art and we just go from there. Curtly Ambrose came out in support of you after former West Indies offspinner Lance Gibbs was critical of your bowling action. He said, “Let them see you can get the job done in your own way and you own style.” Were you encouraged by that?
Okay. No, I never heard what he [Ambrose] said. Once you know how to master the craft, why would you want to change it? I just stick to what I know.

“I’m not too far. I think my batting technique is very good. Just a couple more things that I need to iron out. I am capable enough to do the job for my team”

Can you talk about how you find a bowling rhythm?

Once you get your mechanics right and everything in line, your rhythm will fall in place. Shoulders, the way how I set up my bowling side to land the ball in the right areas. In the Afghanistan Test I had good rhythm, the ball was coming nicely out of my hands. I enjoyed that.In my first Test, I bowled to Rahane, and he is a good player of spin. Once I was bowling my stock deliveries and my best deliveries, I was being played with an understanding – he understood where I am coming from. So all I had to do now was to be patient and wait until whoever make a mistake.What is your stock delivery?
My normal offbreak.You have now bowled more than 100 overs in Test cricket. What have you learned? And what do you think you need to work on?
Test cricket and first-class cricket are two different types of cricket. Test cricket, you have to be more patient, you are bowling to better players, so you have to be more smarter and more putting the ball in the right areas consistently. In first-class cricket, probably you can get away with one or two bad balls, but in Test cricket the margin is very slim, so you have to be consistent and always be on the money.After the ten-for against Afghanistan you said you expected to score a Test century before getting a five-for. What did you mean?

My batting is going to be a big part of my career. I’m capable enough of scoring runs, so I just have to work hard on my batting and do the right things that I know I can do with the bat, and maybe I come up full-blown allrounder.You have spoken about having the ability to be a top-order batsman. How far away from that goal are you?
I’m not too far. I think my technique is very good. Just a couple more things that I need to iron out. I am capable enough to do the job for my team.In ten Caribbean Premier League matches last season, Cornwall made 254 runs at a strike rate of 190.97 with two half-centuries•Ashley Allen/CPL T20/Getty ImagesYou are an amazing slip fielder. Does it come naturally?
Fielding is something I put a lot of hard work into. I am a very good catcher. I catch the ball well at slips, even midwicket or short cover. I am trying to master areas and see how best I can contribute in the field. During training I do a lot of catching. Just make sure you keep your eyes on the ball right through.Is it those big hands plus reflexes?
It is a little of both. You have to have both to do the job.When it comes to your fitness, what are the things you focus on?
There’s no doubt about it I am a big guy, but I have to put in work. I don’t really get too bogged down and lazy about it. I spend a lot of time on my fitness. Try to eat properly.Does the focus on your body size and weight distract you or mentally hurt you?
I don’t really study what other people say. I know what I can do. And I know what I need to do. So I just focus on that and leave the rest.“A lot of people underestimate me because of my size. I fool a lot of people – especially bowling from my height and getting a lot of spin.” You said that a couple of years ago to the . Does that still hold true?
Yeah. Nothing has really changed. I just have to work from strength to strength.You recently had surgery on both your knees. In terms of intensity where are you right now?
I got the knee surgeries in December 2019. I am getting back there. My knees are way better than before. I had to get the surgery done because of an old injury.

“In first-class cricket, probably you can get away with one or two bad balls, but in Test cricket the margin is very slim”

You have 300-plus wickets in 62 first-class matches with 19 five-fors. Do you think you are underappreciated despite the good numbers?
Not really. The numbers speak. I just have to keep building as my career goes on. I have to cherish my performance. Celebrate with my team-mates. You just have to stick to basics and stay calm and go about your business.And are you calm at all times?
I am this calm from day one. That’s how I know myself from ever. Hold your composure and do your thing.Pitches in England are not spin-friendly, but you have played there before, with West Indies A. Do you reckon because of that and the bounce you generate, you hold the upper hand?
England is not really spinner-friendly, but if you put in the work you’ll get some result. If the weather is dry, you will get spin. You just have to be consistent and with different bounce, line and length, you will be good.What will be the key for you to be effective?
Patience. Consistency. Keep at it for long periods.Finally, what did your family tell you before you left the Caribbean?
Stay safe and enjoy your cricket. Once you enjoy your cricket, success will come

'I want to be the player who stands up when it's 40 degrees and it's flat'

It’s been a hard, injury-studded slog to the top for South Africa’s brightest pace-bowling hope, and now he’s looking to turn up the heat

Firdose Moonda22-Apr-2020Pace is pace, .While the modern bowler is interested in developing a slower ball or learning the art of reverse swing, for Anrich Nortje, speed is key to his craft.”Pace, especially for me, is crucial,” Nortje says from his family farm in the Eastern Cape during South Africa’s Covid-19 lockdown. “When you don’t have the pace, you have to focus so much on skill because it’s so difficult to teach someone pace at a later stage in their career.”So pace was always Nortje’s baseline and the rest, like control and consistency, came later.By the time he began to focus on technique, he had been bowling for several years, had played for age-group provincial sides, and had had a smorgasbord of injuries. He was 17 when he broke his collarbone and came to the realisation that “my body wasn’t really built for rugby”. At 1.88 metres tall and with a wiry frame, Nortje had more fast-twitch fibre than big muscle, which steered him towards bowling.He made his first-class debut in 2013, in Namibia, where he opened the bowling and took a wicket in his second over. He was 19, “quite shy and reserved”, according to his team-mate Jon-Jon Smuts, “but he had white-line fever”. He was also very proud of his Afrikaans background, a quality that was immediately evident. “I think the most English music he listened to was Jack Parow,” Smuts said.ALSO READ: Close your eyes to reality, and imagine this South Africa dream teamAfrikaans rapper Parow makes what he calls “dangerous” music that stings with satire, while wearing a leopard-print peak cap with a ridiculously long visor, a 70s ‘tache and a smirk. What might someone like that have in common with Nortje? “It’s a never-say-die, never-stop-fighting attitude,” Nortje says, when asked what underpins Afrikaans culture.A self-styled “proper Dutchman”, Nortje, like Parow, wants to be someone who stands out. “When times are tough, I want to put my hand up and try and make a change,” he said. “I want to be the player that stands up when it’s 40 degrees and it’s flat. That’s how I see it.’In his first full season as an international, Nortje achieved exactly that. During one of the tougher periods in South African cricket, in which they won only one of five home series, he was one of the bright spots. Nortje was South Africa’s highest wicket-taker of the 2019-20 summer, and has one of the best strike rates among ODI bowlers since January 2019. To the international cricket community, he surged onto the scene overnight, but his bowling was a product many years in the making.

Between November 2013 and November 2015, he went through a revolving door of injuries and used the time to concentrate on his studies. Knowing that international sport can be a precarious career path, he embarked on a Bachelor of Commerce degree and a postgraduate programme in financial planning while he worked his way back to bowling.Nortje needed to figure out a way to keep bowling quickly for sustained periods of time while minimising the risk of hurting himself. That’s where Eastern Province coach (and later coach of the Warriors franchise) Piet Botha, and Drikus Saaiman, the Warriors’ strength and conditioning coach, came in. They embarked on what became a three-year process to get Nortje into good positions at the crease.”The main thing in the last year was to have all the power at the crease, so we looked at everything from a braced front leg to a strong front arm and a good hip drive,” Nortje explained. “I did a lot of training with Drikus to understand how the body works and how certain things feel when you do certain movements, especially the hip drive.”Being able to bring the back hip forward when landing on the crease is key to making a bowler’s action more front-on, which is easier on the body, and so more sustainable. Nortje started to get it right in the 2017-18 season, when he was the highest wicket-taking out-and-out fast-bowler in South Africa’s first-class competition behind three spinners and a medium-pacer. He had become the go-to-guy for Smuts, who was now Warriors captain. He “expressed himself by getting wickets”, and had gained a reputation as the quickest bowler on the domestic scene, which was suffering from something of a go-slow.Given his gas, Nortje knew he would stand out. “If I look back a few years, in domestic cricket, we had a couple of guys in each team who could bowl 140 or 150kph, but it changed so much. You hardly have guys who bowl 140-plus now, and so anyone who gets to is always being looked at,” Nortje said.Cobras coach Ashwell Prince was one of those doing the looking and he picked Nortje up in the fifth round of the inaugural Mzansi Super League draft for R350,000 (approx US$19,400) for Cape Town Blitz. Technically Nortje made nearly R29,166 an over, because he only delivered 12 of them before he broke a bone in his ankle and was ruled out of the rest of the tournament.With 18 wickets in four Tests, Nortje was the leading wicket-taker in the Basil D’Oliveira Trophy, against England•AFP/Getty ImagesBut Nortje had made a massive impression in the three matches he played, taking 8 for 83 all told, including four wickets in nine balls against Durban Heat. There, he counted Hashim Amla and Temba Bavuma among his victims. He clocked speeds of 150kph, enough to secure an IPL deal. Less than a month after he underwent surgery, while shopping for meat for a braai he found out he had been picked for the Kolkata Knight Riders for R400,000 ($21,500) in the December 2018 auction. When asked about the thought of bowling to Virat Kohli, Nortje said it would be “wow.”And it was – but not the way Nortje might have thought it would be. He injured his shoulder and never made it to the IPL. He had to wait until South Africa’s September 2019 tour to India before he came up against Kohli, on T20I debut in Mohali. Kohli faced six balls from him, among them a short-ball and a yorker, and didn’t score any boundaries, but he finished unbeaten on 72 as India beat South Africa by seven wickets. Three weeks later, Nortje made his Test debut in Pune and Kohli scored an unbeaten 254 as India won by an innings and 137 runs. Nortje bowled 25 overs and went wicketless, conceding a century of runs. Wow.ALSO READ: Anrich Nortje ready to pound in again on green grass of homeBy then Nortje had understood the roller coaster that is international cricket more than most rookies. He had been picked for the World Cup squad but broke his thumb, soon after he recovered from the shoulder injury that kept him out of the IPL. That happened in the nets a couple of weeks before the squad’s departure for England, but he managed to see the bright side. “I had just got married and would have had to leave for the World Cup the day after my wedding, so it actually worked out quite well. It was nice to be at home just after the wedding and spend some quality time together.”Micaela, a teacher, was Nortje’s high-school sweetheart and became a popular fixture in the second edition of the MSL, where television cameras couldn’t get enough of her supporting him in the stands. That tournament came as a relief at a particularly dark time for South African cricket, when the administration crumbled and, over the course of ten mad days in December, everything changed. A new coaching regime was installed and they saw a big role for Nortje in the home summer.Anrich Nortje’s vital 40 as nightwatchman helped South Africa set an imposing target in the second innings of the first Test against England, at Centurion•Getty ImagesWith Lungi Ngidi out of the England Tests, Nortje would be the third prong in the pace pack, and he finished as the leading wicket-taker in the series. But it was his other job, of nightwatchman, that gave him more joy. “My first five-for (at the Wanderers) was really special but my favourite moment was in the first game, when I helped the team with the bat,” he said.Nortje batted for two hours and seven minutes in the first Test, in Centurion, scored 40 and starred in a match-winning partnership with Rassie van der Dussen, proving that his scores of significance at first-class level were not flukes. “At provincial level he always liked to play a few shots but he has a few 60s and 70s to his name,” Smuts said. “It was really great to see him do that for South Africa.”While South Africa won the Centurion Test, they went on to lose the series 1-3 and are still in a rebuilding phase. “It’s a culture of learning because everyone is quite new to international cricket. There’s a lot of young guys coming through and a lot of young guys in senior positions,” Nortje said. “It’s about trying to stick to the basics of what the guys have done in the past and learning and understanding where we fit in now.”ALSO READ: Anrich Nortje embraces ‘proper Dutchman’ nickname after showing rearguard gritFor Nortje, being the fast man remains his forte and he sees himself as the person to turn up the heat when South Africa are in the field. “When I try and put some extra effort in and see the speed gun and the ball flies through, that just gets a little bit of blood flowing again. It feels like it makes things interesting and you can do things you didn’t think you were able to. And then you can work on some extra stuff when you have the pace.”Those extras are what Nortje needs to develop to take his game to the next level, something Botha has usually overseen, but is now the domain of bowling coach, Charl Langeveldt. Botha remains a close confidante and mentor to Nortje. “Pace is the No. 1 thing because it makes people sit up and take notice,” he said, “but great players have other skills as well. They can bowl in gears and when they sniff something, they just step it up.”So pace may be pace, , but Nortje is discovering there’s a lot more to bowling besides.

The best of Superman Jadeja

Catches, sprints, clean pick-ups and throws to effect impossible run outs, he’s done them all

Sreshth Shah03-Mar-2020
Catch off Jason Roy, 2019 World Cup league match
India’s bowlers were posing no challenge for England’s openers when Jadeja pulled off one of the best catches of the tournament. At 160 for no loss, India’s morale had dropped. Just a while earlier, replays proved they had erred by not reviewing an lbw call. Jason Roy had just deposited Kuldeep Yadav for a six over long-on. But when he tried to repeat that shot, substitute fielder Jadeja ran forward from long-on and dived full length to take a dipping catch just inches from the ground. The umpires had to go upstairs to confirm whether the catch was clean, but Jadeja’s body language told you the story. For a moment, Roy stood rooted to the spot, but eventually began the slow walk back.Run-out of Mohammad Mithun, Asia Cup 2018 final
At 139 for 3 in the 28th over on a tired surface, Bangladesh looked good to post a defendable total in Dubai, until Jadeja decided to change the script. Yuzvendra Chahal’s flighted delivery had just been creamed by Liton Das through the extra-cover region, and it nearly went all the way, but for a flying blue blur. Jadeja leaped to his left to grab the ball with his left hand, dragged it back into his hand for a proper grip, got on to his knees and flung the ball towards the non-striker’s stumps – all in one fluid motion. Chahal whipped the bails off, leaving Mohammad Mithun stranded well outside his crease. Mithun was certain the ball would beat Jadeja, but it didn’t, and it played a hand in Bangladesh’s lower order collapse. Not only was the run-out important but so was the stopped single since India eventually chased Bangladesh’s 222 down off the final delivery of the match.Run-out of Shahid Afridi, Asia Cup 2016 match
Shahid Afridi was trying to steal a second run in the eighth over with Pakistan 41 for 5. But he took on the wrong fielder. The first run was easy enough, as Jadeja ambled towards the ball at square leg. That was the dummy. As soon as Afridi turned for the second run, Jadeja sprinted towards the ball and in a flash released it with a rocket throw to MS Dhoni, who whipped the bails off. Pakistan were eventually all out for 83.Shane Watson dismissed caught and bowled, T20I series in Australia, 2016
Completing a caught-and-bowled dismissal off a well-struck shot is always a toughie. The bowler has to break his follow through midway, then stick his hand/s out, and finally hope that the ball sticks. But with Jadeja, all that is second nature. During India’s memorable T20I series win in Australia in 2016, Jadeja produced a stunner that would have burst through the hands of most others. The delivery wasn’t great, outside off and in the slot for the big-shouldered Shane Watson to smash it, and the batsman obliged with no half measures.The umpire moved to his right to take cover, but Jadeja was there to protect him. Jadeja – from wide of the crease around the wicket – shuffled to his right to get in front of the non-striker’s stumps, lifted his arms over his head, and plucked the ball out, much to Watson’s disbelief. Australia’s misery was compounded six balls later when Jadeja combined with Dhoni to dismiss Aaron Finch for a 48-ball 74. Those two dismissals broke Australia’s back, silenced the SCG crowd, and eventually handed India a 27-run victory.Run-out of Ross Taylor, 2019 World Cup semi-final
It would be a lot to unpack if you were told that Martin Guptill’s run-out of Dhoni in the semi-final of the 2019 World Cup was the second best run-out of the match. In the first innings, Ross Taylor, on 73, flicked Jasprit Bumrah into the gap behind square for two. It was a regulation two, but what Taylor did not account for was Jadeja. When he collected the ball near deep midwicket, Taylor was a third of the way into his second run, and when the ball was released, Taylor was halfway home. But like a pebble zipping on water when hurled with a zip, Jadeja’s throw cut through the air and hit the stumps on the full. Umpire Paul Reiffel referred it to the TV umpire, but both Taylor and Jadeja knew what the outcome was.

Mayank Agarwal hasn't had a breakthrough IPL yet. He's looking forward to correcting that

Coming off a fantastic red-ball run in 2019, the Kings XI Punjab batsman is hoping to crack the IPL code this season

Interview by Shashank Kishore04-Sep-2020Mayank Agarwal has self-awareness and clarity of thought in his approach to the game – that much is crystal clear. In a way, being a late bloomer for India – he broke through into the Test team as a 28-year old – has given him perspective about the need to stay in the present and keep his game clutter-free to attain consistency over sustained periods.In this year’s IPL, he will team up at Kings XI Punjab again with his best friend and best man at his wedding, KL Rahul, along with a host of other Karnataka players, under head coach Anil Kumble, to chart what he hoped will be an impact year. How will he go about it? He tells us in this interview.Bio-bubbles, testing, protocols, quarantine – you must be tired of it all.
Well, the pandemic has taught me to be appreciative of things. I’m grateful for the lives we have. I’m not going to be sitting in my hotel room and thinking about the restrictions. The fact that we’ve even come close to playing has taken a huge amount of effort from different people, so I’m appreciative of the very fact that cricket is back.Also, spare a thought for athletes from other sports in India. They’ve had so much disruption. Personally, I’ve used this time at home to read a lot, do some cooking, help with household chores, do a lot of gardening, and all the things that you generally tend to miss out on with the kind of touring lives we have as cricketers. I’m not complaining at all. Yes, there are rules, I will abide by them and co-operate in whichever way I have to, instead of complaining about the situation. It’s the same for everybody.How tough was it, returning to cricket after five months?
For the best part of the last ten to 12 years, I’ve been playing professional cricket. So a five-month break hasn’t taken that much of a toll, honestly. The only challenge has been to maintain continuity, which hasn’t always been possible in Bangalore. But in general, it hasn’t been tough for me, personally.What are you looking forward to the most this IPL?
I’ve been scoring runs at different levels, but the fact remains I haven’t had a breakthrough IPL season yet [in ten years now], so I’m looking forward to correcting that. Also, I’m looking forward to being part of a winning IPL team. I came close in 2017 [with Rising Pune Supergiant].How does the familiarity with the Kings XI set-up help?
KL [Rahul] and I started together, played India Under-19 together, we’ve opened in Tests. We’ve been part of a World Cup team. This is his first time as captain, and I’m excited for him. We’ve both played under Anil [Kumble] at RCB. As a coach, Anil has been meticulous in his planning and has given us specific roles. When someone gives you clarity to the extent he has, it gives you a clear picture of where you stand and what you should do to get to the next level.

“Cricket at the highest level is a confidence game, and when you have a captain who is always focusing on the positives, it’s nice to have that reiteration that you’re good enough to tackle any challenge”

Will it take some pressure off you, knowing there are some explosive batsmen in the team?
We’re a fun group of players at Kings XI. [Chris] Gayle, KL, [Nicholas] Pooran, [Glenn] Maxwell – all of them love to express themselves on the field. Anytime you go out to bat after, say, a Gayle or Rahul, your job automatically becomes a tad easier because even if one of them has started off well, the pressure isn’t staring at you when you walk in.You like opening, but in Kings XI you’ve generally batted at three. You had a few sessions to prepare in Bangalore before flying out. Did you work on anything in particular?
As soon as the lockdown was lifted, I started training with my personal coach, RX Murali. I was in touch with Anil regularly during the lockdown period. He was a great source of guidance. He’s studied my game, so he spoke to me about areas I can look at improving, aspects I can consider incorporating, the scoring areas I can possibly open up. Also, I’ve been working on a few things on the mental side of things. So while training, I’ve tried to incorporate all this into practice. A month’s time [in UAE] is good enough for us to assess the wickets and train accordingly. Obviously the conditions will be much different to India in October-November. I think the plans we’ve put in place and the little bit of training we’ve done [in Bangalore] will come in handy.ALSO READ: KL Rahul: ‘Aggression for us will be to adapt, not go kaboom from ball one’You’ve been part of the Indian team for over 18 months now. What are your learnings from there?
Everyone’s in an environment where they’re striving to learn and pick up new tricks. We feed off each other; there’s no senior-junior thing. Cricket at the highest level is a confidence game, and when you have a captain who is always focusing on the positives, it’s nice to have that reiteration that you’re good enough to tackle any challenge.In that time, have there been any specific interactions you’ve had with someone that have helped particularly?
I remember feeling a bit of pressure to cement my position in the Test team during the West Indies tour last year. I hadn’t made too many runs in the first Test, and in between games Rohit Sharma could sense I was off a bit. He came forward to offer me some guidance, which I am extremely grateful for. We spoke a lot about how that Test series in West Indies was a different challenge for me. I had scored two half-centuries in the Test series against Australia on the last tour, so he impressed upon me that I shouldn’t let that extra pressure of expectation get to me and overthink the process in the Caribbean. It definitely helped having that chat as I did go into the second West Indies Test in a more relaxed frame of mind.”Anytime you go out to bat after Gayle or Rahul, your job automatically becomes a tad easier because the pressure isn’t staring at you when you walk in”•BCCITwo months later you made your first Test century, opened with Rohit, and put on a triple-century opening stand.
Yes, that was a special partnership at home against South Africa. I really needed a consistent home season and wanted to get a big score after three half-centuries abroad and not converting any of them into a big hundred. It was an amazing experience opening with Rohit and watching his fearless attacking strokeplay from the other end. Apart from that innings being my first Test century, it also happened to be Rohit’s first century as Test opener. But most importantly, we put on a massive opening stand which set the tone for a number of good Test wins during the home season.You’ve often spoken of RX Murali and Rahul Dravid’s influence, and the positive vibes of the Indian dressing room. Is there anyone else who has been instrumental?
Ray Jennings played a big part early on. I interacted with him when I was invited to be part of a talent camp for uncapped Indian players conducted by RCB in late 2010. He was very impressed with my work ethic and ability to play shots at the top of the order, and RCB signed me as one of the uncapped players for the 2011 IPL. What I enjoyed the most about working with Ray during those three seasons at RCB was his honest and direct critical feedback, and he was someone who told you things you didn’t want to hear, and knew when a player needed a dressing down if they were falling out of line. I will always respect those years with him as a coach. It toughened me up to face the challenges of professional cricket.ALSO READ: ‘100 is a magical figure, but sometimes 100 is not enough’When you started off, the perception was that you were suited more to white-ball cricket. Today you’re known to be a formidable red-ball batsman.
Yes, that was the perception early on, as many had followed my one-day performances in the 2010 U-19 World Cup, and the early seasons in the IPL with RCB. From my point of view, I always knew that to be considered among the great Indian batsmen, I needed to excel at the highest level and play Test cricket for India. The 2017-18 Ranji season was that watershed moment in my career where I improved tremendously as a red-ball player, and that successful Ranji season followed by more red-ball runs for India A in 2018 gave me the confidence in my ability to succeed at Test match level.A lot has been said already about that Ranji season in 2017-18, where you made 1000-plus runs. Tell us something we don’t know about that season.
I was close to being dropped that season. I wasn’t in good form for a couple of months going in. I had a poor 2017 IPL with Rising Pune, and had a bad start to the Ranji season as well with two ducks.Vinay Kumar has always looked to help and elevate young Karnataka players throughout his career, and that’s something we have always admired about him. More than him just backing me to play another game after those two ducks was his support where he said that he believed in my ability to succeed at this level and it’s not just a matter of one game but that he wanted me to deliver for the team for the rest of the season. It was a huge thing for me that he, as captain, had that trust and faith in my ability. I just feel happy that I could repay his faith in me with a 300 in the next game, and that started off a great run for me in red-ball cricket, both for the rest of the Ranji season and in the India A four-day games leading into my Test debut in Melbourne. That has effected a turnaround of sorts in my career.

Dean Jones will always be known for Madras

Remembering his most magnificent innings and what it said about his skills and endurance

Ian Chappell27-Sep-2020Dean Jones’ name will forever be linked with the south Indian city of Chennai.Known as Madras in 1986, conditions were typically hot and humid when Jones amassed a double-century of immense skill, will power and human endurance. This was the innings of a man with a big heart. Unfortunately that same heart failed the man affectionately known as “Deano”, when Jones died in Mumbai after suffering a cardiac arrest.Jones’ double-century in Madras contained everything a young man playing only his fifth Test innings would want. There was a wide range of shots, producing runs at an excellent strike rate, and a score that guaranteed his place in the side for a good while to come.ALSO READ: Dean Jones on the Madras Test: ‘I can’t remember a thing after 120 in that innings’Originally entrusted with the crucial No. 3 spot by Allan Border, he was then goaded by Captain Grumpy when he asked to retire hurt because of exhaustion. “We’ll get a real Australian, a Queenslander, Greg Ritchie,” taunted Border, “if you’re not up to the job.”Jones’ request was justified when he was out not long after. He was immediately whisked off to hospital where he was put on a saline drip as his body threatened to shut down. That innings was to take on a greater level of importance when the Test finished in only the second tie in the game’s history.Jones will be remembered for many other exploits – another Test double-century; being a member of Australia’s first World Cup-winning side; for asking Curtly Ambrose to remove his white wrist band (because it was the same colour as the ball); and for a reputation as an innovative and successful ODI batsman. But nothing to quite match his Madras magnificence.I was not altogether surprised by Jones’ sudden rise to stardom in India following a slow start to his Test career. Before the tour, he visited me in Sydney, where he discussed batting at No. 3 and anything else that might assist him in his career.Dean Jones rushes to embrace Allan Border after Australia win the 1987 World Cup in Calcutta•Liu Heung Shing/Associated PressMy impression? Any man prepared to pay his own airfare to get ahead in his career at a time when cricketers weren’t well remunerated has the determination and dedication to succeed at international level. That instance was not uncommon. During his career and in his life after cricket, Deano eagerly sought information and used it to enhance other cricketers’ performances.He was widely respected in India not only for his heroic deeds in Madras but also for his commentating role as “The Professor”. Wearing a robe and mortar board, he would accentuate his theories by pointing at a blackboard with a cane.ALSO READ: ‘Revolutionary’ Dean Jones was coming back into the Australia foldHis advice, especially on batting in ODIs, was regularly sought, and Jones was happy to pass on his knowledge. That also gained him employment as a coach, often in places where others feared to tread, like Pakistan and Afghanistan.This fearless approach is not surprising when you consider his upbringing. He was the son of Barney Jones, a highly competitive Carlton club cricketer, who was rumoured to once have helped place ice blocks on a good length the night before a semi-final where University were chasing victory.Dean inherited Barney’s competitive instincts and they were honed under the watchful eye of former Australia batsman Keith Stackpole. Jones arrived at Carlton as a precocious young lad with abundant energy. Stackpole remembers his enthusiasm: “He would chase everything in the field, and he always wanted to bowl his own way, usually short.”That was a hallmark of Jones’ cricket – especially his one-day batting – he did things his own way. In doing so, he finished with an excellent average and a particularly good strike rate for his era.Sometimes his enthusiasm got the better of him, especially when he asked to have Ambrose’s wrist band removed during a 1993 ODI. That was one of his few regrets. “It probably wasn’t a wise idea,” chuckled Jones, “seeing Curtly took 5 for 32.”Nevertheless Jones had a lot of good ideas and that’s how it all ended, expressing his opinions on television in Mumbai, not a million miles from Chennai.

Bruised and abused, Indians make their own luck at the SCG

Test cricket was at its best, as India got into positions to benefit from any help from anywhere

Sidharth Monga11-Jan-2021Ishant Sharma (whole series). Mohammed Shami (three Tests). Virat Kohli (three Tests). Umesh Yadav (two Tests). Ravindra Jadeja (most likely, one-and-a-half Tests). Hanuma Vihari (most likely, one Test). Rishabh Pant (at least half a Test). Rohit Sharma (two Tests). KL Rahul (not close to the playing XI but out of the series). R Ashwin has tweaked his back too. Cheteshwar Pujara is playing with a hand injury sustained in the nets. This is the known list of injuries suffered by the Indian team on the tour to Australia.Everybody is sick of the bio-bubbles and Covid-19 restrictions. They have been away from home for close to five months. A man has missed his father’s funeral, another the birth of his child. A third made it to the birth of his child only because he got injured. They are asking you not to leave your floor in your hotel. You perhaps know the bigger picture. You perhaps know you are the fortunate ones to still have a lucrative job. Yet it can get to you after this long.Hanuma Vihari injured his hamstring, which meant he couldn’t run for the best part of his innings on the fifth day•Getty ImagesThe only thing left to do then is to just go out and play the cricket, the only place where you can be free. There, too, is a random racist bloke in the stands calling you names.Related

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***

Between them, Rishabh Pant and Pujara divide more opinion than opinion exists.Pant is a young punk. Plays his shots. His India batting coach wants him to walk the rope between “carefree” and “careless”, suggesting he thinks he can be careless. They all talk about the shots he plays to get out all the time. Wherever he goes. Whichever format he plays. He has been out of the team for the whole year almost. He dropped two catches on day one. Still keeps chirping.Pant’s back foot slips away when he plays full balls. Experts say it will get him in trouble with short balls and straight balls. In the first innings one got him in the elbow. He was not wearing an arm guard. He couldn’t get feeling in his arm. Couldn’t hold the bat properly. Got compression tape on. Dropped the painkiller pill as he tried to pop it. Cue Twitter jokes on drops. Got up again, batted for ten balls more. Went for scans. There was no fracture.The other is a senior pro. Phlegmatic. Everyone other than him seems to know how he should bat. Everyone believes they are right and he is wrong. At any given point of time in his career, he has not been scoring runs since, well, the last time he scored runs. And even those runs are not scored at the right tempo. He is credited for the dismissals of three of his fellow batsmen in an innings he faces a third of the bowling and top scores.The two come together in the second over of the morning session. The Indian team management has decided to split Pujara and Vihari, who can both get stuck. There is a whole day to bat. There are 305 runs to get. You can’t start to think of anything as target. The only thing left to do is bat and give it your best shot.And they just bat. All the noise is kept out. At the wicket, it doesn’t matter what Ricky Ponting and Allan Border – and Twitter, and that racist bloke in the front row – think. Pujara blocks. Pant hits out after getting set. These are two expert Test batsmen telling the world they know what works for them and that they will bat the way they believe is the best. Neither is thinking of a win or a draw.Pujara brings up his fifty in 170 balls, four fewer than in the first innings, which was his slowest fifty in Tests. Pant races away from 5 off 34 to 50 off 64. This is how they play. This is how they should play. Their approach will be determined by what they feel is the best for themselves and the team at that time.It is not like Pant has decided he is going for the win, and that that is the only brave and courageous thing to do. He has been dropped twice, on both occasions playing a defensive shot. He knows playing attacking cricket is his best bet. He has hit a six with the field up. Then with the field back. Then gone between the deep fielders. He knows any of these can get him out caught thus giving way to the noise about the shot-selection, but he has the conviction to keep doing what is best for him.By the lunch break, Pant has attacked ten balls and defended 27. He has been in control of nine of the attacking responses, scoring 51 runs off those ten balls. He is not in control of three of the 27 defensive responses, two of them being edges dropped by Tim Paine. Not all pitches will allow this kind of cricket to come off, but in knowing which ones will, will be the key to the longevity of Pant’s career.Nathan Lyon kept creating chances, but was hit out of the attack by Rishabh Pant on a fifth-day pitch•Cricket Australia/Getty Images

***

Pat Cummins, Josh Hazlewood, Nathan Lyon and Mitchell Starc are the best attack in the world. They are strong, fit, skilful, accurate and experienced. They possibly lack a Neil Wagner-like enforcer on dying pitches, but Australian pitches don’t usually die down in the way this one has. The four keep pounding down this pitch tirelessly they best know how to.The fast bowlers try shifting their line of attack. Over the wicket, around the wicket, straight at the wicket to outside off, short balls and reverse swing, but the pitch is just too slow to draw any response that can beat good batsmen intent on defence. Or someone as good at attack as Pant.Lyon keeps creating chances, changing his line of attack if not the pace or trajectory as much as someone like Ashwin does. He gets Ajinkya Rahane early and also draws two edges from Pant, but is hit out of the attack by a left-hand batsman on a fifth-day pitch. Between them, by lunch on final day, Australia’s bowlers have drawn 73 false responses but have taken just three wickets for it. In this series, bowlers have been getting a wicket for every nine false shots.

***

On the final day, usually the onus is on the spinner. If they don’t deliver a win, they are not allowed to forget that day. Lyon knows it. India’s spinner knows it. They don’t ask Ashwin what happened at Wanderers in 2013-14. He just has to live with it for the rest of his life.Here, though, Ashwin is not sitting down. He watches the whole Pant-Pujara stand while standing up in the viewing balcony of the SCG pavilion. This is no superstition. Ashwin has tweaked his back. His wife, Prithi, says he couldn’t bend to tie his laces in the morning. His batting has anyway taken a hit in recent years. Once a potential allrounder, the last time Ashwin faced 50 balls in a Test innings was in Adelaide on the last trip in 2018-19. The last time he scored 50 runs was in 2017.You have heard of VVS Laxman batting with a listing back in Kolkata in 2000-01. Of Mohinder Amarnath coming out in a blood-stained shirt, able to see his blood on the pitch, and then carry on batting against fearsome fast bowling. Of Shivlal Yadav batting with a broken toe. Of Anil Kumble bowling with a broken jaw. Now imagine acts of such bravery put together in the same Test. That is SCG.No amount of courage, though, can trump conditions and luck. They were no less brave in Adelaide when they were bowled out for 36. The pitch was quick, the edges were carrying and they lost the whole side in 32 false responses. Here, as Ashwin watches on, false responses are either not going to hand, or when they go, they are dropped. By the time Pant finally holes out trying to maximise the old ball, India have lost just four wickets in 79 false responses. Put together, 36 all out and this 250 for 4 has featured 14 dismissals in 111 false responses, which is the going rate in the series.Cheteshwar Pujara lost Rishabh Pant with 157 still to get, but that didn’t seem to matter•Getty Images

***

This is day five. Two of the best sides in Test cricket are at each other. One of them is fighting a freakish run of injuries, cabin fever off the field and a great attack on it. The great attack is up against a dying pitch and wretched luck.In their way is a batsman who made them bowl what he himself called the ball of the series in the first innings. If you wonder why Pujara keeps getting these unplayable deliveries, it is because he doesn’t get out to lesser balls. He doesn’t the unplayable ones; he attacks to bowl unplayable ones. In between, he sometimes doesn’t take toll of the less threatening ones, but here it doesn’t matter. Especially once Pant has got out with 157 still to get. The draw is an option. The dots are building pressure on Australia, not on India. A draw is as good as a win for India.If he is going to force you to bowl unplayable ones, then unplayable ones it shall be. Hazlewood runs in, bowls an inswinger just short of the driving length, Pujara covers for it as he has been doing for 380 deliveries in this Test. But this one pitches and leaves him to take the off stump. This is Test cricket of the highest quality rising above the virus, rising above the hate, rising above the conditions.

***

Then Australia catch a break. Vihari, India’s last standing batsman, injures his hamstring while taking a single. Vihari is arguably playing for his career in a side that is full of options now for just five or six batting positions. He can’t run now. Ashwin can’t move too much. Jadeja is padded up but he can’t even peel a banana with his broken hand. The next three are mugs with the bat. India can’t think of winning now. Not that they did it earlier, but Australia feared it. Now they can focus on just attack.Ashwin is full of respect for Cummins. He says Cummins can take it a notch higher when he sees a sniff. This is a sniff. There is a new ball in hand. Cummins goes short ball after short ball. Ribs, glove, shoulder, all peppered. Ashwin keeps getting back up and keeps getting inside the line of the short ones. The leaves down the leg side are classic smell-your-armpit ones.Instinctively Ashwin wants to get off strike and sets off for a run, but realises Vihari can’t run. Both of these batsmen were run out in the first innings. Ashwin was ridiculed for ball-watching, but he says he never received a call from his partner so he had to turn around and look where the ball was. Imagine being run out a second time as Vihari nearly is, responding to an instinctive call. But runs don’t matter. Time does.Ashwin spends the tea break on his feet because if he sits, he might do his back in for good. Vihari has most likely torn his hamstring. You can’t hit out of this situation. You can’t make the clock go faster. One ball after the other, they bat on.

***

Tim Paine tried to unsettle R Ashwin when the pitch was doing nothing for his bowlers•AFP/Getty Images”At least my team-mates like me, d**head… Even your team-mates think you are a goose.”That’s Paine to Ashwin during a conversation caught on the stump mic. On day four, Paine was using the same stump mics to send a message across to the bullies of Australian cricket, Shane Warne and Andrew Symonds, for picking on Marnus Labuschagne, the South African who moved to Australia and is their second-best Test batsman now. Today the mics are catching this puerile conversation that he is using to try to unsettle a resolute batsman when the pitch is doing nothing for his bowlers.Paine tells Ashwin he can’t wait to see him in the fourth Test at the Gabba, which is supposed to be quicker. Ashwin tells him he can’t wait to see Paine in India, which might end up being his last series. Can Paine be sure he will even make it to India?Two Tests ago, Paine came out and turned a hopeless situation into a fighting one, benefitting from a dropped catch himself, and ended up being Man-of-the-Match for the first time in his career. His leadership, as was visible in him standing up for Labuschagne, is exemplary. But days of specialist captains are gone. Among Australia wicketkeepers who have scored at least 1000 runs, only two – Adam Gilchrist and Brad Haddin – have a better average than Paine’s 32.37, but since Paine became captain in the aftermath of the ball-tampering scandal, only two wicketkeepers have averaged worse than his 27.73 and still survived ten Tests in their side.If you are going to keep your place in the side without your batting, you better be great at catching and leading. Paine has presided over Australia’s only series loss to an Asian side at home. Since May 2018, he has a decent catching efficiency of 91.3% against pace and 86.4% against spin. As a perspective, Pant’s catching efficiency off spin is 55%. So far this series though, Paine has already dropped three: Gill in Melbourne – he went to hurt Australia – and Pant twice in Sydney.Now watching his bowlers pound the lifeless pitch ball after ball, Paine is trying everything. If India draw this – as looks likely now with Ashwin and Vihari blunting every blow from Australia – Paine can still end up losing back-to-back series to India come Brisbane. And then Starc produces one final edge, which is carrying to first slip, but you can never be sure on such a dying pitch. So Paine does the right thing and dives for it, only to spill it again.Paine has got to know dropped catches are a part of the game. Had he not been dropped in Adelaide, Australia might well have been 0-2 down. In total, he has dropped four but was doing the right thing each time. Not grabbing at the ball when Lyon bowled, not leaving it to the slip when Starc did. Will he be able to repeat this to himself when he is all alone in his bio-bubble, not able to leave his floor in the hotel?

***

Pujara keeps out 205 balls, Pant plays 118, Vihari hobbles along for 161 and Ashwin fights a painful back for 128. India lose only five wickets to 135 false responses, an innings they are owed after the 36 all out in just 32 false ones. The job done by the medical staff to put enough people on the park is immense. Between them, they have saved a Test when they don’t know if they will have 11 standing men available for the next. If Vihari misses out in Brisbane because of injury and if India play just five batsmen at home, who knows when he will play next. Will Ashwin be able to come back and bowl in three days’ time?All that doesn’t matter. What matters is that one good hamstring and a crooked back batted half a day out with only one good thumb and three Nos. 11 behind them; that two under-fire cricketers trusted their game to make these two dream they could save the Test; and that before those two, a man opening for the first time away from home, Rohit, showed them the pitch had no demons. In the end, the conditions might have won, but India put themselves in positions to benefit from any help from anywhere. That’s what Test cricket, and life, is mostly about.

How many bowlers have taken wickets with the first ball of both innings of a Test?

And is Joe Root’s 5 for 8 the best bowling performance by an England captain?

Steven Lynch02-Mar-2021Was last week’s two-day Test at Ahmedabad the shortest of all? asked Baskar Raghavan from India

The third Test in Ahmedabad lasted just 140.2 overs – or 842 balls – in all. That puts it seventh on the list of the briefest completed Test matches: it’s the shortest since 1934-35, when England beat West Indies on a rain-affected pitch in Bridgetown, in a match that lasted only 112 overs (672 balls).Three years earlier, on a similarly spiteful track in Melbourne, Australia beat South Africa in the shortest completed Test of all. It lasted just 109.2 overs (656 balls): South Africa were bowled out for 36 (left-arm spinner Bert Ironmonger, who was two months short of his 50th birthday, took 5 for 6) and 45 (Ironmonger 6 for 18).For the list of the shortest Tests of all, click here. (Note that this table includes drawn games; to see the shortest matches with a positive result, look down the fifth column to see the winners.)Overall, as this list shows, the Ahmedabad Test was the 22nd to be finished inside two days. A lot of those were early matches played on uncovered pitches – there have been only eight two-day finishes in more than 2000 Tests since 1946. The last time England lost inside two days was almost 100 years ago, in May 1921, when Australia won by ten wickets at Trent Bridge.Axar Patel took a wicket with the first ball he bowled in both innings of the third Test. Has anyone ever done this before? asked Mithun Pandey from India

Rather surprisingly perhaps, that feat by India’s Axar Patel, who took a wicket with his first delivery in both innings of the recent two-day Test in Ahmedabad, appears to have happened only once before (full details are not available for all Tests, but there don’t seem to be many other candidates). The other man known to have done it was also an Indian left-arm bowler: Zaheer Khan dismissed the Bangladesh opener Javed Omar for a king pair in Mirpur in May 2007, striking with the first ball of both the first innings and the follow-on.Gubby Allen’s 7 for 80 against India at The Oval in 1936 remain the best figures by an England captain•Getty ImagesAxar Patel has 18 wickets after two Tests. What’s the record? And with another Test at Ahmedabad coming up, what’s the best for three? asked Jeremy King from England

Axar Patel is one of five bowlers who took 18 wickets in their first two Tests: the others were John Ferris and Clarrie Grimmett of Australia, Alf Valentine of West Indies, and Ajantha Mendis of Sri Lanka. Five others took more: Sydney Barnes of England and Bangladesh’s Mehidy Hasan had 19, Bob Massie of Australia 21 and England’s Alec Bedser 22, while the Indian legspinner Narendra Hirwani led the way with 24 wickets after two Tests.The number for Patel to shoot at in the final Test is 31, by Hirwani again – so he needs the little matter of 14 wickets to beat that. Charles “Terror” Turner of Australia had 29 wickets after three Tests, and a more recent Aussie, Rodney Hogg, had 27. Then come Mendis and Australian legspinner Herbert “Ranji” Hordern with 26, and Bedser, Ferris, the South African seamer Vernon Philander, and England’s Fred Trueman with 24.Where does Joe Root’s 5 for 8 rank on the list of best bowling figures by an England captain? asked John Lynch from Vanuatu

There have been only three statistically better bowling analyses by England captains in Tests than Joe Root’s 5 for 8 in Ahmedabad last week. Bob Willis claimed 6 for 101 against India at Lord’s in 1982, while Sussex’s Arthur Gilligan had phenomenal figures of 6 for 7 as South Africa were bowled out for 30 at Edgbaston in 1924. But the best bowling figures of all by an England captain remain Gubby Allen’s 7 for 80 against India at The Oval in 1936.It’s an indication of the scarcity of bowling captains, especially for England, that there have been only 15 five-fors by their skippers in Tests.Ishant Sharma hit the first six of his career in his 100th Test. Has anyone taken longer to hit their first six? asked Sanjit Srivastava from Canada

There is only one player who waited longer for his first Test six than Ishant Sharma, who celebrated his 100th cap in Ahmedabad by finally clearing the ropes: Glenn McGrath of Australia collected his first (and only) six in his 102nd Test. The most matches in a complete career without a single six is 86, by England’s Derek Underwood, and the most Test runs without one is 3835, by another England player, Jonathan Trott. For that list, click here.Use our feedback form, or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

West Indies' memorable Test wins this century

From a massive upset against Steve Waugh’s Australia in Antigua to the one-wicket win against Pakistan in Jamaica

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Aug-2021Won by 155 runs vs India, Kingston, 2002

After the first four Tests of a draining, seesawing series, the decider seemed to hinge as much on who had more left in the tank as on cricketing skill. Only 18 wickets fell across 444 overs during the fourth Test in Antigua, and India, who had bowled second and bowled 248 overs – with Anil Kumble injured and off the field for the bulk of them – were running on fumes by the time they got to Sabina Park. They chose to bowl first on a greentop, but couldn’t make use of the conditions, and Wavell Hinds and Chris Gayle punished them with a century stand that laid the platform for a total of 422. Mervyn Dillon, Cameron Cuffy, Pedro Collins and Adam Sanford formed one of the least nightmare-inducing pace quartets in West Indies’ history, but they bowled with verve and discipline to secure a match-winning 210-run lead. It was a matter of time, but the weather threatened to dampen their party. The start of the final morning was delayed, but rain kept away for just long enough for West Indies to secure the series win; half an hour after they’d taken the final wicket, a torrential deluge, which would last 11 straight days, enveloped all of Jamaica.Won by three wickets vs Australia, St John’s, 2003
Steve Waugh’s mighty Australia had won 12 of their previous 14 Tests before touring the West Indies in April 2003. West Indies, meanwhile, were a side in decline. The series was going to script, with Australia winning the first three Tests and threatening a clean sweep in Antigua. The teams were level on first-innings score, but once Australia got 417 in the second innings and reduced West Indies to 74 for 3, the result seemed a foregone conclusion. Ramnaresh Sarwan kept his cool through an infamous verbal exchange with Glenn McGrath to get a hundred, and Shivnarine Chanderpaul played some sizzling shots in his own century to make West Indies favourites. There was more drama on the fifth day, though, when Chanderpaul was dismissed early, leaving 46 still left to get and just three wickets in hand. Seam bowlers Omari Banks and Vasbert Drakes showed remarkable concentration to complete the win, which remains West Indies’ only Test win against Australia this century.Won by seven wickets vs Sri Lanka, Kingston, 2003

This was a fast bowlers’ Test over the first three innings, which produced totals of 208, 191 and 194, five-wicket hauls for the slingy Fidel Edwards, on debut, and the fast and erratic Prabath Nissanka, and a seven-wicket haul for the accurate Corey Collymore. Then, with West Indies set a seemingly tricky target of 212, with Chaminda Vaas and Muttiah Muralitharan to contend with, the script changed abruptly. Ramnaresh Sarwan coasted to 82 off 110 balls, and Brian Lara cracked an unbeaten 80 off 90, as West Indies romped to victory at nearly five runs an over. The unfortunate Nissanka bore the brunt of the punishment, conceding 64 in eight overs, as Sri Lanka’s hopes of a maiden Test and series win in the Caribbean went up in smoke.On an extraordinary run in 2012, Marlon Samuels scored 123 and 52 against New Zealand in Kingston•DigicelCricket.com/Brooks LaTouche PhotographyWon by 128 runs vs South Africa, Port Elizabeth, 2007

West Indies hadn’t won a single Test out of their last 20. They’d never won a Test in South Africa and had lost eight of their nine previous Tests in the country. No one expected a thing from them. They had a new captain, though, in Chris Gayle, and he made the earliest and loudest statement he could possibly have made, tonking 66 off 49 balls after South Africa chose to bowl first. That was followed by more substantial contributions from Marlon Samuels (94) and Shivnarine Chanderpaul (104), and West Indies posted a more than competitive 408. Then they were in dreamland, three wickets each from Jerome Taylor and Daren Powell and a tail-mopping four-for from Dwayne Bravo securing a 213-run lead. South Africa bowled a whole lot better in the second innings than they had on an erratic first day, but that still left them chasing 389, and that was just too steep a task, despite the best efforts of Jacques Kallis and AB de Villiers.Won by five wickets vs New Zealand, Kingston, 2012

After winning the first Test comfortably, West Indies were under the pump in the second. New Zealand only made 260 after being sent in, but they had four fast bowlers and had reduced the hosts to 17 for 2 when Marlon Samuels walked in. Wickets kept falling at the other end – it was 113 for 6 at one stage – but Samuels kept playing his shots, scoring 45 of the 47 runs that the last three wickets contributed to West Indies’ total, and finished with 123 off 169 balls.New Zealand still led by 51, but West Indies kept clawing back courtesy the offspinners Sunil Narine and Narsingh Deonarine, who shared seven wickets to bowl the visitors out for 154 in their second innings. It was still anyone’s game with a target of 206, but Samuels – who was having an extraordinary year in which he averaged 86.60 in Tests apart from winning the World T20 final almost singlehandedly – was not done yet. His 52, and forties from Chanderpaul and the nightwatchman, Kemar Roach, steered West Indies to a five-wicket win.Won by five wickets vs Pakistan, Sharjah, 2016

In the entire history of Test cricket, only one opening batter has batted twice in a Test match and finished not-out both times. In a Test match in which 35 wickets fell for 28 runs apiece, Kraigg Brathwaite batted twice and faced 429 balls without being dismissed. First, he carried his bat and scored 142 to guide West Indies to a 56-run lead. Then he made 60 to ensure they got to their target of 153 with five wickets in hand. All this to lead West Indies to their first away win, outside of Bangladesh, in almost nine years.Shai Hope made a century in each innings of West Indies’ only win in England since 2000•Getty ImagesWon by five wickets vs England, Headingley, 2017
West Indies had not won a Test in England since 2000 when they toured there in 2017, and there was nothing in the first Test, at Edgbaston, to suggest that record would change – England had won by an innings and 209 runs after bowling West Indies out twice for less than 200. The visitors showed some resilience at Headingley, with young batters Kraigg Brathwaite and Shai Hope scoring centuries to build a first-innings total of 427 in response to England’s 258. England seemed to take over in the second innings, and when they declared 321 runs ahead towards the end of the fourth day, it seemed only two results were possible: an England win or a draw. But Brathwaite and Hope showed their first-innings knocks were no flukes, putting on 144 for the third wicket at a decent run rate. Hope went on to get his second hundred of the game, and Jermaine Blackwood got 41 off 45 balls, as the asking rate was rising, to complete the win.Won by ten wickets vs England, North Sound, 2019
A three-day win in which England were bowled out in 42.1 overs in the second innings drew ire from the British press, who considered their side favourites going into the series. But for West Indies, it was proof that they were developing a pace attack that may not have been as feared as those in the past but could still be quite effective. Roach grabbed the headlines with four wickets in each innings, while Jason Holder bowled a nagging line and length. West Indies had beaten England by 381 runs in the first Test of the series. The win in Antigua gave them one of their most significant series wins in recent times, with a Test to spare.Won by three wickets vs Bangladesh, Chattogram, 2021
Another big fourth-innings chase, another inexperienced batter making a name for himself. Kyle Mayers was on debut in the first Test of West Indies’ 2021 tour of Bangladesh and came in at 59 for 3 in the second innings with West Indies needing 395 to win. Batting aggressively right from the start, Mayers scored 210 not out to complete the fifth-biggest chase in Test history. What made the result even more remarkable for West Indies was that they were missing a number of their first-choice players who had chosen not to travel during the Covid-19 pandemic. Mayers and Nkrumah Bonner, another debutant, may not even have been in the XI if everyone was available, but they put on 216 for the fourth wicket in the chase. Once Bonner was out for 86, Mayers went on an all-out attack, hitting seven sixes in all. It seemed such an unlikely result after Bangladesh, who had swept West Indies 2-0 on their last tour, took a 171-run first-innings lead and then declared their second innings eight down with just over four sessions left. West Indies rode on the momentum and completed a 2-0 series win with another memorable victory in Dhaka.Won by one wicket vs Pakistan, Kingston, 2021
It seemed like there was nothing to separate West Indies and Pakistan as they battled for four tense days at Sabina Park. After bowling Pakistan out for 217, West Indies had taken a slender first-innings lead thanks to a 96-run partnership for the sixth wicket between Brathwaite and Jason Holder. Jayden Seales, an exciting 19-year-old quick, picked up five wickets in the second innings to help bowl the visitors out for 203 and leave West Indies 168 to win. That target began to look miles away as wickets fell regularly on day four. A half-century from Blackwood helped the hosts recover from 16 for 3, but then four wickets fell for 30 runs to heap the pressure back on them. Roach got 30 not out from No. 9 and needed Seales to help with the bat as well. The young quick stuck around for 13 balls to allow Roach to score the winning runs.

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