Australia survive a staggering 155 from Stokes to take 2-0 Ashes lead

The visitors had been in control of the Lord’s Test for long periods but then everything changed on the final day

Andrew McGlashan02-Jul-2023Australia survived an anger-fuelled and astonishing century from Ben Stokes, ignited by the controversial stumping of Jonny Bairstow, to take a 43-run victory at Lord’s and hold a 2-0 lead in the Ashes.What was a hard-fought but reasonably sedate final day, erupted into controversy and raw emotion when Bairstow wandered out of his crease before over had been called having avoided a bouncer from Cameron Green in the 52nd over with Alex Carey then throwing down the stumps. Australia appealed and the third umpire upheld the decision with Bairstow well out of his ground.

In scenes unlike any witnessed at this ground, even in its long history of epic matches, the game was then played out in a febrile atmosphere where Australia were jeered endlessly by a full final-day crowd and MCC members had to reminded about their behaviour after incidents when the players left the field for lunch.When Bairstow was dismissed, England needed 178. Stokes then unleashed an assault on Australia’s attack, adding 108 in 21 overs with Stuart Broad, with an innings that included nine sixes. He was given a life on 114 when Steven Smith spilled a chance at deep square leg. This was Headingly 2019 on steroids, if that’s possible. Australia were rattled; England got to a point where they looked favourites.But straight after the afternoon drinks break Stokes top-edged Josh Hazlewood into the off side with 70 runs still needed. It was too much for the lower order who succumbed to the short ball, both Ollie Robinson and Broad hooking into the deep. Josh Tongue and James Anderson hung on for a while, briefly teasing the outlandish possibility of a final twist, before Mitchell Starc got one at leg stump as Tongue gave himself room.Australia celebrate a win at Lord’s•Getty Images

England had started the fifth day needing a distant 257 but Stokes and Ben Duckett made solid progress as they built a fifth-wicket stand of 132. When play began, all the talk was still of Duckett’s reprieve the night before to Starc’s catch at fine leg – if only everyone knew what was to come.Stokes went to his first half-century since the Old Trafford Test against South Africa last year and Duckett, for the second time in the match, was approaching three-figures when he top-edged a chance to Carey who caught it brilliantly, one handed above his head, to continue a fine series behind the stumps. However, his main part in the drama was soon to arrive.Five overs later, mayhem ensued. As he so often does, Bairstow let a ball through to the keeper, tapped his back foot quickly into the crease and immediately walked out of his ground. The ball had barely reached Carey, who gathered and under-armed at the stumps in one motion. Australia immediately celebrated as Stokes and Bairstow converged on the umpires. The third umpire Marais Erasmus deemed the ball not to have been dead and Pat Cummins saw no reason to withdraw the appeal.When Broad joined Stokes in the middle, England’s anger was clear. Broad was in the face of Australia’s fielders from the moment he took guard, while Stokes was obviously fuming but channelled his emotions into one of the most awe-inspiring displays of ball-striking Lord’s has seen.Jonny Bairstow and Ben Stokes argue with Australians•AFP/Getty Images

He tore into Green with three boundaries in an over through the leg side, then in Green’s next over went further with a trio of consecutive sixes, the second of them palmed over the rope by Starc at long leg. He reached his century from 142 balls with the third of them and there was barely a celebration, just a brief raise of the bat in acknowledgement.The fifty partnership came up in 4.4 overs moments before the players took lunch. Words were exchanged between Broad and David Warner as they walked off the pitch, while footage soon emerged of MCC members in the Long Room confronting Australia’s players. It was later claimed by Cricket Australia that physical contact was made and MCC apologised.Would the 40-minute break take the sting out the situation? The second ball of the afternoon session was launched over long-on by Stokes and two deliveries later he was spilled by a sprawling Smith who could not gather the top edge. By and large, Stokes tried to farm the strike although occasionally was happy to give Broad a few balls to face, and he joined in the heady atmosphere by pulling Hazlewood through the leg side to end an over where Stokes had already taken two further sixes.Hazlewood was withdrawn from the attack after a three-over spell which cost 30 as memories of Headingley came flooding back at every turn. Cummins had no frontline spin to turn to after Nathan Lyon’s calf injury on the second day and opted not to throw to ball to Travis Head.Stokes took another brace of sixes over the leg side, this time from Starc, before a summit meeting between Australia’s senior players saw Green return to the attack and he bowled two good overs which cost just three.By now, Australia had nine fielders on the fence to Stokes and the boundaries dried up. Nine runs came in six overs. Hazlewood returned, Stokes swiped across the line and Carey settled under the catch. Australian fielders ran from all corners of the ground. Cummins and Smith gave Stokes an appreciative tap on the back. They had stopped him in the nick of time. The Ashes were within their grasp but the events of the final day at Lord’s are likely to reverberate across both nations for a long time to come.

'It is not a wise decision' – BCB boss expects Tamim to withdraw decision to retire

Nazmul Hassan says he has tried to speak to Tamim but without success: “I am hopeful that he will contact me”

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Jul-20232:18

‘A lot of things went into Tamim Iqbal’s sudden retirement’ – Mohammad Isam

Despite Tamim Iqbal saying “this is the end for me” in international cricket, Nazmul Hassan, the BCB president, is hoping that he changes his mind because Bangladesh are planning for their captain to play the ODI World Cup and go even further beyond.Hassan was addressing a midnight press conference in Dhaka following an emergency BCB meeting where he said has reached out to Tamim but hasn’t received a response yet. “I told his brother Nafees that he should at least captain the side in this series [against Afghanistan],” he said. “We will discuss things after the series. Then I said that a legendary cricketer shouldn’t take such a decision. He is an important member of the side. Nafees said that he conveyed the message, but there was no reply. I have to wait for his response, I am hopeful that he will contact me.”We need him in the ODI side. I will wait for him to change the decision. I will still say that we need him in the Asia Cup and World Cup teams. We will wait for him. I didn’t expect such a decision from him. He told me that he wanted to play till the 2025 Champions Trophy. We made him the captain. We cannot think about it differently. We didn’t have a reason to think differently.”Related

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But, when speaking to the earlier on Thursday evening, Hassan said what he had earlier to , that he didn’t agree with Tamim’s statement on July 4 ahead of the ongoing ODI series against Afghanistan that he would test his fitness in the first ODI.”I will say it every time something like this happens – he passed the fitness test, so why did he tell the media that he is not totally fit? If he wasn’t fit, then how did he pass the fitness test? If he had a problem, he would tell me or the physio,” Hassan said. “What was the purpose to suddenly say it in the media? This is not how international cricket is played. We will not tolerate this.”I don’t accept his retirement announcement. He is the captain, we have the Asia Cup and World Cup ahead of us. It is not a wise decision. It seems he has been thinking about it for a long time. It is not taken spontaneously. It is not a proper decision.”When asked at the press conference about the BCB failing to show respect to senior cricketers at the time of their retirements – Mahmudullah retired in the middle of a Test match and Mashrafe Mortaza never actually announced his retirement – Hassan said, “What respect should I show them? What do I have to do for them? If Bangladeshi cricketers are not respected, then who is respected?”It is a shocking thing for me. I don’t know why he [Tamim] did this. I speak to cricketers regularly but if they behave like this, I have to stop this culture.”Mashrafe, however, backed Tamim’s decision, but wondered why Tamim had to take the decision so early.”Personally, I have 100% respect for your [Tamim’s] decision,” Mashrafe wrote in a Facebook post. “Tamim, your decision is definitely yours alone. It doesn’t matter whether someone likes it or not. There will be arguments from both sides. But no one will understand better than you what is best for you.”But I want to know something: why bid farewell after just 34 years and 108 days? Was it not possible for you to carry on? Did some kind of pressure force you to take this decision? Many of your fans may seek answers to these questions today and for many days in the future.”Mashrafe reminisced about meeting Tamim for the first time, and then developing a friendship with him after they became colleagues in the national team.3:50

Tamim: ‘It was not a sudden decision’

“I first saw you at your house in Chattogram, wearing shorts. Your brother, my friend Nafees Iqbal, introduced you to me. I saw you the next time in the National Cricket League in Khulna. Then, from the 2007 [ODI] World Cup, we became friends while traveling together,” Mashrafe wrote. “How many days and nights were spent together, eating out together, chatting for hours; all that mischief, fun, discussions and arguments about games, there is no way to keep track of those.”Mashrafe also alluded to Tamim’s ability to analyse matches well, and wondered who would take up that mantle in the Bangladesh team.”When I was the captain of the Bangladesh cricket team, you were one of my ‘snipers’. You yourself know that very well. The day I left the team, you took me on your shoulders… Many memories are now coming to my mind,” Mashrafe wrote. “Knowing you, I could have easily done a post-mortem about your decision. But I won’t do that, because we must respect your decision.”One more thing: I don’t know who will do analysis-based discussions on various statistics within the team camp. Maybe someone will. But you will always be the best of the best in that.”

Usman Khawaja, Ricky Ponting query controversial ball-change

Ponting calls for ICC ‘investigation’ as opener says replacement ‘hit the bat so hard’

Matt Roller31-Jul-2023Usman Khawaja, Australia’s opening batter, has echoed Ricky Ponting’s displeasure at the crucial ball-change midway through the fourth innings of the fifth Ashes Test at the Kia Oval, stating that he “hadn’t felt the ball hit my bat as hard” at any other stage of the series, despite facing more than 1200 deliveries across the five Tests.Khawaja finished the series as Australia’s leading batter with 496 runs at 49.60, and while he and David Warner were adding 140 for the first wicket, their pursuit of a stiff 384-run target appeared to be firmly on track.However, umpires Joel Wilson and Kumar Dharmasena changed the ball after the first delivery of the 37th over of the innings, deeming that it had gone out of shape after Mark Wood hit Khawaja on the helmet with a bouncer. Only 11 more balls were bowled on the second afternoon after the change of ball.The replacement appeared to be significantly harder and newer than the ball that had been used previously. England took three early wickets on the fifth morning, with Chris Woakes dismissing Khawaja and Warner in consecutive overs, before Wood had Marnus Labuschagne caught in the slips. Australia then lost a further five wickets in quick succession to Moeen Ali and Woakes, before Stuart Broad – still armed with the replacement ball – sealed victory in the 95th over of the innings.”We started off really well,” Khawaja said at the post-match presentations. “The big thing was that ball. As soon as they changed that ball, the first over they changed that ball I knew straightaway this ball is very different. I went straight up to Kumar and said ‘how old is this ball you’ve given them because it feels like it’s about eight overs old.’ You could see the writing on both sides and it hit my bat so hard.Usman Khawaja was pinned lbw by Chris Woakes as England fought back with the replacement ball•Getty Images

“Obviously I got hit in the head by Woody, and they changed the ball because they said it got damaged. But that new ball that came in, when I hit my bat … I’ve opened in every single innings this Ashes series and I haven’t felt the ball hit my bat as hard as that ball felt when it hit my bat.”So I said to the boys even coming into today to be careful, this new ball, it’s going to be tricky. It’s going to be a lot harder than that other ball. Some things you can’t control in this game. It was disappointing for us because I felt like we had a real stranglehold on that game.”Speaking during the lunch break, Ponting, the former Australia captain, suggested the umpires had either been “blasé” in their approach to changing the ball, or had not been given an appropriate replacement in the box of balls brought onto the pitch by the fourth umpire, David Millns.”The biggest concern I have is the big discrepancy in the condition of the ball that was chosen to replace the one [that had gone out of shape],” Ponting said on Sky Sports. “There’s no way in the world you can even look at those two balls there and say in any way are they comparable.”At the end of the day, if you are going to change the ball, you want to make sure that you get it right, so [you make it] as close as you possibly can to the one that you’re changing it from. Now if you have a look in that box, there weren’t too many older-condition balls in there. There were some older ones that were picked up, the umpires looked at that and threw them back.”I just cannot fathom how two international umpires that have done that a lot of times before can get that so wrong. That is a huge moment in this game, potentially a huge moment in the Test match, and something I think actually has to be investigated: whether there was the right condition of balls in the box, or the umpires have just, blasé, picked one out of there that they think will be okay to use.”Related

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  • The stars align for Stuart Broad's farewell … before the sky starts to fall in

Sky showed ball-tracking data that suggested the ball had both seamed and swung significantly more on the fifth morning than on the fourth afternoon, prompting Ponting to call for an investigation.”The conditions were perfect for bowling this morning, let’s say that,” Ponting said. “The conditions were better for bowling this morning. But what I saw last night, that ball there, I’ll put my hand up and say I’ve got absolutely no doubt at all that that ball would not have done anywhere near as much as what that one did this morning.”Double the amount of movement this morning from yesterday afternoon, seam movement and swing. I think it’s a huge blunder that needs to be investigated.”According to Law 4.5, if the umpires agree that the ball has become “unfit for play through normal use”, they should replace it “with a ball which has had wear comparable with that which the previous ball had received before the need for its replacement”.Marcus Trescothick, England’s assistant coach, said on the second evening that the new ball seemed “just a bit harder” than the old one.”The boys could sense the ball was making a different sound off the bat,” he said. “Immediately, there’s a bit more life in it. Balls seem to have gone very soft, very fast in this game – and this series. Both captains have tried to change them on numerous occasions.”Glenn Maxwell, who is part of Australia’s limited-overs set-up, tweeted shortly after the first wicket to fall: “Beware the 2nd newy #ashes”.An ICC spokesperson told ESPNcricinfo: “We do not comment on on-field decisions. As you would expect, umpiring performance is continually evaluated.”

Jennings century clinches quarter-finals berth for Lancashire

His 103* helps wrap up seven-wicket win over Notts with 55 balls to spare

ECB Reporters Network22-Aug-2023A second century in the competition from skipper Keaton Jennings clinched Lancashire’s place in the quarter-finals of the Metro Bank One-Day Cup after they finished their Group A programme with a third straight victory.Jennings finished on 103 not out as the Red Rose county wrapped up a seven-wicket win with 55 balls to spare. The result puts them on 10 points and although Kent could equal that with a win over Hampshire, they would still go through to Friday’s eliminator on superior run rate.Veteran Steven Croft made 38 on his first appearance of the season, sharing a 102-run stand for the second wicket before George Balderson’s unbeaten 31 helped Jennings finish the job.

Knockout fixtures

Quarter-finals: Gloucestershire vs Lancashire (August 25), Hampshire vs Worcestershire (August 27)
Semi-finals: Warwickshire vs Hampshire/Worcestershire (August 29), Leicestershire vs Gloucestershire/Lancashire (August 29)
The final (September 16)

The home side had stumbled to 42 for 5 before Liam Patterson-White (39) and Sammy King (37) led the way in a lower-order fightback to 185 all out.Tom Bailey, Balderson and left-arm spinner Jack Morley took two wickets each. Will Williams, the New Zealand-born seamer, finished with 3 for 32 after taking two wickets in the opening powerplay to reduce the Outlaws to 18 for 3 after opting to bat first.Just one boundary scored and three wickets lost added up to a miserable opening powerplay for the home side as Lancashire’s new-ball bowlers made the most of early conditions on an outground that has been home from home for the Outlaws in the competition, although not a happy one, all three of their matches here having ended in defeat.Ben Slater, after several play-and-misses, finally nicked one off Tom Bailey to be caught behind before Williams, Lancashire’s leading One-Day Cup wicket-taker this season, beat left-hander Ben Martindale with an inswinger that hit him in front and bowled right-hander Lyndon James, who offered no shot to another that came back. Hameed’s clip through midwicket for four in the same over was the only moment of relief.Desperate to find calmer waters, the Outlaws suffered more blows when Matt Montgomery, fresh from the unbeaten 92 that kept his side alive in the competition in a thriller in Canterbury last week, was leg before playing across one from Bailey, and Hameed, having hinted at a fightback by greeting Balderson with two fours, perished after seemingly thinking about a third but changing his mind and then failing to get his bat fully out of the way.A couple of partnerships gave the innings at least a degree of respectability. Patterson-White and 20-year-old Sammy King, who has a couple of Second XI hundreds to his name recently, added 50 for the sixth wicket before King, having slog-swept left-arm spinner Jack Morley for one six, holed out attempting another after playing nicely for his 37.Patterson-White then added 56 with Dane Schadendorf (32) before both were out in the space of four balls in similar fashion, making room to cut. Some late hitting from bowlers Tom Loten and Brett Hutton gave themselves a little more to defend.Lancashire looked to have the better of the conditions when they batted. They knew too that they could be more measured in their approach while the balls were new and though they were only six ahead of the home side on runs at the end of the first powerplay, their only casualty was George Bell, who miscued Brett Hutton to cover.The approach seemed to be paying off handsomely at the halfway stage, with Lancashire 98 for 1 compared with the Outlaws’ 85 for 5. Jennings had completed a 72-ball half century in which his only show of outright aggression was a six driven back over the bowler’s head when James took over from Dane Paterson – thankfully none the worse for a nasty-looking fall in the third over of his opening five-over spell – and Lancashire were ahead of the required rate.Patterson-White induced a moment or two of jitters with two wickets in two balls, breaking the second-wicket partnership after it had added 102 in a little under 23 overs by inducing a thin edge that spelt the end of Croft, caught behind and having Dane Vilas caught at slip, the former Lancashire captain attempting to cut his first ball.But Jennings and Balderson ensured there were no further scares, Jennings upping the tempo with three fours in the same Paterson over to move into the 80s, going into the 90s with his 12th boundary before completing his second hundred in his last four innings from 123 balls with 13 fours and that one early six, before Balderson’s boundary off Patterson-White secured the win.

Joe Clarke and Lyndon James hold up Kent's survival push

Pair rebuild with 99-run stand to bring Nottinghamshire within four of parity in follow-on innings

ECB Reporters Network12-Sep-2023A defiant rearguard action from Joe Clarke and Lyndon James gave Nottinghamshire hope of avoiding defeat in their LV= Insurance County Championship with Kent at Canterbury after they were forced to follow on.Nottinghamshire ended day three on 177 for 5 in their second innings, a deficit of just four, after Clarke and James batted through the entire evening session to finish unbeaten on 61 and 38, respectively, at stumps.Aron Nijjar had earlier claimed career-best figures of four for 67 as the visitors were bowled out for 265 in their first innings. Michael Hogan and Joey Evison then claimed two wickets apiece after Kent asked Notts to bat again, but after reducing the visitors to 78 for five, they were frustrated during a wicketless evening session.The visitors began day three on 219 for 8, a deficit of 227, but with the weather forecast looking ominous and with electrical storms predicted to arrive by mid-afternoon, Brett Hutton and Dane Paterson actually hung around for 40 potentially crucial minutes against Nijjar and Chahal, adding just 10 to the overnight score.Yet having taken 14 overs out of the game, Paterson started to hit out and he skied Nijjar to Jack Leaning, who took his fifth catch of the innings.
That last wicket duo managed to bat out a further 10 overs. Asitha Fernando didn’t come with a huge reputation as a batter but he made an entertaining 14 not out that included a six off Nijjar where he dropped to one knee and plastered him over cow corner.With the follow on target dwindling, Nathan Gilchrist was handed the new ball midway through the 97th over and had Hutton caught behind for 31 with the second ball of the 99th.By now, the skies were looking leaden and Kent immediately told the umpires the wanted Notts to bat again. After six overs of resistance, Hogan produced an inswinger that splayed Haseed Hameed’s middle and leg stumps, bowling him for seven, but although Notts were 20 for one at lunch, after it Steven Mullaney and Ben Slater looked largely unthreatened until rain forced the teams from the field at 1:58pm.Despite a 38-minute delay, Kent were so far ahead of the over rate only an over was lost and Joey Evison duly transformed the mood in the ground with two wickets in three balls.He broke the partnership when he tempted Mullaney into a pull caught on the backward square leg boundary by the sub, Arafat Bhuiyan. Slater then inexplicably drove Evison straight to Hogan at mid-off.It was then Hogan’s turn to take two wickets in an over. He bowled Matt Montgomery for six and three balls later had Tom Moores caught at first slip thanks to a stunning one-handed grab by Zak Crawley.The visitors had slumped from 63 for 1 to 87 for 5 at tea, but Clarke and James looked far more at ease after the resumption, offering few chances and steadily eroding Kent’s lead. Clarke hit a Nijjar full toss for four to pass 50 in the final scheduled over, although to the confusion of almost everyone in the ground, play continued.The players, at least, seemed to know but no one bothered to tell the scorers, fans, press or PA announcer, until the umpires belatedly let it be known play was going to continue till 6pm, and a few desultory overs followed.

Sydney Sixers lean on history for proof WBBL hope isn't lost

The team are 0-3 early in the season and have lost Alyssa Healy, but there is time to fight back

AAP25-Oct-2023Coach Charlotte Edwards insists the Sydney Sixers’ WBBL season is far from over, despite crashing to three straight losses to start the summer.Already without Alyssa Healy through friendly fire to her finger from her pet dogs, Sixers sunk to another loss on Tuesday night with a three-wicket defeat to Brisbane Heat.Title favourites before the season started a week ago, Sixers are now second last and face a hard road to climb back towards the WBBL’s top four. But they are adamant all hope is not lost.Related

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Edwards is quick to point to the fact Adelaide Strikers lost their first two games of last season before coming back to beat Sixers in the final and win the title.Sixers themselves also lost the first six games of the opening season in 2015-16 before reaching the final.”We all know that this T20 format is quite a fickle format,” Edwards said. “We’re not we’re not playing badly, we’re not being rolled. We’re just not winning those those close moments.”We’ve not taken our catches, we’ve not taken our opportunities at times. With the bat we’ve not really extended partnerships,. We’ve just got to keep keep turning up, it’s a long tournament as we all know. The Strikers lost their first few games last year.”Sixers face Melbourne Renegades at Junction Oval on Sunday, as part of nearly a fortnight on the road after three straight losses in their home city.They expect to have a clearer prognosis on Healy’s injury by then, and whether she will return at some point during the WBBL. If she is ruled out for the season the Sixers have limited options on domestic replacement players with former NSW wicketkeeper Hannah Trethewy drafted in.There were some positive signs on Tuesday night, with 17-year-old Kate Pelle moving well and taking two catches behind the stumps.”Seeing someone like her now flourish in this environment is a real positive for us as a club,” Edwards said. “Midge [Healy] was loving watching her taking those catches. There’s a lot to come from her with the bat as well.”Ellyse Perry also looked in good touch with 49 while moving back to the top of the order. Sixers also expect to have her back bowling by early next month, as she fights back from a knee injury.

Williamson and Jamieson to miss Bangladesh T20Is on 'medical advice'

Rachin Ravindra and Jacob Duffy have been called up as replacements, and Mitchell Santner will stand in as captain

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Dec-2023Kane Williamson, the designated captain, and Kyle Jamieson have been withdrawn from New Zealand’s T20I squad to take on Bangladesh at home later this month. Mitchell Santner, who has led both the New Zealand white-ball sides in the past, will be captain in Williamson’s absence.Rachin Ravindra and Jacob Duffy have been called up as replacements, with NZC saying the decision on Williamson and Jamieson was made following “medical advice and consideration of the team’s upcoming schedule, with a focus on this summer’s Test series against South Africa and Australia”.Williamson, who missed seven months of competitive cricket earlier this year after sustaining a right knee injury during the IPL, “will undergo a period of knee rehabilitation and strengthening following his recent return to play in India and Bangladesh,” NZC said.As for Jamieson, “his hamstring injury was best served by a period of targeted rehabilitation leading into February’s Test Series against South Africa”. He will sit out the series of three T20Is against Bangladesh as well as the January T20I series against Pakistan. He was earlier withdrawn from the ODI squad for the ongoing series against Bangladesh, which New Zealand are leading 2-0.”We want both Kane and Kyle to be in the best possible place leading into the next block of Test cricket against South Africa and Australia,” Gary Stead, the New Zealand coach, said in a statement. “Based on discussions with the medical staff and the players, it was decided a period of rehabilitation and conditioning was the best option for both of them.”Jacob is an experienced T20 cricketer, and always brings a lot when he is part of the BlackCaps environment. He’s worked very hard on his white-ball skills in recent seasons. Rachin adds to any environment he’s a part of, and has a great desire to learn and develop his game – across all three formats.”The series of three T20Is – Napier (December 27), and Mount Maunganui (December 29 and 31) – would have marked a return to the format for Williamson, who last played a T20I on November 20 last year, against India in Mount Maunganui.

New Zealand squad for T20Is against Bangladesh

: Mitchell Santner (capt), Finn Allen, Mark Chapman, Jacob Duffy, Adam Milne, Daryl Mitchell, James Neesham, Glenn Phillips, Rachin Ravindra, Ben Sears, Tim Seifert, Ish Sodhi, Tim Southee

Rahul Dravid to continue as India's head coach

While the exact duration of his second term is not yet known, it will be at least until the 2024 T20 World Cup in June

ESPNcricinfo staff29-Nov-20235:10

Bal: ‘The natural cycle for this job should be WTC final in 2025’

Rahul Dravid will continue as India’s head coach after accepting the BCCI’s offer to extend his term. While the BCCI did not specify the duration of the extension, it will be at least until the 2024 T20 World Cup in June.Dravid became the head coach in November 2021 for a two-year term that ended at the conclusion of the 2023 ODI World Cup earlier this month. While India has risen to the top of the Test, ODI and T20I rankings under Dravid as coach, they were unable to win any ICC trophies – finishing as semi-finalists in the 2022 T20 World Cup, and runners-up in the 2023 World Test Championship and the 2023 ODI World Cup. India’s run in the ODI World Cup was particularly impressive: they won all nine league games and the semi-final, before losing the final to Australia.ESPNcricinfo learned that the BCCI wanted Dravid to stay on to ensure continuity to the structure he had put in place over the past two years, which might otherwise get disrupted under a new coach.Related

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“The last two years with Team India have been thoroughly memorable,” Dravid said in a statement announcing his contract extension. “Together, we have witnessed the highs and lows, and throughout this journey, the support and camaraderie within the group have been phenomenal. I am genuinely proud of the culture we have set in the dressing room. It’s a culture that stands resilient, whether in moments of triumph or adversity. The skills and talent that our team possesses are phenomenal, and what we’ve stressed is following the right process and sticking to our preparations, which has had a direct impact on the overall result.”I thank the BCCI and the Office Bearers for placing their trust in me, endorsing my vision, and providing support during this period. The demands of this role necessitate considerable time away from home, and I deeply appreciate my family’s sacrifices and support. Their instrumental role behind the scenes has been invaluable. As we embrace new challenges post the World Cup, we remain committed to the pursuit of excellence.”Dravid’s first assignment in his second stint as head coach is India’s tour of South Africa, which starts with three T20Is and three ODIs from December 10 followed by two Tests, in Centurion (from December 26) and Cape Town (from January 3). India then play a five-Test series against England at home, before the T20 World Cup in June.Jay Shah, the BCCI secretary, said Dravid had the board’s “full backing”. “Team India is now a formidable unit across formats, and our top ranking in all three formats directly reflects his vision, guidance, and the roadmap he charted for the team,” Shah said. “Having won 10 consecutive games before the final, our World Cup campaign was nothing short of extraordinary, and the head coach deserves appreciation for setting up the right platform for the team to flourish. The head coach has our full backing, and we will provide him with all the support needed for sustained success at the international level.”The BCCI has also extended the terms for India’s support staff: Vikram Rathour (batting coach), Paras Mhambrey (bowling coach), and T Dilip (fielding coach).

Marsh declares Zampa Australia's 'most important player' ahead of the T20 World Cup

Skipper expects to move back to No.3 for New Zealand series after some experimentation against West Indies

Tristan Lavalette14-Feb-20240:45

Ferguson: Warner looks primed for T20 World Cup

Captain Mitchell Marsh has pinpointed Adam Zampa as arguably Australia’s “most important player” ahead of the T20 World Cup after a “formidable” West Indies pummelled the star legspinner in their 37-run consolation victory in Perth.An unusually sluggish Zampa had a rare off night in the third and final game of the series to finish with 1 for 65 in the worst bowling figures in Australia’s T20I history.In a tactical gamble from Marsh that backfired, Zampa was held back until the penultimate over of the innings and was thrashed for 28 runs punctuated by three consecutive sixes from Andre Russell as West Indies powered to a match-winning total of 220 for 6 after recovering from 17 for 3.Related

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“He bowled some really tough overs tonight,” Marsh said. “The 19th [over], it’s probably the hardest over. We were banking on breaking that partnership at some stage and I held Zamps back there, but unfortunately we came off second best.”Zamps is by far our most important bowler and probably our most important player in this team.”Despite ending the home international summer on a sour note, Marsh was encouraged by a new-look Australia’s series victory as they trialled several players with a host of frontliners missing.Quick Xavier Bartlett starred early with two wickets in his T20I debut to continue his stellar start to his international career following his consecutive four-wicket hauls in ODI cricket.”He certainly earned his spot,” Marsh said of Bartlett who finished with 2 for 37 from four overs. “I didn’t know him that well, but he seems like a ripping kid and a real competitor.”But Australia resisted selecting emerging batter Jake Fraser-McGurk, who had made his international debut in the ODI series, as they reshuffled the top-order with Marsh moving up a spot to open alongside David Warner.Marsh is expected to move back to No.3 with the return of Travis Head in the upcoming T20I series in New Zealand.”Just giving guys opportunities, different places throughout our lineup,” Marsh said about Australia’s rejigged batting order which saw Aaron Hardie bat at No.3 and Josh Inglis shift down from opener to No.4.Adam Zampa and Mitch Marsh celebrate a wicket•Getty Images

“The team will change a little bit in New Zealand with a few experienced heads coming in, but I think on a whole the series was great to unearth a few young guys.”[To] win a series against a really good team was really impressive. They’re a formidable team with some amazing talent.”They certainly bat deep and will be hard to beat on their home turf [at the T20 World Cup].”West Indies’ top order struggled to handle the extra bounce on the pace-friendly Optus Stadium surface. But allrounder Roston Chase ignited the fightback with 37 off 20 balls before Russell and Sherfane Rutherford combined for a T20I record sixth-wicket partnership of 139.”That’s the thing about our team…our batting goes right down to 11,” Chase said. “We believe in every batter we have and we are not short on confidence.”Everybody knows that West Indies is a boundary-hitting team, so we strive on that.”After failing to qualify for the last T20 World Cup, West Indies have been rejuvenated under the leadership of Rovman Powell with series victories over England, India and South Africa in the past 12 months.”West Indies is a big cricketing nation with a lot of history, so to miss the last World Cup was heartbreaking for the team and also for the region,” said Chase, who also took 2 for 19 with his offspin to halt Australia in the middle overs.”But I think that this team really has the belief. It’s been a different vibe. I think everyone enjoys each other’s success and the guys really gel together well.”

Iyer's return, Cummins vs Starc the subplots as KKR take on SRH

SRH are likely to be without Hasaranga in what is expected to be spin-friendly conditions at Eden Gardens

Hemant Brar22-Mar-20242:10

Steven Smith predicts Starc’s wicket tally, IPL 2024’s MVP, and much more

Match details

Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) vs Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH)
Kolkata, 1930 IST (1400 GMT)

Big picture – Cummins vs Starc

In December, Pat Cummins became the most expensive player at an IPL auction when SRH bought him for INR 20.5 crore (US$2.47 million approx.). But the record did not survive for even two hours as KKR broke the bank for Mitchell Starc, signing him for INR 24.75 crore (US$2.98 million approx.).On the first weekend of IPL 2024, those two will come face-to-face in Kolkata.Related

  • Do new-look SRH have the personnel to turn fortunes around?

  • Shreyas Iyer's fitness a concern for spin-heavy KKR

  • The constant and universal appeal of Mitchell Starc

Cummins had a dream 2023, where he led Australia to the World Test Championship and the ODI World Cup titles. But this is his first captaincy stint in T20 cricket, and leading an IPL team is vastly different from leading a national side. And while Cummins the bowler is already on the path to greatness in Test cricket, the same cannot be said about him in T20s.SRH have got a new coach as well: Daniel Vettori. That makes it the fourth consecutive season where they have a new captain and a new coach. Once among the most consistent IPL teams, SRH finished twice at the bottom and once at No. 8 – among ten teams – in the last three seasons. Can Cummins and Vettori revive their fortunes?One man who played a key role in Cummins’ success as Australia captain last year was Starc. For KKR, he will have to play an even bigger role as there is no other world-class seamer in the squad.The last time Starc featured in the IPL was in 2015. Playing for RCB, he had picked up 20 wickets in 13 games at an economy of 6.76. Since then, he has gone for 8.14 an over in 41 T20Is. During the 2022 T20 World Cup, Australia even left him out for a match. With the next T20 World Cup in June, he, too, has a point to prove.Shreyas Iyer is back for KKR•BCCI

Team news – Shreyas Iyer back for KKR

Shreyas Iyer is back as KKR captain after missing the 2023 season. There were some concerns over his fitness recently as he did not field on the last two days of the Ranji Trophy final because of back spasms. But earlier this week, he featured in KKR’s intra-squad practice match and is fit to play on Saturday. Dushmantha Chameera, though, is likely to be unavailable for the first few games after suffering a quadriceps injury during the first ODI against Afghanistan.Wanindu Hasaranga is unavailable at least for the first game. His status is a little unclear, since he is in Sri Lanka’s Test squad in Bangladesh but can’t really play those games as he is serving an ICC suspension. In a way, his absence makes Cummins’ task of picking four overseas players easier.

Impact Player strategy

Kolkata Knight Riders
If KKR bat first, they can start with Nitish Rana. In the second innings, Suyash Sharma can replace him as Impact Player. The opposite can be done if they bowl first.Probable XII: 1 Venkatesh Iyer, 2 Phil Salt (wk), 3 Shreyas Iyer (capt), 4 , 5 Rinku Singh, 6 Andre Russell, 7 Ramandeep Singh, 8 Sunil Narine, 9 Mitchell Starc, 10 Harshit Rana, 11 Varun Chakravarthy, 12 There is arguably a better strategy if a team bats first. For example, if KKR are batting first, Ramandeep Singh can come in as Impact Player for a dismissed Nitish, if required. If there is no such need, Vaibhav Arora can replace Nitish at the start of the second innings to further bolster the bowling.Sunrisers Hyderabad
If SRH are batting first, they can start with Abdul Samad and replace him with T Natarajan in the second half. Vice versa if they bowl first.Probable XII: 1 Abhishek Sharma/Mayank Agarwal, 2 Travis Head, 3 Rahul Tripathi, 4 Aiden Markram, 5 Heinrich Klaasen (wk), 6 , 7 Washington Sundar, 8 Pat Cummins (capt), 9 Bhuvneshwar Kumar, 10 Mayank Markande, 11 Umran Malik, 12 Or, if they are batting first, they can bring in Abdul Samad for a dismissed Rahul Tripathi, if required. Else, Jaydev Unadkat can replace Tripathi in the second innings.There’s a lot of dollars that Mitchell Starc and Pat Cummins have to do justice to•Getty Images

Stats that matter – Russell vs Klaasen

  • Among those who have hit at least 50 sixes in the last 12 months, Andre Russell has done it most frequently, clearing the boundary once every 6.1 balls. Heinrich Klaasen is second on the list, with 7.3 balls per six
  • Russell and Bhuvneshwar Kumar will be up against each other at the death – a match-up Russell enjoys. He has smashed Bhuvneshwar for 72 runs off 34 balls (strike rate 211.76) while getting out twice
  • Shreyas Iyer has struggled against Bhuvneshwar and Umran Malik. Against Bhuvneshwar, he has scored only 44 runs in 49 balls in T20s while getting out three times. Against Malik, it’s two dismissals in 15 balls for 16 runs
  • Since the start of 2020, Iyer has had a strike of 119.34 against legspin. SRH have Mayank Markande to exploit that weakness
  • Mayank Agarwal has a sub-par record against most of the KKR bowlers: 12 runs in 17 balls (1 dismissal) against Mitchell Starc, 15 runs in 19 balls (1 dismissal) against Varun Chakravarthy, 22 runs in 24 balls (three dismissals) against Russell and 40 runs in 32 balls (two dismissals) against Sunil Narine
  • KKR were the most expensive side in the powerplay last season, with an economy of 9.78. SRH were just below them, with 9.29. Both teams will be keen to correct that

Pitch and conditions

KKR won only two out of seven home games last season. Their bowling attack revolved around their spinners but the pitches were not helpful. However, during the 2023 ODI World Cup, Kolkata turned out to be the most spin-friendly venue. Given spin is once again KKR’s stronger suit, expect the pitch for Saturday’s match to be on the slower side. The temperature will hover around 25°C, with little chance of dew.

Quotes

“Right now, I feel I am in the best shape possible. I have been doing my training regularly, I have been hitting the balls, and I have been batting for longer periods of time. That’s something I am thriving on. I don’t want to think about what the doctor has said, what the injury was, because when you put your focus on the injury, you forget what you are doing the best. I want to put all these things aside and focus on what’s there on the plate.”
“It’s one of the beauties of the IPL – I have been playing with Starcy for 15 years, [and] I can’t remember another game where I have played against him. Also, it’s going to be weird looking across and seeing him in the other dugout. And yeah, being an opposition captain, seeing how we go about playing him will be an interesting part of tomorrow.”

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