Spin less of a factor at batting stronghold

While England will be wary of the threat from Yasir Shah, they will be eased into the series at the least spin-friendly venue in Asia in recent past

Shiva Jayaraman12-Oct-20153-0 Margin by which England lost their previous series in the UAE to Pakistan. This was only the fourth time England had been blanked outside the Ashes in a series with three or more matches. This was also only the fifth time Pakistan had whitewashed any opposition in a series involving three or more Tests.5-3 Pakistan’s win-loss record in the UAE since they beat England 3-0. They beat Australia 2-0 and have drawn 1-1 against South Africa, Sri Lanka and New Zealand in this period. Overall Pakistan’s win-loss record in the UAE is 11-5. They have drawn six out of the 22 Tests they have played in this country.1-6 England’s win-loss record away from home in Tests since 2013. Their win-loss ratio of 0.166 in away Tests during this period is better than only Zimbabwe and West Indies who both haven’t won a single away Test.2000 The last and only the second time England won a Test against Pakistan away from home, which was in Karachi. England have lost five of their six Tests against Pakistan outside England after that Karachi win. Overall, England have lost seven of the 27 Tests away to Pakistan, while 18 have ended in a draw. Their first win had come in Lahore in 1961, which was their first away Test against Pakistan.46.19 Runs spinners have averaged in Abu Dhabi after the last time Pakistan played England here in 2012. In Tests since 2013, this is the worst they have averaged at any venue in Asia. In four Tests here during this period, spinners have taken 51 wickets and only one five-wicket haul. In the Test here between the two teams in 2012, they took 31 of the 40 wickets to fall at an average of 18.00.38.25 Runs per dismissal that batsmen average in Abu Dhabi – the highest they average at any venue that has hosted at least five Tests. In just seven Tests at this venue, batsmen have hit 21 centuries and 33 fifties. The hundreds per Test ratio of 3.0 in Abu Dhabi is the highest for any venue that has hosted a minimum of five Tests.

Top Test venues by centuries per match (min 5 Tests)
Venue Tests 100s 100s/Test
Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi 7 21 3.00
Niaz Stadium, Hyderabad – Sind 5 13 2.60
Multan Cricket Stadium 5 13 2.60
Antigua Recreation Ground, St John’s Antigua 22 57 2.59
Bellerive Oval, Hobart 11 28 2.54

51 Runs made by Ian Bell in six innings in the last series played by England against Pakistan in the UAE. Bell, however, will not have to face Saeed Ajmal, who dismissed him cheaply four times in that series. Since his last hundred against Pakistan, which came in the first innings at Headingley in 2006, Bell has averaged just 9.12 against them from nine innings with a highest of 29. Before that he had made four hundreds and two fifties in ten innings against Pakistan and had scored 666 runs at an average of 83.25.

England batsmen v Pakistan, Tests
Batsman Inns Runs Ave 100s/50s
Ian Bell 19 739 46.19 4/2
Alastair Cook 20 729 36.45 3/2
Stuart Broad 12 355 32.27 1/1
James Anderson 12 73 6.64 0/0
Liam Plunkett 4 37 9.25 0/0
Steve Finn 6 10 10.00 0/0

17.65 James Anderson’s bowling average against Pakistan in Tests. He has taken 32 wickets against them in seven Tests, nine of which came in the 2011-12 series in the UAE at an average of 27.66 apiece. Among bowlers in England’s current squad, Stuart Broad was the highest wicket-taker for them in their last series in the UAE: he took 13 wickets at an average of 20.46.

England bowlers v Pakistan, Tests
Bowler Mats Wkts Avg 5wi/10wm
James Anderson 7 32 17.65 2/1
Stuart Broad 7 27 21.96 0/0
Steven Finn 4 13 22.92 0/0
Liam Plunkett 2 4 61.00 0/0
Ian Bell 10 1 42.00 0/0

19 Runs Younis Khan requires to go past Javed Miandad as the top run-scorer for Pakistan in Tests. Younis has 8814 Test runs at an average of 54.07 and has 30 centuries. Miandad retired with 8832 Test runs in 1993. When he gets the 19 runs that are required to go past Miandad, Younis will break a Pakistan record that has stood for nearly 22 years.

Pakistan bowlers v England, Tests
Batsman Inns Runs Ave 100s/50s
Younis Khan 18 784 43.55 2/3
Azhar Ali 13 403 33.58 1/2
Mohammad Hafeez 7 285 47.50 0/2
Misbah-ul-Haq 5 180 36.00 0/2
Asad Shafiq 5 167 33.40 0/1
Shoaib Malik 9 163 18.11 0/0

120.57 Misbah-ul-Haq’s batting average at the Sheikh Zayed Stadium in Abu Dhabi. He has made 844 runs in just seven Tests at this venue. His last six innings here have produced five hundreds with four of them coming in consecutive innings in the last three Tests. Abu Dhabi has been a productive venue for Pakistan, with the batsmen in their current Test squad collectively averaging 62.30 here. Their 12 hundreds at this venue are the most they have made at any venue.257 Runs Alastair Cook needs to go past Jacques Kallis as the top run-scorer in Asia among batsmen from outside the subcontinent. Cook has 1802 runs at an average of 56.31 in Asia and has made seven hundreds and seven fifties in 18 Tests here. Among overseas batsmen, only Kallis, Ricky Ponting and Shivnarine Chanderpaul have scored more than him in Asia.0 Centuries Cook has made in the UAE – the only country he has played a Test in but hasn’t scored a hundred. Cook has got hundreds in each of the other eight countries he has played Tests in. Should he make a hundred on this tour, he will become only the second batsman after Rahul Dravid to make a hundred in each of the nine or more countries he has played Tests in.

Hundreds in every country played in (min 6 countries)
Batsman Countries played in Made 100s in
Rahul Dravid 10 10
Colin Cowdrey 7 7
Ken Barrington 7 7
Hanif Mohammad 6 6
Mushtaq Mohammad 6 6

8 Wickets Yasir Shah took the last time he played an England XI in a first-class game in the UAE, which was in a tour match before the 2012 Test series. Playing for the PCB XI, Shah took 8 for 114 in the match, including a five-for in the first innings. Andrew Strauss, Jonathan Trott, Kevin Pietersen (twice) and Ian Bell were among the batsmen he had dismissed in that game. Shah has gained in reputation since then, having become the quickest Pakistan bowler to 50 Test wickets. He has taken 61 wickets in ten Tests – the most taken by any Pakistan bowler in his first ten Tests – at an average of 24.81 including four five-wicket hauls.

Two sides with issues makes for tight tussle

Playing the No. 1 team on their own patch will be a huge challenge for an inconsistent England side but there are signs of weakness in South Africa to be exploited

George Dobell in Durban23-Dec-2015On paper, it shouldn’t even be close.The No. 1 side in the world are playing at home. And they are playing against a side that has lost three of its last four Tests, has won just one of the four Test series it has completed this year and which seems likely to be without its leading wicket-taker due to injury. The bookies make South Africa the favourites; it is hard to disagree.And yet, the sense remains that England have an opportunity in South Africa. The sense remains that, despite having won only one opening Test on tour since victory in Port Elizabeth in 2004, a new look England have an opportunity to exploit a South Africa side whose confidence was dented by defeat in India, whose key players are all over 30 and, in a couple of cases, recovering from injury.Might there be parallels with 2012? At that time, England were the No. 1 rated side and South Africa the hungry chasers. The hosts were tired, divided and in decline. South Africa punished their lack of unity and their mistakes.More specifically, England were wedded to an approach that brought short-term benefits but, in retrospect, could not work over a long period: the balance of their side – three seamers and a spinner – compromised the effectiveness of the players required to do much of the bowling. Graeme Swann retired early, Tim Bresnan’s elbow problems robbed him of the nip that, just briefly, rendered him a top-class performer and both Stuart Broad and James Anderson have been obliged to curb the pace they possessed early in their careers. Too much was asked of them.Could it be the same with South Africa now? Almost every seamer in contention for their Test team has suffered some sort of injury in the recent past. Vernon Philander, so effective in Cape Town (where he averages 19.93 with the ball), has already been ruled out of the first two Tests, and while Dale Steyn has proved his fitness, the number of overs he may be required to bowl does not give him the best chance of maintaining it. He is a thoroughbred; he shouldn’t be pulling a plough.To spread the load, South Africa could consider playing four seamers and using Dean Elgar and JP Duminy for a spin option but Hashim Amla’s indication was that they would play offspinner Dane Piedt which would further increase the load on three quicks. Whichever way you look at it, Jacques Kallis is missed almost as much for his bowling as his batting.It would be silly to compare Ben Stokes to Kallis. But there is no doubt that the presence of two allrounders (Moeen Ali is the other) is a major asset to England. It allows them to rotate their bowlers in a way that may prove crucial with just two days between the first two Tests and it allows them to bat deep. The runs added by Moeen and Broad in the Ashes, for the eighth or ninth wicket, and always made at a fast pace against tiring bowlers, were vital.The excellence of four or five players seems to be masking cracks in the South Africa side. On the basis of the performance of the A team against England this week, there is a worrying lack of depth in domestic cricket. The drain of talent to England – Kolpak registrations, UK passport holders et al – has diluted the quality of the domestic system in South Africa. But for a stronger Rand and a more rewarding domestic programme, the likes of Kevin Pietersen, Jonathan Trott, Craig Kieswetter, Michael Lumb, Nick Compton and many, many more might have pursued their careers in the land of their birth. Had they done so, the domestic system might have been improved and the standard may have remained higher.Perhaps, in the long term, it is just as worrying that despite the free entry, very few local spectators turned up to watch the match in Pietermartizburg. Long-form cricket has no room for complacency in South Africa, just as it had no room for complacency in the Caribbean a decade or two ago.None of this is meant to denigrate the current South Africa Test side. In Amla and AB de Villiers they have two great batsmen; in Steyn and Morne Morkel they have a pair of top-class bowlers and Andy Murray showed us recently what impact just one top player can have on a team.Will Dale Steyn be hampered by his workload?•Getty ImagesKagiso Rabada offers hope for the future, too. But, now without Graeme Smith and Kallis, they are not the side they were and the bench strength looks weaker.It would be easy to dismiss defeat in India as an aberration. Conditions at home will bear little comparison and it seems unlikely that any potential weakness against spin will be exploited. But South Africa play so little Test cricket these days – a rain-ruined series in Bangladesh was their only other complete series in 2015 – that new players have little opportunity to adapt to the disciplines required in the longest format. You have to go back almost two years, to the Australian tour, since they were seriously challenged at home.As a result (and as made clear by S Rajesh in his preview of the series), there is little “home advantage.” New South African batsmen are almost as unfamiliar with their Test wickets, which traditionally have offered a little more bounce, as their visitors.England have questions to answer themselves. They have been inconsistent throughout the year, reserving most of the best moments for typically English conditions and again being well beaten by Pakistan. The opening partner to Alastair Cook has tended to have the poor employment prospects and the middle-order, the excellent Joe Root apart, has not delivered with any consistency.Moeen, for all that he offers as an all-round package, knows he needs to contribute more as a holding bowler and using Jonny Bairstow as a keeper is a risk; some might even interpret it as an accident waiting to happen. Standing back to the seamers he is serviceable; standing up to Moeen he is very much a work in progress.As England learned in 2012, when Amla was reprieved early on the way to make two match-defining centuries, you cannot give such players lives. The success or failure of England’s new-look slip cordon – with Alex Hales the new man at third – may define the series. Anderson’s potential absence as slip fielder to the spinners would add to the magnitude of his loss.And, for all the talk of how impressive Chris Woakes looks in training – and he really does – the fact is he currently has a Test bowling average in excess of 50. He’s better than that, but filling the shoes of Anderson is a daunting task and Woakes is yet to prove he is up to it.But Cook, relieved of the uphill struggle that captaining the ODI had become, looks to have recovered the freshness that rendered him such a relentless accumulator of runs, the return of Compton would appear to stiffen the top-order and James Taylor is tough and versatile. Stokes and Root look in top form and, with all six of the batsmen having made half-centuries at least in the warm-up games, they should all go into the first Test with confidence high.The series may come a little early for a redeveloping England side but, against a South Africa team which appears to be in decline, they have a great opportunity to prove themselves.

The stop-start story of Abbott's Test career

A strong performance followed by time outside the XI has been a recurrent theme in Kyle Abbott’s Test career so far. And it looks unlikely to change in the near future

Firdose Moonda in Delhi05-Dec-20151:38

‘They want to drag it out’ – Abbott

Hurry up, Kyle.It’s February 2013 and Jacques Kallis has tweaked a calf muscle in the nets is probably not going to be able to play the third Test against Pakistan. You might have to debut but don’t be overwhelmed. Just listen to your coach Lance Klusener and keep it tight please.Oh, you’ve taken seven wickets on debut. That’s great.Now wait.

****

Hurry up, Kyle.

Longer India bat, happier we are – Abbott

The only people who do not seem in any real hurry are the Indian batsmen, who are are content to bat time out of the game and themselves into form. They may even bat so much that South Africa could entertain thoughts of a draw.
“The longer they bat, the happier we are because it’s more overs out of the game. I thought they would have had a crack at us tonight actually,” Kyle Abbott said. “But obviously not, they want to drag it out.”
South Africa were on the verge of hitting the fast-forward button themselves with two wickets in two balls this morning but then Virat Kohli and Ajinkya Rahane took any thoughts of unlikely win away.
“Even though we had them four down, they still had a lead of 260. If we’d maybe had rattled one or two more… maybe 350 was in our mind. We threw everything at them but it probably wasn’t reversing as much today as it was before,” Abbott said.
“The pitch has got a bit slower and there maybe a bit of fatigue setting in; we’ve been in the field for quite a long time so maybe we haven’t been as tight as we would like to have be. They only had a strike rate of about 40. When there is not much happening and they are not taking too many risks, it gets harder. They played within themselves and quite sheltered. They made it harder for us. Even when we did tempt them, they either left it or that patted it back but its Test cricket and we are testing our skills and our patience.”

It’s March 2014 and Wayne Parnell has suffered a groin injury midway through the second Test against Australia in Port Elizabeth. South Africa managed to draw level anyway and now want to fling as much firepower as they can at the opposition to try and win the series. You’ve just taken 12 for 125 in a domestic match so you’re the fireball.Oh, you’ve kept it tighter than any other seamer. That’s great.Now wait.

****

Hurry up, Kyle.It’s December 2014 and time to wipe the floor with probably the weakest line-up in the modern game, West Indies. Don’t be upset if Dale Steyn and Vernon Philander leave just the one wicket for you. Just keep it tight, remember?Oh, you ended with another decent performance. That’s great.Now wait.

****

Hurry up, Kyle.It’s November 2015, Philander has tumbled in training and his ankle does not look good. Forget brushing your teeth, just get on the next flight to Johannesburg, and the next one to Dubai and the next one to Bangalore. Whatever you leave behind, make sure it’s not your bowling boots.Sleep if you must, shine those pearly whites somewhere along the way and make sure you’re ready to bowl even if you step off the plane ten minutes before the first ball. You will play. You have to because Steyn will also miss the match with a groin strain.Oh, the rain is spoiling everything. That’s not great.Now wait.

****

Hurry up, Kyle.It’s December 2015 and the series against India is gone. Steyn is still injured, the spinners have suffocated South Africa’s run-scorers and stubbed out much of their spirit but there is something to salvage. Conditions are not going to be as skewed in their favour and off the abrasive surface or in the smoggy atmosphere, you may find some movement.You found it to beat M Vijay’s bat. The first time he didn’t touch it, the second time he did, but then you overstepped, the third time the ball went just over the stumps and the fourth time he inside-edged onto his pads. You showed him that on a strip with variable bounce, he needed to be more sure of his footwork. It turned out Cheteshwar Pujara wasn’t looking. You managed to get the ball to sneak through the bat-pad gap and take out his off stump.Then you found some reverse swing. You managed to move the ball in to the right-hand batsmen and forced them to play. The first time Rohit Sharma blocked, the second time he blocked, the third time he let it go, the fourth time it found the edge but Hashim Amla dropped it. In the end, Wriddhiman Saha was the victim, when a ball moved into him just a touch and he played on.You frustrated India with a consistent line and you asked questions of them with your lengths. You kept it full, you bent your back, you had another catch dropped and two more taken. You ended the Indian innings.Oh, and you became just the second seam bowler since 1987 to take five wickets at this venue. What did such a performance mean to you?”I think I will take a lot of confidence from this. There was a perception that maybe I can only bowl in South Africa where there is a bit of nip but I have shown that if the ball is reversing, I have ability to take wickets. So I will use is as motivation.”That’s great.Now wait.But, not too long.

****

Hurry up, Kyle.It’s the same match and South Africa’s batsmen are making the bowlers work much harder by ensuring they are back on the field less than 24 hours after they left it. You will have to try and do it all again, even though the ball is not moving and the batsmen are more assured. You will be tired. You may not have the success.Oh and the Indian captain wants to keep you out there to make his point that it is entirely possible to get runs in this series. That’s great but it means before you and your team-mates can go home…You have to wait.

****

Hurry up, Kyle.It’s still December 2015, and Philander has probably not recovered from his injury. Irrespective of whether Steyn has, the strangle by spin in India will mean South Africa want nothing more than the green, green grass of home. Your home, Kyle.Kingsmead will host the first Test against England, and South Africa could be tempted to go in with four pacers. If Philander is unavailable, both you and Kagiso Rabada could play.Oh, but they can’t go in with four pacers in every match. And when Philander recovers, he slots back in. And they don’t seem too keen to do without Rabada, who has leapfrogged all the competition.That’s great. For him. But where does that leave you, Kyle?”Your career is never a guarantee. It’s always something you are fighting for, constantly. Not just me but every other player. It’s a fight the whole time.”So all you can do is wait.

King Richards holds court on cricket

Sixty-three-year-old Viv Richards may never have played T20 cricket, but the Quetta Gladiators mentor managed to grab the attention of every single youngster around him with his baritone voice and big-hearted laughter

Nagraj Gollapudi03-Feb-20161:48

‘We should all work as one family’ – Richards

Like a powerful magnet, he kept drawing those around him, towards him. And like many, many before them had done, each and every member of the Quetta Gladiators listened to the man in front of them with rapt attention. After all, it was Viv Richards: the king of cricket.Clad in the grey team attire, a black Emporio Armani cap, branded black sunglasses, and a thin grey French beard, Richards looks as imposing as ever. But he is not intimidating. Instead, on his first day of the Pakistan Super League, where he is the mentoring the Gladiators, Richards showed a light-hearted personality that put the inexperienced Pakistani youngsters at ease.Despite having never played the Twenty20 format, Richards remains a favourite with franchises in various domestic leagues, including the IPL, Big Bash League and the Caribbean Premier League. A singular presence during his time as a top-order batsman for West Indies, Richards has been hired by teams to not just perform the role assigned to an after-dinner speaker, but more importantly, to inject a heavy dose of motivation in young players. T20 cricket is a pressure sport, after all.On Tuesday, at the sprawling ICC Cricket Academy campus, Richards’ baritone voice and big-hearted laughter echoed all around. He is 63-years-old, but never for once did he act his age. Instead, Richards puts his arms around young Pakistan players like Sarfraz Ahmed and Asad Shafiq, while earnestly responding to their numerous questions.”It was my first meeting with him. I had never seen him play, but I had heard about him,” Sarfraz, Gladiators’ captain, said. “He said that you should never have doubt when you play. He said when he went in to bat he never had doubts in his mind. ‘Even if I walked in without wearing a helmet I knew that I would not be hurt by the ball,’ he told us. He said if I am playing at this level then I must be good. But if I had fear inside then no one could help me.”A sturdy and aggressive middle-order batsman, Sarfaraz specifically wanted to know the role he should play in a dynamic format like T20 where pressure is omnipresent.Viv Richards: One among the players•PSL”In his opinion, my decision should be backed by the team. And if the team backed me it would be successful. Importantly, he said that at all times, good or bad, the team should always be one and trust each other.”What was fascinating for Sarfaraz to see was Richards, despite his legendary status, behaving like one of his friends.”He had an aura when he played. But today he was one of us. He is our mentor and made us feel at ease.” When Moin Khan introduced Richards to the group as “Sir”, he was told “in the future, forget the ‘Sir’. Vivian is okay.” You could hear the laughter among the Gladiators’ group from a distance.Richards’ message to Sarfaraz was straight and simple: “If you do not believe in yourself no one is going to believe you. So you got to trust yourself all the time. And back yourself. That’s why you are here. So it is important that you yourself trust yourself and believe that you are good enough.”Former Pakistan wicket-keeper Moin, who is Gladiators’ head coach, was not surprised by Richards’ popularity. “Look at them, every one of those players is standing and listening to him,” Moin turned back, pointing to the group listening intently to Richards. For Moin, Richards is the pioneer in making cricket aggressive. “He taught all of us that you can quicken the pace of the game. He is a big inspiration.”According to Richards, the key in T20 cricket is to stay committed to the task at hand. To stay committed to the role given to you. “I am here basically to try and instil as much confidence as possible. As you know, T20 cricket is very spontaneous. The things that you see on a regular basis is tough to coach. What I am here for is to inspire (with) whatever information that is necessary. There are a lot of young kids here and I am quite happy doing that,” Richards said.For the last nine years, Pakistan has been starved of international cricket at home. Consequently, the domestic players and youngsters like Sarfraz have been denied the opportunity of watching live cricket, attending training sessions, and interacting with past greats in the flesh. These are all important steps in the evolution of a young player.It’s not just Richards. Kevin Pietersen (Gladiators), Chris Gayle (Lahore Qalandars) and Shane Watson (Islamabad United) are all reputed and proven names that can teach a thing or two the uncapped domestic Pakistani youngster.As Sarfaraz said, the PSL has now presented him and all Pakistan players across the five franchises that lost opportunity. “He [Richards] has already put the confidence inside us where we can walk up to him and ask any question we want. That is what I would like to do for the next 20 days.”

'To enjoy cricket, you must enjoy your downtime'

James Faulkner talks about the IPL, his slower balls, bouncing back from a drunk-driving episode, and bad haircuts

Interview by Arun Venugopal26-Apr-2016This is your fourth team in the IPL, but obviously the high point was your stint with Rajasthan Royals. How have you found the Gujarat Lions set-up so far?
It’s been different. Obviously, I was with Rajasthan for three years. [Three years there] made you very used to what happened around you. You’ve got the same sort of squad pretty much every year, the same support staff, coaches and senior players as well. We all knew each other inside and out. Obviously it’s going to be new any time you come to a new franchise, or whether it’s a new team. So you are playing county cricket or Big Bash, there are going to be different challenges and different relationships you have to build with team-mates. You know their game as well and what they are trying to achieve. That’s all part of the challenge and so far we have started well as a team.How long does it generally take for you to develop a sense of attachment with the team?
Ah, it doesn’t happen quickly. It all depends on the players you know already. I am lucky here I knew a lot of their players, especially their international players, but I even knew a lot of the Indian locals as well, having played with them in other franchises, whether it was way back at the start at Pune [Warriors] or Kings XI [Punjab] when I wasn’t obviously playing. But I was training with them and spending time. [At the] end of the day it’s up to the players to gel and it is up to the coaching staff to get them to gel as well.When you are playing alongside a few ex-international captains like Brendon McCullum and Dwayne Bravo, what are the things you learn from a leadership perspective?
Nothing has really stood out too much for me. Probably it’s just that we are all in it together, so all the senior players are trying to help the young players improve their games and at the end of the day we can all improve as a group. That’s what stands out. For the younger players who haven’t played any games in the IPL, talking to those players – they probably idolise a few of them, which is great. It’s healthy for any team.Anyone who idolises you in the team?
() I am not too sure. I am just trying to help as much as I can. I encourage the younger players to ask questions and [share] little pointers every now and then when I feel like it’s the right time.

“I just haven’t had the opportunity to bat. If you look at how many balls I have faced in the last 12 months, it’s not many”

Is there a system in Gujarat Lions where each senior player takes a younger player under his wing and mentors him?
No, I think it just naturally comes up. With any player you notice something with which you help them. You are not there to tell them off or make them change their games too drastically. It’s just little things that they can [work on]. At the end of the day they are responsible for their own games. If they want to take your advice they can. If they don’t, no issue at all.Talk us through the different kinds of slower balls you bowl. The back-of-the-hand delivery seems to be a clear winner.
Yeah, I have tried to play out with a new one off late, just to have another option. That’s just an offcutter. It all depends on the wicket. [On a] slow wicket you can bowl different sorts of deliveries. On quicker and flatter wickets they are not as effective, so you will have to really try and out-think the batsman compared to when it is slower and turning, when you can bowl the same sort of balls consistently.Did starting out as a wristspinner make it easier for you to bowl the back-of-the-hand one?
When I was young I would bowl spin in the backyard with Dad and then I just sort of developed [it] into my game with hours of bowling in the backyard. That’s pretty simple, so it’s one of my weapons now. It’s just a matter of trying to find other deliveries to keep the batsmen guessing.How do you extract the amount of bounce you do from that delivery?
For me, it’s all about not just putting it there. Instead of just putting it there when I am bowling the ball I get more revolutions on it. That’s where you get the bounce and the spin. It can be harder and challenging here in the IPL, especially with the dew factor, it’s hard to hold it. I bowled one the other night [in Mumbai] that came out not very good. It’s hard to get that feel and grip on the ball sometimes in certain grounds around India.Have you had an opportunity to swap notes with Bravo on slower deliveries?
Yeah, he’s got a beauty, so I have spent some time in the nets talking to him about certain fields, asking how he bowled it. I can’t actually bowl it like him, but it’s one of those things you have to get if you are trying different deliveries to improve your game.In the recent past, your bowling seems to have grown in strength, but the batting has been a little patchy. Do you think bowlers around the world have worked you out better now?
I just haven’t had the opportunity to bat. Whatever the teams I have played in, the top order have got the runs, so you can’t really go out there and score runs if you are only getting to face four-five balls. I tend to look at it as if I am batting down at 6, 7 or 8, I am not getting to bat a majority of times in many games. If you look at how many balls I have faced in the last 12 months, it’s not many.”It’s different cricket over here [in India]. The fans love the game, and you can’t explain that to your friends and family back home about how crazy they are for all the players, all the teams, just cricket in general”•Associated PressDoes your father, Peter Faulkner, a former first-class player himself, share cricketing advice with you?
He shares his advice, but he lets me do my own thing. He is supportive of what I am trying to achieve and that’s to play the best cricket I can in any format. We talk cricket, but, to be honest, when I am not playing I enjoy my time at home with my friends and family.You said you will regret the drunk-driving episode for the rest of your life. Is it something that’s past you now? What have you done to get over it?
Yeah, it’s nearly a year – it was June or July. It’s ages ago now. I have just got back to playing cricket and tried to play as well as I could. From the incident, the next game I played [in the Royal London Cup 50-over tournament] I switched on. We [Lancashire] won that T20 [Natwest T20 Blast] after that.How did you manage such a quick turnaround from an incident like that?
It was just about obviously owning up to it, putting your hand up to apologise and then putting it behind me and try and improve as a person, and improve as a player as well. I have enjoyed cricket after that even more, so that I can get away from it all. Obviously it was a tough time and yeah, at the end of the season we won the T20s, which is great. I felt like I did owe my team-mates something as well while I was there, so doing that was satisfying.How did your family react to this incident – your parents and girlfriend?
I had support from everyone, whether it was family or friends or team-mates. That’s what friends and family are there for. Everyone makes mistakes. It’s just a matter of your owning up to it and learning from it and not making the same mistake twice. I had support from everyone. [My parents and girlfriend] were just as supportive.

“I want to try and play as many games for my country as I can and perform as well as I can in tight situations”

How much did the alcohol management counselling session help? Have you tried to stay off the bottle completely like David Warner has recently?
No, for me, it’s the same thing. You celebrate your success as you celebrate your downtime. I had one [counselling] session with Tim Paine, who was there [with him during the incident in Manchester]. We were trying to celebrate his engagement. That was it. I have put it behind me since that.You said last year that you would ideally like to spend a lot more time with your sisters? Have you managed to find time to do that?
Yeah, it’s hard. My sisters, one of them has just finished uni and got a degree and the other one, I have hardly seen, so it is hard. When I am back home as well I am not in one specific spot – you travel around Australia. It’s the same with all the players that fly for inter-state games. It’s very hard for them [my sisters] as well because they have got their own lives to live and their own studies and full-time job to do.Given the kind of adulation cricketers receive while playing in India, how do you ensure you retain perspective and stay grounded?
It’s just one of the things [when] you come to India and play the IPL. It’s different cricket over here. The fans love the game, and you can’t explain to your friends and family back home about how crazy they are for all the players, all the teams, just cricket in general. I think it’s fantastic. I definitely do enjoy playing in front of the crowds over here because of that factor.How has your girlfriend found the experience? How does her presence help you on tours?
It’s definitely massive bonus if you have a friend or family or girlfriend over at the moment – someone around for company. Obviously here in Rajkot, it’s quite hard for the overseas players. I know some of the Indian players are struggling as well. Yeah, she is holding up. She has done enough travel now. She understands that this isn’t a holiday, it’s purely work and that [it] comes down to performance. She is supportive and she is studying at the moment, so she is busy doing that.You are a big Aussie Rules football fan. What are the things from the AFL that you have learnt and tried to incorporate into your own game?
I haven’t seen much AFL over the last couple of years purely because I was never home to watch it. I haven’t really brought anything to my own game. It’s a different sport, but I am into sport and games. Probably enjoyment is the only thing I have brought into my game.”Me and Virat get on fine and he said the same thing to the press as well. There is nothing there. It’s just a contest and he likes getting into a contest.”•Cricket Australia/Getty ImagesYou seem to have had your fair share of banter on the field, like a few chats with Virat Kohli recently.
I think [with] every player, not every player, but it’s just friendly banter at the end of the day. Me and Virat get on fine and he said the same thing to the press as well. There is nothing there. It’s just a contest and he likes getting into a contest. That’s what makes him one of the best players in the world.Are you comfortable taking the piss and being at the receiving end of such banter?
Oh, I have copped plenty of banter. Don’t worry about that! Definitely, I enjoy it as well. It’s part of it.Is your current hairstyle inspired from that of the volleyball, Wilson, in , as someone pointed out on your Twitter page?
() I had asked for a number two [on the shaver] on the side. Next thing I know I have got a number one. I just let him go with it. That [the haircut] was in Mumbai. I am not too fussed about it. I normally let the hairdresser do what they want to do. Yeah, couple of weeks hopefully away from a good haircut.Is there a culture shift now in the Australian side with many younger players like you being a departure from the archetypal beer-guzzling, macho player of the past? Most of you appear to be a lot more metrosexual.
I am not too sure. I didn’t grow up in that generation. I think now what you see is a lot more cricket being played, so that’s definitely a lot harder when it comes to that. [There are] so many different formats around the world, and T20 has changed the dynamics so greatly. It’s obviously fantastic. You will have to ask players who have had played in both generations, but I think the big factor is that there is so much more cricket.Speaking of so much cricket, it’s perhaps natural to fall out of love with the game at times. How do you rekindle that love?
I think it’s about enjoying your downtime as well. We don’t get many days off – we had yesterday off and then we train today, play tomorrow and then we go pretty much flat out after that every second day with travel. You have to spend time with your mates and relax and try and forget about it [cricket], switch off and get ready to switch back on again.I have got my girlfriend here in India at the moment. I watch movies. That’s probably the main thing I do. We had a couple of days in Mumbai last week. We spent some time around the pool, trying to relax and get out of the hotel room. [We] went out to dinner and restaurants and came back ready to play.What are the benchmarks you set for yourself as a cricketer? Are you working on something specific to get better at red-ball cricket?
Personally, I want to try and play as many games for my country as I can and perform as well as I can in tight situations. A measurement of that is how many games you are involved in or you win as a group. Whether I bat well or bowl well or have a poor day while winning, that’s how I measure myself.It’s hard to do that [get better at red-ball cricket] when I am not playing any. I haven’t really played much Shield cricket in the last few years. I have played a lot of white-ball cricket and obviously we won the World Cup in Australia. So yeah, just concentrating on winning the game I’m playing in at the time.

When Pollard nearly did a Tahir

Plays of the day from the tri-series match between West Indies and South Africa in Barbados

Firdose Moonda24-Jun-2016The passion Kagiso Rabada had flown under the radar in the tournament until the fourth ball of his second over. Having seen Wayne Parnell draw Andre Fletcher’s edge the over before, Rabada tried the same against Johnson Charles, but with an extra yard of pace. He breached the 147kph mark with his third delivery; Charles had a waft and was beaten. Then, Rabada hurled in another delivery around the same speed. This time though, he held the length back. Charles, clearly startled to move his feet, sent the outside edge to Chris Morris at second slip. Rabada responded in a celebratory style reminiscent of Dale Steyn’s – he fist-pumped, leapt up and roared – in a clear demonstration of how much it means to him to lead the attack.The expectation Eleven years earlier, South Africa’s current bowling coach Charl Langeveldt took a hat-trick at Kensington Oval. Today, one of his charges, Kagiso Rabada, had the chance to do the same. After removing Andre Fletcher and Marlon Samuels off successive balls, Rabada was on a hat-trick. At the top of his mark, Rabada received some instructions from his captain. At the crease, Denesh Ramdin shuffled into position. On the sidelines, Langeveldt moved nervously into a better viewing position. All of it was for nothing. Rabada’s hat-trick delivery strayed down the leg side, well out of Ramdin’s reach and Langeveldt’s piece of history.The reprieve Both Darren Bravo and Morne Morkel’s days may have turned out differently after the second ball of the 11th over. Morkel banged in a short and wide ball, Bravo was late on the hook and top-edged to long leg. Wayne Parnell could have simply stood in place, raised his arms and taken the catch but thought he needed to jump as well. In doing so, he parried the ball and himself over the rope. Not only did he shell the chance but he cost the team six runs too. Bravo was on 11 at the time and went on to score 102.The catch West Indies put down their first opportunity to take an early South African wicket when Denesh Ramdin put down Hashim Amla , but he made up for it two overs later to give Shannon Gabriel much deserved reward. The opening bowler drew the bottom edge from de Kock, Ramdin was moving to his right and then had to change direction to take the catch. Ramdin celebrated but only after Gabriel pleaded with Umpire Kumar Dharmasena and de Kock was sent on his way.The celebration Kieron Pollard was a visibly irritated man when he was caught on the long-off boundary, but he may have been a little more irked when asked to field at backward point with Sunil Narine in operation during South Africa’s reply. But if Pollard was annoyed with his lot, it didn’t show. When Chris Morris jabbed at a quicker one to get an inside edge, Pollard leapt at it one-handed. He grabbed the ball with his right hand and took off on a celebration Imran Tahir-style towards the boundary. As is his style, Pollard stopped short of running too much and took a bow instead: first to the crowd and then to change room. It was his night, after all.

How do batsmen cope with the intensity of their lonely skill?

Digging the pitch, repetitive body movements, talking to themselves, superstitious behaviour, visualisation – different ways that batsmen deal with the pressure of their profession

Michael Bond26-Oct-2016All sportspeople like to imagine that their discipline is the most mentally challenging, that winning or losing comes from within. But batsmen have a stronger claim than most. What other sport demands such intense concentration, affords participants so little control over their situation and penalises mistakes so cruelly and with such dramatic ritual?Batting is a game of life and death like no other. Success – a century, a match-saving last stand – can live with you forever. But getting out feels like the end of everything: you are dismissed not just from the field of play, but from your own dreams of hopefulness and redemption.Dismissed batsmen are like mourners at their own funerals. The dressing room falls silent as they return, “in respect for the dead”, as Mike Brearley puts it in The Art of Captaincy (1985).”There aren’t many situations in sport where you have this challenge of one tiny mistake and that’s it, finished, the rest of the day you’re watching from the sidelines,” says sports psychologist Steve Bull, who worked with the England cricket team for 17 years. “It creates a particular type of pressure which I don’t think other athletes experience.”Given the intensity of the mental drama, it is little wonder that a batsman’s struggles are with himself as much as with the bowler he faces, and that a lack of confidence can invite negative thinking and a fear of failure. For top-level batsmen with near-perfect technical skills, protecting themselves from such tendencies is critical. The methods they use to reduce anxiety, stay positive and maintain focus are idiosyncratic, often eccentric and tell us as much about the quirks of the human mind as the nuances of cricket.If you watched England’s three-match Test series against Sri Lanka this summer, you will have spotted a graphic example of one of these methods. Before each ball, the Sri Lankan opener Kaushal Silva performs what psychologists call a “pre-performance routine”. He adjusts the velcro on his gloves, moves his bat from his left to his right hand and holds it up in front of him, moves his left elbow back and forth eight times (fewer if he’s facing a spinner) as if pulling on an imaginary rope, then, gripping his bat with both hands, arches his back before settling into his crease.The repetition looks neurotic, but Silva has developed it to help him feel settled. “I don’t really count the exact number of times I do it, it just comes from my body,” he says. “I do it until I have calmed my nerves and I feel OK and I’m really focused. These small things help me to be myself and to just concentrate on the next ball.”

“When I’m nervous I start talking. It would help me concentrate. It annoyed everybody, including the people who played with me”Derek Randall

It seems to be working. Sri Lanka lost 0-2, but Silva won his team’s Player-of-the-Series award for his 193 runs.Most batsmen have pre-performance routines, though few as elaborate as Silva’s. They might wander a few steps towards square leg, tap the bat on the ground a particular way or pull at their shirt. What psychological purpose does this serve? Brearley thinks it’s “a way of clearing the mind of the last ball, getting on with the next one, making clear to oneself that a line needs to be drawn under the last one”.In Jonathan Trott’s case this is literally true. He marks his guard with a shallow trench, which he reinforces before each delivery, as if to bury everything that’s gone before, a habit he repeats whether he’s batting in the nets or in a county or international game.Such repetition is critical to why routines work, says Bull. “It has to be 100% consistent, every ball always the same. You need to get your routines habitualised to the point where you don’t think about them, to practise them so that when you’re in the middle you go into automatic pilot.”In other words, batsmen should tune their mental routines alongside their physical ones so that the two coalesce. Consider Kevin Pietersen’s advice to a 12-year-old budding cricketer who asked him on Twitter how to stop “second-guessing” himself when playing a shot, a common mental error among cricketers still developing their technique. “Practise, practise, practise, and trust your practise,” Pietersen replied. “Hardest thing to do but when you do it changes your game.”Perhaps the most tangible function of routines is that they give the batsman a sense of control over a situation which, for the most part, is out of their hands. The state of the wicket, the weather, the path of the ball through the air and off the pitch are beyond his reckoning; his pre-ball ritual is all his own. This need for control amid so much uncertainty may explain why batsmen are particularly prone to superstitions. Unlike a pre-performance routine, a superstition – essentially an irrational belief in implausible causality – is unlikely to improve performance. Yet cricket is full of them.The Glamorgan opener Steve James avoided eating duck meat until he retired, and he wouldn’t allow his daughter to have plastic ducks in her bath. Mike Atherton had to be first on to the field at the start of an innings, even if it meant barging past his opening partner on the way down the pavilion steps. The South African batsman Neil McKenzie used to tape his bat to the dressing-room ceiling because his team-mates had once done this as a practical joke prior to him scoring a century. Steve Waugh batted with a red rag in his pocket for similar reasons.Mike Atherton was known to be one of the most mentally tough batsmen in English cricket, highly motivated, competitive and self-confident•Getty ImagesDerek Randall, like many batsmen, hated being on 13. “I couldn’t wait to get off it,” he says. “Sometimes I’d get out because I was trying too hard to get off the blooming thing.”Ed Smith, one of the most notoriously superstitious cricketers, had a habit of asking the umpire, mid-over, how many balls were left. For the first part of his career he did this always after the fourth ball, then switched to asking after the third ball. Since he batted for around 15,000 overs in his career, he must have asked this question of the umpire around 15,000 times.”It was silly and I knew it,” he writes in Luck: A Fresh Look at Fortune (2012). “It was unintelligent and I knew it. It was a source of mirth and I knew it. But I did it anyway. Superstition was a dependency I found hard to give up.”Many batsmens’ superstitions revolve around an obsession with their kit. Trott is scrupulous about how he arranges his bats. Atherton always followed the same padding-up routine: box, chest guard, inside thigh-pad, outside thigh-pad, left pad, right pad, arm guard, gloves, helmet. This kind of fastidiousness is not too surprising since batting is much about organisation, repetition and structure.Yet rigorously adhering to a ritual is unlikely to put you in the runs and could make things worse. “If the superstition is something you might not have control over, like wearing your lucky socks, what happens when you lose your lucky socks or they fall apart,” says sports psychologist Stewart Cotterill. “It will have the opposite effect: you’ll feel you’re not ready.”Once all the fussing and the rituals and the routines are done and the batsman is settled at the crease, he can then focus on the bowling. This is where the real test begins. Unless you are an expert meditator, paying close sustained attention to something for long periods can be mentally draining. To deal with this, coaches encourage batsmen to “dial up” their focus when the bowler is running in and “dial down” between balls.Atherton says switching on and off like this is “absolutely vital” and came easily to him, a naturally relaxed character. “All studies show you can’t concentrate for lengthy periods without a break. The ball is ‘live’ for maybe six to ten seconds, so that is all you have to concentrate for.”Silva pares down the window of concentration even further, to three or four seconds, switching on only when the bowler is halfway through his run-up. He calculates that this way, if he sets out to score a century in, say, 180 to 200 balls, he will have to concentrate deeply for just ten to 15 minutes. “So it’s 15 minutes to get 100 runs. If you cut it down like this then it will be easier. You don’t worry about the long term, you just focus on the particular ball.”

“Mental skills are like physical skills. You have to work at them relentlessly. You have to challenge your brain to get better at blocking out the negatives and replacing them with positives”Steve Bull, sports psychologist

The thought of surviving hours at the crease can seem overwhelming if you don’t break it down.Tammy Beaumont, who this summer became the first woman to hit back-to-back ODI centuries for England, during the series against Pakistan, worries only about the next five runs. “I’ll tell myself: get to five, once I get to five get to ten, keep it like that, keep it all about the next ball.”Another approach is to segment time. Brearley and Randall did this during the Centenary Test between England and Australia in Melbourne in 1977. Needing 463 to win with a wicket down, they decided to take it in 15-minute sections. “Stick at it, Skip. In ten minutes there’ll only be 15 minutes to tea,” Brearley recalls Randall saying, in The Art of Captaincy. They lost by 45 runs; Randall scored 174.You don’t have to be an international or even a professional cricketer to benefit from these mental heuristics. Bull says the key difference between elite and “Sunday afternoon batsmen” is that “Sunday afternoon batsmen tend to overcomplicate things. They’re standing there tapping the ground as the bowler runs in, thinking about where the fields are, thinking about their left-hand grip, where their shoulders are. The best players in the world are just standing there saying: watch the ball.”Mental routines are a way to simplify things, to shut out technical thoughts, memories of mistimed shots and other internal distractions, and to help the batsman settle into a state of readiness that Bull calls “relaxed alertness”. But routines alone may not be enough, especially in international games where the pressures can be immense. To settle nerves and maintain confidence through an innings, many batsmen engage in what used to be considered a symptom of mental illness but is now recognised as fully functional: talking to yourself.In a 2013 study at an English first-class cricket club, psychologists at Cardiff Metropolitan University found that batsmen used self-talk regularly, either to motivate themselves in challenging situations – when walking out to bat, for example, or after a poor shot – or to deliver instructional cues that focus attention, such as “Watch the ball!”Younis Khan had conversations with his alter ego to motivate himself at the crease•Getty ImagesIn fact, “Watch the ball” seems to be the default cue for most batsmen. Ricky Ponting used it. You can sometimes see Eoin Morgan mouthing it before a ball. Beaumont, after watching one of Ponting’s masterclasses, adopted it then adapted it – her current cue is “Time the ball, play straight”. Easy if you know how.One of the most notorious self-talkers in cricket history is Randall. He did it constantly and out loud. “It was spontaneous, it was a natural thing to do. When I’m nervous I start talking. It would help me concentrate. It annoyed everybody, including the people who played with me.”During the fourth Test of the 1978-79 Ashes, when Randall scored 150 during the second innings and turned the series in England’s favour, his monologue continued throughout the nine hours and 42 minutes he spent at the crease. Here’s a snatch of it, as relayed to Sunday Times journalist Dudley Doust by his opponents and team-mates: “Come on, Rags,” he says. “Get stuck in. Don’t take any chances. Get forward, get forward. Get behind the ball. Take your time, slow and easy. You idiot, Rags. Come on, come. Come on, England.”Younis Khan, who averages 53.72 in Test cricket and is Pakistan’s highest-ever run scorer, also talks to himself all the time when he’s at the wicket. But he has a slightly different approach to most, conducting his conversations with an alter ego that he conjures up as he goes out to bat.”I imagine there is a guy standing in front of me and he is Younis Khan, and just talk with him. It’s like there are two Younis Khans standing face to face like a boxer, and they are talking and looking each other in the eyes. Come on, Younis Khan, you can do this, you can do that.”Self-talk can keep you focused, and it can also help maintain confidence, without which batting can feel like Russian roulette. Mark Ramprakash, the England men’s batting coach, says confidence and self-belief are “absolutely paramount. They can work wonders: they can make up for a less-than-perfect technique. The thing with cricket is that you have a lot of bad days. You make one wrong decision, or someone takes a great catch. The best players, like Alastair Cook, are incredibly resilient to those bad days. They maintain a belief in their own ability.”Ramprakash himself suffered a crisis of belief early on in his England career when he failed to make a big score and began to question whether he belonged at Test level. Then in 1998 he started working with Bull, brought in by England as team psychologist.”He gave me a very simple framework of coping with all the scrambled thoughts that were going on in my head,” says Ramprakash.

Silva pares down the window of concentration to three or four seconds, switching on only when the bowler is halfway through his run-up. “So it’s 15 minutes to get 100 runs. If you cut it down like this then it will be easier”

It proved pivotal. Soon after meeting Bull he scored 154 against West Indies in Barbados – his first Test century – and then topped the averages the following winter in Australia. His team-mate Atherton, writing in his autobiography, said he sensed at the time that Ramprakash was “a totally different person, and consequently, player”.Today the mental side of batting and the pressures that come with playing at international level are taken very seriously by England’s management, due in no small part to Ramprakash’s influence. Yet confidence is a fickle trait. Sometimes it’s necessary to fake it to make it, so to speak. Psychologists have known for decades that feelings and emotions stem from changes in the body, rather than the other way round – a phenomenon known as embodied cognition – which means it’s possible to generate confidence simply by acting it out.”Shadow batting” – practising sublime strokes between balls – or walking out to bat with head held high, can have a positive effect on the way you play. The sports psychologist Jamie Barker, who works with Nottinghamshire Cricket Club and the ECB’s performance programme, makes a point of getting players to focus on their body language as they leave the pavilion, to appear confident even if they don’t feel it: “If you’re assertive, your brain will pick up on that.”Another way of “faking” confidence is to visualise the way you want to play in your mind’s eye before the game begins. In 1974, early in his career, Randall suffered four first-class innings in a row without scoring a run. “It was a nightmare,” he says. “The pressure just builds on you.” So on the morning of his fifth innings he got up early and arrived at the ground while it was still deserted, strapped on his pads, walked out to the middle, played a cover drive and took a run, “just to remember what it was like”. He scored 93 that day.Ramprakash encourages England’s batsmen to use this kind of visualisation, which serves as a cognitive rehearsal for the main event. There is much evidence that it works. One problem with all these approaches is that worrying too much about your own performance can easily make things worse. Steven Sylvester, Middlesex’s psychologist and author of the recent book Detox Your Ego (2016), thinks that for players at the top of their game what really matters is “where your heart is, why am I here?”The important thing, he says, is to believe at an emotional level that you are playing not for yourself but for your team or your country, or some other ideal that transcends you. “When players start to think about their performance as serving the group it increases their self-esteem, their belief goes up and they become a bit freer in their skills. It gives them a little bit extra.”Mark Ramprakash suggests using visualisation techniques before going out to bat•PA PhotosIn 2013, Sylvester helped Australia and Middlesex batsman Chris Rogers after he was called up to the Ashes squad more than five years after his previous Test. “It became blindingly obvious that his fear of representing his country in the Ashes as an opening batsman was stopping him from moving forward,” he says. “Through a deep discussion of how to serve his country he came up with a more compelling reason to doing well than if it was just about him.”Sylvester coached Moeen Ali through a similar process, helping him put his cricket in the context of his faith and his desire to be a role model. The Pakistan batsman Asad Shafiq, who has scored eight Test centuries at No. 6 – a world record – gives an equally compelling reason for his own success: “To bat at No. 6 you have to be patient, as most of the time the tailenders are with you. You have to give them confidence and support.”Shafiq is batting not just for himself, but for Nos. 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11 as well. He epitomises CLR James’ portrait in his classic Beyond a Boundary (1963) of the batsman as the ultimate team player. When facing the ball, writes James, he “does not merely represent his side. For that moment, to all intents and purposes, he is his side.”Without doubt, all batsmen can improve their confidence, resilience and other mental attributes if they’re willing to practise. “Mental skills are like physical skills,” says Bull. “You have to work at them relentlessly. You have to challenge your brain to get better at blocking out the negatives and replacing them with positives.”Yet it also seems clear that some people are inherently better at this than others. In 2005, Bull carried out a psychological analysis of 12 English cricketers from the previous two decades whom county coaches had identified as the toughest mentally in the country. Among them were Atherton, Graham Gooch and Alec Stewart. Bull found them all to be highly competitive and motivated, full of self-confidence and with a never-say-die attitude, some of which derived from their upbringing, some from the teams they had played with and some from their personality.For the rest of us, it is comforting to know that we can learn such skills – and that even the greats can struggle at times. Even Don Bradman called batting “a nerve-racking business”. In The Art of Cricket (1958), he implores us to give a thought to the batsman’s travails as he wends his way to the wicket: “He is human like you, and desperately anxious to do well.”

Could white-ball contracts save West Indies?

The likes of England and New Zealand have them already, and West Indies need to consider them seriously if they are not to be deprived of their best players

Tim Wigmore13-Oct-2016West Indies have always been vulnerable to their players earning more by representing someone else. Garry Sobers almost played in English league cricket in 1963 instead of for West Indies. Two rebel tours took place to apartheid South Africa in the 1980s, exploiting the financial insecurity of fringe players. So those who harrumph that today’s Caribbean stars lack the pride of their forebears in representing the region miss the point. West Indies will not return to having their stars available for every game through appeals to romance.Incentives matter. It is not in the financial interests of West Indies’ T20 stars to devote themselves to the national side. While that remains the case, the dispiriting cycle will continue: at full-strength in the World T20, West Indies will remain formidable, but the rest of the time they will be deprived of most of their best players, with predictable results.The heady talk in April of a resurgent West Indies, after the men and women had triumphed in the World T20 and the Under-19s had won the World Cup, already seems like an age ago. There are a few more trophies on the mantlepiece, but nothing has changed. The internecine squabbling between the players and board continues. Phil Simmons, the most popular coach with the players for many years and the man who oversaw the men’s World T20 triumph, has been sacked. Some stars from that tournament are now absent friends; others are only glimpsed in a West Indies shirt when they are underprepared.Dwayne Bravo arrived in the UAE the day before the first T20I against Pakistan, highlighting how West Indies are emasculated by the absence of contracts for their white-ball specialists: the only WICB contracts are for those who play Test cricket too. All the while, other countries are successfully grappling with the notion of white-ball specialists. England have just introduced lucrative new white-ball contracts, which could allow leading limited-overs players to earn more than Test players. Could West Indies’ limited-overs cricket be reinvigorated by doing the same, and creating six to eight contracts for white-ball specialists?It is much easier for the ECB to award bumper central contracts than for the WICB to do so because the ECB has so much more cash: the result of more lucrative commercial deals. A lack of cash is the reason why, in order to fund the creation of 90 professional contracts in the domestic game, the WICB had to reduce the amount that the top international players earned, and phase out the seniority principle in international payments, under which senior players received higher match fees than less experienced ones did.

What West Indies players are paid

  • US$1735 per T20I

  • $2300 per ODI

  • $5750 per Test match

  • Plus $1000 image rights per day if selected in a game

  • Three contract tiers: Category A, $140,000; Category B, $120,000; Category C $100,000

The WICB has made some effort to compromise with leading limited-overs players. Outside pre-existing arrangements, the WICB has created a window for the IPL in the cricket calendar. “That is a big chunk of the prime cricket months in the Caribbean. It is also lost revenue for WICB not scheduling cricket in that window,” says Richard Pybus, West Indies’ director of cricket. “Having done that, we wanted players committing to play in West Indies domestic cricket, to give value to fans and sponsors and bring depth to the competitions. So they would have been able to play in the IPL and CPL, then give a commitment to West Indies cricket, international and local. This hasn’t been the case.” The WICB has ruled that ODI selection is predicated on playing in the Nagico50, the regional 50-over competition, but as that clashes with the Big Bash, the ruling has left a coterie of players unavailable for ODI cricket.So while the WICB is far from blameless, to some extent it is also simply a victim of wider financial imbalances in international cricket. And yet even New Zealand, a board with similar financial realities, finds a way to accommodate white-ball-only contracts.An insider believes that US$100,000-150,000 a year would persuade West Indies players to sign up to limited-overs contracts that allow them to play the entirety of the IPL and CPL but otherwise gave the WICB first refusal over their services, and the right to manage the players’ workloads. With such security, players would be less inclined to play in every possible T20 competition.In Florida in August, the WICB held discussions with limited-overs specialists on how to work together; among the options proposed by the players’ representatives was including white-ball contracts and relaxing the requirements to play in the Nagico50. As yet nothing has materialised from the conversations, though the WICB is understood to be considering introducing some form of limited-overs contracts.

An insider believes that US$100,000-150,000 a year would persuade West Indies players to sign up to limited-overs contracts that allow them to play the entirety of the IPL and CPL but otherwise gave the WICB first refusal over their services

There would be significant advantages if they did so. While the cash needed for white-ball contracts – probably close to $1 million a year, depending on the number of contracts – is not insignificant, it could be seen as an investment. If West Indies are able to tie down their limited-overs stars, they would become a much more attractive proposition to broadcasters, sponsors and opponents alike.In March, Bravo suggested that West Indies could dominate T20I cricket just as they had dominated Tests in the 1980s. While the West Indies of the 1980s generated cash by being invited to tour the wealthiest nations – they toured Australia six times that decade, including four times in Test series – so the side of the 2010s could become huge draws in limited-overs cricket, leaving West Indies better off financially and in cricket terms. Few want to watch the T20 world champions play as meekly as in the two whitewashes by Pakistan in the UAE.Of course, a new system could create new problems. The WICB’s current contracts show an organisation that puts Test cricket above the other two formats. If that changed, then West Indies’ limited-overs sides might be strengthened – but at the expense of a further decline in their Test team.”One of the West Indies’ challenges is to keep their best players playing Test cricket,” says Tony Irish, the executive chairman of the Federation of International Cricketers’ Associations. “Lucrative white-ball contacts may bring some of their current ‘free agent’ players back to playing ODIs and T20Is but it may well also encourage future West Indies players to make that choice over Test cricket.” Irish believes new contracts need to be more lucrative across the board to keep players playing all three formats – emphasising how West Indies are hampered under the ICC’s revenue distribution model. However much it is maligned, the WICB faces a series of unenviable choices.The beating at the hands of Pakistan has left West Indies in a precarious position in regards to the World Cup•Getty ImagesBut the current impasse between the itinerant T20 stars and the WICB is debilitating and, without substantial reform, shows no signs of improving. “My feeling at the moment is that things could get worse before they get better,” says Eddie Tolchard, managing director of Insignia Sports International, which represents, among others, Samuel Badree, Kieron Pollard, Sunil Narine and Darren Sammy. “There are financial considerations, of course, but in any form of employer-employee relationship, there is a duty of mutual trust and confidence.”For players to enter into any form of retainer with the WICB, it wouldn’t be purely down to the financials. The relationship would need to be better. Goals aligned. Continuity and confidence installed, with everyone knowing where they stand and what exactly they are agreeing to commit to each year, and importantly, a thriving and positive environment for the youngsters to be exposed to created.”If that does not happen, the current batch of T20 globetrotters will be trendsetters in the Caribbean, and young players might use West Indies as little more than a vehicle to attract T20 scouts. Already the lack of availability of West Indies’ best players has cost them a place in the Champions Trophy, and the $250,000 participation fee that comes with it. Now, having slipped back to ninth in the ODI rankings after their drubbing by Pakistan, West Indies are at risk of not merely having to play the World Cup Qualifiers, but doing so shorn of their best limited-overs players, jeopardising their chances of reaching the World Cup itself, and thus potentially losing out on the $1 million given to each qualifier.A new contract system would be no panacea. But increasing the incentives for leading players to represent West Indies would give the team a chance of ending the blame game, and fielding something resembling their best side in the two limited-overs formats. Without substantial reform, the fear is that West Indies’ performances in bilateral limited-overs cricket will get even worse.

Frustrating week ends in delight for Odisha

Odisha have qualified for the quarter-finals of the Ranji Trophy for the first time since 2001-02, but life was anything but comfortable for them for the last ten days or so

Arun Venugopal10-Dec-2016When Delhi were battling for a win against Saurashtra in Baroda to stay alive in the knockout race, some 1500 km away an anxious Odisha side was keeping close tabs on the match. With Odisha only one point ahead of Delhi’s 21, the latter’s victory would leave Odisha needing to win outright against Jharkhand in their last league game beginning on December 15.However, unlike his team-mates, Odisha captain Govinda Poddar wasn’t sweating over the outcome. He was attending a family function in his hometown Rourkela, and had decided to take his mind off the game. His team-mates, though, wouldn’t let him be.”I wasn’t following the scores because I didn’t want to be nervous about something I couldn’t control. But, every once in a while, someone or the other would ring me up to tell me the score,” he told ESPNcricinfo. “I would tell them: ‘, please put the phone down. Tell me at the end if they have lost or not.'”Not long after, Saurashtra snuffed out Delhi’s chances by four runs after last man Navdeep Saini was adjudged lbw. As a result, Odisha were into the quarter-finals of the Ranji Trophy for the first time since 2001-02. This time, Poddar didn’t mind the phone calls.”I have two phones and both started ringing at the same time. Our wicketkeeper Saurabh Rawat, and Ranjit Singh, the opening batsman, were the first guys to call,” he said. “When I picked up the phones, I heard their excited voices: ‘, we have qualified, congrats.’ Then, I called our coach Debasis Mohanty and we congratulated each other.”Allrounder Biplab Samantray was one of the players who bombarded Poddar with score updates. He was at his home in Cuttack, discussing the match online with his team-mates. “We were all sharing updates on our team’s Whatsapp group, and whenever my internet slowed down, I would anxiously ask the others what the score was,” he said.”It’s been 15 years since we have qualified for the knockouts, so obviously there is bound to be excitement. It was a dream of mine, personally, to play in the quarter-finals. We have been doing well this season and God has given us another chance to prove ourselves. We had our team’s practice session this afternoon and everyone was excited about performing in a big match. Such things don’t come easily.”Odisha leave for Thiruvananthapuram on Monday for what would now effectively be a practice match against Jharkhand ahead of the quarter-finals scheduled to begin on December 24. Had Delhi won, the trip would have been a lot more tense, especially with what Odisha have gone through in the last week or so. They were grounded in Dindigul for a week after their last league fixture against Jharkhand was a non-starter following the death of Tamil Nadu chief minister J Jayalalithaa. Poddar called the “hotel arrest” a new experience that transcended cricket.”From December 2 to 8, we were in Dindigul,” he said. “We went for practice only on the first two days, and a few hours before she passed away on December 5, there were rumours about her passing away. Our local manager feared there could be acts of violence and said we had to return to the hotel, which was about 35 km away from the ground [in Natham]. After we reached the hotel, we couldn’t step out until December 8.”It was frustrating, but it was a new experience in the sense we got to know a lot of new things. The passing away of a leader of such stature is sad news, and we could see what it meant to the people there.”There was some anxiety over Odisha’s travel plans, and for a brief period, they didn’t know the fate of their match against Jharkhand. “There was a bit of apprehension over whether we could get out of town or not, and what would happen to the match,” he said.”So there was a lot of chaos, but all the boys got together and reassured one another that we couldn’t afford to worry about the game. Whenever it took place, we had to be ready – there was nothing more we could do. For those five-six days, all we did was wake up, gather in somebody’s room and order room-service. That we have bonded well all season has helped.”After the team eventually got back to Odisha, they have had well-deserved downtime. Poddar hoped Odisha, rejuvenated by the break, would go further in the tournament. “I was very desperate because some of our players have been performing well over the last few years, but still they are not getting to play at a certain level,” he said. “To come into the limelight, you need to play quarter-finals and semi-finals. Your matches are broadcast live and people know there is a team that is trying hard to come up the ladder.”For now, though, Odisha have earned the right to celebrate their biggest achievement in a while. “We haven’t planned a party yet, Samantray said, “but we will have something for sure before we start for Trivandrum.”

Mushfiqur's little masterclass in playing spin

Aakash Chopra analyses Mushfiqur Rahim’s response to India’s spinners on the fourth day of the Hyderabad Test

Aakash Chopra12-Feb-2017Mushfiqur’s varied responses to the same length

Mushfiqur Rahim has played the Indian spinners quite well in this match. Confidence in the forward defence has formed the foundation of his game. Bowlers try to target the good-length area and to counter that regularly you need a good defence. He has played with soft and high hands while keeping the bat ahead of the front pad. The second response to a same length ball is his wide range of sweep shots. He can play the ball fine, square and even drag it from outside off to hit towards midwicket. Once he was set, he started using his feet to drive through covers and down the ground. That forced spinners to drag the length shorter and he is quite good at cutting. A bit of a masterclass in playing spin.A unique trigger movement
In his stance, Mushfiqur’s back toe is on the middle stump and the front toe on the leg-stump mark. Most players either go back and across or have a forward press, but Mushfiqur is different. He goes slightly towards square leg with the back leg, which leads to the front foot falling across. He makes up for it by playing late.Bhuvneshwar’s first four balls
Bowling the first over of the day, Bhuvneshwar Kumar brought the first ball in, and swung the next one away. Then, he went to the corner of the crease, for the first time in the match, and kept the shine as if he was bowling an outswinger but used the angle to bring it in. He followed it with the sucker ball from the middle of the box, which finished within the stumps and dismissed Mehedi Hasan. It was a good example of using the crease and the old ball well.A pitch map depicting the lengths Indian seamers bowled to the Bangladesh batsmen•ESPNcricinfo LtdYorkers gone missing
While everyone has, quite rightly, appreciated the Indian seamers’ ability to reverse swing, the absence of yorkers has left a little void. Shoaib Akhtar’s suggestion for the old ball is to target the nose and the toes: bowl a couple of bouncers to soften the target and then follow it up with a few toe-crushers, especially when bowling to the tail.Captain’s hunch
At the start of the fourth day, Umesh Yadav gave his hat and sunglasses to the umpire to prepare for the first over before Virat Kohli intervened. He asked Bhuvneshwar to bowl that over and told Umesh to bowl from the other end. As luck would have it, Bhuvneshwar dismissed Mehedi on the fourth ball. Cricket captaincy is a lot about hunch and gut-feeling, and Kohli’s decision was a fine example of that.Tamim’s distinctive front-foot defence
Tamim Iqbal is one of the four Bangladesh batsmen who’ve scored more that 3000 Test runs, and is currently their leading run-scorer in the format. He has a unique way of defending the fast bowlers on the front foot, for his front toe never touches the ground. While he allows the ball to come to him and is a fluent player on the front foot, the toe in the air suggests he would not be throwing his weight towards the ball. It’s never a bad idea to bowl full and a little wide early on.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus