'Courageous' Taijul Islam delivers for Bangladesh, again, when most needed

The left-arm spinner’s contest with Abid Ali made for wonderful viewing; it was even, and only after 110 balls did the Pakistan batter falter

Mohammad Isam28-Nov-2021As Taijul Islam walked to his bowling mark, there was a big cheer, some clapping of hands and some chatter, and a lot of buzz among the Bangladesh players. And why not? He had picked up four wickets, including that of century-maker Abid Ali, and the Bangladesh players were expecting more from him. He didn’t disappoint, finishing with 7 for 116, his ninth five-wicket haul in Tests.Related

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Taijul picked up almost all of the big wickets. And the pressure he created on the second day of the Chattogram Test played its part in Mehidy Hasan Miraz nailing Babar Azam cheaply. Taijul himself was rampant in the first two sessions of the day, and his contest with Abid made for gripping viewing: Abid scored slowest against Taijul when compared to the other bowlers, and though he did hit the left-arm spinner for three fours and a six and the lbw decision was a marginal one too, it was a testament to Taijul’s patience. He had bowled 110 deliveries to Abid before getting rid of him.”The wicket wasn’t all that friendly for spinners. Taijul was successful because of his consistency, patience, accuracy and discipline,” Bangladesh’s spin-bowling coach Sohel Islam said afterwards. “We didn’t take any wickets yesterday but we were still in the game. We bowled similarly today. We wanted to be accurate, create a bowling partnership and prey on the batsman’s patience. We stuck to our plans.”Partly because of his quiet and unflashy exterior, Taijul has always flown under the radar somewhat. He has always been tagged a Test specialist, and finds himself in and out of the white-ball squads. He hardly plays Tests abroad. But in Test matches at home, the plan is usually to hand him the ball as soon as possible. And he rarely fails to deliver: he has an average of 26.39 at home.When he does, though, he cops a fair bit of blame. Like after the losses to Afghanistan and West Indies. He wasn’t too effective in Sri Lanka earlier this year either. He was then passed over for the one-off Test in Zimbabwe in July, keeping him out of international cricket for six months.

“I have one role when Shakib is playing, and another when he is not playing. Since he isn’t playing, I have to manage the wicket-taker’s role as well as maintaining economy”Taijul Islam

At one stage in between, he tried to tweak his bowling action, making it similar to that of Daniel Vettori, who was Bangladesh’s spin-bowling coach at the time. But he reverted to his own action soon enough. What didn’t change was his attitude.”I like courageous guys like Taijul,” Sohel said. “He thought that he needed to take a bit of a risk to get to the next stage of his career. He showed guts by trying something like that [change of action] at this stage of his career. I think it is a sign of a big player. His new action would never have caused him a big problem in any case. His old action was stored in his muscle memory.”Taijul, among the top-flight players who regularly plays domestic first-class cricket, came into this game on the back of a ten-wicket haul in the National Cricket League. A quiet contributor, sometimes with the bat too, and at least on one occasion on the field, Taijul will probably find himself playing a more central role in the bowling line-up as Shakib Al Hasan’s career reaches its final stages.”I have one role when Shakib is playing, and another when he is not playing. Since he isn’t playing, I had to assume his role. I have to manage the wicket-taker’s role as well as maintaining economy,” Taijul said. “Regardless of whether I am playing NCL or any other tournament, I try to stick to my process when I am preparing for Tests.”Taijul has now delivered again, giving Bangladesh a good chance of beating Pakistan. In a cricket team with so many spots where more consistent performers would be welcome, the stability Taijul provides is invaluable. He has a big heart. He has great control over his craft. What he might need is more support from the management, and be part of the bigger plan.

Fearless Kuldeep Yadav continues reaping rewards of planning and confidence

“He looks like he’s got energy, faster arm action and now he’s got the skill to take over,” Daniel Vettori on Kuldeep’s return to form

Sruthi Ravindranath29-Apr-20223:18

What is Kuldeep Yadav doing differently this season?

The renaissance continues: he has added new dimensions to his bowling, he has been more confident, and he has been producing match-winning spells. Kuldeep Yadav had wrecked his former team Kolkata Knight Riders earlier in the season, and on Thursday he did it again, finishing with superb figures of 4 for 14 in three overs to restrict them to 146.He continues to show why he deserves to be part of India’s T20 World Cup plans, putting his success down to him becoming “mentally strong” and having “clearer plans”.”I have probably become a better bowler [than before],” Kuldeep told host broadcaster Star Sports after the match. “However, one thing is certain that I have become a lot stronger mentally. When you fail in life, you think, ‘Where can I improve?’ You learn from your mistakes when you face failure in life. I have worked on it, and now I have no fear of failure.”Related

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Kuldeep picked up his second four-wicket haul of this season, taking his tally to 17 wickets. In his first over, he had debutant Baba Indrajith caught at long-on, before trapping Sunil Narine lbw with the very next ball. He came back in the 14th over to dismiss Shreyas Iyer and then set up Andre Russell to get him out for a three-ball duck.”I liked the wicket of Russell because I set him up well,” he said. “I first went around the wicket and then returned to bowl over the wicket. Then I went back to bowl around the wicket and bowled a bit wider. That was my plan. He played out two dots, and then I knew he would step out for a shot. So I perfectly planned for that, and it [the wicket] was an important wicket for us.”This kind of planning – without overthinking – is what has led to Kuldeep having his “best IPL season yet”. He was not too worried when he went wicketless while conceding 40 in three overs in the last match against Rajasthan Royals. But that has not always hasn’t been the case, he admitted.Until IPL 2019, Kuldeep was Knight Riders’ go-to wicket-taker, averaging 19.43 with an economy rate of 7.32. In 2020, he picked one wicket in five games and was eventually dropped. Kuldeep didn’t make the Knight Riders’ starting XI in the first half of the 2021 season either, and was then sidelined with a knee injury for the second.Kuldeep Yadav: “I’ve become a lot clearer with my plans. I’ve backed my skill”•BCCIWorrying about giving away too many runs is no longer an issue this time around because he has always found ways to come back.”I’m enjoying bowling, and I’ve become a lot clearer with my plans,” Kuldeep said. “I don’t think too much about what the batter will do, I have also given away some runs. I’ve backed my skill. I’ve stuck to my lengths too, though it’s not always been perfect.”But that’s what happens in T20. But my focus has been on bowling good lengths. When I get a wicket upfront then it just gives me more confidence [for the rest of the game].”But what is it that has sparked his turnaround this season?He has been bowling a lot quicker – his average speed has gone from 81.9kph in the IPL till 2021 to 86.6kph this season – and has also managed to put more revs on the ball. Former New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori believes these things have also helped Kuldeep bring more energy into his action.”More revs mean your hand position and your release point [are better] and the more energy you bring to the crease,” Vettori told ESPNcricinfo’s T20 Time:Out. “The great Shane Warne talked about how your energy at the crease shows how much spin you get in the ball – you need a quick arm speed, and then your subtleties and nuance come from your wrist position.””Looks like Kuldeep has got the energy, a faster arm action, and now he has got the skill to take over because of that base. It’s also the release point. It’s about bowling fast with more revolutions on it, and you see the seam position.”

“Kuldeep has recognised that to be successful in this format, ‘I too have to add a little bit of pace to the ball and be able to spin it'”Ian Bishop on Kuldeep’s success this season

“It felt like during the last opportunity he tried to buy wickets, and that maybe [was] a product of Narine being a certainty and [Varun] Chakravarthy coming into the team. ‘I have got to make the most of this opportunity because If I don’t do something, I’m going to be out of the team.'”Now he seems more settled – he is obviously the first choice for Delhi and he is forcing his case for being back in the Indian team. It’s all about what he’s done and how he’s improved as a bowler.”Former West Indies fast bowler Ian Bishop also believes that Kuldeep bringing in that extra dimension of adding pace has brought him success this season.”Virat Kohli, the captain [of India] at that time, wanted him [Yuzvendra Chahal] to bowl with more pace as wristspinners in world cricket have done. The Rashid Khans, the Imran Tahirs were bowling quicker through the air.”Kuldeep has recognised that in order to be successful in this format ‘I too have to add a little bit of pace to the ball and be able to spin it’. So whether that’s been a deliberate effort [or not], I think that was good planning. And to see him bowl with more pace is actually working.”Chahal and Kuldeep were once a crucial part of India’s white-ball plans before falling out of favour due to inconsistent performances. They both have now made strong cases: Chahal is the leading wicket-taker in the tournament, with Kuldeep right behind. But there is no competition between the two, at least according to the latter.”He is like my elder brother, and he has given me encouragement,” Kuldeep said. “He used to talk to me constantly even when I was injured. I sincerely wish that he got the Purple Cap.”

Dan Lawrence shaping up as the homespun hero of Root's new England

Young batter’s non-conformist approach offers glimpse of radical future for Test side

Andrew Miller22-Mar-2022“Mystery spinner, mystery spinner… my kingdom for a mystery spinner!”The storied reign of Nasser Hussain, England’s finest Test captain of the 21st century, essentially boiled down to this lasting and tacky residue… a realisation that he could, and did, haul England’s standards up by their bootstraps, and deliver successes that could not have been contemplated even 18 months before he took charge, but that when it came to beating the very, very best, there was only so much he could ever dredge from the personnel at his disposal.It was, in fact, a lament in stereo throughout that era of awakening. England beat West Indies at home and Pakistan and Sri Lanka away in 2000-01, but were then trounced 4-1 in consecutive Ashes campaigns in 2001 and 2002-03. With a tough tour of India in between whiles, Hussain found himself yearning for a spinner to turn it at complex angles like Shane Warne and Muthiah Muralidaran (while doing his best to be grateful for Ashley Giles). And at the same time, his sidekick Duncan Fletcher was obsessed with creating an attack filled with 90mph bowlers – and for that fleeting moment of glory in 2005, his monomania was amply born out.But yes, here England are, two decades later, still trying to solve that apparent riddle of the Sphinx, even as they still find themselves endlessly drawn towards conformity – from the preponderance of right-arm medium-pacers who were chosen to lead the line in Antigua, or the continued inability to trust their legspinner Matt Parkinson for a Test debut, despite dragging him around the globe like some weird novelty baggage-tag that you’re too superstitious to do away with.And yet, there have been glimpses in these last two Tests of a welcome new radical streak to England’s cricket, stilted and uncomfortably implemented though it may have been. After all, it was injury and illness, rather than any specific selection U-turn, that earned both Saqib Mahmood and Matthew Fisher their Test debuts in Barbados. And all the while, overseeing the process is Joe Root’s captaincy, which clearly engenders deep loyalty, but really isn’t given to flights of tactical fancy.Related

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Even so, twice in as many bore-draws, England have made all the running going into the final day of the Test; twice they’ve thrown the bat with abandon in the third innings to give themselves a chance, and twice they’ve bowled with spirit and early optimism, only for the realities of the surface and West Indies’ proud resilience to grind them down in the final hour.And that if that new-found lack of conformity has had a focal point, then it has arguably come in the guise of Essex’s Dan Lawrence, perhaps the most homespun cricketer that England have fielded in a generation. In four consecutive innings, Lawrence has latched on to the responsibilities of his new No. 4 berth, batting with a notable selflessness, especially in the second innings, that has had distant echoes of Graham Thorpe’s attempts to seize the initiative on England’s 1993-94 tour of the Caribbean – another campaign that promised new beginnings after a familiar Ashes trouncing.”It was a joy to bat with him out there,” Root said, after Lawrence had made a career-best 91 in their 164-run stand in England’s first innings. “He just seems to be growing in confidence all the time. If he plays as he is, it’s not going to be long until he gets a big hundred. He was very selfless this week, even in the first innings. The tempo increased, he pushed it along.”After the awfulness of England’s Ashes batting, in which they were let down time and again by a failure to embrace the game’s fundamentals, Lawrence’s approach in this series has offered a very postmodern route to rectitude. On the final morning in Antigua, before England’s declaration intentions were clear, it seemed debatable whether his diet of inside-out drives over extra cover was really the best use of a rare chance for Test-match practice. By the time he’d racked up 131 runs from 189 balls in Barbados, however, the methods to his madness were plainer for all to see.

For it’s hard to judge Lawrence by the same standards as his contemporaries. Unlike Zak Crawley, for instance, who – through no fault of his own – epitomises the public-school pipelining that is so prevalent among the coming generation of England batters, Lawrence is the son of the groundsman at Chingford CC in East London. His path to cricket has been, in its own way, every bit as exclusive, but so much less regimented; less time spent with the MCC coaching manual in youth-team clinics, and more time with his own whims in the very nets that his dad prepared, and which backed onto his garden.The upshot is a player who, instead of having his quirks beaten out of him before they could take on any lasting expression, had them hard-coded by his early induction into men’s league cricket – he made his debut for Chingford aged 9, and was opening the batting at 14. And while that may be a familiar story for any number of prodigies in the subcontinent in particular (and one of innumerable reasons while English cricket’s failure to tap into its vast British Asian demographic has been so self-defeating) it is virtually unheard of in England’s more cloistered pathways.Lawrence came through at Essex after learning his game with Chingford CC•Getty Images”I do play the odd shot sometimes, and then watch it back and I’m like, ‘wow, that looks … strange’,” Lawrence told Wisden Cricket Monthly last year. “I learnt quite a lot myself growing up and surrounded by adults you grow up faster, learning how to play against people who are bigger and stronger than you. A lot of my best mates still play at Chingford, so who I am as a person has been moulded by the people at the club.”And yet, for all his batting success, it was arguably with the ball that Lawrence made his most radicalising impact in Barbados. It wasn’t that his match figures of 21-6-57-1 were especially game-changing, or that they put Jack Leach’s marathon efforts to any shame, as Leach ploughed his way through 94.5 overs in the match, the most by any England bowler since 1962.Rather it was his optimistic, angular lines of attack that caught the eye, as Lawrence tossed his offbreaks up with that extraordinary, uncultivated, limbs-akimbo action, and ripped them repeatedly off the seam with a wristspinner’s verve. Each of his two wickets in the series have come late in the day, against well-set centurions – Nkrumah Bonner in Antigua, and Jermaine Blackwood in Barbados – and in that respect at least, he showed Leach a thing or two about the risk-reward of flight and bite. Maybe, by extension, he also made it easier for England to understand why Parkinson’s legbreaks could be the missing link in their attack in Grenada next week.”He gets so much overspin, and on wickets like this where you get funny bounce and you need to hit the seam to get it to react, he does that very well,” Jeetan Patel, England’s spin coach, said of Lawrence’s bowling. “He offers uniqueness. Everyone can see his action is a bit different, but what he does with the ball is different from other guys as well.”For the time being, though, England’s learning curve remains a delicate one. Lawrence, after all, is just two matches into his recall, having twiddled his thumbs in Australia even after the Ashes had gone down the pan – a notable lack of coherence from the selectors given that, only two years beforehand, he had emerged from the 2019-20 Lions tour of Australia as perhaps the surest thing since Kevin Pietersen tore a swathe through India with England A in 2003-04.Dan Lawrence bowls during West Indies’ first innings•Getty ImagesOn that trip, Lawrence made a brace of centuries in the Lions’ four-day games, including a matchwinning 125 in the unofficial Test in Melbourne – their first such representative win in Australia in seven previous campaigns. But the pandemic struck a few weeks later, and despite some sparky displays – not least on debut in Sri Lanka – he’s struggled like many of England’s young guns to make genuine strides in an environment specifically designed to prevent tight-knit units from forming.Now, however, there’s just the germ of a new dynamic. “It’s not a win, but it feels like another step forward as a team,” Root said. “We’ll keep pushing very hard but there’s a number of things that were really promising again. The young guys have enjoyed taking on new roles, and we’re finding positions where we’re on top and commanding the game. I’m feeling quite confident about certain aspects of how we’re playing.”Whether Root has full confidence to embrace non-conformity, however, could define the real strides that this team is able to make.

Samit Patel: 'Who'd have thought that I'd play 20 years of T20 cricket? It's pretty special'

Blast record-holder targets more success with Notts as tournament’s 20th season draws near

Matt Roller11-May-2022Samit Patel is the second-highest wicket-taker in the history of English domestic T20 cricket as the Vitality Blast approaches its 20th season, an achievement that must have seemed implausible to him in his first experience of the format.In the inaugural year of what was the Twenty20 Cup, Patel made 10 not out off 13 balls on his T20 debut for Nottinghamshire against Leicestershire at Trent Bridge and two days later was thrown the ball for the first time in a televised game against Yorkshire at Headingley.”I was still at school at the time and I was telling everyone at school to watch me,” Patel recalls. “But then my first-ever ball in T20 cricket was a no-ball. It went for six. And the free hit went for six too so I’d bowled one ball for 14.” Michael Lumb, his future team-mate, went after him and took his only over for 28 runs; even in the days before ‘match-ups’ had entered common parlance, bowling left-arm spin to a set left-handed batter was a dangerous game.”No-one knew how to play T20 cricket in that first year,” Patel says. “We didn’t know what a good score was, we didn’t know which players to use. No-one knew anything: teams were trying pinch-hitters, anything they could think of. We just didn’t know: it felt like a trial, really.”It was just a case of ‘try and get as many as you can, save a few wickets for the back end’ and off we went. From a bowling point of view, it was ‘if in doubt, bowl yorkers’ – no slower balls, no bouncers. Nobody knew how to play it so there was no planning at all.”A fresh-faced Samit Patel during T20 cricket’s third season•Getty ImagesPatel’s own experience was shaped by Notts’ struggles: they won five of their first 18 games across the first three T20 seasons, failing to reach the knockout stages until their run to the final in 2006. “We probably prioritised red-ball cricket a little bit too much but that was just the thing to do back in the day,” he reflects.The contrast is stark with a side that has now won more T20 games (128) than any other county and reached the knockout stages in each of the last six seasons, winning the title in 2017 and 2020. Patel has been a constant, and along with Ravi Bopara will be one of only two players to appear in each of the first 20 seasons of English domestic T20 cricket, following Gareth Batty and Rikki Clarke’s retirements. Last year, he became the first man in the tournament’s history to play 200 games.”Who’d have thought that I’d play 20 years of T20 cricket? It’s pretty special, to be honest,” he says. “To play in every year of the Blast for the same county has been unreal. I’ve been very fortunate. T20 has given guys a chance to fly around the world, meet new friends and make a difference: it’s been great for English cricket.”

Patel himself has played in just about every T20 league going – BBL, BPL, CPL, LPL, PSL and Super Smash – and is now a short-form specialist, having signed a white-ball contract in 2020. “I did the hard work of four-day cricket before that,” he says. “I advise that to everybody: you need the fundamental skills of batting, bowling and fielding from four-day cricket before you go down the franchise route.”He will again be a key player for Notts in 2022 when the tournament starts in two weeks’ time, bowling a large proportion of his overs in the powerplay and adding batting depth to give their top order licence to go hard against the new ball. With Dan Christian returning as captain, they are a hugely experienced squad once again and are the bookies’ pre-season favourites for the title.Last year, they won the North Group but were knocked out after a dramatic collapse against Hampshire in the quarter-finals, which took place over a month after the group stage due to the Hundred. “After playing so well in 90% of the game and then to lose, that was pretty frustrating to be honest,” Patel says. “I know the boys are desperate to put that right.”We’ve got big-game players and we know how to get it done. We’ve got a lot of experience which counts for a lot; we’ve got Dan Christian coming back this year who says ‘old is gold’ and that’s absolutely right. As soon as we get on a roll, it’s going to be tough for teams to come and play against us. We want to put pressure on any opposition.”Related

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Several counties are anxious about player availability for the Blast, with England’s Test and ODI series against New Zealand and Netherlands respectively both clashing with group games. Ben Duckett and Joe Clarke are the Notts players most likely to be affected, but they expect to retain the core of their side for most of the tournament.”We all want the boys to get picked for England,” Patel says. “That’s why we play our cricket. We’ve got a lot of depth so if the boys get picked we can cover for it but if they don’t, they’re going to have to churn them out for Notts.”And if winning a record-equalling third title is not enough, there is added personal motivation for Patel as he looks to keep up with Danny Briggs at the top of the tournament’s all-time wicket-taking list. “I’ve been toe-to-toe with him for a number of years. Briggsy is a good bowler – he flies under the radar – but so am I… hopefully I can get to the top at some stage.”Supporters can witness Notts Outlaws in the Vitality Blast at Trent Bridge from May 27 to July 1. Tickets are available here.

Luke Wright captains ESPNcricinfo's all-time T20 Blast XI

Our expert panel make their picks ahead of the 20th season of English domestic T20

ESPNcricinfo staff23-May-20221. Alex Hales (Nottinghamshire)

Hales has been among the Blast’s most destructive batters for more than a decade, earning his first England call-up on the back of his T20 form for Notts in 2011. He is the club’s all-time leading run-scorer in the format and is the only man in the top 50 run-scorers in the Blast’s history with a strike rate above 150 in the tournament.Luke Wright is the Blast’s all-time leading run-scorer•Getty Images2. Luke Wright (Sussex, captain)

The Blast’s all-time leading run-scorer and the captain of this side, Wright joined Sussex in 2004 and has been a mainstay of their T20 set-up ever since, captaining them from 2015 to 2021. He was part of their title-winning 2009 team but has got better with age and has become increasingly reliable as an opener since giving up bowling.3. Moeen Ali (Worcestershire)

A prolific allrounder throughout his domestic T20 career, ruthlessly taking down county spinners and reliably chipping in with the bat. Moeen became Worcestershire’s captain in 2018 and immediately led them to their first-ever title; the following season, he hit one of the Blast’s great hundreds in the quarter-finals against Sussex.Moeen Ali captained Worcestershire to the 2018 title•Getty Images4. Samit Patel (Nottinghamshire)

The Blast’s ubiquitous presence: six men in the tournament’s history have more runs, only one has more wickets and nobody has played as many games. It seemed a far cry when his first over in the competition went for 28 back in 2003 but Patel has become a domestic T20 legend, winning two titles on top of his remarkable individual success.5. Jos Buttler (Somerset/Lancashire, wicketkeeper)

It has become rare for Buttler to play more than a handful of Blast games in a season due to his England and IPL commitments but he was one of the competition’s stars as a young player. His 55 not out off 23 balls in Somerset’s 2010 semi-final was his first major televised innings and he continued to thrive after moving to Lancashire, playing a walk-on role in their 2015 title. Now one of the world’s best T20 openers but No. 5 in this team, having spent the overwhelming majority of his domestic career in the middle order.Buttler announced himself as a T20 cricketer at Somerset•Getty Images6. Ravi Bopara (Essex/Sussex)

Like Patel, Bopara has been an ever-present in the Blast, making his debut as a non-bowling No. 9 as a teenager in 2003; it was an inauspicious start but he has thrived in a number of different roles at both Essex and Sussex. He has batted everywhere from No. 1-10 but is a finisher in this side – the role in which he thrived for Essex when taking them to their only T20 title in 2019.7. Dan Christian (Hampshire/Gloucestershire/Middlesex/Notts)

One of four men to win three Blast finals, including two as captain. Christian’s first experience of the Blast was as a jobbing allrounder for Hampshire in 2010, a stint remembered for the chaos induced by his hamstring injury in a dramatic ending to the final. He returned with Gloucestershire and Middlesex – where he once hit 129 in a losing cause – but has flourished at Notts, leading them to two titles and living up to his mantra that “old blokes win stuff”.ESPNcricinfo’s all-time T20 Blast XI•ESPNcricinfo Ltd8. Benny Howell (Hampshire/Gloucestershire)

Howell is Gloucestershire’s magical mystery man. Described by his ESPNcricinfo profile as a right-arm medium-pacer, he identifies himself as a ‘fast spinner’ who bowls quick cutters and knuckleballs – and few on the county circuit have found a reliable way to counter him. He is the only player in this team without a Blast winners’ medal, his only T20 appearances for Hampshire coming in the year between their two titles.Azhar Mahmood’s clinches a Surrey win•PA Photos9. Azhar Mahmood (Surrey/Kent)

Mahmood was part of the Surrey side that won the inaugural Twenty20 Cup back in 2003, finishing the season as the second-highest wicket-taker in the country, and was still an effective bowler by the time he played his final Blast game in 2016 at the age of 41. He was also prolific playing for Kent and spent half of his county career as a local player by virtue of his British citizenship.10. Danny Briggs (Hampshire/Sussex/Warwickshire)

Briggs’ emergence as a fresh-faced left-arm spinner coincided with – and contributed to – Hampshire’s T20 glory years: they won the title in his first and third seasons, in 2010 and 2012. His performances earned him a brief England call-up and he has continued to impress while flying under the radar since moving counties, first to Sussex, then to Warwickshire. He retains top spot in the all-time wicket-taking list.Danny Briggs is the Blast’s all-time leading wicket-taker•Getty Images11. Harry Gurney (Leicestershire/Nottinghamshire)

Gurney was Leicestershire’s leading wicket-taker when they won their record third title in 2011 – though missed Finals Day with a side strain – and developed into one of the country’s leading death bowlers at Notts, mixing up his pace and angle of attack and nailing his yorkers. He was key to their 2017 title, closing out the final with 4 for 17 to earn himself a second career on the franchise circuit.Other players who received votes:4 votes: Graham Napier, Adil Rashid, Jason Roy, James Vince, David Willey
3 votes: Yasir Arafat, Michael Klinger
2 votes: Andrew Flintoff, James Foster, Dimitri Mascarenhas, Tymal Mills, Phil Mustard, Jeetan Patel, Imran Tahir, Marcus Trescothick
1 vote: Shahid Afridi, Mushtaq Ahmed, Jofra Archer, Pat Brown, Rikki Clarke, Ian Cockbain, Steven Croft, Steven Davies, Ian Harvey, Adam Hollioake, Colin Ingram, Rashid Khan, Adam Lyth, Darren Maddy, Brendon McCullum, Paul Nixon, Kieron Pollard, Jimmy Ormond, Owais Shah, Jeremy Snape, Darren Stevens, Andrew Symonds, Max Waller, Chris Wood

In Sri Lanka's hour of economic and political crisis, their cricketers have spoken up

The country is on the brink of economic collapse brought on by poor governance, and its sportspeople have added their voices to those of common citizens

Andrew Fidel Fernando07-Jun-2022″Cowardly… I am disappointed to see we even have such leadership”
– Wanindu Hasaranga”Disgusting… Intentional and planned.”
– Kumar Sangakkara”Entire world can see how pathetic your actions are.”
-Mahela Jayawardene”They did not take any action to prevent this…”
– Roshan Mahanama”Disgusting behaviour.”
– Sanath JayasuriyaThese are all quotes from tweets by Sri Lanka’s biggest cricketing stars, and several of the most beloved sporting figures in the country. Each of them was clearly incensed. But they were not tweeting about a dismissal where a non-striker was run-out when backing up. This wasn’t about a dressing-room spat, a fight with a coach, or even corruption on the field.

Peaceful protestors demanding for their basic needs and rights attacked by despicable thugs and goons backed by the thugs and goons in the government. Disgusting. This is state backed violence. Intentional and planned. https://t.co/sYiSEM2Q6P

— Kumar Sangakkara (@KumarSanga2) May 9, 2022

Disgusting act by the ruling government backed thugs attacking peaceful protesters.. entire world can see how pathetic your actions are. Where is law and order ? What are you doing SL police? Ur supposed to serve and protect the innocent? https://t.co/0WStIwpUVR

— Mahela Jayawardena (@MahelaJay) May 9, 2022

I am disgusted to see the attack on the most peaceful and strongest protests in the history of our country. This shows the cowardliness and dictatorship of the government authorities as the mobs were assembled in the Prime Minister's residence…

— Roshan Mahanama (@Rosh_Maha) May 9, 2022

Disgusting behavior!#GoHomeRajapakshas #GoHomeMahinda #gohomegota https://t.co/yHB0K5PC1j

— Sanath Jayasuriya (@Sanath07) May 9, 2022

All this was in response to the violence that each of them felt Sri Lanka’s government had unleashed on peaceful protesters on May 9. Those initial attacks sparked nationwide reprisals. By the end of the day, nine people had been killed, and dozens of politicians’ homes had been torched.Related

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Doth protest too little

What do India's cricketers have to say about the protests in the country?

Sri Lanka, if you hadn’t read, is going through an unprecedented economic crisis, which has prompted a popular uprising taking aim – in particular – at the Rajapaksa family, who have governed the country for 12 of the last 17 years and are seen as having led Sri Lanka to this precipice.”We send politicians to parliament for them to have full parliamentary benefits, and for them to lead a very luxurious life,” Mahanama says, capturing just a fraction of the public sentiment. “The only thing people expect from them is to give them what they promise, and to live peacefully. Now everything has been taken away. We’re talking about the bare essentials. There is no electricity, there are long blackouts. There are shortages of medicines. No fuel. No kerosene. No milk powder.”I’ve been seeing four or five kids share a loaf of bread. People have been going down from three meals a day to two. From two down to one. I’m hurt. I’m sorry to see fellow Sri Lankans going through this. It was the politicians who basically pushed everyone onto the streets.”Mahela Jayawardene: “One good thing with these incidents is that we as a country have come together”•Getty ImagesWhat has happened on the streets since March are mass protests, many led by young Sri Lankans. They have found an epicentre near Colombo’s Galle Face Green, where many of the earliest cricket matches in the country were played. There, a vast array of tents, banners, stalls, a makeshift library, a “teargas cinema” that screens films on themes relating to the protest, and various other platforms for public education, discussion and dissent have been erected by a loose collection of protesting groups. Around the country, more Occupy-style movements have begun in Kandy and Galle, most notably. But there have been large and spirited demonstrations all over the island, many of which have been met by water cannons, tear gas, and occasionally fatal gunfire, by Sri Lanka’s police and armed forces.It is impossible to separate the protests from their main demand, “Go home, Gota” (referring to Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, Sri Lanka’s president), and “Go home, Rajapaksas.” To support the protests is essentially to align yourself with these political aims.What is unusual about these demonstrations from a cricket perspective, however, is that they have had substantial support from past and current cricketers. Long before Hasaranga tweeted his disgust at the “cowardly and barbaric… attack on innocent and peaceful protesters” on May 9, he had expressed his unequivocal support of the “” (the struggle), even as he took his first steps in what would eventually become a phenomenally successful IPL season. “To the brothers and sisters involved in the , you have my utmost respect,” he tweeted on April 9, along with a photo of the mass demonstrations at Galle Face. “You’re the real heroes of the present day,” he wrote, tweeting a bicep-flex emoji and a Sri Lankan flag.By this stage, several high-profile cricketers had already been seen at the protests. Dimuth Karunaratne, Sri Lanka’s current Test captain, had made an appearance. As had former Test captain Marvan Atapattu. Upul Tharanga, and Jayasuriya had tweeted their support as well. Others put up social media posts that were at least “support adjacent” – meaning, they weren’t decrying the Rajapaksas outright but were in some vague sense showing solidarity with a growing people’s movement.Mahanama, though, was one of the first on the ground, one of the most vocal online. “When I saw people struggling like this, I thought to myself, ‘I can’t just stay at home,” he says. “I need to be there for people because they’ve been there for me throughout. We need people with a strong voice to come out and show their displeasure. By the day, things were getting worse. We need these politicians to be accountable. Some of these people have been there for years.”People line up for kerosene at a filling station. The Sri Lankan rupee has declined sharply and inflation in May was around 40%•Ishara S Kodikara/Getty ImagesFormer fast bowler Dhammika Prasad had had similar thoughts. “People were really facing a lot of difficulty just to live, because of the economic crisis,” he says. “They were facing an for their lives. They still are. As a responsible citizen, I had to do something. When I was playing, these are the same people who would support me. I have a responsibility towards them.”Young people have got down on to the streets to protest. When they are there demonstrating peacefully to ask for something completely reasonable, you can’t just stay at home. Perhaps there’s a tendency among us to save your own skin. But there are times when you have to have a backbone and stand up for what’s right.”Although far from the biggest name in Sri Lankan cricket, Prasad’s was the most committed, and profound of the anti-government demonstrations by Sri Lanka’s cricketers. In addition to the Rajapaksas’ perceived economic mismanagement and corruption, support for a variety of long-standing social-justice causes has found loud expression at the protests. In April, chief among these was the call for justice for the victims of the 2019 Easter bombings, which primarily targeted Christian places of worship. Although a presidential inquiry into the bombings was carried out, largely during Gotabhaya Rajapaksa’s tenure, there has been widespread criticism that it was insufficient, and that those who masterminded the attacks – or at least set them in motion – have not yet been identified.Prasad, a Catholic, said he could not help but take up this cause as the three-year anniversary of the attacks approached. He first took part in a 40-kilometre protest march between the Katuwapitiya Church in Negombo and St Anthony’s Shrine in Kochchikade – the latter was the site that had the most casualties in the attacks. Later that month, he staged a 24-hour hunger strike at Galle Face, during which he called relentlessly for justice.A policeman fires tear gas during clashes between government supporters and protesters in Colombo on May 9•Ishara S Kodikara/Getty Images”I remember in 2019 I went to the church at Katuwapitiya with Dasun Shanaka and Dushmantha Chameera,” Prasad says. “The church was totally destroyed, and there were parts of human bodies everywhere. Of the 269 people who had died, I wondered how many would have clapped for me, and how many would have loved cricket. I wanted to do right by them.”People are really struggling, and on top of that, there has been no justice for the victims of the Easter attacks. It was for those reasons I was at the .”There has been criticism of the , including that the protests became a trendy place to be seen. However, defenders of the protests have argued that the conversations, slogans and discourse seen at the protests have helped bring vital political issues that were previously the domain of wonks and academics into the mainstream. Jayawardene is among those defenders.”The has triggered a lot of awareness around the country – how we need this change and how we can make those changes, which the country desperately needs,” he says. “I’m very, very proud of the people who have got together in the protests around the country – not just in Colombo but in the outstations as well. And they’ve been strengthened by a lot of others.”Among the issues the protests have put a microscope on, for example, is Sri Lanka’s constitution, which many critics think concentrates too much unchecked power in the office of the president. Prasad, Mahanama, and Jayawardene all support amending the constitution to dilute the powers of the president, or a completely abolition of the office. As a first step, though, the current head honchos need to leave, Jayawardene says.Dhammika Prasad: “Young people have got down on to the streets to protest. When they are there demonstrating peacefully to ask for something completely reasonable, you can’t just stay at home”•Deshakalyan Chowdhury/AFP/Getty Images”In a company, if the CEO and the CFO have made bad decisions and that company is in a crisis situation, the first thing that should happen is that those people resign. It should happen the same way with a country.”We need all parties to come together, but that’s going to be tough because first of all people have to put their hands up and say, ‘We’ve done something wrong’ and step down.”Just as the protests have reflected diverse political interests that have – at least momentarily – come together, many cricketers have expressed varying visions for Sri Lanka. In the course of the interviews for this story, Jayawardene called for better-educated politicians, but Mahanama suggests that well educated people are not necessarily always good decision-makers. “Sometimes the guy at the [local eatery] knows more about what’s going on than the so-called political experts.”Not all cricketers have endorsed the anti-establishment sentiment. Muthiah Muralidaran, the most high-profile Tamil cricketer ever, has refused to criticise the Rajapaksas. In fact, he more or less defended them on an Indian news channel, asking protesters to calm down until the government provided solutions. Murali’s story, however, is profusely conflicted and complex.But as the protests have brought complex political discussions into the mainstream, Sri Lanka’s cricketers have become more vocally engaged in more political conversations as well.Protestors camp out at the “Gota Go” village on Galle Face Green in April•Ishara S Kodikara/Getty ImagesJayawardene, who is Sinhala-Buddhist, the majority ethno-religious identity group in the country, puts it this way: “One good thing with these incidents over the last three or four months is that we as a country have come together. There are no ethnic, or religious, or caste, or social divisions. For a long time a lot of people benefited from keeping everything divided. That’s something that the younger generation has realised.”His friend Sangakkara has also spoken out against majoritarian politics over the course of the last few months. Other cricketers from Sinhala-Buddhist backgrounds have also been critical of the island’s political culture. Prasad called outright for a “system change”.What has been clear through much of the economic crisis, and the political crisis that economic nosedive precipitated, is that many of Sri Lanka’s cricketers have either been unwilling to remain idle as their nation suffers, or at the very least have been forced to take a stance because of the intensity of the anti-government demonstrations.Jayawardene, who was one of Sri Lanka’s most respected captains and players as well as a globally recognised coach, but also the head of a national sports council under a Rajapaksa regime, explained it this way: “Sri Lankan cricket is about people in the country. Without the Sri Lankans supporting us, we wouldn’t have achieved anything over the last 30 years. All the sportsmen and women in the country owe a huge gratitude to the people in this country. We’re a small country, and we’re part of society.”Yes you still have to work within that framework, but that doesn’t mean you are part of that establishment. We grew up here, and most of us will be here till we die. You are part of Sri Lanka. You’re part of that society.”

IPL 2022 playoffs – Which team didn't win a single match against the other three in league stage?

A look at how each playoffs team has fared in the tournament so far

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Adam Zampa's return could be the silver lining Australia need in wet Melbourne

Regardless of conditions and match-ups, the Australian setup views him as part of their best T20 XI – and he has extensive MCG experience to draw on

Danyal Rasool27-Oct-2022The skies over Melbourne have remained grey for about as long as anyone can remember now, but for Australia, there are suddenly silver linings to be had. New Zealand’s thumping win over them in Sydney might have put them on the ropes early on, but Australia staggered back to their feet with an imperious dismantling of Sri Lanka. Ireland’s stunning vanquishing of England even takes a sliver of pressure off Australia in a key match against their oldest rivals at the MCG on Friday. Crucially, it’s a game that will almost certainly see legspinner Adam Zampa, who sat out the Sri Lanka contest with Covid-19, return to the fray.”We haven’t talked about the team composition yet but Zampa’s feeling a lot better,” captain Aaron Finch said. “He’s been up and about a little bit. He was not crook but he was really flat the day before the [Sri Lanka] game and we wanted to give him as much time as possible to get up for the game but it was thought to be too much of an effort and would take too much out of him. Going into a World Cup game, you want to be at 100% and he felt as though he wasn’t so, that was the reason he pulled out, but I expect that he will be available here.”Related

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On paper, that might not necessarily be the most valuable match-up for Australia. Each of England’s top eight that played against Ireland have excellent strike rates against legspin since the start of last year; Harry Brook’s 123.15 the only one below 138. Moeen Ali’s obvious prowess against that particular type of bowling makes this an especially favourable match-up for England on paper through the late middle overs – a time when Australia tend to turn to Zampa for one to two overs. And against New Zealand, he found himself taken apart somewhat, conceding at least a four or six in each of his four overs as he went for 39.In spite of that, there’s never appeared any doubt in Australia’s mind that their best XI at this T20 World Cup is one that has Zampa in it, no matter the opponent. It was why, at the Junction Oval, where Australia trained indoors as the rain continued to lash Melbourne, Zampa bowled with the intensity of someone who knew he’d be involved against England.For all of England’s prolific record against legspin, the Australian legspinner wasn’t exactly outclassed in the two T20Is the sides played in the build-up, conceding 43 in five overs, two of which came in a game rain shortened to 12 overs each. It also included an absorbing battle with Moeen, one that saw the England batter score just seven off six balls, five of which came in the 17th over and included his wicket. In an innings that saw Moeen smash 44 off 27, Zampa had served more as a nail than a punching bag.It’s a tiny sample size, but Finch believed it was Zampa’s refusal to shirk a challenge which makes him so highly regarded against this England side.

“Zampa’s always up for the challenge and that’s the great trait that he’s got. I think he never ever backs away from a challenge. He takes it on.”Aaron Finch

“[Moeen and Zampa] have had some really good battles. Mo’s obviously an unbelievable striker of spin. But Zampa’s always up for the challenge and that’s the great trait that he’s got. I think he never ever backs away from a challenge. He takes it on. He wants to be there when they’re in the heat of battle and that’s something that that I admire so much about him. Because compared to other guys around the world, he doesn’t spin the ball as much as them but what he what he’s got is a huge heart and his cricket brain is brilliant. The amount of work that he does in the preparation for a game is outstanding.”How effective spin will be at the MCG also remains an intriguing unknown. In the game between India and Pakistan, spin disappeared so frequently it had to be hidden away till as late as possible. England, meanwhile, reaped such rich rewards with legspin they bowled three overs of Liam Livingstone against Ireland – two at the death – meaning Sam Curran, their best T20 death bowler on form, didn’t even complete his full quota.With Zampa having played more T20s at this venue than any other player from either side – he has played for the Melbourne Stars in the BBL since 2015-16 – his nous to hold his own in high-scoring tournaments should stand him in good stead. Just twice in 26 innings has he conceded more than 34 runs here, and of the maximum of 104 possible overs he could have bowled, he has sent down over 99. When Zampa plays at the MCG, Zampa bowls at the MCG – a lot.It might not be the worst time to play an England side still smarting from the defeat to Ireland, and the criticism of the rain-blind approach they took may well create further doubts in England’s minds on a day where the weather is expected to play a huge part again. Precisely the sort of doubts Adam Zampa will be itching to exploit.

India vs Pakistan – cricket, not hype, takes centre stage ahead of Round 2

The lack of shouting and screaming after the result last Sunday has led to a very different mood ahead of this Sunday’s marquee contest

Shashank Kishore03-Sep-20228:34

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Can you keep history away when it’s India vs Pakistan? Turns out, you can.Unlike before their first meeting last Sunday, where the talk was around a “friendly rivalry” and the “lovey-dovey” nature of it, this one feels different.India-Pakistan contests have become so one-sided now that there is this feeling that the build-up is bigger than the match itself. If Pakistan’s spree of World Cup losses over the years played into India’s chorus of “” prior to every ICC event, Pakistan’s “” chants after the ten-wicket dismantling of India at last year’s T20 World Cup was a strong riposte.But all that seems to be in the past now. Because Round 1 produced such a compelling contest, the cricket itself has taken centre stage ahead of Round 2. And no one is complaining.Related

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Prior to last Sunday, you would have to think hard to remember when an India-Pakistan result had been accepted with such magnanimity by those on the losing side (at least in public). It almost seemed like the unity and brotherhood is what it really was about, and there was no need to let one result trigger over-the-top reactions.Ahead of the first game, Babar Azam must have felt a bit tired after stressing, repeatedly, that Shaheen Afridi’s absence was a big loss indeed. It wasn’t too different for Rohit Sharma, who had to do the same when it came to Jasprit Bumrah.A week on, the focus and hype from the outside seems to have veered towards the teams, not just individuals, or the camaraderie they share and show. There is the realisation that all the ingredients have come together to make one more fascinating T20 contest. Sample these: Virat Kohli vs Naseem Shah. Babar vs Bhuvneshwar Kumar. Hardik Pandya vs Fakhar Zaman. These are fascinating subplots to the game.Kohli has had two starts and is looking build on some fluency. On Friday, two days out from the match, he had a lengthy chat with head coach Rahul Dravid during a training session. He then batted for a long time. Towards the end, he mimicked Suryakumar Yadav’s 360-degree game, much to everyone’s amusement.On Saturday, India had an optional nets session, but Pakistan didn’t train at all, owing to a short turnaround from their game against Hong Kong in Sharjah on Friday.Haris Rauf talked about the calmness in the camp; he spoke of how individuals are preparing for a big game in their own ways – mixing rest and recovery, with some fun, and not fretting over this being “another big game”.6:11

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But there are questions for both teams to answer.How will India deal with the absence of Ravindra Jadeja? And will KL Rahul find his old form? Pakistan, meanwhile, won’t have Shahnawaz Dahani either. Which means Axar Patel and Hasan Ali could get in.Naseem is every bit that kid in a sweet shop, who has been given the new ball and told to simply do his thing. Babar is looking for a score of substance, while Fakhar’s effectiveness has everyone, including their former coach Mickey Arthur, wondering about the kind of damage he could do if he opened the batting.India’s focus has firmly been on the present. Pakistan haven’t once spoken of the banana peel their game against Hong Kong had the potential of being. There’s a sense of assuredness about Babar’s men that hasn’t come easily. For this, much of the credit should go to the captain and the coaching staff.If Round 1 was exciting, Round 2 offers more of the same. High stakes, high pressure. Yet, it feels different because of the calm – far removed from the chatter that usually dominates the narrative.

Hathurusingha 2.0: what's changed, and what hasn't?

This stint as Bangladesh coach comes with a firing pace attack and several familiar faces, but it also brings with it a heavy weight of expectations

Mohammad Isam06-Feb-2023Chandika Hathurusingha’s return as Bangladesh men’s head coach, on a new two-year deal from February 20, has been the talk of the country’s cricketing circles. He held the position from June 2014 to October 2017, a ground-breaking period for the team. But then he left in a huff, taking on the Sri Lanka job soon after and going on lead his new team to victory over Bangladesh. Hathurusingha, however, is a BCB favourite and now makes his return, taking charge across formats, as confirmed by board president Nazmul Hassan. What lies ahead of him? Here’s a run-through.

What hasn’t changed

The administration: The BCB set-up remains the same, which is the main reason why Hathurusingha is back. Hassan, who has been at the helm since 2013, said last week that he had been in touch with Hathurusingha about the Bangladesh job since the men’s T20 World Cup in Australia in November last year. At the time, S Sriram was the technical consultant, effectively the T20 head coach, while Russell Domingo was the Test and ODI coach.ESPNcricinfo understands that Hathurusingha had to give two months’ notice to leave New South Wales – where he was batting coach – which means he had some sort of deal in place with the BCB as early as November 28 last year.Meanwhile, Sriram was in discussion with the BCB for a long-term deal as T20 coach but the talks fell through mainly because the BCB wants a coach to be fully available and Sriram’s IPL commitments worked against him. And so Hathurusingha takes charge across formats.During his first stint, he had a strong relationship with the BCB, particularly Hassan, and the two have reportedly been in touch ever since Hathurusingha had resigned. The two had formulated a two-tier selection panel, which saw Faruque Ahmed leave as chief selector in protest in 2016. But, as Hathurusingha returns, two out of the three selectors during his reign also remain: chief selector Minhajul Abedin and Habibul Bashar.The players (mostly): Usually a new coach takes a bit of time to understand the culture in Bangladeshi cricket, but that won’t be too much of a problem with Hathurusingha as he already knows at least a third of the players who are still highly relevant to the senior team – they played under him in his first stint as well. For example, some of the players who debuted under Hathurusingha are Litton Das and Mehidy Hasan Miraz, who are now the men in form, key to the team’s fortunes.Where things might change is the exact role he plays as coach. The core group of senior players from his last stint has broken up somewhat. Mashrafe Mortaza, who captained two-thirds of all international matches during Hathurusingha’s first stay, is no longer part of the senior side; Mahmudullah only plays ODIs now after retiring from Tests and being kept out of T20Is; Tamim Iqbal and Mushfiqur Rahim have retired from T20Is. Only Shakib Al Hasan still plays all three formats.And with so much change in the experienced core, comes different demands of the coach. The Bangladesh team now has several players trying to find their feet at the highest level – young batters like Zakir Hasan, Afif Hossain and Yasir Ali. The likes of Najmul Hossain Shanto, Anamul Haque and Mosaddek Hossain, too, are at a complicated point in their career. Hathurusingha will likely have a lot more career-moulding to do in this stint.The favoured format: Bangladesh remain an ODI-loving team, having won 70% of their 50-over matches during Domingo’s reign from 2019 to 2022. In fact, performances in ODIs have steadily improved since Hathurusingha’s last stint – they had won 48% of their ODIs under him from 2014-17, followed by 57% under Steve Rhodes, before Domingo took over.The bigger challenge for Hathurusingha will lie in Tests and T20Is. He had formulated the plan to play on raging turners in home Tests, resulting in wins against England and Australia. But those pitches also helped Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, Afghanistan, West Indies and India to beat Bangladesh at their own game. There remains plenty of work to be done if Hathurusingha is to slowly change Bangladesh’s mind about which their favourite format is.

What has changed

The pace attack: Bangladesh now have a strong pace-bowling unit. During his first stint, Hathurusingha was more interested in spin, almost killing off fast bowling. He hardly picked a fast bowler in home Tests, which left them with a mountain to climb in overseas conditions, with little game-time under their belt to be consistent.But now fast bowling is winning the team matches across formats. Taskin Ahmed, very consistent since his comeback in 2021, is the leader of the pack, having helped the team win an ODI series in South Africa last year. He is backed up well by Ebadot Hossain, whose 6 for 46 was the decisive blow on New Zealand in the Mount Maunganui Test. Khaled Ahmed is building himself up as a Test specialist, while Mustafizur Rahman is strong in white-ball cricket.There’s also Shoriful Islam, Hasan Mahmud, Rejaur Rahman Raja – who is long waiting in the wings for an international debut – and Mrittunjoy Chowdhury – who has done well in the last two BPL seasons. Fast-bowling coach Allan Donald recently held a clinic for the next batch of fast bowlers, where the likes of Musfik Hasan and Nahid Rana impressed him. All this progress in the pace department calls for a change in mind-set for Hathurusingha.The expectations: The expectations will certainly be much higher than in 2014, when Hathurusingha first came to the job as a virtual unknown. He was recommended by Khaled Mahmud, but few others in the BCB set-up knew him well. Now, he is regarded as one of the key engineers of Bangladesh’s road to greater consistency, and has a reputation in cricketing circles as a hard-talker. All this, added to the fact that the next ODI World Cup just eight months away.Rhodes and Domingo were often matched up to him. Now, he will not only be matched up to them, but also to Hathurusingha 1.0.

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