Pakistan chip away at deficit

ESPNcricinfo staff27-Jun-2015It took Pakistan 15 minutes and 3.1 overs to wrap up Sri Lanka’s innings, Yasir Shah picking up Dushmantha Chameera’s wicket to finish with figures of 6 for 96. Sri Lanka were bowled out for 315 to finish with a first-innings lead of 177•AFPPakistan had a shaky start, losing Mohammad Hafeez in the fourth over. However, Ahmed Shehzad scored a patient half-century, his third in Test cricket, after weathering a testing spell from Chameera•AFPAzhar Ali was solid, too, and gave Shehzad good support at the other end•AFPThe pair carried on to bring the deficit under 50 as Pakistan went to tea on 129 for 1•AFPHowever, Shehzad misjudged the length of Dhammika Prasad first ball after the break, top-edging a pull behind with Dinesh Chandimal settling under it•AFPAzhar Ali, in the company of Younis Khan, brought up a half-century of his own…..•AFP… before bad light forced a premature end on the third day, with Pakistan trailing Sri Lanka by only six runs•AFP

Starc's chin music and AB's apology

ESPNcricinfo picks out the plays of the day in the third T20 between South Africa and Australia in Centurion

Firdose Moonda14-Mar-2014Starc’s chin musicIn a tour that was billed as a battle of the bowlers, the batsmen would have known they were in line to get hurt. With extra bounce on offer in Centurion, pain was all but guaranteed. With the third delivery of the match, Mitchell Starc got one to rear up and seam away from Quinton de Kock and the youngster’s heart my have skipped a beat. He would have had it in his throat three balls later when Starc dug it in short and the ball bounced to hit de Kock just below the chin. His grille jammed against the lower part of his face and his collarbone appeared to have taken the bulk of the impact. De Kock received treatment immediately and took a few minutes to get his breath back before batting on.The mis-hit sixIt’s not often that AB de Villiers gets it wrong but even when he does, he manages to make it right anyway. De Villiers was two balls into his innings when Brad Hogg served up a half-tracker. The swipe over mid-wicket was not timed at all and, at first, it looked as though de Villiers had hit the ball straight up. He wore a pained expression even as he watched it sail over over the boundary for six and eventually offered a sheepish grin at his good fortune.The triumphant returnAlbie Morkel spent his comeback match doing nothing more than fielding and would have have been pleased to get some time in the middle in this one. With South Africa in trouble, he was quiet for six deliveries before Shane Watson presented him with an inviting length. Morkel cleared the front leg and swung hard, sending the ball over cow corner and many rows back into the stands to announce his big-hitting return.The toe-cruncherMorkel managed only one more cracking shot before he was undone by a delivery that needs to become more frequent in this format. Starc’s toe-cruncher was on target and Morkel could not keep it out. By the time he brought the bat down, middle and off stump had been disturbed.AB’s apologyIt wasn’t de Villiers’ night with the bat and it wasn’t his night in the field either. It was the fourth over of the chase and he was stationed at point when Aaron Finch hit the ball his way. Awkward bounce saw it slip past him and allow two runs. Later that same over, de Villiers was undone by bounce again. Cameron White’s square drive went over his head as de Villiers’ was on his haunches trying to stop it. When de Villiers looked to be fooled by the bounce off the next ball, his home ground could not help but jeer and de Villiers raised a hand in apology to them.The perfect cover driveBefore play, Aaron Finch joked that he did not just stand and swing but there was some method to the madness. He proved it by playing the shot of the match. Finch played the perfect cover drive off Wayne Parnell after slamming a couple of short balls with disdain. He inched forward to a slightly fuller one and caressed it through the covers. The timing was exceptional and would have satisfied most purists.

Melbourne's Sri Lankan connection

Asanka Gurusinha and Ravi Ratnayeke might be the most famous of them, but there are more than a dozen other former Sri Lankan cricketers who now call the city home

Brydon Coverdale24-Dec-2012Boxing Day. The biggest event on the Australian cricket calendar. Two years ago 84,384 spectators packed the MCG to watch the first day of a critical Ashes battle. Last summer 70,068 turned up to watch the opening day of Australia’s series with India. This year, for the first time since 1995, it is Sri Lanka’s turn to share the stage with the Australians. There won’t be a record crowd, but Melbourne’s enormous Sri Lankan community should help ensure plenty of the stands are full.According to last year’s national census, roughly half of Australia’s 86,415-strong Sri Lankan-born population lives in Victoria. Until last year, the state’s governor was one of those: medical researcher David de Kretser, who was born in Colombo.Asanka Gurusinha is another, and he is far from the only former Sri Lankan cricketer who now calls Melbourne home.”We had a get-together when we went back and played in a six-a-side competition in Sri Lanka, and 16 of us were living in Melbourne,” Saliya Ahangama, who played three Tests as a fast bowler in 1985, said.Some are well known, Gurusinha and Ravi Ratnayeke, especially. Some had only brief moments in the spotlight, such as Manjula Munasinghe, Marlon Vonhagt, Susil Fernando, Kosala Kuruppuarachchi and Sanjeewa Weerasinghe. Others like Chamara Dunusinghe and Athula Samarasekara fall somewhere in between. Some remain heavily involved in the game through coaching, others have put cricket firmly behind them to pursue other careers.Ravi Ratnayeke: the businessman
Ratnayeke is one of those whose cricket links have been all but severed. A bowling allrounder who played 22 Tests and 78 one-day internationals, Ratnayeke even captained Sri Lanka in an ODI in 1988. He would have played more but for his decision to retire relatively young – his final international appearance came on his 30th birthday. Ratnayeke is now 52 and has been living in Australia for 22 years, ever since his playing days finished.”We were semi-professional, not fully professional,” Ratnayeke said. “We had to work. A lot of the guys who played during my time gave it up during the peak of their careers. I gave it up when I had probably another three or four years left. I was very fit and had plenty of time but I gave it up because I needed a career and needed to be able to look after the family.”At first, Ratnayeke and his wife and two children lived in Perth, where he played some club cricket, but the family had cousins in Melbourne and decided it was the natural place to settle. He has made a career with a packaging company, Amcor, and since his knees convinced him to stop playing club cricket, he has had little involvement with the sport.Coaching holds no interest for Ratnayeke – he says that had he stayed in Sri Lanka he might have pursued a career in cricket administration. He prefers competing himself and these days it’s golf. Even as Channel 9 was replaying moments from Bellerive Oval’s inaugural Test – also Ratnayeke’s last, in 1989 – during the coverage of Australia’s recent win over Sri Lanka in Hobart, Ratnayeke’s focus was elsewhere. “I completely forgot about the Test match on day one and only heard the score on my way back home from work,” he said.That said, the Ratnayeke family typically makes the trip from their home in Rowville, in Melbourne’s outer south-eastern suburbs, for the Boxing Day Test. Ratnayeke was at the infamous 1995 match when Muttiah Muralitharan was called for throwing, but he won’t be at the ground this year – the family will be away over the holiday period.Ratnayeke’s children have little real connection with Sri Lanka these days, and he has no regrets about moving from his homeland, a move that was made with his family in mind. Melbourne is well and truly home now.”We decided for the sake of the kids and what we wanted to do in the future that we would move to Australia,” Ratnayeke said. “It was good for the kids. I have no regrets. Australians love sport and I love sport. And I love Australia for that. Now I’m an out-and-out Aussie – I don’t even have a Sri Lankan citizenship anymore. I have to get a visa to go back.” Manjula Munasinghe: giving back to the community
Munasinghe has been back in recent years. Unlike Ratnayeke, his international career didn’t last long – five ODIs in the mid-1990s. And unlike Ratnayeke, Munasinghe is heavily involved in coaching in Melbourne. When he first moved to Australia in 1999, Munasinghe found work with the Victorian Cricket Association in junior coaching and that led to him establishing the Aus-Lanka Cricket Academy six years ago.

“Over here a lot of Sri Lankan families push their kids to the educational side rather than sports. When they get to 16 they often give up cricket totally and focus on their studies. That’s why I tried to get this academy going”Manjula Munasinghe

The programme provides coaching for children from ages seven to 17, and while the initial students were largely from the Sri Lankan community, it has expanded significantly. About 100 children are involved in Munasinghe’s programme and he said the challenge was to keep them in cricket when they reached the last few years of their schooling.”When I first started we didn’t do any advertising, it was word of mouth,” Munasinghe said. “The majority of the kids had Sri Lankan backgrounds. It became known around the Sri Lankan community. Now a lot of other nationalities have come too – Indians, Pakistanis, Bangladeshis and Australians. It’s a bit of a mix.”Over here a lot of Sri Lankan families push their kids to the educational side rather than sports. That’s the big disadvantage, when they get to 16 they often give up cricket totally and focus on their studies. That’s why I tried to get this academy going and show the kids what sort of path they need to take to get to a higher level.”One the success stories from Munasinghe’s Rowville-based academy is Nishal Perera, a young offspinner who this season has made his debut for Essendon in Melbourne’s first-grade competition, where he has found himself playing with or against current and former state cricketers such as Cameron White, Glenn Maxwell, Ryan Carters and Bryce McGain.Munasinghe estimates there are five or six students in his programme who have the potential to reach state level if they stick at the game – and that’s the challenge. In past years he has taken teams from his academy on tours of Malaysia, India and Sri Lanka, but all of this is a side project for Munasinghe, who works full-time for the sports nutrition company Musashi. If he happens to help a young player reach the next level, his academy has done its job.Saliya Ahangama: the holiday-maker who stayed
Coaching has also been the focus for Ahangama, who came with his wife to Melbourne in 2000 to visit his sister-in-law. It was a holiday that turned into a permanent move. Back in Sri Lanka, Ahangama had been coaching the SSC club, and when he was visiting Melbourne, he heard that the Prahran Cricket Club was looking for a coach. Ahangama got the job, was sponsored in his move by Tony Greig, with whom he had commentated in Sri Lanka, and the rest is history.At Prahran, Ahangama had the pleasure of coaching David Hussey before he became a state cricketer. He also spent time as a bowling coach with Dandenong, where he worked with Peter Siddle, James Pattinson and Darren Pattinson.”That was a great experience,” Ahangama said. “I won’t take the credit, though – they were great bowlers. Watching the work ethic and the way they went about their business, you could see they were going to get to the top, especially Peter Siddle.”For the past two years, he has been the bowling coach with Hawthorn-Monash University, another club in Melbourne’s premier competition, and the team for whom Lasith Malinga played a one-off T20 earlier this month while he was preparing for the Big Bash League.It was a combination of cricket and family that brought Ahangama to Melbourne – his sister-in-law had lived in the city since 1985, and her husband’s family since the 1960s – and he has no plans to move back to Sri Lanka. “It’s been a great experience,” he said. “It’s home for me now, there’s no two ways about it.”Asanka Gurusinha: the sales manager
It was club cricket that brought Gurusinha to Melbourne as well. The North Melbourne Cricket Club offered him a three-year contract, and given that he had plenty of friends in the city, he was keen to make the move. He has been a Melburnian since 1996; like Ratnayeke, he moved at the age of 30.”It’s a very nice city, and with the big Sri Lankan community, you never feel isolated,” Gurusinha said. “It’s a good place for me and my family.”Ravi Ratnayeke in Sharjah in 1984•Getty ImagesGurusinha played six seasons of club cricket before he decided he wasn’t enjoying the game like he should have been. Much like Ricky Ponting, who doubts he will play Sheffield Shield cricket after this season without the lure of earning higher honours, Gurusinha felt that he was not going to progress to state cricket, so there was little point playing on.”My brain and my body were used to playing cricket to get to the next level, and the highest level,” he said. “I knew whatever runs I scored for district cricket here I’d never get to the Victorian side, because Victoria still had the policy about not playing overseas players in their Sheffield Shield team and one-day side.”There are only six state sides and 66 players are vying for 11 Australian places, so if they play overseas players, they are jeopardising that. So after a while I thought, ‘I’ll never play for Victoria, and I’ve played international cricket.’ After six seasons I thought that’s enough. It’s a funny thing: I completely walked away from cricket.”Gurusinha is now 46 and has made his career as group sales manager for Trader Classifieds, a company that publishes magazines and websites around Australia. There’s plenty of interstate travel involved in his work, and although he occasionally finds time to catch up with his former team-mates who also live in Melbourne, those meetings are few and far between.”It’s a funny thing. We don’t catch up that often,” he said. “If there is a Sri Lankan function and we see each other, we’ll catch up. We’re all busy and we’re running around doing our own work. I do catch up a little bit with Ravi [Ratnayeke] and Sanath Kaluperuma. Those are two guys I keep in touch with.”There are plenty more out there. Some will be at the MCG on Boxing Day, others won’t. But they all have one thing in common: they’re among the 43,995 Sri Lankan-born people who now call Victoria home.

Trott's patient approach earns overdue acclaim

England’s grip on the series had been severely loosened by Mohammad Amir, but it was restored in dramatic fashion by an unlikely pair – Jonathan Trott and Stuart Broad

Andrew Miller at Lord's27-Aug-2010After a summer of contests that tickled the fancy without quite hitting the spot, here at last was a day of Test cricket to savour. For England it began with catastrophe – the loss of four wickets for eight runs in the space of 16 morale-shattering deliveries – and at 47 for 5, with England’s No. 11 being summoned from the nets barely five minutes into the day’s play, it would have surprised no-one had the slump culminated in the fourth double-figure total in the space of five Tests. It’s been that sort of a season after all – one characterised by abject batting surrenders, not least those instigated by the prodigious and seemingly unplayable Mohammad Amir.But great Test cricket requires flow to counterbalance the ebb, which is why what happened next will live on in the memory long after the cheers of a raucously absorbed Lord’s crowd have faded into the night. With their credibility on the line after squandering a 2-0 series lead amid a clatter of wickets at The Oval, the onus was on England to fight with greater tenacity than at any stage since their rearguards at Centurion and Cape Town last winter. In the improbable pairing of Jonathan Trott and Stuart Broad they found two men capable of bending the contest to their will.The manner in which Trott and Broad tore through the record-books was impressive in its own right, as they extended their unbroken stand to a massive 244, which is just two runs shy of England’s all-time eighth-wicket record, and already the tenth-best for any wicket from No. 7 to 10. That they did so with the innings at the absolute point of no-return at 102 for 7, however, was little short of awe-inspiring. As Graham Gooch had said on the rain-truncated first day, this Test is the only Test that counts – not the one that got away at The Oval, nor the moderately significant one that takes place in Brisbane in three months’ time. And to England’s credit, they found sufficient focus to keep the entire arena mesmerised by the here-and-now.”I knew that if we were 100 all out this Test series was going to be 2-2,” said Broad. “So I looked to take a bit of responsibility, and Trotty was fantastic in the way he was so clear with his thoughts. He said to play straight as you can and look to have positive intent, and we didn’t think about getting even to 200. We just talked about going up in fives – 105, 110 – which keeps your mind clear and you don’t worry too much about what the wicket is doing.”Though Broad stole the show with the purity of his maiden first-class hundred, it is Trott who has been England’s banker batsman throughout this most puzzling of summers. While his team-mates have never once questioned his value to the side, it’s taken the English public a long old while to warm to his awkward charms, which is especially strange when you consider how ubiquitous his form has been in home internationals, ever since he seized the Ashes with that brilliant debut hundred at The Oval last August. Today he brought up his 1000th Test run in his 23rd innings, but if you include the 94 and 110 he made in the Bangladesh ODIs back in July, he has 998 international runs from his last 15 home innings in all forms of international cricket, at a formidable average of 90.72.In another era, such credentials would have been sufficient to earn him instant cult status – take Robin Smith and Allan Lamb, for instance, two other South African-born batsmen whose heritage was not held against them by an adoring public. But the further problem with Trott is the fussy, borderline-OCD nature of his cricket. Like his fellow Capetonian Jacques Kallis, he cloaks his talent with a one-size-fits-all batting tempo that seems out of kilter with the entertainment-obsessed era into which the game has now moved. But as Kevin Pietersen unwittingly demonstrated with a ghastly first-ball mow to the keeper, patience remains a virtue that no Test cricketer can live without.Trott’s average in Lord’s Tests currently stands at an incredible 411, but if his double-century against Bangladesh earlier in the season was harshly derided for its langueur, this tour de force left no-one in any doubt about the value of a cricketer who sets himself for survival like Ray Mears in a bushtucker trial. His attacking strokes, such as they were, were nothing more than calculated caresses, as he utilised the precise amount of power required to pick the gap and find the boundary – and in so doing virtually eliminated any prospect of a false stroke, even while Amir and Mohammad Asif were probing his outside edge.”In the position we were in, he was out there for the whole collapse and saw the ball nipping around. That can easily get in a batsman’s mind,” said Broad. “But he played with such clarity, hit strongly through the leg-side and picked up anything that was slightly a bad ball and put it away. It was a special effort, and we all know what a great temperament he has. I think that will be fantastic for him in his Test career to come, because he’s already got more than 1,000 runs, averaging 50, and that is testament to the player he is.”Trott’s 149 was the second time in this bowler-ruled series that he had racked up more than 100 runs in a Test, and while his pair of fifties in the victory at Edgbaston were reasonably warmly received, their overall impact was lost amid the navel-gazing about Broad’s wayward shy at Zulqarnain Haider, and the question marks that that fit of pique raised about England’s temperamental readiness for the Ashes. However, the clarity of this response brooked no equivocation. The mongrel in Broad that compels him to tread a precarious disciplinary line will be invaluable when the going gets tough in Australia, as will Trott’s bloodless desire to bat on regardless of circumstance. But right at this moment, all that matters is the task at hand. And neither man is content with their position just yet.”It’s a very important morning tomorrow, because our big aim is to get 400,” said Broad. “It was key that we communicated this evening, because it would have been easy to give away a cheap wicket, and then – boom, boom – you’re not in a good position. We just talked of not giving our wickets away, because they’ll have a 30-over old ball tomorrow when their seamers are bowling, and hopefully we can capitalise on that.”For the time being, though, Broad can reflect on a seminal day in his development as an international cricketer. His only previous century in any form of cricket had come for Leicestershire Under-19s against Derbyshire during the formative years of his professional career, but now – thanks in no small part to the immense assurance provided by his partner – he has gone one better than his father, Chris, and scored a hundred at the home of cricket, no less.”I always dreamt of an extra-cover drive for my hundred,” he said. “But luckily, it was on my legs – and I’ll take anything. If I was to pick any ground in the world it would be at Lord’s, so this is one of those days that will live long in my memory. Today has given me a lot of confidence that I can score Test match hundreds, and I hope this is a stepping stone to go and score many more.”

Ashwin bags nine in his 100th Test as India cruise to innings win

England suffered another collapse to crash to a 4-1 series defeat in Dharamsala

Andrew Miller09-Mar-2024India 477 (Gill 110, Rohit 103, Padikkal 65, Sarfaraz 56, Bashir 5-173) beat England 218 and 195 (Root 84, Ashwin 5-77, Bumrah 2-38) by an innings and 64 runsIt ended in an avalanche of wickets in the foothills of the Himalayas, as England’s bid to scale the heights on their tour of India descended into the depths of an innings defeat in Dharamsala, and an ignominious 4-1 series scoreline that – on this final, sorry evidence, if not the feistier fare that had preceded it – was an apt reflection of the enduring gulf between the sides.At least James Anderson scaled his own peak, claiming his 700th Test wicket in the day’s opening exchanges, to achieve an altitude that surely no other seam bowler will ever challenge. But it was left to another of Test cricket’s most enduring performers to put his personal seal on a landmark contest, as R Ashwin – in his 100th Test – took his own tally to 516 and counting, with 5 for 77, his 36th five-wicket haul, as victory was sealed inside two sessions on the third afternoon.Related

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Though magnificent throughout the match, it was during a mesmeric display before lunch that Ashwin unveiled his full sleight of hand. In that passage of play spanning 8.5 overs, and punctuated only by a crie de coeur from his fellow caps centurion, Jonny Bairstow, Ashwin claimed four of England’s top six, including both openers for a total of two runs and their crestfallen captain, Ben Stokes, with the final ball of the session. Each victim was carved open in bespoke, surgical fashion – more of an autopsy, in fact, given the number of dead men walking straight into his extraordinary web of deceit.Bazball, this was not. The literal confidence trick that had allowed England, in the campaign’s opening exchanges, to over-reach their perceived limitations through sheer force of will has long since been banished – as much by the brutal one-upmanship of India’s own batting onslaughts as by the skill of Ashwin, Jasprit Bumrah, Kuldeep Yadav and Co. And so, when faced with a daunting deficit of 259, after Shoaib Bashir had backed up Anderson’s incision to close out India’s first innings for 477 with his second five-wicket haul of the series, there was never any sense that a second Hyderabad miracle was in prospect.England had overturned a 190-run deficit on that occasion, with Ollie Pope’s 196 to the fore. This time, Pope became Ashwin’s and India’s third victim inside the first ten overs – caught off a top-edge as he flapped unconvincingly across an ill-judged sweep. And though Joe Root hung around like a faded memory to salvage some personal and collective pride, the cause had long since been lost by the time he was last man out for 84 – caught, fittingly enough, on the long-off boundary by Bumrah to hand Kuldeep the final wicket of a match that his first-day five-for had launched in India’s direction.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

If England were to have had any hope (and to that end, even their spin coach Jeetan Patel, optimistic to the point of delusion when speaking to the media at the midpoint in Hyderabad, had hedged most of his bets when speaking at the close of the second day’s play) then it needed to have been invested once again in their openers, Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett, whose record of seven 45-plus stands in nine previous innings had been the one reliable manifestation of their aggressive intentions all tour.This time, however, Ashwin was waiting, armed with the sharpest of scalpels as he took his share of the new ball, and from the outset, Duckett’s defenceless game was gripped with panic. Faced with Ashwin’s wicked control of seam and cut, he discovered in an early tangle of limbs that these were not conditions in which he could turn to his favoured sweep, let alone poke speculatively from the crease, as he did to his fourth ball of Ashwin’s opening over. One delivery later, he came charging down the pitch to meet those wiles at source, but the bowler was just too canny for him. Ashwin dropped his length like a boulder to york Duckett three metres down the pitch, and knocked back his off stump with just two runs on the board.Crawley, at this stage, was rather more preoccupied with surviving back-to-back maidens from Bumrah, including another unplayable cutter that nipped past his outside edge. But when Ashwin finally got to line him up for the first time in the sixth over, his first ball gripped and turned a full ten degrees back into his pads – enough to spook even the most composed of England’s competitors on this tour. Two balls after that, a similar line and length outside off produced half the amount of spin, and Sarfaraz Khan at backward short leg was perfectly placed to pocket the deflection. After nine consecutive double-figure innings, Crawley’s 407-run campaign had ended with a 16-ball duck.By the time Pope’s own skittish display had been unpicked, England’s innings was in disarray. Enter Bairstow, puffing out his chest in the manner he had ordained for his own 100th Test, for a belligerently short-lived counterattack that epitomised the triumph of hope over expectation that has characterised so much of his eclectic Test career.Jasprit Bumrah struck twice in an over on the third day•BCCI

All of a sudden, Ashwin was back where he’d been at the top-end of the series, as Bairstow ditched the circumspection and chose instead to launch him for the hills. Anytime the ball was in his arc, it was out of the ground – consecutive slog-swept sixes in Ashwin’s seventh over, and a third in seven balls soon afterwards, to give the impression that, yes, finally, Jonny was very much on.Unfortunately for England, Kuldeep was on soon afterwards as well. And, just as he had derailed them in the first innings, so he was again in the wickets in his very first over, as Bairstow – not for the first time – found his left-arm angles too confounding to counter. He played back to a big twisting left-arm legbreak to be pinned on the back foot in front of leg. Umpire’s call upheld the appeal, and Bairstow had to troop off for 39 – his highest score of a desperately unfulfilled series, in which he had reached at least 25 in seven of his 10 innings.The least that could be said for Bairstow’s campaign is that he gave it a go in the prescribed manner. Stokes, by contrast, suffered his fourth consecutive single-figure score, and just as in the first innings at Ranchi, his departure on the stroke of lunch left England five-down and bereft of purpose. That’s not an accusation that is often directed at Stokes, but this latest dismissal – prised out by Ashwin’s arm-ball as it skidded past his inside-edge – continued a pattern of distinctly cagey extractions.Once again, Stokes’ stride to the pitch wasn’t half as convincing as his mechanics made it out to be; once again he flung his head to the heavens, as if to signal he’d been powerless to counter such genius – and, to be fair, this was the 13th time that Ashwin had got the better of him. But, as with so many of his middle-order colleagues, Stokes’ series stats confirmed the extent to which he’d fallen short: 199 runs at 19.90, including 65 at 10.83 in the last three Tests.Lunch had barely been digested before Ashwin had his fifth. Ben Foakes seemed to have settled in the opening exchanges of his stand with Root, only to be lured into the sort of rush of blood that has characterised his team-mates’ displays, but not usually his own. Ashwin tossed one up outside his eyeline, and Foakes kneeled into a mighty yahoo across the line, only for the ball to bite and rip back through his gate.Joe Root briefly resisted India with a half-century•Getty Images

At 113 for 6, Tom Hartley at least closed out his maiden series with another display of batting pluck, one that will surely give him an edge when the home season begins and England are back to selecting a solitary spinner. But after digging in alongside Root for 20 hard-grafted runs, he had no answer to the magnificent Bumrah, India’s on-field captain with Rohit Sharma nursing a stiff back.Bumrah’s second delivery of his new spell snaked back into the left-hander’s pads, trapping him so plumb in front that there wasn’t even any point in a speculative review. Shockingly, it was Bumrah’s first wicket of the match, an unfathomable delay given his rip-roaring spell on the first morning. But he didn’t have to wait so long for his second. Two balls later, out came Bumrah’s pinpoint yorker, to blast Mark Wood out for a duck. This time he did seek the second opinion, but to no avail. At 141 for 8, India were circling for the kill.Root at least resolved to end his own campaign on a high. By playing late, and trusting his defence to a degree that none of his colleagues could ever begin to emulate, he began to tick along with the stealth and class of old, and had designs on bowing out with his second century of the series while Bashir was hanging out alongside him in a plucky 48-run stand for the ninth wicket.But up popped Ravindra Jadeja, to bowl Bashir for 13 – not before the batter had caused some mirth by calling for a review – and with only Anderson for company, Root opted to roll the dice and lost. It was the fitting end in every respect, with Kuldeep rightly claiming the Player-of-the-Match award in spite of so many competing claims at the end of India’s most complete team performance of the series. For if Ashwin was the man to capitalise on England’s broken mindset, it was Kuldeep’s unfathomable wiles that had cracked it in the first place.

Nitish Rana to captain KKR in place of injured Shreyas Iyer

He has led Delhi in 12 T20s in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Tournament, and has been with KKR since 2018

ESPNcricinfo staff27-Mar-2023

Nitish Rana (right) has been part of KKR since 2018•BCCI

Nitish Rana has been appointed interim captain by Kolkata Knight Riders, while their regular leader Shreyas Iyer recovers from a back injury that is likely to sideline him for at least the first half of IPL 2023.Rana was one of two candidates for the interim captaincy along with Sunil Narine, who joined the franchise in 2012 and has been with them ever since. Narine had recently led Abu Dhabi Knight Riders in the inaugural edition of the International League T20, where they finished last among six teams with one win and eight losses.Rana has led his state team Delhi in 12 T20s in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, with eight wins and four defeats. A 29-year old middle-order batter, he was bought by KKR ahead of the 2018 season and has been retained by the franchise ever since. He’s played 74 matches for them, scoring 1744 runs at a strike rate of 135.61.”While we are hopeful that Shreyas will recover and participate at some stage in the IPL 2023 edition, we feel fortunate that Nitish, with the captaincy experience of having led his state side in white-ball cricket and the IPL experience he has had with KKR since 2018, will do a great job,” KKR said in a statement. “We are also confident that under head coach Chandrakant Pandit and the support staff, he will get all the support needed off the field, and the highly experienced leaders in the squad will provide all support that Nitish may need on the field. We wish him the best in his new role and Shreyas a full and speedy recovery.”Rana was KKR’s second highest run-scorer last season, behind Shreyas, with 361 runs at a strike rate of 143.82. It was a disappointing year for the team, as they finished seventh in the league with six wins and eight losses.With Rana taking over as captain, KKR will be under whole new leadership this season, with Chandrakant Pandit replacing Brendon McCullum as head coach and Bharat Arun appointed bowling coach.

Botafogo tem pelo menos três desfalques e uma dúvida para duelo com o Resende

MatériaMais Notícias

O técnico Luís Castro terá desafios para montar o Botafogo no confronto com o Resende, previsto para acontecer no Estádio Kleber Andrade, em Cariacica (ES). A derrota por 1 a 0 para o Flamengo no Mané Garrincha deixou a equipe alvinegra com pelo menos três desfalques confirmados para a décima rodada da Taça Guanabara (primeira fase do Carioca).

O lateral-esquerdo Marçal, o zagueiro Joel Carli e o atacante Tiquinho Soares foram expulsos na reta final da partida contra os rubro-negros. O trio aguardará detalhes da súmula para saber se corre risco de receber um gancho maior.

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O Botafogo também tem uma dúvida em relação ao meio-campista Patrick de Paula. O atleta saiu de campo com dores no joelho esquerdo. Há indefinição, inclusive, se ele joga contra o Sergipe, na quinta-feira (2), no Batistão, pela Copa do Brasil.

Em compensação, Castro tem dois retornos previstos para a partida. O lateral-direito Rafael e o zagueiro Adryelson, expulsos contra o Vasco, devem retornar após terem cumprido suspensão.

'Chegamos no nosso limite em relação ao Internacional', diz dirigente do São Paulo sobre xodó de Ceni

MatériaMais Notícias

A negociação para levar o atacante David do Internacional para o São Paulo vai ficando cada vez mais difícil. Em entrevista à ‘ESPN‘, o diretor de futebol tricolor, Carlos Belmonte, revelou que os esforços para levar o jogador ao Morumbi são grandes. Mas que as tratativas com os gaúchos vão se complicando cada vez mais.

– O David é um pedido do Rogério (Ceni), que já trabalhou com ele no Cruzeiro, depois no Fortaleza, mas a gente tem as nossas possibilidades. Chegamos no nosso limite em relação ao Internacional, que tem todo o direito de fazer a pedida que quiser para o atleta, que é deles. Fizemos o que é dentro das nossas possibilidades. A proposta está na mesa – disse.

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+ Confira as principais negociações do futebol nacional no Mercado da Bola do L!

Para piorar ainda mais o cenário ao clube do Morumbi, um concorrente apareceu. O Bragantino apareceu e teria feito proposta oficial ao Colorado para ter David em definitivo. Segundo a imprensa gaúcha, o negócio poderia superar R$ 10 milhões.

Xodó do treinador dos tempos de Cruzeiro e Fortaleza, o jogador é tido como imprescindível para os planos de Ceni neste ano. Seja por ser fá de seu estilo de jogo, seja pela polivalência. Centroavante de origem, ele pode fazer as pontas quando necessário.

Nos corredores do Morumbi, o sentimento é de que o negócio aconteceria mais fácil. O atacante tem 38 jogos no último ano pelo clube gaúcho, com apenas dois gols marcados. Não vai às redes desde junho.

Mas o Tricolor encontrou resistência. E por motivos extracampo. Há mágoas internas no Inter. Primeiro pelo fato do São Paulo ter atravessado as negociações por Nikão no início do ano passado. O Colorado tinha tudo acertado com o ex-Athletico-PR, hoje já emprestado ao Cruzeiro.

Depois, o Inter tinha esperanças de que o São Paulo lhe ajudaria a chegar a um acordo com o meia Igor Gomes, que acabou acertando o seu futuro com o Atlético-MG.

Diante disso, o Colorado resolveu endurecer as coisas para o Tricolor. Além do pagamento integral dos salários de David, o clube exige também o pagamento de um valor para a liberação do jogador por empréstimo de uma temporada, como querem os paulistas.

O São Paulo chegou a encerrar as conversas na última semana, por não concordar com as condições. Mas há uma insistência de Ceni com o nome do atleta e uma carência no elenco. Das 12 saídas confirmadas para esta temporada do elenco do ano passado, estão os centroavantes Éder e Bustos, o que deixa o clube sem opções para a reserva de Calleri, sem contar com as opções vindas de Cotia, como Maioli.

Motivos que manterão o Tricolor no mercado, justamente atrás dessa opção para a reserva de Calleri.

– Se não for o David, essa é uma posição que a gente acha que precisa de mais um atacante, um atacante com força porque a gente tem Calleri. Apesar de o David não ser centroavante, o Rogério colocou que na eventualidade da saída ou da ausência do Calleri, ele conseguiria adaptar o nosso formato de jogo com o David mais à frente. O David é, sim, um desejo da gente, mas se não der, achamos que precisamos de mais um centroavante, com as características parecidas com às do Calleri, um jogador que segura muito a bola, que retém, que dá tempo dos nossos jogadores se adaptarem – completou Belmonte.

> Confira jogos, classificação e simule os resultados do Paulistão-23

India's template in focus in final T20I series before T20 World Cup 2024

While Afghanistan have a total of nine games ahead of the T20 World Cup, India only have the IPL after these three

Hemant Brar10-Jan-20244:59

Dravid not concerned with lack of T20Is ahead of World Cup

Big picture: Final rehearsal for IndiaIn less than five months, India will face Ireland in their opening game at the 2024 T20 World Cup. While there is the IPL before that, the three-match series against Afghanistan, starting in Mohali on Thursday, is India’s only T20I assignment in between. Incidentally, this is the first time India are playing a bilateral white-ball series against Afghanistan.Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli are back in the T20I squad for the first time since India’s semi-final loss to England at the 2022 T20 World Cup. Kohli, though, will miss Thursday’s game because of personal reasons.Rohit’s return also forces a change at the top. Head coach Rahul Dravid confirmed that Rohit and Yashasvi Jaiswal are India’s first-choice openers in T20Is. They also provide the left-right combination. Jaiswal’s ability to attack from the first ball also makes him a better prospect than Shubman Gill, who is the third opener in the squad.Related

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While Gill has improved his six-hitting ability, his powerplay strike rate in all T20s since the start of 2023 is only 138.44 while Jaiswal’s is 163.69. In Kohli’s absence, Gill could slot in at No. 3 on Thursday but may have to sit out for the last two games.Afghanistan will be keen to build on their gains from the 2023 ODI World Cup. They will play nine T20Is between now and the T20 World Cup. So there is time to finalise the first-choice XI, play it together, and fine-tune it if required.With that in mind, they have picked a 19-member squad for this series. Rashid Khan is also part of the roster but will not play in the series as he continues to recover from back surgery. In his absence, Ibrahim Zadran will lead the side once again.Afghanistan had a hiccup last month when Fazalhaq Farooqi, Naveen-ul-Haq and Mujeeb Ur Rahman wanted to be released from their central contracts and play franchise cricket. But all three are now back in the national team and are expected to play a big role.Rohit Sharma was in good spirits during India’s training session•PTI

Form guideIndia WLWWL (last five completed T20Is, most recent first)
Afghanistan WLWWWIn the spotlight: Rohit Sharma and Najibullah ZadranRohit Sharma gave India blazing starts at the ODI World Cup, scoring at a strike rate of 135.01 in the powerplay. But it needs to be seen if he can translate the same into T20 cricket. In ODIs, a batter can take an over or two to get their eye in and then line up a particular bowler. T20, a different beast, has little breathing room. One-over spells are the norm here with bowlers’ primary goal being to stop runs. That is a challenge India would want Rohit to overcome.Najibullah Zadran rarely gets the recognition he deserves. Among Afghanistan batters with at least 500 T20I runs, he has the highest average (31.85) and the highest strike rate (139.71). And only Mohammad Shahzad has more 50-plus scores for the country. Of late, Najibullah has been struggling with injuries and form. He was left out of the XI after just two games of the ODI World Cup, in which he scored 5 and 2. But he showed signs of a return to form with an unbeaten 13-ball 28 against UAE in the third T20I last week.Team news: Samson or Jitesh?With Suryakumar Yadav and Hardik Pandya out with injuries, Tilak Varma and Rinku Singh will get another chance to show their wares. The same holds for Arshdeep Singh, Avesh Khan and Mukesh Kumar in the fast-bowling department, with Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj rested. It will be interesting to see whether India pick Jitesh Sharma or Sanju Samson as wicketkeeper.India (probable): 1 Rohit Sharma (capt), 2 Yashasvi Jaiswal, 3 Shubman Gill, 4 Tilak Varma, 5 Jitesh Sharma/Sanju Samson (wk), 6 Rinku Singh, 7 Axar Patel, 8 Kuldeep Yadav, 9 Avesh Khan, 10 Arshdeep Singh, 11 Mukesh KumarIbrahim Zadran will lead Afghanistan in T20Is for the second successive series•PTI

In the absence of Rashid, Afghanistan are likely to continue with fellow legspinner Qais Ahmad. However, Noor Ahmed may have to make way for Mujeeb.Afghanistan (probable): 1 Hazratullah Zazai, 2 Rahmanullah Gurbaz (wk), 3 Ibrahim Zadran (capt), 4 Azmatullah Omarzai, 5 Najibullah Zadran, 6 Mohammad Nabi, 7 Gulbadin Naib/Karim Janat, 8 Mujeeb Ur Rahman, 9 Qais Ahmad, 10 Naveen-ul-Haq, 11 Fazalhaq FarooqiPitch and conditions: Win the toss and chaseOut of 40 T20s Mohali has hosted in the last two years, the chasing team has won 26. So the team winning the toss will be looking to bowl first, even though Afghanistan captain Ibrahim Zadran said he didn’t notice much dew in the past two days. At night, it could get slightly foggy with the temperature dropping below 5°C.Stats and trivia: Will India get lucky with the toss? India have now lost 11 tosses in a row. The probability of that happening is 0.0005. Rohit needs 147 runs to become the second batter after Kohli to reach 4000 T20I runs. Mohammad Nabi needs 123 runs and eight wickets to complete the double of 2000 runs and 100 wickets in T20Is. So far, Shakib Al Hasan is the only one to do so. Axar Patel is five short of 50 T20I wickets.Quotes”Rinku Singh has made a good start in international cricket and he is playing really well. The role we have given him, the finisher’s role, he is fulfilling it. This is another opportunity for him to take his development further. As far as the selection is concerned, that will be decided later but when players perform well, they are always in the selectors’ minds.”
“You see, we have one of the best spinners in the world, and we also have good fast bowlers in Naveen and Fazal. So our aim is to improve our batting skills and we will try to do more in that department.”

Kohli on equalling Tendulkar's record of 49 ODI hundreds: 'It's stuff of dreams'

He got to the milestone on his 35th birthday in India’s World Cup match against South Africa at Eden Gardens

ESPNcricinfo staff05-Nov-20231:29

‘Ridiculous!’ – Anil Kumble marvels at Virat Kohli’s ODI numbers

Virat Kohli has equalled Sachin Tendulkar’s world record of 49 ODI hundreds, getting to the landmark on his 35th birthday in India’s World Cup match against South Africa in Kolkata.”Every opportunity to play for India is big one for me. To be able to do that on my birthday, in front of the whole crowd, it’s stuff of dreams, something that as a child you wish had happened,” Kohli said after his record-equalling innings. “I am very grateful to God that I have been blessed with these kinds of moments, so much love from the fans as well and just continue to help the team in any way possible.”Kohli reached the record-equalling hundred off 119 balls, getting to the milestone in the 49th over of India’s innings by punching Kagiso Rabada to cover for a single in front of a near-capacity crowd at Eden Gardens. While Tendulkar scored his 49th century in his 451st ODI innings, Kohli got there in just his 277th innings in his 289th match. He finished unbeaten on 101 off 121 balls, having steered India to a total of 326.

Kohli began his innings in the sixth over and then India lost Shubman Gill in the 11th, with the score then 93 for 2. “It was a tricky wicket to bat on,” Kohli said. “We got a great start through Rohit [Sharma] and Shubman, and then when I got in, my job was to keep that momentum going, but as soon as the ten overs got over, the ball started gripping and the wicket started slowing down as the ball got older.”Our roles are different – me and Shreyas [Iyer], we wanted to string in a partnership and to be honest, as soon as we lost Shubman and Rohit within ten overs, my role was to bat deep and bat till the end because that’s what I have done over the years and that’s what the communication from the team was well; I bat and guys bat around me and then Shreyas started hitting a few. So, we were not thinking that we would get 327 [326] but that’s what happens when you dig deep and you take the game into the last few overs then you can get a few more than you thought.”He and Iyer kept India’s momentum going with a third-wicket stand of 134 off 158 balls. “We had a lot of practice sessions before we went to the Asia Cup. I and Shreyas invariably batted together, because No. 3 and 4, against spinners. And I spoke to him, ‘This is the partnership that has to take centre stage through the middle overs’. So both of us are pretty comfortable rotating the strike against spinners. Whatever loose balls he got, he put them away, credit to him,” Kolhi said. “As I said, when you lose two wickets and don’t have Hardik [Pandya] in your team, you need to bat deep and make sure that you get to a stage where the opposition feels like we have to restrict them, rather than thinking we are one wicket away from 30 runs lesser than what we had to chase. He batted beautifully according to the situation and strike rotation was the key.”Getty ImagesKohli now has two hundreds in the 2023 World Cup to go with four half-centuries in eight league games so far. He is the second highest run-scorer in the tournament behind South Africa’s Quinton de Kock, his 543 runs coming at an average of 108.60 and strike rate of 88.29. It is the first time he has scored more than 500 runs in an ODI World Cup.Kohli’s hundred continues a prolific year for him in the ODI format. He has more than 1000 runs with five centuries in 2023, at an average of 72.18 and strike rate of 99.82. It is the eighth time he has scored more than 1000 ODI runs in a year, surpassing Tendulkar’s record of seven.With seven wins in seven games, India were the first team to qualify for the World Cup semi-finals, ahead of this top-of-the-table clash with South Africa.

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