Aaron Finch acing verbal volleys but needs his bat to do the talking

Leading into Australia’s key England clash, he said his Sri Lanka struggles were an anomaly – but his numbers at home say otherwise

Alex Malcolm27-Oct-20222:40

Aaron Finch: ‘Still feel like I’m playing pretty well’

If Thursday’s press conference was a net session, then Aaron Finch was seeing them well and striking them even better.Just 24 hours out from Australia’s must-win game against England at the MCG, Finch copped a probing delivery from a journalist.”What have you made of some of the talk around your position?” The reporter asked directly. The reporter added that former Australian captain Allan Border had suggested Steven Smith should play in place of Finch.”Lucky I pick the team then, isn’t it?” Finch retorted with a smile.”One of,” Finch quickly clarified. “There’s a few of us that sit down and discuss the team. But everyone’s got their opinion, that’s fine. I’ve got no issues with what their personal opinions [are]. I don’t read or listen to any of it personally.”He had presented the full face of the bat to the question. It was struck firmly enough to return the delivery back from where it came quickly.But press conferences aren’t net sessions. Nor are net sessions even close to match situations. But when Finch stepped into the indoor centre at Junction Oval no more than two hours after his press conference, the crisp timing he showed behind the podium eluded him.Nets are never a great indicator of anything for either professional or amateur cricketers, especially indoors. Form in the nets should always be taken with a large grain of salt.But in Finch’s case, it’s hard to ignore. He was facing Australia coach Andrew McDonald and bowling coach Daniel Vettori, a right-left combination in tandem, armed with side arms and near-new white Kookaburras.

“I felt I was playing quite well. And once Maxy [Glenn Maxwell] started to get away, I probably went into my shell a little bit and looked to just get off strike rather than hitting good strong shots out to a deep man.”Aaron Finch on his Sri Lanka innings

When compared to Mitch Marsh, who was batting in the next net, facing assistants Michael Di Venuto and Andre Borovec in the same fashion, the difference in the quality of the timing, movement patterns and balance was stark.Finch admitted on Tuesday that his innings against Sri Lanka in Perth had been poor. On Thursday, he called it an outlier.”I think it’s an anomaly in my career,” Finch said. “It’s just one of those days. I hit a really nice pull straight to the fielder, and then an off drive in the same over straight to the fielder.”I felt I was playing quite well. And once Maxy [Glenn Maxwell] started to get away, I probably went into my shell a little bit and looked to just get off strike rather than hitting good strong shots out to a deep man. I was trying to get off strike [by hitting] in the ring, which is never easy when you’re facing a world-class spinner like [Maheesh] Theekshana.”And that’s probably what I will change next time. I think I was probably one or two boundaries away from being back to a run-a-ball and it probably looks a little bit different there.”There is an argument that Finch’s innings, as slow as it was, did play an important role in helping lay a foundation for Australia’s middle order. He was 20 off 24 when Maxwell entered and he had kept his gun middle-order matchwinner away from the new ball in the powerplay and his less preferred match-up of Lahiru Kumara. It allowed Maxwell to face the spin of Dhananjaya de Silva and Wanindu Hasaranga in his first two overs. He smashed 22 off his first six balls to reduce the equation to 73 off 60 and relieve any pressure Australia were feeling.”We identified early in the game or in our powerplay when the ball was zipping around a bit that we didn’t want to try over-attack and expose the middle order too early, because then you risk going two or three down in the powerplay,” Finch said. “Then it’s a struggle to get the game back into a position where you can get home a little bit more comfortably.”So it’s just that middle part. I think straight after the 10-over timeout, there was only a wide off an over, so a lot of dot balls there. But I still feel like I’m playing pretty well.”Therein lies the problem for the Australian captain. It’s a sound strategy to be buying yourself time in the powerplay in this World Cup when the seamers are dominating as the new ball has seamed, swung and bounced prodigiously, particularly in Perth and Melbourne. But Finch’s inability to accelerate beyond that places a huge burden on those around him, particularly in home conditions.Aaron Finch’s knock against Sri Lanka was the slowest innings of 40 or more balls ever at Men’s T20 World Cups•AFP/Getty ImagesFinch, and Australia’s selectors, have been quick to point to Finch’s T20I numbers this year to suggest he remains in decent form in the format despite retiring from ODI cricket after a string of low scores. Since March, he has made three half-centuries in 14 T20I innings, averaging 30.91 and striking at 124.49.There was also a strong belief that he would be fine in home conditions having experienced more troubles away. But the opposite is true. He has actually had a lot more success away than at home recently. Since the start of 2020, he has scored six half-centuries in 23 innings, averaging 37.75 and striking at 138.42 overseas. At home he has been struggling. In 14 matches he strikes at just 98.45 and averages 19.61 with one half-century against West Indies this month on the Gold Coast.His innings against Sri Lanka, the slowest of any consisting of 40 or more balls in Men’s T20 World Cup history, was not an anomaly in that context.He has been working tirelessly to find a method to neutralise the lbw threat that has plagued him throughout his career, and he has succeeded having only fallen twice to it in T20Is since the start of 2020 and never in Australia. But in doing so he seems to have completely neutralised his scoring ability off both feet.Finch was asked by another journalist if he felt the weight of the world on his shoulders.”I don’t feel any more pressure than I ever have,” Finch said. “The only pressure is the expectation you put on yourself. “Another well-timed response to another probing verbal delivery. But in the end, he needs his bat to do the talking.

What India, Australia, South Africa need to do to make the World Test Championship final

Pakistan’s chances of finishing in the top two of the points table have taken a massive hit

S Rajesh12-Dec-2022After these two defeats against England, do Pakistan have any chance of making it to the WTC final?
The two home defeats have badly dented Pakistan’s hopes of qualifying for the final. With only three Tests left in this cycle (one against England in Karachi and two home games against New Zealand), the maximum that they can finish on is 54.76%. It is very likely that at least two teams will finish with higher percentages.For example, Australia, currently table-toppers on 75%, need only 20 points from their remaining seven Tests to ensure that they end up higher than 54.76; they can get those points with a win and two draws. India, who are on 52.08% with six Tests to play, need 44 more points, which they can get with three wins and two draws.South Africa, currently second on the WTC table at 60%, need 28 more points (two wins and a draw) from their five remaining Tests to stay above Pakistan. Sri Lanka have a tough assignment in New Zealand coming up, but a 1-0 series win will ensure they can finish with a higher percentage than 54.76.It is highly likely that at least two of these four teams will get the points required to push Pakistan out of contention.What do India need to do to ensure qualification?
India are currently fourth on the points table, but if they win each of their remaining six Tests – two against Bangladesh and four against Australia – then their percentage will rise to 68.06, which will surely be enough for a top-two finish (Australia’s numbers will drop if they lose four to India).ESPNcricinfo LtdIf India finish with a 5-1 win-loss record, their percentage will be a healthy 62.5, which will still ensure qualification as both Australia and South Africa can’t go past that number. However, if they lose two, their percentage will drop to 56.94, which will leave them relying on other results.Have Australia already qualified?
Australia are comfortably on top of the table at 75%, but they still have some work to do before they are certain of qualifying: if they lose each of their remaining seven matches in this cycle, their percentage will drop to 47.37.That said, Australia do have an opportunity to seal their qualification before they embark on what could be a potentially difficult tour of India: if they win all three home Tests against South Africa, they will finish with a minimum percentage of 63.16 even if they lose all four against India. That will ensure a top-two finish, as only India can finish higher.What are South Africa’s chances of qualifying?
South Africa are currently second on the points table, with two series to play – three Tests in Australia, and two at home against West Indies next year. If they win their home Tests but lose all of their away Tests, they will drop to 53.33. Hence, they need at least one win in Australia: a 1-2 series defeat followed by a 2-0 series win will lift them to 60%, which will keep them in contention.Are Sri Lanka still in it?
Sri Lanka are currently on 53.33%, with just two away Tests in New Zealand to go in this cycle. If they win both, their score will rise to 61.11; if the series finishes 1-1, it will drop marginally to 52.78. Thus they will probably need two wins to stay in contention.What about England, West Indies, New Zealand?
Despite England’s fantastic run under Ben Stokes, with eight wins in their last nine Tests, England are not in the race. They only have one Test remaining in the current cycle, and even if they win that, they will end up on 46.97%. That’s because they had a wretched first half of a campaign: in their first 12 Tests of this cycle, they lost seven, drew four, and won only one.West Indies can finish with a maximum of 50%, while the New Zealand can go up to 48.72% if they win their last four Tests.

Pakistan take on New Zealand in does-matter series in last lap of ODI WC preparations

New Zealand are still without some of their regulars, while Pakistan have some big issues to address even though it’s the format they are the most consistent in

Danyal Rasool26-Apr-2023When Pakistan cricket fans urged the side to experiment during the T20I series because it “doesn’t matter”, they meant something along the lines of “it doesn’t matter because New Zealand are missing most of their first-choice players, and Pakistan have all of theirs available; so go out, have fun and take risks – the T20 World Cup is 18 months away, the scoreline is immaterial”.But New Zealand clawed back from a 2-0 deficit to get one hand on the trophy after Mark Chapman’s heroic exploits earlier in the week, and Pakistan are beginning to find out that there’s nothing in their cricket that “doesn’t matter”. The criticism in the inquest that followed – both from the fans and the media – wasn’t really too extreme, as it can be. After all, when a side that played the T20 World Cup final just five months prior follows up a series loss to Afghanistan with a split series against New Zealand, who offloaded most of their best players in India en route Pakistan, it must mean something.But there’s little time for Pakistan to worry about that, or indeed for New Zealand to exult in their feats of the past ten days. For the five games coming up in the 50-over format really do matter, offering some of the last real-match practice ahead of the ODI World Cup in the autumn. New Zealand, again, are without some of the players they will have at their disposal for the World Cup, and so have another opportunity to test their bench strength. But with Kane Williamson a high-profile doubt for that tournament, finding someone who can somewhat adequately fill those huge boots might represent priority number one.Lack of ODI time a worry for PakistanFor Pakistan, simply the opportunity to play a bit more ODI cricket against a quality side is welcome. Since the end of the last World Cup, Babar Azam’s side has played just 23 ODIs; they played 82 in the preceding World Cup cycle. The last time Pakistan took part in fewer ODIs between two World Cups was the 1979-1983 cycle, and even that included 25 games. Some of that has to do with the postponements and cancellations the Covid-19 pandemic forced, but ODI cricket’s gentle decline from relevance appears to have hit Pakistan’s scheduling especially hard. Even the games they have played haven’t often come against the highest class of opposition; they include six against Netherlands and Zimbabwe, a further three against West Indies during the off-season in Multan, and another three against a completely second-string England side.Pakistan would want Mohammad Rizwan to replicate his T20I form in ODIs•AFP/Getty ImagesBut that doesn’t mean this is a weak ODI side; if anything, Pakistan have greater role clarity and offer more consistency in this format than any other. They won a home series against the No. 1 ranked Australia a little over a year ago, boast a top three that could hold its own against any in world cricket, and eye-watering depth in the pace-bowling attack. There’s quality in the legspin department thanks to Shadab Khan – and recently even Usama Mir – while Mohammad Nawaz’s utility to the side, particularly as a lower-order batter, has grown. They were within one win of rising to the top of the ODI rankings just three months ago, but ended up falling short when New Zealand launched a comeback to take that series 2-1.That remains one of just two series Pakistan have lost in the World Cup cycle, but there remain issues to address. Pakistan are still trying to find a way of sorting out a suspect middle order to balance the burden of run-scoring more evenly through the team; in the period between the two World Cups, no team has relied on its top three more than Pakistan. Haris Sohail was brought back in from the cold to help alleviate that problem, while Agha Salman offers potential of providing some of that stability. Pakistan will hope Mohammad Rizwan can begin taking to this format with the same adroitness as he has the other two formats, and want allrounders Nawaz, Faheem Ashraf and Shadab to fill in some of the gaps.New Zealand’s chance to lock World Cup contendersIt might appear New Zealand are in a better space with much less pressure and fewer expectations, but this close to a World Cup, any team would wish to have its full squad available. A stronger New Zealand side, after all, did walk away with the series trophy in Pakistan three months ago, and doubling up on that would bring calm to a side that has been extremely dominant this cycle at home, but crumbled frequently against stronger opposition away.Mark Chapman earned an ODI call-up following his T20I century•PCBThat win in Pakistan is something of an outlier; every other New Zealand series win this cycle has either come in New Zealand, or against Ireland, Scotland and – relatively more notably – West Indies. While home form, which includes two series wins against India, is nothing to be sneezed at, it will bear little relevance to the World Cup in India itself. When New Zealand visited India immediately after that Pakistan triumph, they were swept aside 3-0 relatively comfortably.But New Zealand will be encouraged by how well some of the reserve players held up against Pakistan in the T20I series. This close to a World Cup, the incentive to hit another level and book a spot at that tournament will be high. There was little in Chapman’s recent T20 matches to suggest the quality he displayed in Pakistan, and he was instantly rewarded with an ODI berth. That puts him in immediate contention for the World Cup, and if Chad Bowes or Rachin Ravindra – who have showed flashes of form in the T20Is – can replicate their performances, these ODIs may offer New Zealand a lot more cover for their bench over the coming months.New Zealand may have a lot of players in India at present, but even the ones here will fancy a trip across the border in six months. The T20I series may have been shared and will soon be forgotten, but you won’t catch too many claiming this ODI series doesn’t matter either.

Thrill, thrill Pakistan

Pakistan didn’t fluke this series win against Sri Lanka. They decided they were going to play like this, told us about it. and went out and did it

Osman Samiuddin28-Jul-2023Admit it. You sniggered a little when Pakistan “unveiled a playing style” this May. A new kit, a new player, a new mega-bucks commercial deal, yes. But unveiling a new playing style?Perhaps you’re older and were downright sceptical. Pakistan, playing in a consistent and identifiable and consistently identifiable way? Tell them you can’t ascribe pattern to chaos or package and sell bottles of rainbow.Some of you may have appreciated the fact that Pakistan were, for once, being proactive and thinking and talking about the brand of cricket they wanted to play.This brand, the PCB explained in the middle of an 850-word press release announcing the appointment of their new coach Grant Bradburn, was . was, in the words of team director Mickey Arthur, “winning while having our own culture, our own brand of cricket and our own style. We will not be satisfied with wins without that culture in the team”.Related

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Soon after, during a press blitz, further detail was provided. This culture would stem from resilience, a national trait often ascribed to Pakistanis and the idea that Pakistan shines when pushed against a wall, that it burns brightest when it is darkest. The Cornered Tigers thesis, in other words, that Pakistan produces its most exhilarating and attacking cricket when they are up against it the most.Except now, in a crucial twist, this new coaching set-up was trying to instill into the players not to wait to be cornered but to be that tiger from the get-go.At the time, it did sound a bit like the hokum you might find in a brochure, or a self-help guide, though there were occasional glimmers of greater intent in white-ball series against the touring New Zealand side in April.But it was in beating Sri Lanka so comprehensively that a fuller expression of this – a humble request here to anoint whatever this is with a punchier, less lofty name – emerged. This was across a much broader canvas, operating with the acceptance that some days will be good, some bad, that one session might contain an entire game within it, where time and all its unfolding and uncontrollable possibilities and realities will test commitment to an intangible philosophy.And in real life, outside the confines of a press release, it was much more thrilling to watch. Pakistan scored at 4.06 runs per over through the series, the second highest by any visiting side in Sri Lanka (India scored at 4.17 across three Tests in 2017).In a crucial twist, the players don’t need to wait to be cornered before turning on their tiger mode•AFP/Getty ImagesWhen they were cornered in that first innings at Galle, at 101 for 5, still 211 runs behind, they were still going at five an over. Saud Shakeel and Agha Salman took the bolder, more aggressive route out putting on 177 at nearly five an over, but they were only maintaining the aggression. By the end of the second day, Pakistan had never scored faster across an innings as long as it was then – 4.91 runs per over across 45 overs – in their first innings of a Test.The target in the final innings was small, but precisely in that range which so traumatises Pakistan. And this was Galle, across days four and five, against a slow left-arm orthodox who had already done them over once on this ground, who has 59 wickets from just nine Tests. Pakistan wobbled, but they kept going hard at the target so that despite being 38 for 3 and 79 for 4, it never felt far away. At 4.05 runs per over, it was Pakistan’s fourth-quickest chase of a target between 130-185.On the third day of the second Test in Colombo, Pakistan scored 385 runs, the third-most they have ever made in a day. Agha became only the third Pakistani to score a hundred runs in a session. In short, it is difficult to remember this much collective intent in the batting. The only time Pakistan have scored faster through a series was against India at home in 2005-06, on legendarily flat tracks in Lahore and Faisalabad.The bowling has never needed much selling, of course. But even by Pakistan’s standards of variety, this was a proper 1980s United Colours of Benetton ad of an attack. Nearly all species of bowler was present: left-arm fast, right-arm fast, slow left-arm spin, right-arm legspin-mystery spin. All kinds of avenues and angles of attack available: tall, short, new-ball vim, old-ball reverse, get beat on the outside edge, get beat on the inside edge, hit stumps, hit pads, get caught in the slips, contain, attack and contain as attack.The fielding and catching will take time to process, though fair warning: there’s not enough time in the world to come to terms with the level Pakistan operated at.

England are playing – and winning and bossing – Tests in a way that is infectious. It is natural for others to want to replicate, not least because in a calendar in which more players are playing more white-ball cricket than ever, it is the pragmatic move

A reality check will point out this is only two Tests and that too against a non-vintage Sri Lanka side, who finished mid-table in the last World Test Championship (WTC). Even that is kind of the point though. Usually, in such contests, Pakistan rise or stoop to the level of their opponents (other than Australia and South Africa away). Only last year, with seven to eight of the same personnel in both XIs, Pakistan were thumped in one Test and had to pull off the second-highest chase in their history to win the other.Except that this was planned, from the moment Arthur arrived in Islamabad in April and with Bradburn and team management, began to spell out what they wanted. And that it did come from a genuine place of crisis.It’s easy to forget Pakistan finished seventh in the last WTC, ahead only of West Indies and Bangladesh. When they began that cycle, such was their draw that a route to the final was not a fantasy. They ended it single-handedly trying to kill Test cricket. The chairman killed the pitches, the captain and coach killed the ambition, in an unholy communion of conservatism.They needed to do something – anything – and so they did. All the messaging about the was reinforced at the pre-series camp for Sri Lanka (where white-ball cricketers and the Emerging team also attended).Two sessions a day were organised, one for skill development, the other for game scenarios. Players were encouraged to develop shots they weren’t used to playing in the skill session. In the scenarios, they played 21s, where batters have to score 21 runs off a certain, pre-decided number of deliveries (always at least at a run-a-ball). But they are dismissed automatically if they play three dot balls in a row. Pakistan’s boundary-hitting in this series hit Sri Lanka like a truck, but the cumulative toll of their running and strike rotation was far more insidious. (And a handy by-product was that bowlers bowled with more patience, not searching for the glory ball but building dot-ball pressure.)Whether they say it publicly or not, there is an imprint of Bazball on this, of course. For all the evangelising, England are playing – and winning and bossing Tests – in a way that is infectious. It is natural for others to want to replicate, not least because in a calendar in which more players are playing more white-ball cricket than ever, it is the pragmatic move.

Maybe Pakistan were slightly more refined about it – or played to their limitations, or to an embedded conservatism – tweaking the tempo particularly when they felt they’d gotten ahead of the game. But this is detail.The point of all this is to say that Pakistan didn’t fluke this series win, and especially not the manner of it. They decided they were going to play like this. They wrote it down and told us about it. They went off and practiced it. Then they went out and did it. It’s been forever since we’ve been able to say that about a Pakistan Test side (Misbah-ul-Haq’s Pakistan, in case you were wondering, though they never wrote press releases about that style of play).In the end, though, there is a reason you might have sniggered when you first heard about this. Or were sceptical. Or were so desperate for Pakistan to have a brand. Because you know this doesn’t happen; or that if it does, it can’t be sustained or institutionalised because that’s not how Pakistan cricket rolls.Already, not a day out from it, it’s possible to foresee the ways in which the fades or fails. Pakistan don’t play another Test till December and then too in Australia where they’ve lost 14 consecutive Tests. Against that record, a rain-hit, insipid, unambitious – whatever kind – draw will count as a win. They then don’t play another Test till the following August. You can’t build brands if you have no product in the first place.Murmurs have also begun about Zaka Ashraf’s new administration wanting change. The current coaching set-up around the team is unusual for Pakistan in terms of hierarchy and the nature of roles within it. Pakistan don’t do well with unusual. Misbah is not a fan and he’s just been appointed Ashraf’s cricket advisor.To make changes to this set-up, after this kind of win, and just before the Asia Cup and World Cup would be some act of self-sabotage. That, some might point out, is also the Pakistan way.

Mustafizur Rahman learns new-ball tricks in bid for World Cup ticket

His patchy form means he is no longer Bangladesh’s first-choice left-arm pacer despite his end-over skills. So now he’s looking to add to his repertoire

Mohammad Isam21-Sep-2023Not much cricket was played in Dhaka today, thanks to the on-again, off-again unseasonal rain, but what little was managed provided the stage for Mustafizur Rahman to show some vital rhythm ahead of the World Cup.Someone like Mustafizur would usually be a shoo-in for a spot in Bangladesh’s World Cup fifteen, but patchy form meant that the selectors and team management were looking for signs of this rhythm. His numbers for this season might be deceptively good, but he has looked out of sorts in most spells since last year and, for a while now, Shoriful Islam has edged ahead of him in Bangladesh’s left-arm pace pecking order. Shoriful bowled well enough in the Asia Cup to earn a rest in this series, meaning he is also confirmed pick for the World Cup. Mustafizur has this one series to state his strongest case for his own spot.Today, he took three wickets, conceding just 3.85 per over in his seven overs. That sort of economy is not common for him, and even more uncommonly, he got two of his three wickets in the first powerplay. He has only done this four times – in 90 ODI innings – in his career before today, the last instance coming 20 months ago, in January 2021.With his old-ball tricks – he is known for his use of his variations like cutters and slower-balls in the death overs – being deciphered more and more by batters since roughly the start of 2022, he has been working on sharpening his skills with the new ball. Bangladesh’s assistant coach Nic Pothas, speaking after today’s abandoned ODI, said as much.”Fizz [Mustafizur] has been working hard for the last month or so, to try to find some rhythm with the new ball,” Pothas said. “He has worked hard with [fast-bowling coach] Allan Donald. You can see the fruits, and it is coming along at the right time before the World Cup. We are very happy for him. We know his death-bowling credentials. You can wake him up at 3 o’clock in the morning to bowl death overs, and he will do them with the best in the world.”Pothas said that the skills needed to bowl with the new ball and being a death-overs specialist are very different things. Pothas believes Mustafizur is experienced enough to excel in both areas. “Those two roles are very specific. They almost live in two different boxes. It is no different to a batsman playing a particular type of innings and then having to do range hitting at the end.”[But] these guys are professionals. They have to be able to do anything. He prioritises very well. He is very experienced.”Mustafizur also earned praise from New Zealand captain Lockie Ferguson. “Certainly today was challenging for the boys and I thought the way Youngie [Will Young] and [Henry] Nicholls batted through that middle part really cemented a potential platform for us. Obviously it was difficult coming on and off with rain as well, it wasn’t easy.”Bangladesh bowled really well. Clearly there was some spin, and Mustafiz bowled really nicely as well. So, good learnings to take into the next game, but it’s just unfortunate that it rained.”

It takes one day, but England don't have the time right now

ODIs aren’t a priority for England at the moment, and that’s been reflected in their poor show at the World Cup so far

Matt Roller23-Oct-20231:40

What’s gone wrong for England?

The widespread view that ODIs are dying a slow and painful death has not been rebuffed in the first two-and-a-half weeks of the World Cup in India. Halfway through the group stage, the tournament has been characterised by two things: the number of close finishes (hardly any) and empty seats (plenty).It was a theme that emerged as Joe Root spoke to the English press in Bengaluru on Monday. Root stressed that he was not looking to make excuses for England’s disastrous start to their title defence, which has seen them lose three of their first four matches, but the lingering sense that 50-over cricket no longer takes precedence was reinforced.Echoing his coach, Matthew Mott, Root suggested that England’s build-up had been “rushed” after a six-month gap between March and September in which none of their World Cup squad played a single List A game, let alone an ODI. “It would have been nice to have a proper run-in,” he said.Related

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In the four years between the 2015 and 2019 World Cups, England played 88 ODIs and used 34 players, 12 of whom played more than 50% of those games. From 2019-23, they played just 42 ODIs and used 44 players, of whom only eight featured in at least half. The player who won the most caps in this cycle, Jason Roy, is not at the World Cup.Playing a full-strength side more often “definitely would have benefitted” England, Root said. “It would have been nice to [have] a six-month period where you slowly work things through as a group. But that’s just not how it is at the minute, and that’s not how we get to play our cricket as an England player, so you’ve just got to be adaptable.”Since their triumph in the 2019 World Cup, England’s schedule has been dominated by Test cricket: they have played 56 Tests in that period, with Australia and India joint-second on 39. With several tours staged concurrently and their white-ball teams focused on the 2021 and 2022 T20 World Cups, multi-format players have often been rested for ODIs.The result is that England’s all-format players are simultaneously overcooked after a busy winter of touring, a full IPL season and an exhausting Ashes campaign; and undercooked, in terms of relevant practice in the format they are actually playing at this World Cup.Jos Buttler couldn’t do much to change the script against South Africa•ICC via Getty ImagesRoot is a prime example: he played only 19 ODIs between the 2019 final and the opening game of the 2023 tournament. “We’re in a unique situation,” he said. “We play a huge amount of Test cricket compared to a lot of the other nations, so there’s always going to be overlapping schedules if we continue to play the amount that we do.”England’s next generation has also hardly played 50-over cricket, since the counties’ One Day Cup clashes with the Hundred, which launched in 2021. Gus Atkinson, the young Surrey fast bowler who featured in their 229-run thrashing to South Africa on Saturday, has played more one-day cricket for his country (four caps) than his county (two).Mott admitted that England were “guessing a little bit” in selection meetings due to their inability to compare players’ recent 50-over performances. “When you’re not playing the format, it’s hard to know who the best players are,” Root said. “That being said, I don’t think we’ve got the wrong squad of players here; I just don’t think we’ve performed.”Root has been an advocate of the Hundred, and said that England’s start to the World Cup “doesn’t make me change my mind” about it. “It makes me question whether we should be playing more 50-over cricket [at domestic level] instead of T20 – instead of the Blast, maybe,” he said.But the reality is that England are unlikely to prioritise 50-over cricket again anytime soon. And why would they, given the shifts in the sport’s landscape? They will pick a fresh squad to play three ODIs against West Indies in December, but will then not play another series in the format until mid-September, when they host Australia.

“It shouldn’t be down to, ‘is it bringing the most money for the sport?’ It should be down to what people want to watch, and what’s going to engage the next generation of players”Joe Root

“There’s talk of whether this format is relevant anymore anyway, in international cricket,” Root said. “Whether that gets changed, I don’t know. Who knows how things will move in the future? But whether it’s domestically or internationally, I don’t think we play enough of it if we’re going to continue to look to compete in World Cups.”Asked whether he would like the format to survive, Root – who was England’s top-scorer at the 2019 World Cup – did not provide a ringing endorsement. “I think it’s got a huge amount of history and it brings a lot to cricket,” he said. “It will always hold a very special part of my heart for what it’s given me throughout my career.”[But] I think that’s a question that should be posed to the next generation of players, and to everyone watching the game, really. It shouldn’t be down to, ‘is it bringing the most money for the sport?’ It should be down to what people want to watch, and what’s going to engage the next generation of players.”Their answer may become apparent next month, when England select a squad to tour the Caribbean for three ODIs and five T20Is: will players who have been excluded from the list of central contracts that will be published this week turn down franchise deals in order to play in a bilateral tour?While many of the players involved in this tournament still see it as the centrepiece of the international game, that consensus is weakening. Last year, a survey by the Federation of International Cricketers’ Associations (FICA) found that just 54% of men’s players consider the World Cup the “pinnacle ICC event”, down from 86% in 2019.Joe Root has been dismissed six times in the powerplay in nine innings since the start of 2022•Associated PressAnd England’s squad has been surprised by how poor the crowds have been for their matches so far – in particular against New Zealand on the opening night in Ahmedabad.”I know [the stadium holds] 130,000 people but the first game, opening World Cup match, [teams from the] previous final, I expected more people to be there,” Root said. “But when it’s 50 degrees [sic] and you’re sat in the sun all day, and a lot of the time it’s working hours, it’s understandable.”If IPL games, which last up to four hours, can feel too long, the eight-hour ODI matchday is increasingly out of kilter with fans’ demands; the ICC’s slogan for this tournament, “It takes one day”, seems almost apologetic.Root emphasised his belief that England’s squad remain “bloody good players” who can pull off five consecutive wins to reach the semi-finals, starting against Sri Lanka on Thursday. He also played down the idea that, with their legacy as world champions in both white-ball formats secure, England have lacked the hunger of other teams.They are clearly not as bad a side as their performances at this World Cup have suggested, but the trend is clear: England were brilliant at one-day cricket during the four years when it became their No. 1 priority, and have declined in the four years since. Considering the global context, it may never be their priority again.

Shubman Gill faces a batting challenge in first IPL season as Titans captain

He’s taking over a team that has qualified for two IPL finals and won a title, and needs a big season to push for a place in India’s T20 World Cup XI

Shashank Kishore23-Mar-2024″I don’t know if you’ve looked at the captains photo with the trophy. That’s how different it is.”Shubman Gill summed up in one sentence the different vibe to IPL 2024. He was referring to the changing of the guard among captains. No Dhoni, Rohit or Kohli. Shreyas Iyer is the most experienced leader, while Gill is the newest.The new Gujarat Titans captain has barely any formal leadership experience. He’s led his state side Punjab in just two T20s in 2019-20. That’s two more than his predecessor – and opponent on Sunday, Hardik Pandya – had when he captained Titans to the IPL title in their first season in 2022, and steered them to the final again in 2023. The bar has been set high for Gill.Related

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He also takes over as Titans captain in what is going to be a crucial season for him as a batter. After a sensational performance in IPL 2023 – 890 runs – you’d imagine that Gill is a lock-in for India at the upcoming T20 World Cup. But the competition for place in the top order, and even to be a reserve in a 15-man squad, is tough.The spectacular rise of Yashasvi Jaiswal and the return of Rohit Sharma as captain leaves little room in the top two. Virat Kohli’s comeback to the shortest format means No. 3 could be spoken for too. Suryakumar Yadav, when fully fit, walks in as well.So this is the challenge facing Gill in his first season as Titans captain, just one year after he so successfully transformed himself as a T20 batter. Between 2019 and 2022, Gill had a best strike rate of 132 in an IPL season. He upped that to 157.80 while remaining prolific – three hundreds and nearly a fourth, an unbeaten 94.Gill took giant strides in improving his six-hitting too. Between IPL 2018 and 2022, he had hit only 47 sixes. Last season alone, he hit 33. The question now is whether Gill will continue batting this aggressively and effectively with the added responsibility of captaincy? There are some examples of young Indian batters who haven’t done so.A time for change: the next generation of IPL captains•BCCIRishabh Pant’s strike rate in his first IPL season as captain was 128.52; it was 152.26 in the previous three seasons. Sanju Samson’s strike rate was 147.32 for three seasons leading into his first as captain, when it dropped to 136.72. For KL Rahul, the drop was from 146.60 to 129.45.Hardik Pandya also slowed down as captain. He went from being a finisher for Mumbai Indians with a strike rate of 169 in three seasons before he became the Titans captain, and then scored at 131.26 in his new role as the team’s anchor. It’s probable that Gill isn’t aware of this trend, but he’s shown himself capable of overcoming challenges.As recently as February, his place in the Test side came under scrutiny during the home series against England after a string of low scores. As the criticism of his form and weakness against the incoming delivery grew, Gill displayed resilience in constructing a fighting second-innings hundred in Visakhapatnam. It paved the way for more runs in the next three Tests.IPL 2022 was an incredible season for Gill with the bat. He needs to find a way to match that along with the responsibility of captaincy, for the Titans to go far in the IPL, and to further his prospects of making the cut for the T20 World Cup.

Ben Duckett bends another Test to his will to add to his family lore

Soon-to-be-father sticks to the game that got him noticed to drive England into the ascendancy

Vithushan Ehantharajah20-Jul-2024Even before Ben Duckett got his second shot at a Test career on the 2022 tour of Pakistan, the four caps he achieved way back in 2016 were something he was looking forward to telling his grandchildren about.As he awaits the imminent birth of his first child with fiancée, Paige, setting the lineage in motion for those future earwiggers … well, kids, granddad has a few stories to tell. Not just of three centuries – and of a couple of indiscretions that preceded his chance to score them – but of his role in fortifying England’s opening partnership for the first time since 2012. It’s a role he’s performed with the kind of engaging play that, as was the case here on Saturday – and indeed on Thursday – channels an opponent’s energy and fires it straight back at them between the eyes.The 71 runs that West Indies added for their final wicket gave the tourists a not-inconsequential lead of 41, while also prolonging the morning session to further frustrate England. The move to simply not try and get Joshua Da Silva out confused many, who were then irked as No.11 Shamar Joseph started to show his aptitude with the bat. And when Duckett drove into Zak Crawley’s stumps at the non-striker’s end – via the fingertips of Jayden Seales – there was the missing ingredient from the first seven sessions of this second Test. Jeopardy.And then, just like that, it was gone. Ground to a paste and smeared across the Trent Bridge outfield, mainly through cover and backward point. Much like day one, when Crawley fell three balls into England’s opening effort, Duckett – again with the assistance of Ollie Pope – flipped matters with a breezy seventy-odd: another knock that did not trouble the centuries column, but carried as much weight given the circumstances.Then, the left-hander unfurled four consecutive fours against Seales – West Indies’ best last week at Lord’s – propelling England to 50 inside just 4.2 overs to change immediately the mood inside Trent Bridge. This time, the deficit was polished off in 41 deliveries. Duckett assumed a more subdued role with Pope having the honour to tuck into Seales for consecutive boundaries. But he had overtaken Pope by the time he unloaded a hat-trick of sweeps on Kevin Sinclair, which in turn allowed England to bring up their 100 in 18.4 overs. Duckett had 53 of them.Much as had been the case for England, a ball change helped momentarily turn the tide for West Indies. The first 14 deliveries with the replacement accounted for Pope and Duckett, both undone by the sideways movement that the subbed-out Dukes was lacking.Three successive sweeps took Ben Duckett to fifty, and ripped the initiative from West Indies•Getty ImagesOn a true pitch at a boundary-friendly ground, the lead of 99 for the loss of three at that juncture had the game in the balance. But the fact that England had that platform allowed Harry Brook (71 off 78) and Joe Root (37 off 67) to close out the day playing their natural games in the toughest conditions, as the moisture held in the air with the floodlights in use for the final 90 minutes of play.”There are occasions when you’d like to put your feet up for a little bit longer,” Chris Woakes joked when asked what it was like watching a top order perpetually on the charge, unperturbed by the odd casualty.”We’ve committed to that way of playing and, we want to entertain, we want to put the pressure back on the opposition. It’s exciting to watch, but at the same time there are sometimes when you’re like ‘lads can we just bat some overs’ so you can put your feet up! But you’ve got to take the rough with the smooth, the way the guys are playing so far in this game has been incredibly exciting, great to watch and hopefully puts bums on seats.”I also know, while there might also be occasionally chances with the new ball against our opening pair because of the way they play, I also know as a bowler – and an opening bowler – that when you’re put under pressure, it does make it harder to deliver your skill.”It’s worth noting Duckett’s introduction to the team came at a time when the vibes under Brendon McCullum and Ben Stokes were immaculate. The 2022 summer had hooked everyone in, but the selectors decided Duckett’s flourish was a missing piece. Alex Lees was a surprise casualty as Duckett got the nod for Pakistan. In the 18 Tests since, against six teams spread across three continents, the shorter left-hander is averaging 47 and has struck his 1,504 runs at 88.62.Related

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None of that is put on. It’s not Bazball, counter-attacking or imposing oneself. Simply a bloke who loves going after the ball so much that there were guffaws in the stands when he left his first ball of the innings, from Alzarri Joseph, to nudge his overall leave percentage closer to 2. And, every bit as loud as the cheers that greeted the 11 boundaries that took England away from peril, was the ovation when Duckett walked off with a second tone-shifting innings in three days.That it came at his home ground felt particularly pertinent, given the looming addition to his family speaks of a more grown-up Duckett, without having to shed the impish instincts. A handy sweet spot between maturity and immaturity. Like knowing swearing isn’t big or clever, but still finding it funny.Northamptonshire encouraged the renegade streak, then Nottinghamshire refined it. That included re-shaping his grip after a botched recovery from an operation on the ring finger of his left hand, which resulted in a contorted grip in the 2018 summer, limiting his scoring shots.The issue arose because Duckett returned to action four weeks earlier than he should have done, impatiently trying to state his case for a return to the England team. The recovery took longer than expected, but as he is finding out, good things come to those who wait, even to a man in a hurry. Particularly now he has a few more stories to share with the family. Perhaps even one of a series-clinching Test win in the city they now call home.

Ollie Pope is a potential weak link for England at No. 3

He’s been a good stand-in captain but an erratic batter, and he’ll have to course-correct quickly if the side is to do well in Australia next year

Ian Chappell07-Sep-2024Despite playing a meaningful innings against a moderate Sri Lankan attack, Ollie Pope needs more convincing knocks away from his home ground to prove he’s a substantial No. 3 batter.Otherwise Pope is in danger of becoming the polar opposite of Joe Root – a capable captain with a feel for the job but an inconsistent batter.Root on the other hand is a batter – especially in England – who is as consistent as night follows day, but his captaincy attributes were negligible. Root is currently in imperious form, but he’ll be bordering on 35 years of age by the time the next Australian tour takes place in November 2025.While Root has a passable average in Australia there’s the not so minor fact that in 27 innings he is yet to compile a Test century in the country. Those knocks were all played when Root was at the peak of his powers, so this will probably be his last chance to rectify that anomaly.Related

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On Root’s three tours of Australia, England have lost 13 of the 15 Tests played. England’s former skipper is yet to experience the thrill of victory in Australia, and this is another major hurdle. The scars are unhealed.Batting in the middle order, Pope had a poor last tour of Australia and should be considered a potential weakness. It’s not just his renowned skittishness that should interest the Australian pace bowlers, there are also some technical flaws that can be exploited.The Australian pace bowlers will hope to break the risk-taking opening partnership and bring Pope to the crease early. If they then dismiss Pope quickly it means the ever dangerous Root will be batting while the ball still has plenty of shine. That is a dream situation under Australian conditions.If Australia do cause concerns for Pope, and England are forced to omit him, then the crucial No. 3 spot becomes a revolving door. Currently the English squad is limited in players who are qualified to do a sound job at No. 3. Without Pope, England would also be missing a suitable replacement captain if Ben Stokes suffers an injury.That would be a crucial double blow to England.

Pope needs more convincing knocks away from his home ground to prove he’s a substantial No. 3 batter or he is in danger of becoming the polar opposite of Joe Root – a capable captain with a feel for the job but an inconsistent batter

However, Australia’s excellent pace attack is also at a stage where age has a diminishing effect. Only Pat Cummins, who is also a fine captain, will be at the not-so-worrying age of 32. Both Mitchell Starc, who’ll be 35 by the time of the England tour, and Josh Hazlewood, age 34, are at a point where skill declines and injuries have a detrimental effect.Offspinner Nathan Lyon is also in that category, and ageing is more of a concern for bowlers than it is for excellent batters like Root.Meanwhile, Australia received the news they’ve probably been expecting but were dreading: former opener Will Pucovski is most likely going to be missing from their ranks following medical assessment.In form and healthy, Pucovski would be a blessing for Cummins’ team following the retirement of David Warner with his pugnacious skill. Australia now have a season to unearth a suitable replacement for Warner or else they’ll have to continue the unsatisfactory experiment of using Steve Smith as an opener.Unfortunately Pucovski’s technique against short-pitched bowling was laid bare at first-class level. It was absolutely disastrous by 2024, when Tasmanian quick Riley Meredith floored him in a Sheffield Shield match. Pucovski became a concern for any selection panel and by this stage nobody could risk choosing him for Australia.In his current cricketing and mental state it’ll be a blessing if Pucovski is left to continue his rehabilitation in virtual anonymity.In the meantime England is wisely pursuing a policy of choosing players who can have a positive effect under Australian conditions.Whilst this is an admirable policy, England’s bigger priority is for Pope to find consistently good form and cement the crucial No. 3 position. If Pope is still misfiring, then England’s tour in 2025-26 could be another frivolous trip to Australia.

Markram unfazed by lean patch with bat: 'That's just the nature of the beast'

The South Africa batter on finding his touch, dealing with conditions in the UAE, navigating a packed cricket calendar, and more

Ashish Pant26-Sep-2024It has been a strange 2024 for Aiden Markram. As captain, he has been phenomenal. He started the year leading Sunrisers Eastern Cape to their second successive SA20 title and then became the first captain to guide South Africa into the final of a men’s T20 World Cup in June. The T20I series loss against West Indies was little more than a blemish on his record.But his returns with the bat have taken a hit. There was a breathtaking century against India in the second Test in Cape Town in January, but barring that, his only 50-plus score this year across formats is the unbeaten 69 he hit in the third ODI against Afghanistan last week. It was a crucial innings in many ways, helping South Africa avoid a 3-0 clean sweep, but Markram’s form in general has been a concern. This becomes especially true in T20Is, where he last scored a half-century in October 2022.Markram, however, isn’t concerned about his lean patch, insisting he has felt “quite good with bat in hand.”Related

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“I mean, it’s all just cricket, really. You can feel as good as you want and not score runs, and that’s just the nature of the beast, unfortunately,” Markram told reporters in an interaction organised by ahead of the two-match T20I series against Ireland.”Some challenging wickets at the World Cup, but all in all, been feeling quite good with bat in hand. Obviously, was nice to get some runs in the last ODI, but a lot of the time I just measure form as to how much I can contribute to my team winning games and not necessarily the amount of runs that I’m scoring.”So that’s what I’m going to take with me moving forward, and hopefully, I can score some runs so that the team is in a good position and can win games are cricket.”Markram will hope to quickly find his 20-over rhythm, especially after South Africa’s heavy defeats to Afghanistan in the ODIs and the fact that they haven’t brought their strongest set of players on this UAE leg.Heinrich Klaasen, David Miller and Kagiso Rabada are some of the key names missing from the squad for the Ireland series. Nine of the 15 players in the T20I squad are yet to play more than ten T20 games. Add to that Reeza Hedricks’ lean run and that leaves a South Africa unit devoid of experience and form.Markram, though, feels that the players selected for this tour all have what it takes to succeed at the international level.”There’s a few guys that have put up their hands domestically back at home in the SA20 itself as well,” he said. “You look at a guy like Wiaan Mulder come on. Matthew Breetzke had a really good SA20. And then Nqaba Peter, of course, he’s got that X-factor. He’s still really, really young and really raw, but he has a lot of those attributes that we like as a team.”So there’s a few guys that deserve to be here firstly, and deserve to have that opportunity to grow their games as cricketers and get exposed to international cricket. And hopefully, if they get a fair opportunity and feel really comfortable in the environment, they can start putting in some nice performances for the team.”Markram became the first South Africa captain to lead the team into a World Cup final•Getty ImagesAnother thing that the South Africans have had to contend with on this UAE tour is the conditions. In sweltering heat in Sharjah during the ODI series, they often found themselves under the pump. The conditions are unlikely to change much when it comes to Abu Dhabi, but Markam feels having been in the UAE for a while should hold them in good stead.”From your heat point of view, it’s just as hot here [in Abu Dhabi], if not hotter and slightly more humid [than Sharjah]. So, it’s nice to have been here now for a while and played in an ODI series going into this T20 series. That’s a big positive for us,” he said. “Sharjah obviously spun quite a bit, or at least a fair amount, and the wicket was pretty placid. I think Abu Dhabi, I haven’t played too much cricket here, but I don’t think it’s going to be as bare a wicket as maybe Sharjah was.”If I look at our nets that we had last night, it’s actually a little bit of movement off the wicket, and they left quite a bit more grass on it compared to Sharjah. We’ll have to be sharp. We’ll have another look at it today at training and try get as much info as we can, just from looking at it with the naked eye. But it’ll ultimately come down to us assessing it in the first few balls, first over tomorrow, and coming up with those plans.”The last time South Africa faced Ireland in an international game was back in 2022 and while the Irish spinners might not trouble the South African batters as much as Afghanistan’s did, Markram is not taking them lightly.

“It is quite a busy schedule, but if you’d offered this to us as a kid growing up, we would have given lots for it”Markram on the cricket calendar

“We’ve all seen how good the Irish team has been over the last few years, and how much they’ve progressed as a team” he said. “Naturally, we don’t face them maybe as much as other teams, so it’ll just be trying to get accustomed to that as quick as we can, and trying to get an understanding of their plans as quick as we can, so that we can try to combat it ourselves.”South Africa have a busy schedule in front of them. After the T20I and ODI series against Ireland, they next travel to Bangladesh before going back home for a T20I series against India. Then they host Sri Lanka and Pakistan at home followed by the SA20 before they travel to Pakistan for a tri-nation series, also involving New Zealand.Markram, however, feels that a packed cricket schedule has become the norm and rotating and managing players will be the way forward.”Yeah, there’s lots of cricket. But we’re not the only team that’s playing lots of cricket. All the teams around the world are playing lots of cricket,” he said. “It’s down to the individual to manage their time wisely, look after their body, and give themselves the best chance of being really sharp for each and every series.”It is quite a busy schedule, but if you’d offered this to us as a kid growing up, we would have given lots for it. That’s sort of how we try to see it, and we take each series on as best we can.”

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