'Bangladesh's strong message to the world'

The cricketing community lauded the Bangladesh U-19 team after they won the country’s maiden world title

ESPNcricinfo staff09-Feb-2020

'There has to be a format where the bowlers are able to challenge batters'

Sachin Tendulkar talks about how ODIs are skewed in favour of batsmen, and looks back to his landmark Sharjah innings against Australia 22 years ago

Sharda Ugra24-Apr-2020It’s not the time to be fussing over birthdays and celebrations, and Sachin Tendulkar doesn’t have his 47th on his mind. The days he has kept track of instead are the number he has spent indoors in his home in Mumbai, without meeting a single outsider. Count them from March 15 onwards. And let’s not forget that, regardless of whether social-distancing norms are in place or not, it’s not like he can step outside for a change of scene and shop for groceries. What Tendulkar misses is the happy whirl of meeting old friends, playing golf or badminton, and otherwise being busy.This is, though, a chance to think about the future, to reflect on what could be, and think about what the new normal might be when cricket does return. Though players have generally tried to adapt to this “forced off-season” by trying to stay fit at home, it may take a while for them to return to their previous levels of on-field sharpness, no matter how much fitness work they have done during the lockdowns. But Tendulkar says, “I personally don’t feel the game is going to change as such.” What he cannot get his head around is the idea of closed-door contests.”That would be odd. Because you get so much energy from the spectators also. If India is to win a crucial game, you want people to be around you to celebrate – to amplify that. But no one inside the stadium? It’s not going to make anyone feel special. It is going to be a weird feeling, and I don’t know how players will react.”ALSO READ: Kartikeya Date: The three phases of Tendulkar’s ODI batting (2018)International games, at least, Tendulkar says, need their living, breathing audiences.”Can you imagine Roger Federer and [Rafael] Nadal playing on the centre court of Wimbledon with nobody there? It’s going to be such a strange thing to watch. Not just cricket, any sport needs to have that energy.”In contrast to the still vast global appetite for him, Tendulkar himself post-retirement is not an obsessive watcher of live cricket. It has been seven years since his emotional Wankhede farewell, and in that time cricket appears to have been enormously transformed, with the advent and explosion of T20 leagues and fundamental changes in elements of the sport itself.Since these are days of nostalgia and whimsical imaginings, what kind of batsman would a millennial or Gen Z Tendulkar have been? Not much different, he thinks: “I would have continued to be myself in today’s cricket, I don’t think I would have changed anything.” What, no 360-degree shot-making or Dilscoops or switch hits?He has seen his younger self on a few YouTube videos and imagines he would not have needed to use those tools. “I don’t see there would have been any need to do something out-of-the-box different. Because if I had continued doing [what I did] the same way, the boundary line is only 70 yards [away],” he laughs. “So if you are going to back yourself to clear [it], then you work on consistency more than anything else, depending on the surfaces. There are surfaces that compel you to play differently, I would have been flexible in my mind, my thought process. I think that flexibility has to be there.”0:28

Happy Birthday, Sachin

What both longevity in the game and the new rules of modern cricket demand is the willingness to keep innovating. “Like how bowlers have developed the slower-ball bouncer, the knuckleball and the wide yorker – they have developed various things. So have the batters. In time to come, maybe eight-ten years down the line, we will be looking at a totally different game – the batswing could be different, the stance could be different. Or the loading up. A lot of elements which we are not thinking of today because it’s not demanded by the game today. But in time to come, it may change.”He remembers watching Andy Flower reverse-sweeping his way to the top of the Test aggregates on the 1999-2000 India tour and saying that Flower was about “eight-ten years ahead of the rest of the lot”. Twenty years on, Tendulkar is right and Flower has come to be seen as having been an innovator back then. When he is asked about the most visible changes in the game since his retirement, Tendulkar points to two issues. One is the absence of a mechanism to correct umpiring bloopers using the DRS. “Those types of things, when the bowlers didn’t get the wicket even though the batsman was out, or the batsmen were given out when they were not, it costs us games. Those type of things win or lose matches and series. Today that doesn’t happen – a bad decision can be completely negated and you still have a chance.”The other he has touched upon before – the ODI rule changes in the early 2010s, where a total of four fielders were allowed outside the ring in the non-powerplay overs, and the use of two new balls in ODIs.”If you have to look at one-day cricket then [with] the two new balls, if the pitches are not helpful, it makes bowlers’ life really difficult. Two new balls have virtually diminished reverse swing, I have not seen lot of reverse swing. [There is] occasional reverse swing here and there.” The use of a single ball, he says, “guaranteed little bit of reverse swing with the discoloured ball and the softer ball”. With two new balls, the ball stays hard, “travels faster, and so I think bowlers have been challenged more”.ALSO READ: Have the new rules made ODIs an unequal contest? (2013)The five fielders in the ring has been an additional challenge. Tendulkar illustrates, offering a standard field for an offspinner: “You would normally have a long-off, long-on, deep midwicket and deep square-leg, and you have to have a deep point inside the ring. Because of T20, batters are prepared to back themselves, because they’ve worked on those shots, reverse sweeps and all sorts of things.” Earlier, if you pierced the infield ring, he goes on to say, “you got a single for that, with the extra fielder back on the boundary line and you lost strike. If the strike was not rotated, then you [as a non-striker] lost possibly three balls an over. And when you were batting well, the bowler would want to bowl at the non-striker and not you.”It must be remembered that Tendulkar was the first batsman to make an ODI 200, ten years ago, before the new rules came into play, when he was two months short of 37. In the decade since, only five other batsmen have gone past 200, Rohit Sharma thrice.Talking about the new rules, which he sees as palpably unfair to bowlers, gets Tendulkar’s cricket self buzzing again. The on-strike, in-form batsman today is supplied with a bounty. The ball past the infield ring is a four. “If I was batting well,” Tendulkar says, “I would hit a boundary and I would face the ball again. You are getting three runs extra, plus you are retaining strike and I would love to do that.”It is this reminder of his appetite for run-scoring that brings the twin hundreds in Sharjah in 1998 to mind. Those innings were played around this time 22 years ago, and are part of the collective memory of a generation of Indian cricket fans: the Desert Storm innings (143) that took India into the tournament final and the match-winning 134 in the final two days later on Tendulkar’s 25th birthday. His partner in the 143 was VVS Laxman, who scored 23 in a 104-run partnership and remembers talking to Tendulkar in between overs. “But I know he wasn’t listening to me,” Laxman said.On batting under the current field restrictions: “If I was batting well, I would hit a boundary and face the ball again. You are getting three runs extra plus you are retaining strike and I would love to do that”•AFP/Getty ImagesTendulkar has himself recalled being “obsessed” that night about keeping strike. “When you are batting well, you want to face every ball. I wanted to win that game, I didn’t want to just achieve our run rate, I wanted to beat Australia and get into the final, so I was playing for the victory.”What was it like being in the zone that night? “Sometimes, I don’t know… you look at the bowler and whatever you’re thinking, the bowler exactly bowls that,” he says. “It was a little bit of that. I knew more or less what they were bowling and I was ready to play that shot. Sometimes that happens, I wouldn’t say every ball, but whenever one is planning to play a big shot, you say okay, if the ball lands in this area I am going to hit. And exactly that is where the next ball has landed and I have gone for that shot. You have those days where whatever you are thinking, that is what exactly happens.”Over the course of a conversation, especially one of this kind, during a time when cricket itself stands suspended, it is easy to lapse into the past and search for new paths around familiar stories. But the game will go on, cricket will resume, and new stars will be born. Is there anyone in the new crop of gung-ho swashbucklers around the world in whom Tendulkar sees a glimpse of his younger self?ALSO READ: Tendulkar: ‘I wanted to beat Australia twice (2018)It is, of course, a headline-seeking question but Tendulkar, always a batsman of turbo-charged intensity and skill, has remained a man of controlled verbal expression. “Since we are talking about promising youngers, there are a number and the names would be Prithvi [Shaw], Shubman [Gill] and [Sanju] Samson. They all are different players. Just like how when we were playing, Rahul [Dravid] was different to me, I was different to Sourav [Ganguly], and Laxman was different from all of us. Similarly these guys are different but have a promising future. They have their own styles.”Because we are where we are, with cricket stalled, the board chiefs all meeting to talk about the future, and Tendulkar turning 47, maybe this is the best time to talk about what the game could include looking ahead. Something larger than tinkering with powerplays, surely. Tendulkar would personally like the debate about Test cricket to be focused not on quantity (four days not five) but on improving the quality of the contest and keeping spectators engaged.Get home boards to move away from the extremes of dead or unplayable wickets and commit one way or the other – seam or spin. Right in the playing conditions, if need be. It may sound radical and impossible to achieve, but Sachin Tendulkar, cricketer, cricket fan, has a parting observation: “We have two formats in which the bowlers are constantly challenged, have restrictions in their field settings, so there has to be a format where the bowlers are able to challenge batters.”

Suresh Raina: Selfless, full of joy and a great team man

In appreciation of a player who always seemed to have more to give for the success of his team

Sidharth Monga17-Aug-2020Only 10 players won more Man-of-the-Match awards when playing ODI cricket for India than Suresh Raina’s 12. Only 11 have played more than his 226 matches. Only 10 players have scored more runs than his 5615. His average of 35 and strike rate of 94 are so close to the legend he played alongside and was supposed to replace: Yuvraj Singh, who averaged 36 and struck at 87 runs per 100 balls.Yet Raina retires from international cricket not a legend, not a superstar, not remembered for his Man-of-the-Match performances although one of those, a stunning hundred in Cardiff teased a glorious assertive turn that he long promised. What you remember instantly of Raina is instead his joy at other’s success. His willingness to throw himself around on the field. To run hard for his partner. To dive for his crease, a technique he mastered. And that is what remains of his primary skill, batting: cameos that made the whole team effort look way better without drawing too much attention to themselves.That tight tense chase in the quarter-final of the 2011 World Cup is so rightly remembered for Yuvraj Singh’s unbeaten half-century to go with his two wickets, but what Singh remembers is a 34. When Raina came in to bat at the fall of the fifth wicket, India still needed 74 off 75, but he immediately eased things for Singh by going after the bowling. In the nervous, error-filled semi-final against Pakistan, India ended up with a target to defend because of Raina’s late push. This time he scored 36.When India needed 322 in 40 overs to stay alive in the tri-series in Australia in 2011-12, Virat Kohli scored a stunning 133 off 86 balls, but Raina’s assault of 40 off 24 balls in the end was just as breathtaking. Raina’s Test debut was a hundred but it was overshadowed by Sachin Tendulkar’s double. Some of his best ODI innings were played in the company of MS Dhoni, who would invariably outshine him.ALSO READ: The best of Suresh Raina in India coloursWhen around an established, more accomplished batsman, Raina was a nuisance for the fielding captain. Joe Pesci if Indian cricket was the mob. Raina could hit into unusual areas: over cover and extra cover on the off side, and over midwicket on the leg side. Also he batted selflessly, which allowed him to hit his boundaries. “Selflessness” might not sound like much today, but when Raina came in, Singh and Mohammad Kaif had only just pulled India out of an era of notorious not-outers in the middle order.After the 2011 World Cup, with Singh now taking time off to recover from illness, it was expected Raina was the perfect fit for that role. He was the left-hand presence in the middle, he was in his 10th year as an international yet young, he was fit, he could chip in with the ball and would pull off difficult catches in the field.And yet in tough conditions Raina struggled. When he went to Cardiff to start his comeback trail for the 2015 World Cup, he had gone 55 innings outside Asia with just three scores of 50 or more. Dhoni had now begun to prefer batting closer to the end of the innings so Raina was given the lead role in the lower middle order: the No. 5. He went in at 110 for 3, which soon became 132 for 4, and this Raina took charge of the situation. He was in total control, and for once dominated a partnership with Dhoni. Pesci had become de Niro for a day.Although he scored only one more hundred after this – that against Zimbabwe – Raina had a good selfless World Cup in Australia. He was still only 29 when sent packing after a tough home series against South Africa at the end of that year. His knee, which was first operated on in 2007, also began to play up.ALSO READ: Suresh Raina, an ace at World Cups and Asia CupsIt will surely rankle Raina that he was never given a run to truly replace Singh. Even after Dhoni’s astute judgement of Ajinkya Rahane: excellent against the new ball or on quick pitches in the middle order, but dodgy on slower pitches. With the top three set in stone, and with slowness mostly a factor in the middle overs, Rahane was always going to struggle.With a similar average and a much lower strike rate, Rahane became the No. 4 choice two years before the 2019 World Cup. When Rahane began to fail, they tried a host of options but never went to Raina. India eventually messed it all up, but never gave someone who had done this job before a go.The selectors can’t really be blamed outright because Raina wasn’t scoring in domestic List A competition. However, he would hardly have been the first person India selected based on IPL runs or past experience. Dhoni, in fact, came back without even playing domestic cricket. Evidently Raina had not done enough when at his best, in the eyes of the leaders of the team, to be made an exception for. It will be a cause for dissatisfaction for Raina, both with himself and the management.It is interesting that India never thought of Raina as a rival for Dhoni’s slot when the latter began to lose his touch. Raina was a free-flowing batsman, and the left-hand option that India badly needed. However, much like for captain Kohli, vice-captain Rohit Sharma and coach Ravi Shastri, it would have been sacrilege even for Raina to think he could replace Dhoni. He was Chinna Thala because there was a Thala. Most of his career was spent in Dhoni’s company: they debuted together, he often stood next to Dhoni at slip on in his ear shot at cover, they put together 3585 runs in each other’s company; no two men have partnered for more for the fourth wicket or lower.Raina took the partnership to the next level when he decided to retire on the same day as his captain. Him at just 33. Once again, like some of his finest efforts on the field, his retirement, too, was a cameo. The tributes he received on Twitter tell you what a team man he was.Now, though, Raina has a chance to play a lead role. He is still only 33, he won’t be playing much else but T20, but he still has a good three-four years of conditioning left in him. As recently as this May, he spoke to Irfan Pathan about the need to be respected by the board. The same board which refused to acknowledge his retirement for close to 30 hours because he hadn’t officially informed them.The same board that doesn’t allow its players to play T20 league cricket outside of IPL. This has caused a lot of disquiet among players who don’t earn BCCI contracts; fewer than 30 do. The prime of an athlete is way shorter than other professionals. They want to make the best of it.Go freelance, Suresh. You have achieved both runs and titles in the IPL. Retire after the next IPL, and play three leagues a year instead. Set a precedent for others that there is an alternative. Lead this revolution. Even Pesci had a much bigger role in The Irishman, in all likelihood his last stand.

Stuart Broad's subtleties prove the old dog isn't done with learning

Three first-day wickets at Galle set agenda for England and scotch some preconceptions

Andrew Miller14-Jan-2021Perhaps it’s the headband, perhaps it’s the wrist position. Perhaps it’s the “bravery” that the man himself says comes with experience. But Stuart Broad has started this Sri Lanka series – this Asian winter – with the exact same ebullience and optimism with which he finished England’s lockdown summer. In doing so, he’s let it be known once again that, at the age of 34 and with a remit to perfect the game-craft that he’s spent the past 13 years honing, he is living his best life right here, right now.The first day of England’s first excursion of 2021 was, as Broad put it at the close, “a nine out of ten day” – as a harassed Sri Lankan line-up, still not recovered from their bruising defeat in South Africa, found a range of ways to gift their opponents the upper hand – from fluky deflections off ankles and fingertips to abject reverse sweeps and miscued half-trackers.But nothing that transpired – certainly not Dom Bess’s curate’s egg of a five-for (the ball to dismiss Dilruwan Perera was the good part…) – could match Broad’s path-finding injection of know-how in his two brief but pointed spells.”It’s an absolute dream world day for us,” Broad said, “and three wickets in Sri Lanka as a seamer feels like a decent day personally.”That’s putting it modestly. Within eight overs, Broad had matched his tally from three previous Tests in Sri Lanka. That haul (for want of a better word) had been spread over three visits in 2007, 2012 and 2018, beginning with a Test debut in Colombo of such alarming inhospitality that the then-beanpole 21-year-old was quietly eased back out of the firing line and held back for more hospitable conditions in New Zealand three months later.It’s worth pointing out that Broad didn’t actually do a whole lot wrong in those three campaigns, other than bowl with the tenacity (aka predictability) of an English seamer, trained to plug away outside off stump, then bang in the short ball for effect when all else fails.But twice he had been on the receiving end of Mahela Jayawardene masterclasses (a fate that few visitors of the 2000s escaped, to be fair, given his eye-watering haul of 23 Test hundreds on home soil) while on his most recent trip in 2018, Broad’s 14 overs in two innings might as well have been designated shine-removers, as England’s trio of spinners – Jack Leach, Moeen Ali and Adil Rashid – continued their dominant theme for the series by sharing 14 wickets to wrap up a 3-0 clean sweep.This time, however, Broad was a man with a new plan – including one made more or less on the hoof, given how cursory England’s preparations for this series have been. While bowling to Joe Root in England’s solitary warm-up at Hambantota, the pair noted the awkwardness of Broad’s lift from just back of a length, and figured a leg gully might be an opportune gamble to the left-handers. Sure enough, Lahiru Thirimanne jabbed low to Jonny Bairstow, to set in motion a day of barely relenting progress for England.Broad confirmed at the close that the ball itself had not been a deliberate ploy, rather a contingency plan in case of natural variation. “At Hambantota, we had a lot of balls from middle stump sliding through the air to leg gully, leg slip,” he said. “Rooty was batting at the time and said it might feel uncomfortable on certain pitches to have a fielder there with my style of bowling. I don’t try and swing it away, but I do try and nip it back, so it was a deliberate ploy to have a fielder there and make the batsman play as often as possible. But you need a bit of luck for it to go there.”Stuart Broad claimed the big wicket of Angelo Mathews•SLCBut you need a bit of skill too to create the conditions for such happy accidents to take effect, and that is the aspect of Broad’s recent performances that is becoming ever more apparent in the late summer (Indian summer, he might be hoping…) of his career. Where once he was a mood bowler, famed for wrecking intermittent Test matches in the space of a single session but slipping back into James Anderson’s gargantuan shadow in between whiles, now he is becoming a mood in himself.Related

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It was in the process of taking his 500th Test wicket, at Old Trafford in August, that Broad’s career average dipped below 28 for the first time in his career. But his returns in the past two years, essentially from the moment he took advantage of a rare period of down-time after the 2017-18 Ashes tour and embarked on an extensive technical MOT, he’s racked up 118 at 21.44, including 38 at 14.76 in 2020 – a year that culminated in a prestigious nomination for BBC Sports Personality of the Year.The majority of those wickets, all captured in South Africa and England, might as well have been screen-grabbed from some of his most famous Test rampages – the 8 for 15 at Trent Bridge, or the 6 for 17 at Johannesburg: full and threatening, you-miss-I-hit lengths every ball, attacking the pads and the edge with equal insistence, kicking off a high seam and occasionally skidding through, and all delivered with those ubiquitous “pumping knees” that signal an attack dog at the top of his game.But it was a subtle manipulation of those methods that earned Broad his rewards today, and in conditions where even he had previously been a bit hang-dog. There was energy and optimism in abundance, of course, but his average speed, hovering around the 80mph mark, ended up being lower even than that of the left-arm swinger Sam Curran – by no-one’s estimation a bona fide quick bowler. That was, as Broad himself explained, a result of some canny changes of pace and seam position rather than any sense that he’s about to lose his nip.”We talked before the Test match about building pressure for long periods of time, and using your individual skill in those little periods,” Broad said. “So I concentrated on making the batsman play as much as possible, and also varying my pace in little ways. Maybe not 6-7mph at times but actually going up two miles an hour, coming down three or four miles an hour, and that was the plan I stuck to.”As befits a man who once captained England’s T20 side – a format in which he has not now featured for almost exactly half his international career – Broad contrived to treat every delivery of his precious new-ball spell as an event. It’s a trait that served him equally well in England’s lockdown summer, when his new-found relish for a fuller, stump-threatening length asked questions of every batsman in his sights.”The pitch offered us something with the ball, which you expect when you bowl a side out for 130, but it wasn’t necessarily sideways movement,” he added. “There was a little bit of extra bounce, a little bit of two-pace that brought the fielders in.”Broad was also responsible for two of the outstanding moments in what was otherwise an abject Sri Lankan batting display – the perfectly pitched cutter outside off that lured the hard-handed Kusal Mendis into a tentative stab to the keeper (and a fourth Test duck in a row), and the injection of venom just back of a length that rushed Angelo Mathews into a misjudged slash to slip, where Root grabbed an impressively sharp catch. On the face of it the moment was yet another batsman error, but Broad’s variety and accuracy made it happen.”I was pleased with [the legcutter],” he said. “It’s one of my best balls. A few years ago I wouldn’t have tried that second-ball to a new batsman but, with experience and confidence in my game, I wanted to bowl a quicker one first ball and then a legcutter to get the batsman playing on the second one.”It just did that perfect half-a-bat-width movement and I think, just with experience and playing more cricket in these conditions, you get braver. With a new ball. I’d never dream of doing that in England, but in these conditions, you’ve got to try something different.”Broad is now two wickets away from matching Courtney Walsh – the first man to breach the 500-wicket barrier way back in 2001, and whose eventual tally of 519 scalps once seemed an insurmountable peak. And who knows, on this showing, maybe even Anderson’s humungous tally of 600 and counting will not be out of his reach.For he may lack the natural skill that has marked his team-mate out as the greatest English bowler of his generation, but Michael Vaughan wasn’t wrong when he stated, way back in 2008, that Broad was one of the most intelligent operators he’d ever encountered. He was finding new ways to skin Test batsmen even back then – short and nasty on that occasion to complement Anderson’s full and tricksy – and as his evisceration of David Warner showed in the 2019 Ashes, the evolution of his methods has been gathering pace for some months already.For if Broad’s fabled reaction to his omission from England’s last first Test of a season, against West Indies at the Ageas Bowl in August, is anything to go by, he’s got the form, the skill and the bloodymindedness to keep confounding expectations for as long as his remarkably injury-free body holds up. And who knows, maybe he, like Anderson before him, can go some way to confounding those preconceptions about his record in less seam-friendly climes.

Both teams have fragile batting, and that has made this Australia-India series enthralling

A collapse always seems to be around the corner, and so neither team has been able to establish absolute authority

Ian Chappell17-Jan-2021In the gripping series between Australia and India it’s fair to say the batting has been indifferent. Finally at the SCG, things regained some form of normality, with totals in excess of 300 and Steve Smith finding comfort in his own little batting world. None too soon, with previous totals more often under 200, and even dipping as low as 36. Ajinkya Rahane’s brave MCG century was an aberration; batting stocks were at a pretty low ebb.The SCG surface was the flattest of the pitches for the first three Tests, which adds to the perception that modern batsmen are better at power-hitting than surviving sustained spells of hostile bowling. In truth it is more likely that there are batsmen in each era more adept at survival than others; it’s just there are currently fewer of them relatively because of the drastically changed landscape of the game.Nevertheless there are a few aspects of the batting that stand out so far in the series. First and foremost it’s no longer correct to say Indian batsmen are the best players of spin bowling. They may not be worse than some others but they’re definitely not better than the rest overall. There have been times in this series when they certainly were not smart players of spin bowling. In the first innings at the SCG, Rohit Sharma and Cheteshwar Pujara were classic examples. They both plodded forward in defence to ball after ball from Nathan Lyon, which is not only lazy footwork but is also asking for trouble. Neither was dismissed by Lyon but it was more good fortune than sound footwork.Related

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It was surprising in Pujara’s case, as his footwork was proactive in the second innings, and in playing that way he looked more like the player who dazzled on debut against Australia in 2010. Generally in the first innings at the SCG, Pujara was very predictable and that played into the hands of the Australian attack. The theory of having Pujara diligently wear down the Australians was a good one on the previous tour, when Virat Kohli was there to take advantage, but in the captain’s absence, the No. 3 had to score more freely.The Australian batting, despite the emergence of Marnus Labuschagne and the potential of Will Pucovski and Cameron Green, still very much revolves around Smith. Despite five of the six top-order positions now being capably filled, the batting looks most serene when Smith is in long-term occupation. Likewise, the Indian line-up is so much stronger with Kohli in the middle, acting as the batting general. However, they’ll be pleased with the emergence of Shubman Gill, who not only looks a player of real class but is also a counterattacking opener, a precious commodity.To round out India’s best side – one that will provide a real challenge if they reach the World Test Championship final – they need Hardik Pandya at full fitness. His all-round presence gives India more selection options in order to take advantage of their blossoming and versatile attack.The other area of need for India is improved catching. There’s no point in having a strong attack if they’re constantly thwarted by spilt chances. That leads to Rishabh Pant’s presence as keeper. He’s fine standing back but he hurts the team standing up to the spinners. If Pant regularly bats as he did in that spirited second-innings knock in Sydney, then he justifies wearing the gloves. However, if the standard fare is only quick-fire thirties, then there’s an argument for Wriddhiman Saha retaining the gloves.The fragility of both teams’ batting has contributed greatly to the enthralling nature of the series. A collapse seems never far from happening, and consequently neither team has been able to establish absolute authority. The resilience and fight shown by India has been matched by the class of the Australian attack and their never-say-die attitude. If these two teams reach the final of the World Test Championship and they are both at full-strength, it should be one of the great winner-take-all battles.

Middlesex's Thilan Walallawita: From escaping the 2004 Sri Lanka tsunami to setting sights on England

Young left-arm spinner aiming to build on impressive debut during Covid-wrecked 2020 summer

Andrew Miller25-Mar-2021In society at large, you’d be hard pressed to pick many silver linings out of a year of Covid-induced lockdown. But on the very local level of English domestic cricket, there have been more than a few upbeat tales – most notably, a glut of young players up and down the land, who were handed unexpected opportunities in 2020 due to the rejigged season, and who seized them with an alacrity that has fast-tracked their development.One such player is Middlesex’s Sri Lanka-born left-arm spinner, Thilan Walallawita – an ever-present member of last year’s Bob Willis Trophy campaign, and a captain’s delight according to his club skipper, Stevie Eskinazi. With just six first-class wickets at 40.83 in five games – and three more in a richly promising T20 Blast debut at the Ageas Bowl – it would be easy to overlook his impact to date, but few who have witnessed him doubt his potential. Not only for Middlesex, but maybe even for England too.”I was talking to my friends about how the pandemic helped me a lot,” Walallawita tells ESPNcricinfo. “It opened a few doors for me to play in the first team. Last year was a good start, and I was surprised how quickly it happened, but if you have a lot of confidence in life, and believe in yourself, it doesn’t have to be a massive jump.”Walallawita’s tale is extraordinary on several levels – not least because it could so easily have been over before it had begun. On Boxing Day 2004, aged five, he and his family were travelling back from a Buddhist temple in Galle when they encountered the full force of the devastating tsunami that struck Sri Lanka’s coastline, killing more than 30,000 people.”I have clear memories of that day,” he says. “That’s the kind of memory that will never go away.”We were coming back from the temple and decided to stop for a coffee. All of a sudden, we could hear some weird noises. My dad went outside to check, and he rushed back to tell us the waves were going back and building up, and getting higher and higher.”We jumped in the car, and tried to cross a bridge to escape, but as soon as we got to it, it collapsed. So we parked our car in the front garden of a nearby house, and started running up the nearest hill. I can remember I was trying to be brave, but the same time I couldn’t hold my tears back.”My parents went back the next morning to check where the car was. There were dead bodies and cars everywhere, it was horrible.”They found the car inside a house, and there was another car inside that house too. But the funny thing is, that car is still up and running to this day. We spent a lot of money to repair it, but it’s still working.”

His story is one that will warm the hearts of cricket lovers across the country, but more than that, he’s an incredible bowler, with a mature head on very young shouldersMiddlesex captain Stevie Eskinazi

Six years later, the family emigrated to North London, where Thilan’s father Ajith had been a long-standing club professional for Potters Bar CC. “He always wanted to come to England, and build our life here,” he says. “We came for the education, and the better standard of life, and it’s been extraordinarily good for us.”Now, at the age of 22, and after a period of stacking shelves in Sainsbury’s in between sessions at Middlesex’s academy, Walallawita stands on the verge of securing his British passport, and beginning the qualification process that might one day see him returning to his native Sri Lanka as an England Test cricketer.”One hundred percent, I definitely want to play for England,” he says. “That’s been one of my dreams since I moved here as a young kid, and hopefully if I have a few good seasons in the next few years, there will be a chance of me playing in the English team. That’s the goal and the dream.”It’s been a long process to get my British citizenship, but it should happen by the end of next month, and that will be a huge weight off my shoulders.”Related

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The lot of the young English spinner has been much discussed in recent times – Walallawita is just a year younger than England’s Dom Bess, who recently endured a rough tour of India. But despite the huge challenges faced by his ilk, Walallawita’s impact to date is best expressed by his impressive economy rate of 2.77, a testament to the control that his game already possesses.”We have high hopes for Thilan, he’s a wonderful young man,” Stuart Law, Middlesex’s head coach, says. “He’s still very much on the development phase, but the way he bowls, he can control a run rate, he’s got good skill, he’s very repetitive in his action, and can land the ball wherever he wants, which is probably the key being a finger-spinner.”The red ball doesn’t really spin a great deal in this country until later in the summer, but he is persistent with lines, lengths, and changes in pace. He’s working out how to get batsmen out, so he’s a fast learner.”Walallawita has a high-calibre idol on whom to model his game. His hero growing up was Sri Lanka’s legendary left-arm spinner Rangana Herath, and though he has not yet had the chance to pick his brains, it is surely only a matter of time – Bess, after all, was among the beneficiaries of Herath’s wisdom on an ECB spin camp in India last year.”He played Test cricket for 19 years so the amount of experience he had is just unbelievable,” Walallawita says. “The main thing I’d want to pick his brains for is his tactical side. It would be a great opportunity for me to meet up with him if I go back to Sri Lanka.”And as Eskinazi points out, any such opportunity would not go to waste. “Thilan’s basically a sponge,” he says. “He is honestly one of the nicest people I’ve ever met. No one’s ever got a bad word to say about him.”His story is one that will warm the hearts of cricket lovers across the country, but more than that, he’s an incredible bowler, with a mature head on very young shoulders. Accurate finger-spinners who can put the pressure on the batters, like he did last year in August and September, are worth their weight in gold in the UK, both to give the big boys a bit of a break, but also to make a big impact.”Walallawita proved that aspect of his game on debut against Surrey at The Oval last summer, and in each of his appearances thereafter. Only days after being registered with the ECB as an “unqualified” player, he picked off a Test cricketer in each innings – Mark Stoneman and Scott Borthwick – for match figures of 2 for 109 in 29 overs in Middlesex’s 190-run victory over their London rivals.Thilan Walallawita made a positive impression in his debut season•PA Images via Getty Images”The Oval was probably one of the best grounds I could have asked to play at,” he says. “All my team-mates were very welcoming, and I felt more confident than nervous playing there.”When I was playing in the second team, I always got the ball early doors and tended to bowl about 15 to 20 overs a day. The first team is a completely different story. When the captain needs me I need to be ready.”Last year I got some opportunities. I’ve got to bowl 17 overs straight at Hampshire which I loved, and I’ve been working on getting my shorter format game-plans ready. As soon as my coaches gave me the opportunity, I said I will never let you down.”Walallawita’s opportunities in 2021 may have to wait a while yet – partly because spin bowlers rarely get a chance for a starring role in early-season England, but also because he is currently Middlesex’s one injured player, after sustaining a hamstring problem in pre-season.”His injury’s come at a bad time because he wanted to get out and play cricket, but he’s got to learn that that’s part of professional sport as well,” Law says. “These injuries do happen, but he’ll be all right, and on the table for selection soon, I’m sure.”There is, however, one aspect of Walallawita’s game that may require some extra attention if he wants to ensure he remains in contention when conditions are not in his favour. As his Middlesex predecessor Ollie Rayner once admitted, the key advice he would give to any aspiring English spin bowler is “learn to bat”.A fallibility in that department has held back many talented spinners in the past, notably Monty Panesar and more recently, the Surrey prospect Amar Virdi, and it’s an issue that Law is already keen to address.”We’re trying to turn him into a hitter down the order,” he says. “His best defensive shots are cover drives and pull shots, which admittedly is not a bad defence to have.””I couldn’t agree more with Ollie Rayner,” Walallawita adds. “But I’m very confident that my batting is coming along nicely this year. Every day is a learning curve for me, but yes, I like to play my shots, and entertain the crowd a bit!”With a fair wind, and fairer weather this summer, perhaps he’ll have both a crowd to entertain in the first place, and a chance to do it with the skills that have marked him out as such a richly promising talent.

India prove they are cheats by batting on turning pitches for decades

And Sri Lanka Cricket doesn’t even try to make our correspondent work for his jokes

Andrew Fidel Fernando01-Mar-2021Pitches. What makes a bad one? How should a good one behave? Is there a charter for pitch decorum handed down to us from centuries past? Do people put pitches in stadiums, or do they build stadiums around pitches that have existed since the dawn of the universe?And why on earth do they crumble? Is it because when non-Asian teams visit, South Asian pitches tend to find themselves at the centre of raging controversies, with abusive words like “poor”, “unfit” and “misbehaving” thrown around, and in the face of this global media pressure, the pitches fall to pieces? (Wouldn’t you?)These are all excellent questions. This column will not answer any of them.Decades-long doctoring
Clearly if the ball turns from the first day in a Test in India, the home side is winning underhandedly. Having lost the first Test, the pitch for the second Test in Chennai was described by some pundits as “a sandpit”, with England collapsing for 134 and 164, and India going on to score more than 600 runs across two innings. If that wasn’t outrageous enough, apparently, this isn’t even the first time India have dominated an opposition on a spinning surface. Can you believe this? This means that not only do India produce pitches unfit for Test batting, they have gone as far as producing generations of batsmen who can score loads of runs on these pitches, the cheats.Premature pitch slander
Spare a thought for the media pundits who used their staunchest anti-pitch rhetoric up in the second Test, where 914 runs were scored, and then found that in Ahmedabad, where the match aggregate was 387, no one really trusted them anymore. Like hunters using all their ammo up on a rat while a bear sneaks up behind them.Mandatory Sri Lanka Cricket round-up (please kill me now)
Do we have to do this again? Do we really have to mock the ever-living crap out of SLC yet again? At some point it becomes boring. I mean, every month. Every single month, it’s the same thing with these people. It’s like they think that after one decent Lanka Premier League, everyone has suddenly forgotten how resplendently incompetent they have been for years.Which of their screw-ups should we drag them for this time? How about SLC describing in a press release Chaminda Vaas’ decision to pull out of the fast-bowling coach position as “holding the administration, the cricketers, and indeed the game at ransom” because he asked for more pay? We could talk about how SLC has consistently spurned local coaching talent in favour of foreign coaches, whom it pays way more, generally (this is the opposite strategy from, say, its extremely successful neighbours to the north). We could talk about the ridiculous turnover for coaching staff within the Sri Lanka national team, which points to a profoundly dysfunctional system (Vaas had only been hired because David Saker had quit earlier in the month).What about all those trophies Vaas got during his career? Can’t he melt those precious metals and sell them for millions?•AFPBut ultimately, we don’t have to do any of that, because SLC’s own press statements make more ruthless fun of it than any of us could. After claiming that Vaas had made his request based on “personal monetary gain”, the statement goes on to suggest he’d instead been “rewarded over the years both in status and in kind”. Hopefully future SLC coaches will figure out how to pay bills using status. The kind of status that sees them flung under the bus in public releases.Best of luck to the Royal Challengers Bangalore…
…who after the IPL auction, put up videos on social media in which cricket director Mike Hesson is shown to be outsmarting other franchises by bidding for players RCB don’t necessarily want (thus driving up the amounts other teams will have to pay for those players) in order to secure the likes of Kyle Jamieson and Glenn Maxwell in later rounds of the auction. I don’t know about you, but for a team that’s notorious for making too little of the talents at their disposal, it seems a little early in the process to gloat. Either they are right to be this confident or they have made their eventual shaming even more hilarious. In which case, see you back here in three months.No-show champions
Australia are not going to tour South Africa in March, as had been planned, Why? Officially, Cricket Australia is citing an “unacceptable health and safety risk” to its players, due to the prevalence of Covid-19 in South Africa. Here are some facts, though:- The teams were to be in a biosecure bubble, so the Covid-19 status of the country is irrelevant if the bubble is secure enough.- Cricket South Africa had devised an especially tight biosecure bubble for the Australia series.- The cutting short of the England tour in December has been tacitly accepted by the ECB as having been no the fault of CSA’s bubbling procedures.- Covid-19 case numbers were on the decline in South Africa at the time of cancellation and have largely been that way since.It’s difficult, though, not to think that these are not the facts most relevant to the postponement of this tour. Try these:- Australia had just been beaten at home by an under-strength India team.- The last time they went to South Africa for a Test series, they suffered an epoch-changing pantsing.Next month on The Briefing:
– Despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, dozens of pundits continue to claim to be cricket experts.- SLC decides to burn down all its stadiums to cut down operational costs.

What has gone wrong for Pakistan in T20Is over the last two years?

They were once the all-conquering side in the shortest format, but are now struggling to keep pace with its evolution on multiple fronts

Hassan Cheema04-Jun-2021There’s a line in the finale of the American version of that feels relevant not only to the world in general – especially the last year – but also to cricket fans. “I wish there was a way to know you’re in the good old days, before you’ve actually left them,” the character Andy Bernard says.It was true of Pakistan’s mid-’90s ODI side, true of Misbah-ul-Haq’s Test side, and most obviously true of Sarfaraz Ahmed’s T20 side.ESPNcricinfo LtdIn the three years following the 2016 World T20, Pakistan played 36 T20Is, winning 30, and yet were not taken seriously. Their rise, and fall, coincided with the longest period in the game without a T20 World Cup since the event began. Their achievements were usually appended with caveats: their wins came in the UAE (even though only 11 of Pakistan’s 40 T20Is during Sarfaraz’s captaincy were played in that country); they cared too much about bilateral series, and T20s were all about domestic leagues; they were playing second-string sides (though ten members of the England team they beat in 2016 had played the World T20 final just four months prior, and ten of the 13 Australians in the side that was clean-swept by Pakistan had played in the IPL, and the New Zealand team Pakistan beat away had ten players with 20-plus T20Is).Related

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And this wasn’t just ex-players or fans sniping away – that would be par for the course. The PCB itself didn’t take these achievements seriously, sacking Sarfaraz after one bad series, despite three years of continuous success. And even that lost series was defined by an overhaul that wasn’t needed. Predictably, when that overhaul failed, Misbah, the new head coach, further undermined the achievements of his predecessors – to him, three losses in their last 13 T20Is somehow represented a losing streak.Eighteen months on, Pakistan’s T20 fortunes elicit a nostalgia stronger than Andy Bernard’s.Where did it go wrong?Conservatism up top
In the summer months of last year, as the world moved from one lockdown to another, a conversation brewed on cricket analytics Twitter: was it time to do away with anchors?Theoretically it makes sense. T20 is still played in a conservative fashion; it is seen by too many as an offshoot of 50-overs cricket, not as a separate format. The argument was encapsulated in this article by Karthik Krishnaswamy, the headline of which was the equivalent of a red rag to a bull.It is an argument most progressive T20 thinkers would side with, albeit in hushed tones. Seeing drastic changes in other sports makes one question accepted notions within your own: basketball had its three-point revolution; baseball has had its barrage of three-true-outcomes hitters, who take fielders out of the game by aiming only for home runs, walks or strikeouts; all football codes have had their own analytics revolutions. The key difference is that those sports provide, a degree of homogeneity that helps in terms of analysis in a way cricket, reliant so much on its pitches, lacks.On pitches where a score of 180-plus is par, an anchor could be a liability. Once the par score goes below that, the anchor becomes a necessity. We’ve seen the value of the anchor in T20 leagues over the last year played on a limited number of pitches, from the CPL to the IPL.It’s not always the pitch, however. As with the Pakistan side, the case for an anchor is also made by the lack of faith a team has in its batting depth. (From here on, the period from post-2016 World T20 to January 2019 is referred to as phase one and from January 2019 to March 2021, phase two.)You can gauge the state of a country’s domestic cricket system – or at least its blind spots – by the foreign players selected in its franchise tournament. The eight Big Bash franchises this year employed seven different Asian spinners. Twelve of the 24 foreign players selected for The Hundred are predominantly bowlers, an indication that England’s white-ball bowling depth doesn’t quite match up to their white-ball batting depth.ESPNcricinfo LtdIn the PSL draft every year, foreign top-order hitters are a prime commodity. Even in their successful first phase, Pakistan were backbenchers in the powerplay. It could be argued they often played on slow surfaces, but considering both Bangladesh and Sri Lanka feature in the top three above, it seems a flimsy excuse.This has continued through phase two.ESPNcricinfo LtdIn both periods Pakistan were one of the two bottom teams on scoring rate in the powerplay. It worked because in phase one Pakistan decided to conserve wickets up top and succeeded: their powerplay average in that phase was the third best (behind Afghanistan and England). Since then they have been much poorer at protecting wickets.ESPNcricinfo LtdTop-order conservatism in T20s is a high-risk strategy. At its best, it reduces the game for your batting unit from a 20-over match to a 14-over one, ensuring that even if you don’t win many games in the batting powerplay, you don’t lose many either. But if the top order fails, the entire deck comes crashing down. Considering Pakistan’s middle-order frailties, it’s a strategy that makes sense for them.But even as Pakistan’s top order has risen in the last few months, there has been a call for a more progressive style of play, crystallised in the Babar Azam-Mohammad Rizwan vs Fakhar Zaman-Sharjeel Khan debate. Considering the top three usually play over 50% of all deliveries in a T20 game, that is where Pakistan’s batting needs to catch up. So the debate goes that one of Rizwan or Azam should be paired alongside a “hitter” like Sharjeel or Zaman, or that both Fakhar and Sharjeel ought to open.Except, the numbers show there isn’t much to this debate.ESPNcricinfo LtdThe concept of a top-order hitter alongside Azam or Rizwan is appealing, but the reality is that neither Zaman nor Sharjeel is that – both are essentially glorified anchors. Each of the four strikes in the mid-120s in the powerplay. Sharjeel has the highest ceiling, with a post-powerplay run rate of almost 9.50 but a powerplay average of 17 indicates that the probability of him getting to that scoring rate is way lower.The quickest of the four in the powerplay is Rizwan, who goes at 126, a run rate of 7.56 per over. For contrast, eight of the 12 Full Member sides have scored at over eight an over in the powerplay in phase two.Pakistan could look at the table above and conclude that there’s no need to change the Azam-Rizwan combo and that they could do with Zaman and Sharjeel lower down. Of course, there’s a difference between batting in the eighth over when you’ve been there from the start, and arriving at the fall of a wicket with the bowling team’s tail up. Each of these four players has a much higher post-powerplay strike rate when batting in the top order than when batting in the middle order. Yet it isn’t such an outlandish idea to have them in the middle, such is the state of Pakistan’s middle-order batting.Middle-order malaise
In raw numbers Pakistan’s middle-overs phases have been far better than their powerplays. They have been an average or above-average team for most of this era.ESPNcricinfo LtdHowever, these phases have been dependent on that top order batting long and scoring quicker the longer they bat, and in 2020, on Mohammad Hafeez. The latest iteration of Hafeez is the prime reason Pakistan have actually kept up with the world in those middle overs.Pakistan began this five-year period with the likes of Sarfaraz and Shoaib Malik in their middle order. Unsatisfied with accumulators, they looked for a power-hitter and have since experimented with Asif Ali, Khushdil Shah, Haider Ali, and even tried to force Iftikhar Ahmed into that role. None have stepped up. Since Iftikhar made a couple of scores in Australia in 2019, Pakistan have played 21 T20Is, tried over a dozen players at five and six, and only once has a player made more than 25. Forget averages or strike rates, that’s a level of failure that is hard to comprehend. For context, even the allrounder, Faheem Ashraf, has scored three 30s in this period, batting at seven and eight.This has led ubiquitous former Pakistan players still playing domestic cricket to peddle a false argument that selectors are unfairly obsessed with picking “PSL hitters” over “domestic performers”. In doing so they ignore that Shah averages 45 at a run a ball in his six-season-long List A career, and that Asif Ali has averaged 52 at a strike rate of over 110 in 50-overs cricket in the last four domestic seasons, and that Haider Ali averages over 45 in both first-class and 50-overs domestic cricket in his two seasons. And that Iftikhar, a man who has never really set the PSL alight, is one of three players with at least 50 innings (along with AB de Villiers and Virat Kohli) to average over 50 with a strike rate of over 90 in his List A career.It isn’t unknown for cricket teams to follow a selection formula like deep states secretly running countries employ: they put in place a new regime and at the first sign of trouble start wondering whether the old one was really that bad. Sure, the old guys aren’t what they dreamed of, but right now there’s not much else that can be done. And so:ESPNcricinfo LtdThis is simply comparing Malik and Hafeez to the overall mean – forget about comparing their numbers to those of the like of Glenn Maxwell, Keiron Pollard, Rishabh Pant or David Miller. Pakistan went back to Hafeez very soon after discarding him, and it has paid off. What are the odds they’ll go back to Malik too?In a spin
Much of Pakistan’s success over the past five years has been built around their multi-pronged spin attack. They have been aided by helpful conditions, but both Imad Wasim and Shadab Khan stepped up in Pakistan’s rise. And the subsequent decline of both has been one of the causes for the team’s overall fall.ESPNcricinfo LtdFor all their legacy of fast bowling, the past decade has been defined for Pakistan by their being at the forefront of the powerplay spin revolution: no team in history has opened with a spinner more often than Pakistan; no spinner has shared the new ball across formats more than Hafeez; and in T20Is no one has opened more often than Imad Wasim.Wasim reached the top of the T20 rankings almost entirely on the back of his new-ball expertise, but the Wasim of phase one and two are different bowlers.ESPNcricinfo LtdThis change in numbers, however impressive the economy rate still is, isn’t to be regarded in isolation. After a decade during which spinners’ fortunes were high in the powerplay, there has been a movement back towards pace bowling in the last couple of years. Teams, both national and franchise, are learning that the value of top-order wickets is higher than they assumed and so a run-saving spinner isn’t always the positive he once was.Since the white Kookaburra tends to swing for only the first two or three overs, giving spinners those early overs ends up being counterproductive. So the powerplay spinner has become a shock tactic, perhaps best exemplified by the fact that even in the 2021 half-season of the IPL, with spin-friendly wickets, less than 14% of the new-ball overs were bowled by spinners (compared to, say, the 2018 IPL, when that number was 26%). Instead, as the Chennai Super Kings showed with Sam Curran and Deepak Chahar opening the bowling, new-ball swing bowlers are back in vogue.In that light, Pakistan dropping Wasim for Mohammad Nawaz made sense. Nawaz may never be the powerplay option that Wasim is, but he is a better bowler in the other phases. And with the rise of Shaheen Shah Afridi and the return to form of Hasan Ali, Pakistan have pace resources for the powerplay.Mohammad Wasim, Pakistan’s chief selector, specifically noted how Wasim needs to improve his middle-overs bowling – a clear indication that he was thinking of a move to pace. And yet, his words have not been backed by the actions of the team management. In the absence of Imad Wasim, Nawaz has played eight T20Is and shared the new ball in six.A similar trend has emerged with legspin, and for Pakistan it has been exacerbated by Shadab’s lack of form and fitness since the start of 2019. His overall decline mirrors that of many of his contemporaries.ESPNcricinfo LtdSince the 2016 World T20, eight of the top 20 wicket-takers in T20Is are wristspinners, only one of whom has had a better phase two than phase one. Only Yuzvendra Chahal and Kuldeep Yadav have had as sharp a decline as Shadab; one is now out of the Indian team and the other has question marks around him for the first time in years. Shadab can’t be far behind.But in the absence of many real middle-overs enforcers, and the fact that the World T20 is going to be in Asia, Pakistan are still going to play a wristspinner. The only question is whom.If you consider only the tournaments that each of them have all played, it’s clear that Shadab remains among the best options for Pakistan. Based on the data below, Zahid Mahmood is the likeliest to replace him: from being the best T20 bowler to being the first legspinner in a decade to take more than 50 first-class wickets in a season, he has been the outstanding leggie in the Pakistan domestic game over the last two seasons.Of course, these aren’t exactly like-for-like comparisons – the biggest advantages Wasim and Shadab have is that they can be significant contributors with the bat.ESPNcricinfo LtdAnd there is the wild card. Pakistan spinners have always depended heavily on their captains, from Abdul Qadir being so beholden to Imran Khan that he ended up naming his eldest son after him, to Misbah making Yasir Shah’s career after having captained him domestically for half a decade. It is with this in mind that Usman Qadir’s case is to be assessed. He goes back a long way with Azam and his quality as a wicket-taker under Azam in T20s is clear from his numbers too.ESPNcricinfo LtdAny one of Shadab, Mahmood or Qadir should be fine, as long as Pakistan realise that T20 legspin isn’t what it was even four years ago – teams have employed more lefties as hitters in the middle overs to counter it (which is also why Pakistan should consider Zaman and/or Sharjeel in the middle order more seriously than they actually will).

****

So this is where Pakistan now stand. Over 18 months they have gone from wondering whether their all-conquering side could translate their success at a T20 World Cup, to wondering what it will take to get back to that level. It’s clear that a misuse of their own resources, a drop in form of several star performers, and perhaps most significantly, an inability to keep pace with an ever-evolving format have all contributed to the decline.Even their pace bowling, the one safety net Pakistan have had in T20Is, has question marks over it. Despite the emergence of Afridi and the return of Hasan Ali, Pakistan’s pace attack has gone from being one that took wickets more often than the global average (while going at over a run per over better than that in phase one), to one which is pretty much average by most metrics.Some of that is down to a change in personnel, but there’s also the simple fact that in the Sarfaraz era, every bowler had been assigned just the right role: it rarely felt as if Pakistan were bowling a fast bowler in the wrong phase. Now, take the case of Haris Rauf. He is one of the few fast bowlers to go at a lower economy at the death than in the powerplay (but is twice as likely to take a wicket at the death), while being an above average middle-overs bowler. Yet 30% of the deliveries he has bowled in T20Is have been in the powerplay.That sums it up, really. A change in personnel, a lack of resources, yes, but more than anything, a failure to understand those resources and maximise them. And until Pakistan return to being the team that was bigger than the sum of its parts, you can see their T20 fortunes going the way their 50-over fortunes have gone in the past two decades.

Do you remember these cricket cancellations and disruptions?

From the 1975 Headingley Test to the 2006 Oval forfeiture, disruptions have been a part of the game all along

Ian Chappell09-May-2021The suspension of the 2021 IPL tournament because of surging Covid infections and deaths among the public, and a number of participants testing positive, was a reminder of the game’s vulnerability.In the past, tours have been aborted and matches abandoned for a variety of reasons. Many of these involved back stories, some of which were tragic and others amusing.In 1969, England toured a bitterly divided Pakistan where the series was haunted by protests from the beginning. When a riot brought the third Test in Karachi to a premature halt, the England team flew home immediately.In the match, Colin “Ollie” Milburn had completed his second Test century after being recalled from Australia, where he had enjoyed a prolific Sheffield Shield season with Western Australia. In one innings he smoked a scintillating double-century against Queensland, where he scored a believe-it-or-not 180 runs in a single session.Related

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  • Vandals stopped play

  • Colin Milburn – An Indomitable Spirit

Milburn’s excellent Shield form and subsequent Test century looked to have cemented his spot in the England team, but sadly he never represented his country again. On returning home he was involved in a serious car accident which resulted in him losing sight in one eye. It was a sad end to the career of one of cricket’s great entertainers and characters.In 1990 a mate called to tell me the bad news that Ollie had collapsed and died in a hotel car park at age 48. I asked whether he was going in or coming out of the pub. When the response was “Coming out”, I replied, “Well, at least he will have died happy.”In 1970-71 the MCG Boxing Day Test between Australia and England was abandoned without a ball being bowled after heavy rain ruined any chance of a competitive match. That led to the first ever ODI being played in lieu of the Test in an effort to recoup some of the lost revenue.The match was agreed between officials of both countries without the players being consulted, and this angered many in the England camp. It was yet another arrow in the players’ quiver in the build-up to the World Series Cricket (WSC) revolution in 1977-78. WSC is portrayed as an Australian uprising but that belies the fact that more than 50 players from many different countries were among the original signees.In 1975 the third Test at Headingley between England and Australia was delicately poised after four days when it was abandoned because the pitch had been vandalised. This act of bastardry was a protest over the incarceration of convicted armed robber George Davis, with one of the vandals being his brother-in-law Peter Chappell. On the eve of the fourth Test of that series, at The Oval, Greg Chappell received a call from the unrelated Peter. In his very distinctive accent, Peter asked for match tickets and Greg said he’d leave them at the gate, “If you promise not to dig up the pitch at The Oval”. Peter promised and the Test went ahead unhindered by vandals.At the same ground in 2006 the fourth Test between England and Pakistan came to a premature end with much recrimination. Pakistan forfeited the match after refusing to take the field when the team was accused of ball-tampering and penalised five runs. Despite cricket employing more sheriffs than you’d find in the old American Wild West, the Pakistan captain, Inzamam-ul-Haq, could not be coaxed into taking his team back onto the field. After a lengthy delay the match was awarded to England on a forfeit.In a disgraceful attempt at compromise, the ICC subsequently declared the match a draw in 2008. However, integrity finally won out in 2009 when the decision was reversed at the behest of the MCC, who quite rightly claimed that to not uphold the laws set a dangerous precedent.In the current disastrous climate, the suspension of the IPL could also produce a precedent. It may lead to the World T20 event, programmed for India later in the year, either being postponed or moved.

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