Naseem Shah five-for, Ahsan Ali fifty knock over Karachi Kings

Babar Azam top-scored with 32* for Kings but Quetta Gladiators chased it down in 15.5 overs

Danyal Rasool29-Jan-2022
Karachi Kings might have the advantage of playing at home, but they were all at sea in an abject showing against Quetta Gladiators on Saturday. In a contest that the Gladiators appeared to have sealed before the first powerplay was up, Sarfaraz Ahmed’s side thumped Babar Azam’s by eight wickets, skittling the Kings out for 114 before coasting to victory in 15.5 overs. Naseem Shah was the chief instigator behind the Kings implosion, his first ever T20 five-fer wreaking havoc at the top and tail of Kings’ innings. He had never before taken more than two wickets in a T20 innings, but richly deserved the 5 for 20 his figures showed today.Sohail Tanvir had Sharjeel Khan drag on in the third over, and from thereon, the Gladiators kept Babar off strike while wreaking carnage at the other end. Naseem cleaned up Tom Lammonby, Mohammad Nabi and Lewis Gregory before the completion of the seventh over, reducing the Kings to 34 for 5, before Sarfaraz’s men chipped away regularly enough to ensure the Kings never really managed to regain the foothold they had lost so early in the contest.While Babar remained undismissed, there remained a sliver of hope for his side, and when Aamer Yamin teamed up with him, he finally appeared to have a batting partner who was providing him some support. A six off Nawaz got him going, with Babar creaming a couple of fours off Hasnain a couple of overs later. But just life seemed to be surging back into the contest, Babar nicked off to the keeper, and after another four and a six, so did Yamin. There was little salvaging a wretched innings by this point, despite a little cameo from Imad Wasim, and the 2020 champions ended up folding for 114.Quetta effectively sealed the game with the opening partnership, another big stand setting up their innings perfectly. Will Smeed was less explosive than he’d been on Friday, managing 30 off 35, but when Lammonby held on sensationally to a dipper at deep point, Smeed and Ahsan Ali had wracked up 76 in 11 overs, and the game as a contest was over.Ahsan did his burgeoning reputation no harm with another half-century replete with a combination of sweet timing and blistering power. The 28-year old finished unbeaten with 57 off 43 to go with his 73 the previous day. He did find himself involved in the awkward run-out of Ben Duckett, who, dashing to the danger end, found himself mysteriously turned away by the Pakistani.But the Englishman’s frustration was quickly forgotten when Sarfaraz strode out and finished the game in style with three successive boundaries to make amends for a game they really should have won against Peshawar Zalmi on Friday. The Kings, meanwhile, have lost both, without ever looking like any other outcome was possible in either game.

Khawaja's special century puts Australia on top

Khawaja and Smith capitalised on favourable batting conditions to control the opening day of the second Test

Tristan Lavalette12-Mar-2022Stumps In-form Usman Khawaja scored a memorable first Test century in the country of his birth, as Australia capitalised on favourable batting conditions to control the opening day of the second Test against Pakistan.After skipper Pat Cummins won a crucial toss and elected to bat, Khawaja scored his 11th Test century to lead Australia to 251 for 3 at stumps. He finished 127 not out from 266 balls with nightwatchman Nathan Lyon yet to score.But Australia suffered a late blow almost out of nowhere when Steven Smith fell for 72 in the penultimate over before stumps after Faheem Ashraf took a stunning one-hand catch at second slip off Hasan Ali.The pair had compiled a 159-run partnership as they batted nearly two sessions to blunt an uninspiring Pakistan, which resorted to defensive tactics during a dull final session reminiscent of the dreary Rawalpindi Test.Khawaja became the first Australian to score a Test century in Pakistan since Mark Waugh’s 117 during the third Test in 1998. Having been dismissed on 97 in the first Test, the left-hander spent a considerable time in the 90s either side of tea before notching his milestone with a single to square leg off Sajid Khan. He jumped in the air and pumped his fist in a more muted celebration than after his comeback ton during the SCG Ashes Test. Mixing exquisite strokes with watchful defence, Khawaja notched his third century from six innings since his recall in January.With Khawaja and Smith untroubled, a hapless Pakistan sought a defensive ploy with spinners Sajid and Nauman Ali bowling a leg stump line but Australia’s batters remained patient with Smith constantly padding up during an excruciating period where no boundaries were struck for 23 overs. The only source of entertainment was Nauman’s rather ambitious lbw shout against Smith for a delivery pitching way out outside leg stump that left his team-mates chuckling.Mercifully, the second new ball was taken and the match came alive before stumps as Pakistan reverted back to trying to take wickets with Hasan eking out Smith, who fell for the second straight time in the 70s much to his disbelief.There had been much intrigue over conditions in Karachi after the historic series, the first between the teams in Pakistan since 1998, started with a stale draw due to a lifeless Rawalpindi pitch rated by the ICC as below average. But it has been more of the same with conditions skewed towards the batters although reverse swing was evident before tea and Nauman did conjure occasional turn and bounce before utilising the negative tactics.Steven Smith fell for the second straight time in the 70s•AFP/Getty Images

In a letdown after a moral victory in the first Test, Pakistan were mostly unimaginative and rarely threatened apart from quicks Faheem and Shaheen Shah Afridi conjuring reverse swing before tea but to no avail.Shaheen, who was the standout in the first Test, couldn’t quite hit top gear while Hasan, who returned from an abductor strain, struggled to consistently probe having replaced fiery quick Naseem Shah, who impressed in Rawalpindi with menacing short-pitched bowling.After being on the back foot for the entirety of the series-opener, their first Test in Pakistan in nearly 24 years, Australia dictated the opening day’s play apart from a chaotic period before lunch when they lost the key wickets of David Warner and Marnus Labuschagne. Warner fell on 36 to a gem of a delivery from returning pace allrounder Faheem, who squared up the veteran to entice an edge to wicketkeeper Mohammad Rizwan.Shortly after, Labuschagne, who made 90 in Rawalpindi and is the No.1 ranked batter in the world, was run out for a duck by a direct side-arm throw from Sajid after attempting a risky single. The wickets went against the run of play after Khawaja and Warner compiled a brisk 82-run opening stand, as they weathered challenging new ball bowling from Pakistan’s pacemen before putting the foot down against Sajid.For the second straight innings, Warner rued missing out after a strong start but Khawaja cashed in to ensure Australia built a platform as they eye a massive first innings total, which would be surely welcomed by their tweaked attack.In their only change, Australia handed legspinner Mitchell Swepson his long-awaited Test debut having been around the squad since 2017. The 28-year-old replaced quick Josh Hazlewood to become the first specialist legspinner capped by an Australian Test team since Bryce McGain in 2009.Before Swepson gets his chance, Australia will look to continue Pakistan’s toil under hot conditions in Karachi, where the temperature is again forecast to hit over 30 degrees on Sunday in a contrast to Rawalpindi’s mild conditions last week.

Shastri: With du Plessis as captain, 'things could have been different' for Super Kings

“If Chennai were to think back, they wouldn’t have let go of Faf du Plessis”

ESPNcricinfo staff09-Apr-20227:52

Runorder: Will Super Kings make the playoffs?

If MS Dhoni had been thinking of giving up the Chennai Super Kings captaincy, the franchise should not have released Faf du Plessis and, instead, should have passed on the reins to him, according to Ravi Shastri. That, according to the former India head coach, would have let Ravindra Jadeja – Dhoni’s replacement – play freely, and “things could have been different for Chennai” this IPL season.”I feel that someone like Jadeja, he should focus on his own game. If Chennai were to think back, they wouldn’t have let go of Faf du Plessis,” Shastri said on ESPNcricinfo’s T20 Time Out Hindi after Super Kings lost their fourth match on the bounce, this one by eight wickets to Sunrisers Hyderabad on Saturday afternoon. “He [du Plessis] is a match-winner, he has won the IPL with Chennai, he has a lot of experience.”Super Kings are being led by Jadeja after Dhoni, who had captained them since the start of the IPL in 2008, bar the two seasons when the team was suspended, stepped away from the role two days before the start of the 2022 edition. Jadeja was given the job even though he came into it with little leadership experience – his only past gig as captain at a representative level was with the India Under-19 team, for a while, in 2007. One of the premier all-format allrounders in the world, Jadeja has since had four results go against him, leaving the four-time – and defending – IPL champions in an uphill battle to make the playoffs.At the time the news about Dhoni’s resignation became public, Super Kings CEO Kasi Viswanathan had told ESPNcricinfo that Dhoni had been thinking about giving up the top job, and that “he felt it is the right time to hand over captaincy to Jaddu [Jadeja]”.Shastri argued, “If Dhoni was thinking of giving up the captaincy, then Faf should have been given the job, and Jadeja should have continued as [just] a player. He would have played freely, without the pressure of captaincy. Things could have been different for Chennai then.”As it is, du Plessis was released by Super Kings before the 2022 auction, and was bought by Royal Challengers Bangalore and appointed their captain; Virat Kohli too had given up the job after the 2021 season. Royal Challengers have started the season with two wins in three games.du Plessis had also played a key role with the bat for Super Kings in their run to the title in 2021, hitting 633 runs at the top of the order at 45.21, with a strike rate of 138.20 and six fifties in 16 innings.

Aussies abroad: Labuschagne, Renshaw and Harris make their mark

Tim David was finally recalled by Mumbai Indians but it was a largely quiet week for those in the IPL

Alex Malcolm02-May-20223:35

Can David be Pollard’s successor for Mumbai?

County cricket
The world’s No.1 ranked Test batter Marnus Labuschagne returned to his run-making best for Glamorgan with scores of 130 and 85 in a cracking division two clash against Derbyshire. Labuschagne’s century in the first innings helped edge Glamorgan to a lead but he made a sensational near run-a-ball 85 in the second as Glamorgan fell just 21 runs short of chasing 331 in 55 overs on the final day. They held on for a draw. Michael Neser took 4 for 63 in the first innings at Derby.Matt Renshaw made a statement for Somerset scoring 129 in their innings rout of Warwickshire at Taunton. The left-hander was the only player in the match to pass 71 as he set up Somerset’s match-winning score of 458. It was Renshaw’s 14th first-class century and his first as an opener since his last century for Somerset at Taunton back in 2018. Australia’s chair of selectors George Bailey took notice of his return to form at the top of the order after he was named in the Australia A squad to tour Sri Lanka.Related

  • Labuschagne, Northeast drive Glamorgan as thrilling chase proves just out of reach

  • Versatile Renshaw rising back up Australia's ranks

  • Pat Cummins rested for Sri Lanka T20Is; big guns return for white-ball leg

Not to be outdone, Marcus Harris produced his second century of the English summer in a run-feast against Surrey at Bristol. After Surrey piled up 603, Harris made 124 in reply for Gloucestershire sharing in a 296-run opening stand with Chris Dent. Harris has scores of 136, 67 and 124 in his first three county matches of the season, although his first two performances came on far tougher surfaces, as Gloucestershire and Surrey scored 1046 runs in three days for just 12 wickets in the draw before rain washed out the final day.Mitchell Marsh lofts one over the off side•BCCI

IPL
It wasn’t a great week for the Australians at the IPL with very few outstanding performances. Mitchell Marsh produced his best score of the tournament to-date after an interrupted start due to injury and Covid-19. He looked in superb touch as he smashed 37 off 20 balls on Sunday for Delhi Capitals against Lucknow Super Giants. He feasted on Jason Holder and Dushmantha Chameera with three cracking sixes but fell to the spin of Krishnappa Gowtham as Capitals fell short in the chase. David Warner missed out making just 3 while Marcus Stoinis made 17 not out of 16 deliveries in a far from fluent display. He struck a boundary first ball and a six off his penultimate delivery but scored just seven runs off the bat from the other 14 balls he faced and was dropped at deep midwicket. Stoinis managed just 1 off four balls in his previous outing against Punjab Kings.Warner’s low score was his first in six matches after smashing 42 off 26 balls with eight boundaries in Capitals’ win over Kolkata Knight Riders last week. Marsh made 13 off seven in the same game but Aaron Finch, on return from a shoulder issue, missed out for KKR, clean bowled for 3 off seven trying to launch one across the line.Tim David was finally picked for Mumbai Indians, having been left out of the previous six games, and delivered with a match-winning 20 not out from nine balls to guide Mumbai home to their first win of the tournament over Rajasthan Royals. He struck two fours and a six and was out there with Daniel Sams as he hit the winning six in the final over. Sams took 1 for 32 from his four overs with the ball. Riley Meredith also bowled superbly taking 2 for 24 from his four overs to help restrict Royals to just 158 for 6.Glenn Maxwell produced a special cameo for Royal Challengers Bangalore against Gujurat Titans cruising to 33 from 18 balls. He launched Mohammed Shami over square leg twice for six and then switch-hit Rashid Khan for four over cover, with the ball landing just short of the rope. He then sliced a Lockie Ferguson yorker over backward point for four but fell trying to go again in the 19th over. However, RCB were unable to defend 170 with Josh Hazlewood delivering a rare expensive spell giving up 36 runs in 3.3 overs without a wicket. This came after he took 2 for 19 against Royals last week including the prized scalp of Jos Buttler in a wicket-maiden. But RCB failed to chase 145 with Maxwell falling for a first-ball duck.Did you see?
Pat Cummins has been running the drinks in KKR’s last two matches. He was left out of the loss to Gujarat Titans last week with suggestions he was being rested due a niggle. But he was not selected for KKR’s clash against Delhi with Tim Southee preferred after Cummins had been too expensive with the ball in his first four games of the tournament. He is also going to be rested from Australia’s T20I series on the multi-format tour of Sri Lanka in June.Injuries
Finch did have a shoulder issue that had forced him out of KKR’s line-up last week for one match after making a half-century against Royals. But he recovered quickly to take his place in the side against Capitals and there are no concerns long-term.Matt Renshaw set up the innings with a hundred•Getty Images

Performance of the week
Renshaw’s century for Somerset was the standout performance of the week, in both the context of the game and of his career. He was the only player in the match to pass 71 making 129 in a game where only four other half-centuries were scored across three innings. But it was significant in that it was only his third innings back opening the batting having spent the past two years batting at Nos. 3-5 after he was dropped from Queensland’s Sheffield Shield team back in 2019 and took a break from cricket. With a Test hundred under his belt in 2017 as an opener, and Australia’s current opening pair of Warner and Usman Khawaja both set to turn 36 this year, the 26-year-old is returning to his best at the right time.

Rory Burns turns a few necks to leave Somerset feeling twitchy

Somerset fledglings ruffled as Surrey take command at Taunton

David Hopps13-Jun-2022Surrey 382 for 7 (Burns 113, Jacks 88) lead Somerset 180 (Worrall 3-28, J Overton 3-34, Atkinson 3-40) by 202 runsSomerset supporters casting their eyes skywards in dismay at Surrey’s strengthening grip on this match could always find solace in the beauty of the peregrine falcons wheeling overhead. The falcons nesting at Taunton Minster, across the town, are rearing four fledglings this summer and in the past week or so have begun teaching them to fly. They rested on the floodlight pylons periodically as Surrey built a commanding lead below them, awaiting a fast-food delivery before embarking upon the return journey.Nature Notes aside, news in the West Country was not as uplifting. Somerset had a day of toil as Surrey, with the authority of Championship leaders, turned their overnight 56 for 1 into 382 for 7. Rory Burns completed his second Championship hundred of the summer in his recognizable, idiosyncratic style and Will Jacks, who played the most attractive innings of the day, should have made the second of his first-class career only to be bowled through a sizeable gate, for 88, by Marchant de Lange’s inswinger.The casualties from Jamie Overton’s helmet-hitting escapade on the opening day had mounted overnight. de Lange had been summoned from Abergavenny when Craig Overton suffered delayed concussion symptoms; Overton will be reassessed on Tuesday to determine whether he can play in Somerset’s sell-out Blast derby against Gloucestershire on Friday. Kasey Aldridge, a former England U-19 all-rounder from Bristol, had already replaced Josh Davey, another concussion victim, and revealed a good, repeatable action with the suggestion of more pace to come.Burns is less peregrine falcon than wryneck, another bird also seen in gardens in these parts, slightly larger than a sparrow and possessing an ability to twist its neck almost 360 degrees. The Burns neck jerk to the leg side as the bowler approaches is also quite something, presumably designed to stop him falling over to the leg side, before he shifts his head above the top of off with the bowler about to deliver. Add his mane sweeping from the back of his helmet and it makes him one of the most distinctive batters on the circuit. If birdwatching and cricket-watching ever merge in some dystopian future [I think they just have… Ed], he might one day find an army of twitchers descending upon his every innings.Cricket’s wry neck might have attracted wry remarks during 32 Tests (his average of 30 might be modest but it does bear comparison with any England opener of recent vintage), but he remains a highly effective batter at county level and he dominated the morning session, reaching 50 with a hooked six against Peter Siddle and making busy use of a good batting surface as Somerset’s bowlers, who tend to hit the pitch, found little of the swing available to their Surrey counterparts on the opening day.Nine Surrey batters currently average more than 40, a benchmark only achieved by two Somerset players – and one of them, the Australian Matt Renshaw, is not playing in this match – which even in favourable batting conditions does not auger well for their chances of saving the game.One player below that 40 average is Jacks, whose success remains largely in white-ball formats, and yet his stylish, upright approach insists that he has the ability to transfer his skills to the red-ball game. He, too, was struck on the helmet, this time by Siddle, armed with the second new ball, when he was 42, and a booming off-drive, on 45, immediately after tea, almost caused his downfall when it landed at de Lange’s feet on the half volley and left the big man limping and stretching.Perhaps that contributed to a wilder final spell from de Lange who had bowled with commendable accuracy earlier in the day. He is an immensely strong man as became clear on Somerset’s pre-season media day when, with rain falling, he helped to clear away, carrying a bench, one-handed, above his head while others were struggling away in pairs.Surrey were also disrupted with Hashim Amla unable to resume his innings because of illness. Ben Geddes helped to settle their day before edging de Lange to first slip. Aldridge claimed a maiden first-class wicket that his persistence deserved when Jamie Smih edged to first slip. Burns departed soon afterwards, perhaps unwisely playing back to Roelof van der Merwe’s first ball and edging the left-arm spinner to first slip.A dubious lbw decision against Cameron Steel again gave Somerset hope, but Jacks and Jordan Clark (dropped at slip on 30 off Tom Lammonby) batted them out of the game. Jamie Overton made a late appearance, but this time his damage was limited to the shabby old sightscreen with a clubbed six off van der Merwe. If Somerset are to save this game, their own fledglings must learn to fly.

Daryl Mitchell, Tom Blundell thwart England in familiar fashion after bizarre breakthrough

Yet another century stand for NZ’s old firm as England rue moments that got away

Andrew Miller23-Jun-20225:44

#PoliteEnquiries: How does Daryl Mitchell middle EVERYTHING?!

New Zealand 225 for 5 (Mitchell 78*, Blundell 45*) vs EnglandIt didn’t end up being the day of ascendancy that New Zealand might have envisaged after winning the toss in prime batting conditions, but at least in the continuation of a now-familiar middle-order alliance, it proved to be one in which England were made to work for their breakthroughs, on a day in which their luckiest break of the series couldn’t quite atone for the key moments that got away.By the close at Headingley, Daryl Mitchell and Tom Blundell had combined for their third significant stand of the series, an 102-run alliance for the sixth wicket, to lift their team from a ropey 123 for 5 at tea, and set a new national record in the process too – their total of 593 runs together overtaking the previous record for a single series of 552, set by Martin Crowe and Andrew Jones in their against Sri Lanka in 1990-91.Their partnership could hardly have begun in more bizarre circumstances. Facing up to the spin of Jack Leach in the final over of the afternoon session, Henry Nicholls launched into one of his few attacking strokes in a formless innings of 19 from 99 balls. It should have been his second boundary, but instead the ball deflected off the face of Mitchell’s bat and straight to Alex Lees at mid-off, a moment reminiscent of the late Andrew Symonds’ dismissal in an ODI against Sri Lanka in 2006.For Leach, who had already struck with his first ball of the day to trap Will Young lbw, the fluke was due reward for his best day’s work of the series, and it was the cue too for a diligent afternoon of holding-pattern spin bowling, as he twirled his way through 23 consecutive overs either side of tea, for the commendable tight figures of 1 for 54, and 2 for 75 all told.Daryl Mitchell celebrates reaching fifty for the third time this series•Visionhaus/Getty Images

And yet, to judge by the serenity with which Mitchell and Blundell eased through to stumps, England would surely have traded that moment of fortune for a chance to revisit the day’s key flashpoint – a huge mid-afternoon appeal for lbw against Mitchell, on 8 at the time, as Matt Potts thudded an inswinger into his front pad in the midsts of another energetic day’s work.Hawk-Eye showed that the ball would have been hitting middle and leg, but Ben Stokes declined to send the decision upstairs – perhaps as a consequence of a moment, in Potts’ previous spell, when England had lost a review in similar circumstances, when the left-handed Nicholls, on 4, was adjudged by the third umpire Aleem Dar to have inside-edged another inswinger that would have been striking leg stump.Either way, Mitchell’s let-off seemed to be the cue for him to up the ante, particularly against Leach, whom he struck for two fours and a big straight six into the Football Stand in the space of six balls, for all that the spinner was already extracting more turn and bounce than he was able to produce in the whole of the Trent Bridge Test.However, with the arrival of Blundell after tea, Mitchell seemed happy to dial his aggression back once more, as the pair settled into the familiar accumulative pattern that had successfully reinflated their prospects already in the series, most particularly in the second innings at Lord’s.Mitchell allowed himself one significant shot in anger in the rest of his day’s work, a superb lofted drive off Leach to bring up his fifty with a six over long-off, and a single to midwicket in Leach’s final over of the day took him to his overnight 78 not out, as well as bringing up the pair’s third century stand of the series. Blundell for his part reached the close on 45 not out from 108 balls – following directly on from his 96 at Lord’s and his 106 at Trent Bridge, in another indomitably solid day’s work.England, nevertheless, could be broadly satisfied with their efforts. Having clattered along at close to 4 an over in their first innings at Trent Bridge, New Zealand’s close-of-play 225 for 5, with the new ball still shiny, meant that they were still some way short of making full use of Kane Williamson’s correct call at the toss.Jamie Overton capped his first day of Test cricket with the prize scalp of Devon Conway, but England’s day was set in motion by the indefatigable Stuart Broad, who struck with the sixth ball of each of his first two spells – including to remove Tom Latham for a duck in the first over of the match.Ben Stokes and Jack Leach look on in disbelief after Henry Nicholls’ dismissal•Getty Images

Under the previous regime, Broad – who turns 36 on Friday – might well have been rested for this fixture, after back-to-back matches at Lord’s and Trent Bridge, and with the delayed fifth Test against India looming large at Edgbaston next week. However, with his sidekick James Anderson already out of contention with an ankle niggle, Broad’s importance as England’s senior seamer was plain to see, right from an exemplary and successful first over that claimed the scalp of Latham for a duck.After losing the toss and being asked to bowl first on a dauntingly straw-coloured pitch, Broad had the left-handed Latham in his sights from the outset, as he hammered a good length from round the wicket in his now-habitual fashion. Latham left his first four balls, but after being drawn forward to block the fifth, he was caught perfectly in two minds by the coup de grace, a length ball on off stump that seamed just enough to take the edge and fly through to Joe Root at first slip.It was another failure in this series for Latham, whose highest score in five outings is 26. But New Zealand’s predicament could have been even worse one Broad delivery later, when Kane Williamson – taking back over from Latham as captain after missing the second Test with Covid – fenced down the leg side and inches past the diving wicketkeeper Ben Foakes, in what had been a deliberate ploy to tuck him up, seeing as Ollie Pope had just been posted at leg slip.At the other end, Young was never allowed to settle into his stay. After a firm back-foot punch off Potts had brought up his first boundary, Young almost lost his middle stump to an ill-judged pull that skidded through lower than anticipated, and on 8, he might have run himself out with a quick single to mid-on, where Potts’ pick-up-and-shy flew inches wide of the stumps.But, having seen off Overton’s brisk-if-nervy first over with another cut for four, and survived an inside-edge into his back pad off Broad, Young got himself into a fatal tangle as Leach entered the attack on the hour mark and made an immediate impression.Leach had endured a torrid series to date – his first home Test for three years at Lord’s lasted less than six overs as he was subbed out of the match with concussion, while he returned match figures of 3 for 226 at Trent Bridge in a display that lacked penetration or control.However, with England seeking to accentuate every available positive under the new team management of Brendon McCullum and Ben Stokes, Leach was able to lap up every ounce of acclaim from a grateful Headingley crowd, who will never forget his starring role on his last appearance before them in 2019, when his crucial 1 not out in partnership with Stokes helped seal England’s thrilling one-wicket Ashes win.He’d already had one standing ovation for his first act of the match, a regulation piece of fielding at fine leg. But the second was far more heartfelt, as he nailed the perfect line and length from round the wicket to Young, dipping the ball into a tangle of pads and extracting the lbw verdict from umpire Marais Erasmus. Young reviewed, but to no avail – he’d got his bat stuck behind his pad on impact as Hawk-Eye showed the ball to be smashing middle stump.At 35 for 2, New Zealand’s decision to bat first was looking perilous. But from the outset of their partnership, Williamson and Conway took a conscious decision to put the pressure back on Leach. Conway’s third delivery was clubbed through the covers for four, before Williamson – after a cautious start to his innings – took the spinner on with two fours in four balls, the first a launch over mid-off that only just cleared the backtracking fielder.Overton’s first five-over spell was seen off for 17 – with a top speed at this stage in the region of 88mph, though he would touch 90mph in the evening session. Broad, however, was now primed to return for his second spell, and once again, he struck the crucial blow with the final ball of his initial over. The key delivery this time was his fifth, a hooping late inswinger that crashed into Williamson’s thigh pad. His follow-up was back in the off-stump channel, but held its line this time, as Williamson dangled fractionally outside his eyeline and snicked a thin edge through to Foakes.One notable absence for England was that of Stokes, whose ability to swing the old ball might have been particularly useful in the afternoon session. He arrived at Headingley a day late after a bout of illness, and he had been struggling with a knee injury in the latter stages of his match-sealing innings at Trent Bridge. But he was busy throughout regardless, marshalling his troops with typical vigour, even if his best intentions were ultimately thwarted by New Zealand’s usual suspects.

Zimbabwe to host India, Bangladesh before a tour to Australia after 18 years

The three ODIs against India between August 18 to 22 are part of the ODI Super League

ESPNcricinfo staff19-Jul-2022Zimbabwe are set for a busy two months with incoming tours from Bangladesh and India and a visit to Australia after 18 years.India, who haven’t toured Zimbabwe since 2016, are set to play three ODIs on August 18, 20 and 22 in Harare. The series is part of the ICC ODI Super League that serves to identify the seven direct qualifiers, along with the hosts, for next year’s 50-over World Cup in India. Zimbabwe are currently placed 12th in the 13-team pool, with just three wins in 15 matches. The ODI series is scheduled to finish less than a week before the 2022 Asia Cup, which is set to be played between August 27 and September 11, in the UAE.Related

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  • West Indies ODIs a chance for India's bench to prove its strength

  • Raza takes 4 for 8 as Zimbabwe win T20 World Cup Qualifier

With their place at this year’s T20 World Cup sealed, Zimbabwe will also have an opportunity to acclimatise to Australian conditions when they tour the country for three ODIs in Townsville on August 28, 31 and September 3.Aside from the 2015 World Cup, Zimbabwe have not toured Australia since 2003-04, while the two teams last met in ODIs during a tri-series in 2014.Bangladesh play Zimbabwe in three T20Is from July 30 to August 2, before the two sides face-off in three ODIs on August 5, 7 and 10. All matches will be staged in Harare. That series will be followed by India’s tour.A young India squad, led by Shikhar Dhawan, is currently in the Caribbean for a three-match ODI series that will be followed by five T20Is that finish on August 7 in Florida.Earlier last week, Zimbabwe secured their spot at the 2022 T20 World Cup by winning the eight-team qualifying tournament in Bulawayo. They beat Netherlands in the final by 37 runs with Sikandar Raza returning 4 for 8.Zimbabwe vs Bangladesh 2022:1st T20I – July 30, Harare
2nd T20I – July 31, Harare
3rd T20I – August 2, Harare
1st ODI – August 5, Harare
2nd ODI – August 7, Harare
3rd ODI – August 10, Harare
Zimbabwe vs India 20221st ODI – August 18, Harare
2nd ODI – August 20, Harare
3rd ODI – August 22, Harare
Australia vs Zimbabwe 20221st ODI – August 28, Townsville
2nd ODI – August 31, Townsville
3rd ODI – September 3, Townsville

Will Jacks, Sunil Narine get Oval Invincibles' season up and running

Welsh Fire slip to second successive defeat as Jacks comes up trumps on slow Cardiff pitch

ECB Reporters Network07-Aug-2022Will Jacks hit the highest individual score of the Hundred this summer as his 81 steered Oval Invincibles to a 39-run win over Welsh Fire at Sophia Gardens.Jacks batted from the first to the 99th ball to notch the joint second highest score in the men’s Hundred to join Colin Ingram and David Willey just behind Liam Livingstone’s current record high of 92.His late burst of sixes pushed Invincibles to 154 for 5 and enabled them to put their London derby defeat on Thursday behind them as they picked up their first win and condemned Fire to a second successive defeat.Related

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Having won the toss, Fire sent in Invincibles and quickly added to the pain currently being felt by England star Jason Roy by sending him packing for a mere 10 runs off as many balls.If that was an improvement on his golden duck in the opening round of the Hundred against London Spirt, he showed his frustration at tickling the ball to short fine leg by tossing his bat in the air as he walked back to the pavilion.The pace attack of David Payne, Jake Ball and George Scrimshaw bowled tidily enough on a tricky wicket to initially restrict the run rate. Given they only took one wicket in their heavy defeat against the reigning champions, Southern Brave, in their opening game it didn’t take them long to improve on that.Scrimshaw returned the favour to Payne, who caught Roy, by catching the dangerous Rilee Rossouw at short third and all of a sudden it was 22 for 2 with two key batters back in the hutch.Sam Billings steadied the ship alongside Jacks until he left two balls after being struck in the box and taking a very necessary injury break. His departure, lbw to Ryan Higgins, made it 51 for 3 from 41 balls and put even more responsibility on the shoulders of Jacks.The opener, Surrey’s top scorer in the Blast, steered the side to 57 for 3 at the halfway mark, reached his half-century with a cracking four through extra cover off Payne and then went on the rampage with a series of boundaries.His 50 came up in 36 balls and he added a further 31 off his next nine deliveries before holing out on the boundary off the penultimate ball of the innings. A four off the last ball by Tom Curran meant the Invincibles had set a reasonable target of 154.Joe Clarke gave the home side a good start, punishing spinner Danny Briggs with successive sixes in his opening over. He would go onto top score with 37 as he enjoyed stands of 46 with Tom Banton and then 26 with Ben Duckett.But once he was caught in the deep aiming for another boundary off Tom Curran the writing was on the wall for Fire. They had only made 107 off 100 balls against the Brave and were eventually held to 119 for 6 as Sam and Tom Curran put on the squeeze, both conceding only 24 runs from their 20 balls each.Sunil Narine chipped in with three wickets as he conceded 21 runs off 20 balls.

Cameron Green five-for, David Warner fifty take Australia 1-0 up

Zimbabwe suffered a collapse of 6 for 15, with Wessly Madhevere’s 72 in vain

Andrew McGlashan27-Aug-2022The first five-wicket haul of Cameron Green’s international career set Australia up for a comfortable victory over Zimbabwe in the first ODI in Townsville to mark the early start to their season, although they needed to work hard to break the back of the visitors’ batting.Wessly Madhevere’s career-best 72 held Zimbabwe together, though they were never able to really cut loose, as the innings fell away rapidly in the closing stages, losing 6 for 15 as Green’s wicket tally quickly swelled after he had earlier claimed the key wicket of the in-form Sikandar Raza.A target of 201 was always unlikely to cause too many concerns, and it was duly knocked off with more than 16 overs to spare amid a flurry of boundaries by Glenn Maxwell. David Warner lived a charmed life in making a half-century, but Steven Smith played a controlled innings to ensure the loss of three wickets to Ryan Burl from some casual strokeplay did not become a problem.Related

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On a day where tributes were paid to former Australia allrounder Andrew Symonds, who died in a car accident in May, one of this generation’s finest all-round prospects added another milestone to the early stages of his career.Green had one wicket from seven ODIs before this outing, but he is being viewed as a key figure as Australia build towards the 2023 ODI World Cup in India, having been entrusted as the third frontline quick to allow a very long batting order. He caused problems throughout with his extra bounce, with two batters being caught at fine leg while unable to control short deliveries.Unsurprisingly, Aaron Finch had put Zimbabwe in with the early start, as Australia kept the scoring rate on a tight leash during the first ten overs. But the visiting openers did well to withstand the opening spells. Mitchell Marsh made the breakthrough shortly after the powerplay when Innocent Kaia offered a return catch, but Zimbabwe steadily increased the tempo with Tadiwanashe Marumani getting the benefit of his early hard work.However, with a maiden half-century in sight, Marumani advanced at Adam Zampa and was beaten which led to a few overs of caution. Madhevere and Tony Munyonga then produced a boundary apiece against Zampa in the 25th over, only for Smith to pull off a spectacular running catch from mid-off to remove Munyonga as he aimed down the ground again.The in-form Raza, who has enjoyed a stunning run against Bangladesh and India in recent weeks, was tied down by Australia’s quicks before falling to a short delivery from Green which he top-edged to fine leg removing a major threat with nearly 20 overs to go.David Warner top-scored for Australia with 57•AFP/Getty Images

Madhevere, who would not have played but for an elbow injury suffered by Sean Williams in nets on Saturday, continued to anchor the innings and brought up his half-century from 67 balls while captain Regis Chakabva provided some extra momentum heading into the final ten overs with a spritely display. However, Madhevere’s stay came to a rather soft end, when he prodded a return catch to Zampa off his final delivery.The innings quickly lost its way after that as Green struck four times in two overs, making good use of the short ball, although he looked somewhat sheepish as his fourth and fifth wickets were snaffled by Maxwell at deep midwicket.Australia made a steady start to the chase before left-armer Richard Ngarava, who caused a few problems, forced Finch to drag into his stumps via an inside edge.The 17th over, bowled by Raza, brought a lot of action involving Warner, who was firstly dropped at point when Marumani spilled a simple chance. Then there were bizarre scenes when Zimbabwe reviewed for a caught behind that was given not out, and Warner was so sure he had edged it that he was almost off the field when the third umpire decided there was no conclusive evidence to overturn.When Warner faced Raza’s next over, he pulled the first six of the match over deep square leg and then went to hit a 57-ball fifty, but did not go much further when he swung across the line. Raza’s celebration certainly had some feeling about it, and perhaps a few words.Smith had looked in good touch from the moment he arrived in the middle, and unfurled some well-timed drives between ticking the scoreboard over. He lost a flurry of partners as Australia’s middle order tried to attack Burl’s legspin, with Alex Carey well caught at long-on then Marcus Stoinis and Marsh falling in the same over.However, Maxwell crunched his first ball for four – and thrice cleared the fence later on – as his 32 off nine balls hastened the finish which came with consecutive sixes.

Derbyshire sign Matthew Lamb from Warwickshire

Middle-order batter brings Division One experience to Mickey Arthur project

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Oct-2022Warwickshire batter Matthew Lamb has agreed to join Derbyshire on a two-year deal.Lamb, 26, came through at Edgbaston having joined the club at Under-9s, making his first team debut in 2016. He was a member of the side that won the 2021 County Championship, playing 13 games and contributing 565 runs.A versatile middle-order batter who can also bowl medium pace, Lamb averages 31.23 in first-class cricket and 42.24 in List A.Derbyshire’s head of cricket, Mickey Arthur, said they had targeted Lamb to strengthen the squad after finishing fifth in Division Two in his first season in charge.”Matt had a strong season in Division One and that’s the calibre of player we want to bring to our club,” Arthur said. “Signing a player with a good amount of top level experience is an example of our intent. Our batting has been strong this year, but Matt’s arrival increases that competition for places and re-enforces our batting depth in all formats.”Lamb finished the season out of the Championship side at Edgbaston, but was second in the club’s averages, scoring 487 run at 48.70 with two hundreds in eight appearances.”I leave Edgbaston with a heavy heart, but I’m incredibly excited for the next chapter of my career,” Lamb said. “I will be forever grateful and thankful to everybody at the Bears who helped and coached me from an eight-year-old cricket lover to a County Champion.”I have made friends for life at the club and will always look forward to returning with Derbyshire.”Mickey Arthur’s project at Derbyshire really excites me, there’s a talented group of players and the level of ambition is high, that’s something I want to be a part of. I’ve been pleased with my performances over the last couple of years, but I want to push myself across all formats, this is the opportunity to do that and I’m looking forward to getting going this winter.”

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