All the records Prithvi Shaw broke on debut

Prithvi Shaw, 18, burst on to the Test scene with a rapid hundred against West Indies in Rajkot. Here are the big numbers from his innings

Bharath Seervi04-Oct-20181:07

Prithvi Shaw: Among the youngest and fastest debut Test centurions

99 – Balls taken by Prithvi Shaw to score his century, which is the third-fastest by any batsman on Test debut. Shikhar Dhawan’s 85-ball ton against Australia in Mohali in 2012-13 is the fastest century on debut. Dwayne Smith had reached hundred off 93 balls on his debut.3 – Number of batsmen to score centuries on their Test debut at a younger age than Shaw. Mohammad Ashraful and Hamilton Masakadza had done it before turning 18, while Saleem Malik was six days younger than Shaw. Overall, Shaw is the 15th India player to get a ton on his Test debut.2 – Shaw is the second-youngest India player to score a Test century, behind only Sachin Tendulkar. Overall, Shaw is the seventh youngest to get to a century in Tests.ESPNcricinfo Ltd3 – Players to score centuries on their first-class debut as well as on their Test debut. Before Shaw, India’s Gundappa Viswanath and Australia’s Dirk Wellham had this dual achievement. Virender Sehwag had scored a century on Test debut as well as in his maiden first-class innings, but that came in his second first-class match.1 – Prithvi Shaw, at 18 years and 329 days, topped the list of the youngest players to score a 50-plus score on Test debut for India. In fact, he is the first India teenager to score 50 or more on debut. The previous youngest India batsman to score 50-plus on Test debut was Abbas Ali Baig, scoring 112 at the age of 20 years and 126 days against England at Old Trafford in 1959.2 – Players to score 50-plus at a younger age than Shaw in Tests in India. Both were for Pakistan: Hanif Mohammad and Mushtaq Mohammad. Both achieved this before turning 17. Before Shaw, the youngest India player to score 50-plus in India was the current coach Ravi Shastri (19 years and 210 days), against England in Delhi in 1981-82.ESPNcricinfo Ltd2007 – The last time an India player younger than Shaw made a Test debut – Ishant Sharma at 18 years and 265 days against Bangladesh in Dhaka. Overall, Shaw is the 13th youngest Test debutant for India.3 – Number of batsmen to face the first ball of a Test match at a younger age than Shaw. Hamilton Masakadza, Tamim Iqbal and Imran Farhat are the ones who did it. For India, the previous youngest to face the first ball of a Test was Budhi Kunderan at 20 years and 113 days against Australia in 1959-60.14 – First-class matches played by Shaw before making his Test debut. He averages 56.72 in those games, having hit seven centuries in 26 innings. On his first-class debut, for Mumbai in 2016-17, he scored a century against Tamil Nadu in the semi-final of the Ranji Trophy – incidentally, at the same venue as of his Test debut.3- Number of higher individual scores on debut for India than Shaw’s 134. Dhawan’s 187 is the highest, followed by Rohit Sharma’s 177 and Viswanath’s 137. Overall, Shaw’s innings is the third-highest for any batsman at the age of 18 or less.

Pappu Roy, the left-arm quick who bowled to Sachin Tendulkar and became a left-arm spinner

Pappu Roy was 23 by the time he got the chance to play for his state team. A month on, he is part of an India C squad that includes the likes of Ajinkya Rahane and Suresh Raina

Shashank Kishore22-Oct-2018For most of his teenage years, a tree trunk at the Howrah Union Cricket Club ground in Kolkata was Pappu Roy’s definition of home. He lived on a breakfast of (lemon tea) – it was all he could afford with little or no pocket money – and the lunches and evening snacks he would be treated to by club trainees or coaches in exchange for three hours of net bowling.Now, at 23, Pappu will enjoy his first taste of five-star comforts in New Delhi. There is also the huge incentive of bowling to India’s emerging crop of batsmen in the Deodhar Trophy, where he is part of an India C squad that has star players such as Ajinkya Rahane and Suresh Raina in the mix.It is easy to wonder how Pappu finds himself amid a galaxy of India hopefuls in a tournament tweaked to ensure the best talent auditions for the World Cup, but one look at his numbers suggest how he has earned his place. Pappu’s left-arm spin brought him 14 wickets at an average of 18.42 and an economy rate of just 3.79 in the Vijay Hazare Trophy 2018-19. These numbers stand out even more when you consider that his side, Odisha, managed only two wins in eight matches.”For every hour I bowled at Howrah Union, the coaches offered me a free or juice, that used to satisfy my hunger,” Pappu tells ESPNcricinfo. “Till I was 18, this was my life. Be there from morning to night, keep bowling and earn my meals. This was like work for me. My parents passed away early, there were some family issues (a dispute between his father’s siblings over a plot of ancestral land), so I preferred to be outside, doing what I enjoyed doing.”In 2011, Pappu left for Jajpur, a small town in Odisha, to further his cricket interests, with opportunities in Bengal few and far between. He stayed as a paying guest with a Khan – his friend Amin Iqbal’s father – who has provided for his comforts over the last five years to help shape his cricket dreams. It was in Jajpur that Pappu made the grade as a district player, which eventually paved the way for his Odisha selection.He would train in the morning, play matches in the afternoon, and have fun playing tennis-ball cricket at night. Running 30 minutes to and from the ground with his kitbag was his version of gym work as well as his daily warm-up.A shoulder niggle made his Howrah Union coach Sujit Saha – whom he is still in touch with – suggest he switch from left-arm pace to left-arm spin, and he did so reluctantly at first. Divine intervention, of sorts, convinced him to make the change permanent.”Sachin Tendulkar sir was playing his farewell series,” Pappu says. “Two days before the first Test, Howrah Union bowlers were called in as net bowlers. I was in Jajpur, but took an overnight bus to reach Kolkata. When I landed up at Eden Gardens, I stood in the spinners queue by mistake. I was told later that the fast-bowling slots had been filled up, and I was the only one in my set who could bowl left-arm spin. I thought, ‘ (If I have to bowl left-arm spin to god, let me keep doing this going forward too.’)”He kept taking bucketfuls of wickets thereafter, season after season, with his left-arm spin, and selection for Odisha’s Under-23s came in 2015. After three years on the fringes of the senior team, he finally got his opportunity last month in the Vijay Hazare Trophy, and on his List A debut he dismissed Hanuma Vihari, who had by then become an India player.”I didn’t even know how Vihari looked, but when they told me ‘you’ve got an India player out’, that gave me immense confidence,” he says. “Then I dismissed Ricky Bhui. Our coach Rashmi Ranjan Parida gave me a lot of encouragement. He likened my efforts and bowling style to Ravindra Jadeja. If I can be half as good as him, I know I will be on the right track.”For now, Bengal’s loss has been Odisha’s gain, and Pappu’s immediate goal for the season is to make his Ranji Trophy debut. “I want to do something for the state,” he says. “We haven’t won the Ranji Trophy, even though we have produced some great players like SS Das and RR Parida. Hopefully I will take small steps this season.”

'Greatest role model Sri Lankan cricket ever had'

Rangana Herath’s former Sri Lanka team-mates and coaches pay tribute to him

Andrew Fidel Fernando05-Nov-2018″What an incredible lad he is. So calm, so understanding, and he’s always there for everyone. For the youngsters, especially, having an influence like that is very, very good. Rangana Herath is very approachable to anyone. When you come into the international set-up, everything changes – the rewards and everything around you. You have to react positively to that. To help the youngsters with that, Herath has played a big role. On the cricket side, once Murali retired his numbers tell the story. He’s had a great impact, and Sri Lanka are going to miss him dearly. He falls in the bracket of the legends: the Sangakkaras, the Jayawardenes, the Muralitharans.””When Murali left, everyone thought that Sri Lanka would be a little handicapped. But Rangana actually revelled in being the sole spinner for the country. He never worried himself with what was happening with the board, or anything else. Unlike us, he very quietly went about his work. He did that year after year. He went through some tough times in terms of his career, but whenever he was given an opportunity, he’s just worked at performing and taking wickets. He’s scored some important runs for us as well.”I actually think he’s the greatest role model that Sri Lanka cricket have ever had – the way he’s played the game and the way he’s entered and formed relationships with players. He’s a guy that I admire a hell of a lot. I’m just sad that he’s retiring, because I think Sri Lanka really need him at the moment. I don’t think he’s overachieved. I think his potential was immense.””His determination shows in his whole career, to be out of the team when Murali was there, and to only get a chance later. He made sure he kept working on his game all through those years so that he could grab the opportunity when it came. It’s the kind of quality you see from him on the field as well. There are spells that don’t go his way, but he’ll come right back into it, and within a few overs he’s turned things around straightaway. The control to bowl that he has is something amazing. He’s the last guy from our generation who’s going to call it a day, so it’s a bit of an emotional thing for a few of our boys – for Sanga as well. Once Ranga got his opportunity, he showed what a great bowler he was. In the last five years he’s the guy who’s carried Sri Lanka through in Tests. He’s from a small school in Kurunegala, going into a bigger school and then making his way into the very top level, that’s just a great story.””I was joking in the dressing room and saying he’s become my all-time sporting hero. He’s gone ahead of Roger Federer.”-Former Sri Lanka coach Graham Ford, after Herath had taken a five-wicket haul despite an injured groin, in 2016“He’s such a phlegmatic, calm, relaxed guy – there’s nothing excitable about him. He’s Mr. Dependable. Even with the bat he’s got Sri Lanka out of trouble plenty of times. You look at him and you say he’s like a club cricketer, but the bloke’s mental strength is unbelievable. As mentally strong as any player I’ve come across. “-Former Sri Lanka coach Paul FarbraceWe’d like to do something for him and show him the respect he deserves because he’s had a fantastic career over 19 years – his longevity is phenomenal. From our point of view the respect is certainly there – he’s been a brilliant competitor. He’s done some special things for Sri Lanka and that should be noticed.

Aryaman Birla means business in his own way

The Madhya Pradesh batsman, son of the billionaire industrialist Kumar Mangalam Birla, is determined to be more than just a surname

Shashank Kishore20-Nov-2018Rewa in Madhya Pradesh is a far different world to the opulence of South Mumbai. The cement unit of the Aditya Birla Group – a billion-dollar enterprise – is headquartered in the city. Therefore, when Aryaman Birla, the son of the billionaire industrialist Kumar Mangalam Birla, moved there, it wouldn’t have been outlandish to assume he was there to learn the ropes of the business. However, the real reason for his move was his first love – cricket.After four years in the junior circuit in Madhya Pradesh, Birla took small steps towards strengthening his position in only his third first-class outing last week. He rescued MP with a maiden backs-to-the-wall century at Eden Gardens to help salvage a draw against Bengal. This was a significant because MP are looking to fill the void left by the retirement of their long-time talisman Devendra Bundela, the most-capped player in Ranji Trophy history.Watching the entire team stand up to applaud must have been reassuring because for the first three years in MP, he “felt like an outsider”. The murmurs were invariably about how his “privileged background” may have given him a push. “Performances are the best way of earning trust and respect, so when I started scoring runs, people started seeing me in a different light,” Birla tells ESPNcricinfo. “When I first came to MP, I was known more by my last name. I kept hearing ‘Birla’s son, Birla’s grandson.’ But through my performances, I changed perceptions, they started seeing me differently.”That’s been my biggest achievement so far. Recently someone came and asked me ‘you’re so (simple and straightforward), we didn’t even know you’re from the Birla family.’ That to me was a sign of change.”Birla decided to leave Mumbai as a 17-year old who was unsure of his immediate future as a cricketer trying to “fight for survival” in the city. Not wanting to lose time, he decided to take the plunge by enrolling for district trials in MP in 2014. A three-month stint in England, prior to his move to Rewa, helped him ease self-doubt.

“People realise when you come with the name behind you, you have to live up to certain standards. I want to carry a legacy forward in my own way. As a young kid, I was used to taunts. Now my team-mates joke about it and I laugh it off with them. Any small thing and they’re like ‘ (big people, big talk)’ but I laugh about it now.”

Birla trained with Paul Weekes, an English first-class veteran who played 236 first-class matches for Middlesex before retiring in 2006. Birla represented West Hampstead Cricket Club and made it to a minor county side – the London Schools Cricket Association.”As a young kid in Mumbai, people often said things to please me, it was hard for them to not associate me with my name,” he says. “Whenever I was complimented, I was like ‘are they saying this because of my surname?’ In England, I was just one among the others. They only knew me about my cricket, so playing there made me more confident and mature as a person.”His temperament shone through last season, when he topped the CK Nayudu (Under-23) Trophy run charts with 602 at an average of 75.25, scoring three hundreds in nine innings. It was enough to earn him a Ranji Trophy debut against Odisha. The call-up vindicated his decision to move from Mumbai to MP.He broke his thumbnail at training on the morning of the match, but made his debut nevertheless. It wasn’t “a dream like I’d expected”, but he still battled through pain to put on 72 for the first wicket with Rajat Patidar. The toughness was lauded in the dressing room, even though there had been doubts before he went out to bat.Away from the cricket field, Birla is like the average 21-year old, interested in music and movies. He’s often asked about joining the business and “enhancing the family’s legacy”. It irks him, but he doesn’t feel burdened. “Yes, I don’t have to worry about money, so I can channel that positively and ensure the focus is just on cricket,” he says. “When I was a lot younger, it felt like pressure.”People realise when you come with the name behind you, you have to live up to certain standards. I want to carry a legacy forward in my own way. As a young kid, I was used to taunts. Now my team-mates joke about it and I laugh it off with them. Any small thing and they’re like ‘ (big people, big talk)’ but I laugh about it now. I’m very comfortable now. That’s partly got to do with my upbringing because we were never sheltered and made to live in a bubble at home as young kids, even though our parents had their own careers.”Birla hopes to carry his form through the season and possibly into the IPL – he’s been retained by Rajasthan Royals, who signed him for INR 30 lakh at the 2018 auction. Game time eluded him this season, but opportunities can’t be far off if he keeps performing.”This year, I went in with no expectation, and wanted to give it my best if I got the chance,” he says. “It was tough to get batting time as a reserve, because the time between training and match days is little, but I was maintaining my routines, preparing like I’d play. I did a lot of catching and fielding, fitness work. Knew even if I didn’t get a chance, there was a first-class season to look forward to, and I’m going to be in for the long haul, I can’t get disappointed by one season of warming the bench.”

Fast-bowling depth in Pakistan is incredible – Watson

He speaks about his experience in the PSL, returning to Pakistan after a long gap, and what keeps him going despite retiring from international cricket

Umar Farooq12-Mar-2019Shane Watson was a reluctant visitor to Pakistan earlier but this year he made it to Karachi to play for Quetta Gladiators. In this interview, he speaks about his experience in the PSL, returning to Pakistan after a long gap, and what keeps him going despite retiring from international cricket.You’ve been a part of many dressing rooms across the world for different teams. How have Quetta Gladiators been different?This year, even last year, the difference to me is that the best team…their leadership is always incredibly strong and that is a big difference here with Quetta compared to other teams I played with in the past. The owner, Mr Nadeem Omar, is a genuinely incredible, caring and thoughtful guy and you feel that all the way down to the support staff and the players as well. Then this year we have an incredible squad. We’ve got a lot of match-winners through our whole squad which means our dressing room is a bit different to the other ones I’ve played in because not every team has match-winners all the way through.If you have to pick one franchise out of the ones you’ve played for, which one would you pick and why?It’s impossible to pick one franchise because I’ve played with so many. Normally at the start of the season I have always got a sense of whether something special is happening. Whether it’s the people you’ve got around, the calibre of players you’ve got around, the leadership, it’s all the perfect storm and that’s the moment you really cherish and it doesn’t always happen with every team. For reason of injuries, personal viability and that sort of things I’ve been very fortunate to be playing for few franchises where for one year particularly I had that feeling.[With] teams like Sydney Thunder, Chennai [Super Kings], my first year with [Royal Challengers] Bangalore and this year particularly with Quetta as well, who have an incredible squad with so many match-winners and I got a very special feeling. But this never guarantees that you will win the tournament but it means that we are going to play some very very good cricket.What convinced you to come to Pakistan this year?It’s really special to be here in Karachi in Pakistan as I was here last in 2005. My primary consideration this year was having a time with my family, particularly with my son’s birthday around this time. So it was really a family consideration. I had to talk to my wife, about how much it means to my team for me to come to Pakistan and help them get to the final. For me at the end, my wife has been incredibly supportive, she realised how important it is for me to be able to go to Pakistan for Quetta and also for the people of Pakistan. So it worked out very well.PSLHow was the experience in your first game against Karachi Kings the other night? Yes, even from the first time arriving here at Karachi, people have always been incredible, welcoming and warm and that’s what exactly we all received at the ground. Last night it was an incredible atmosphere, a very special atmosphere. The support even Quetta got was unexpected because we were playing against Karachi. It was great not just for me but for every one. I am glad that I helped them in the way I am able to here and get cricket back, get an international standard cricket match back to the people of Pakistan who love the game as much as I do.Pakistan has always been known for its fast bowlers. You’re the leading run-scorer this PSL season. Did you face the heat while facing any fast bowlers this time?Yes, that is one thing that always comes up while playing in the PSL, even from my first year and it continued to be now. There’s always one or two fast bowlers who are bowling way above 140kmh, pushing 150kmh. So every single game I go out and play, I know I have to be absolutely on my game, ready to go, otherwise I can get exposed and hurt facing these quick bowlers. It’s an incredible thing, the depth that Pakistan cricket has over any other country that I have ever played in – real and proper fast bowling. It’s amazing how they continue to come through. Now we’ve got [Mohammad] Hasnain here at Quetta who has come onto the scene and is bowling 150kmh, as it continues to happen every single PSL. So it’s pretty amazing.Have you stopped bowling to extend your playing career?Yeah, at the moment I have stopped bowling from the start of the Big Bash really. I was trying to get ready to be able to bowl in the Big Bash and ended up getting two calf strains in the lead-up to it. So it was just a defining moment for me to put all my energy towards my batting and hold my body together because I absolutely still love playing, I still feel I can contribute with the bat and on the field with the leadership as well, with the experience I have had. I want to keep playing so I’m putting my bowling at the back burner and no bowling means that I can hopefully play for a few more years.How do you keep yourself motivated when you’re not playing for Australia but for different teams around the world?Ever since I retired [from international cricket], I’ve been fortunate to play many different tournaments around the world and the thing that keeps me very motivated is wanting to be successful and wanting to be in a successful team. That is very simple and I love the opportunity to go out and play with so many different people I never would have played with and you never get to know people on the field because you are always on a battle and survival mode and you never really got to see the true person at the field. So that’s the privilege I’ve had to play with so many incredible people from the last three years playing for different franchises.At Quetta, I’ve been able to get to know Sarfaraz Ahmed, for example, someone I hardly ever played against. Last year, I got to know Kevin Petersen by playing with him for the first time for a long time instead of playing against him and it’s been really special for me. And now it’s an incredible opportunity to be with Sir Viv Richards who was one of my idols growing up. So to be with your mentor in the same team and get to know him and I still have a lot of questions to ask about his career, his playing days and it’s something I would never have had without franchise cricket.

Hashim Amla's tests of greatness

His place in the pantheon is secure, and as he’s emerged from his worst trough in a decade, there could be one more chapter added for South Africa’s veteran

Liam Brickhill12-Feb-2019The most ODI hundreds by a South African. The first South African to score a triple century in Test cricket. The fastest batsman to 2,000, 3,000, 4,000, 5,000, 6,000 and 7,000 runs in ODI cricket. Hashim Amla has, by any measure, achieved greatness on the cricket field. But, such is the nature of the game, it is not enough merely to achieve greatness – as a player ages and draws closer to the end of a career it must be proved repeatedly. There is something almost brutal in it, the old alpha always being tested by those who have come after him, to see if he’s still good enough. Until one day he isn’t.That day has not yet come for Amla, but depending on how broadly one looks at it, a batsman is only as good – or as bad – as their last innings, their last series, even their last year. And after coming off a bad year, during which he averaged 23.36 in 10 Tests before Pakistan arrived, Amla has turned things around, averaging 52.25 across three Tests and 53.50 – at a strike rate higher than Faf du Plessis, Reeza Hendricks and Rassie van der Dussen – in five ODIs against a Pakistani bowling attack that is one of the best in world cricket.He’s clearly still got it, whatever ‘it’ is, and Amla has, over the next few weeks, the opportunity against a wounded Sri Lankan side to continue playing himself back into the sort of form that has brought him so many past glories. He’s come out of his worst dip in form in a decade, and with a possibly career-defining World Cup campaign looming, his resurgence is coming at just the right time.Two months ago, Amla was so out of touch that he was dropped by Durban Heat after his second duck of the Mzansi Super League. He had muddled through the tournament in the batting doldrums, cobbling together 24 runs in seven innings as bowlers repeatedly threatened his edge, his front pad and his stumps. He was also struggling for full fitness, having broken a finger during an equally dry run through the Caribbean Premier League in September – an injury that hampered his ability to train as he would like to and took longer than expected to heal.In his very next innings after that fateful MSL duck at Centurion, for Cape Cobras in the 4-Day Franchise series, Amla walked to the wicket at No. 3 after brothers Janneman and Pieter Malan had laid a platform with a 124-run opening stand, and walked back off again almost immediately afterwards when he was strangled down the leg side first ball by Sisanda Magala. It was just the sort of rotten luck that strikes when a player is short of form.

“In my mind, Hash is, I suppose, like Cook from England. People always talk about him not scoring runs but he’s still the best that we’ve got in the team.”Faf du Plessis

Usually one of the calmest heads on the field, Amla must have felt some pressure when he walked out in the second innings of that franchise match, seemingly unable to buy a run having been out twice in four balls with murmurs about his decline growing. The set-up was almost identical in the second dig, Amla coming out to bat at first drop after the Malans had once again set things up with a 130-run opening partnership. The proposition was a tricky one, with just nine overs remaining in the day and the shadows lengthening across St. George’s Park when he walked in. For 12 long deliveries he clung to the crease on zero, seeing off a fired-up Lutho Sipamla and a probing Basheeru-Deen Walters before a push through the covers off Jon-Jon Smuts’ left-arm spin got him off what could have been a third – and possibly terminal – successive duck.Amla returned the next morning and laced the second ball he faced through cover point off the back foot with his trademark sprung-coiled grace. The Amla of old was back, and more runs flowed from the drive and the pull as he batted for over three hours for a 61 that pressed home Cobras’ advantage and helped set up a 37-run win. It was an innings played far from the limelight in an empty stadium in a windy city, but it was a vital one for Amla and marked the start of his return to form.His touch was back, but it wasn’t easy. Less than a week later, Amla walked out with South Africa 0 for 1 in a tricky second innings chase under grey skies and Pakistan’s quicks in the midst of a fearsome opening burst. What followed were vital runs in desperate circumstances, Amla’s 63 seeing his team home and sending them 1-0 up to set the tone for the series.
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They were, captain Faf du Plessis confirmed, “very important” runs for both Amla and South Africa. “It’s very important for Hash as well, I think, not just in red ball cricket,” du Plessis said. “It’s important for him to score some runs and just relax a bit. Because runs is runs, whether it’s white ball or red ball. Hopefully it will be a good stepping stone for him in a big season for us.”It was. After a quiet Newlands Test, Amla was at it again at the Wanderers, blunting Pakistan’s attack from No. 3 and contributing vital runs to the cause in the second innings with his 71. Du Plessis had called Amla “our rock at number three” ahead of the series, and now the old veteran was once again adding substance to those words with runs in conditions purpose-suited to seam bowling, against the venom of Mohammad Amir and Shaheen Shah Afridi.Now he seems to have turned a corner and in that regard any concerns du Plessis may have had about his team’s elder statesman’s form have been answered. Not that du Plessis had concerns to begin with, he insisted.”No, not as yet,” he said. “In my mind, Hash is, I suppose, like Cook from England. People always talk about him not scoring runs but he’s still the best that we’ve got in the team. So yeah, certainly not even close to my mind. If it was possibly another season where Hash would have struggled then maybe next season I would have said something different, but not this season, no.”As if to remind everyone, if it was necessary, of how successful his career has been, Amla added another ODI milestone to his name with a 27th hundred in the format in the first ODI against Pakistan – the quickest ever, in terms of innings, to the mark, beating Virat Kohli’s record by two innings.Hashim Amla uses the pace to help one behind square•Getty ImagesA little of the gloss is taken off that particular ton by its circumstances, South Africa having pulled up short to register a dissonant 266 for 2, which appeared a scoreline from another age and indeed was the lowest ODI total for a side batting first and only losing two wickets since 1992. His knock, 108* off 120 balls, was in danger of making Amla look similarly anachronistic, and though he registered another fifty three innings later in the series, that likewise came in a match South Africa lost.It’s not the way he usually does things: 24 of his 27 ODI tons have come in South African wins, and his average when South Africa triumph in ODIs shoots up from a shade under 50 to 63.20.Those are the sorts of returns South Africa will need from Amla if they are make a serious attempt at World Cup glory in three and a half months’ time. That tournament will likely be the swansong of what has been an outstanding career, and Amla’s performances during Pakistan’s tour revealed, as Mark Nicholas put it, “both the influence of Father Time and a deep-rooted determination to overcome him.”Once he hit the summit, little has changed about Amla’s game over the years. While his methods are once again bearing dividends, questions in the media are somewhat inevitable at this stage when things don’t quite fall into place. Amla is simply of that age now, and time is running out on him as, ultimately, it runs out on all of us.His runs against Pakistan will help. Any more dropped catches will not. Amla missed chances in the slips in both the Test and ODI series, and while a player dropping a catch is not necessarily a sign of anything other than a momentary lapse of concentration or execution, Amla is of a vintage where such lapses raise a flag.”How do you want me to answer that?” asked his coach Ottis Gibson, when asked if the chances Amla has missed recently have caused him any worries. “It’s not a concern. People drop catches all the time. It happens in cricket. He didn’t go out there with the intention of dropping it. It just happens.”Players get older, powers wane and people retire. That also just happens. But for the runs he has scored this season, for his 18,418 international runs across formats, for his contribution as one half of the most prolific South African ODI batting pair in history, for his record in England (where he averages 56.73 in ODIs), Amla is a vital part of South Africa World Cup plans. How he performs at that tournament, and where he goes from there, will be down to is his will to succeed and his willingness to keep testing his own greatness.

Talking Points – Were RCB too fixated on the left-right combination?

With Parthiv Patel at the crease, they promoted Akshdeep Nath and Marcus Stoinis above the in-form Moeen Ali. Was it a wise decision?

Karthik Krishnaswamy21-Apr-2019Over the last few weeks, multiple teams have been guilty of not giving their most dangerous hitters enough time in the middle. Andre Russell spoke of this on Friday, after coming in at No. 6 against Royal Challengers Bangalore when Kolkata Knight Riders needed 135 to win off 49 balls. Russell’s 25-ball 65 nearly won the match from that impossible position, but he himself felt his team might have actually crossed the line if he had walked in earlier.In today’s afternoon match, Knight Riders were probably guilty once again of waiting too long to unleash Russell against Sunrisers Hyderabad. Knight Riders were batting first, and had already consumed 15.3 overs when Russell came in at No. 7. Sunrisers eventually raced past their target of 160 with five full overs to spare.Royal Challengers may have made the same mistake in the evening game against Chennai Super Kings. Their most in-form hitter was Moeen Ali, who had made 50 off 32 and 66 off 28 in his last two innings, both times batting at No. 4. Today, however, they sent in Moeen at No. 6, when they only had 4.2 overs left in their innings.ESPNcricinfo LtdOne reason for this may have been the fact that Parthiv Patel was at the crease when Royal Challengers lost their second and third wickets. They sent in right-handers Akshdeep Nath and Marcus Stoinis at Nos. 4 and 5, suggesting that they wanted to maintain a left-right combination in the middle.But Parthiv’s presence was enough reason for Royal Challengers to send in their most dangerous, in-form hitter.Parthiv has been a pretty handy batsman in the Powerplay overs of late – his strike rate in that phase since the 2017 IPL season is 142.42. But he has shown a clear tendency to slow down after the field restrictions are relaxed. Since the 2017 season, he has the second-worst strike rate in the post-Powerplay overs among all batsmen in the IPL who have faced 150 or more balls in that phase.ESPNcricinfo LtdAs it happened, Parthiv scored quicker than usual from the seventh over onwards, scoring 37 off 26 (SR of 142.31) in that period to finish with 53 off 37 balls. But his partnerships with Nath and Stoinis came at a manageable rate for Super Kings, who wouldn’t have been too unhappy giving away a combined 66 off 53 balls to the third- and fourth-wicket pairs.Moeen eventually came in with no time to get his eye in, and still made 26 off 16 balls. Did his late entry prevent Royal Challengers from posting a substantially bigger total than 161?Hello, Dale Steyn. Bye bye, new-ball worriesESPNcricinfo LtdIn their first eight matches this season, Royal Challengers took all of three wickets in the Powerplay overs. That’s three wickets in 48 overs. Before today, their bowlers averaged a whopping 144.33 in the Powerplay this season.In their next two matches, they’ve taken seven Powerplay wickets at an average of 9.85.Ten matches isn’t a massive sample size, nor is 60 overs, and this sort of statistical swing isn’t uncommon – think of a team losing only one wicket in the first 40 overs of an ODI, and five in the last 10 overs – so we can’t read a great deal of cause-and-effect into these numbers. But Royal Challengers’ sudden increase in new-ball potency, statistically significant or not, coincides with the arrival of a handy new-ball operator, Dale Steyn.In these last two matches – his first since joining Royal Challengers as a mid-season replacement for Nathan Coulter-Nile – Steyn has bowled six Powerplay overs, taking four wickets at an average of 9.50. Against Super Kings, he took two first-over wickets, off successive balls: Shane Watson nicking an outswinger to slip, Suresh Raina beaten comprehensively by a wicked first-ball yorker.

Chepauk choke: Chennai Super Kings' game plan a throwback to 2011

Super Kings’ performance was a throwback to 2011, when they were invincible at home. Can they repeat it in 2019?

Deivarayan Muthu in Chennai09-Apr-2019The ball grips, turns, and plays more tricks. MS Dhoni is front and centre, marshalling Chennai Super Kings’ spin-heavy attack. There’s no way out for the opposition at fortress Chepauk. It’s 2011 all over again for Super Kings at home.Eight years ago, Super Kings had won eight out of eight games here, including the final against Royal Challengers Bangalore. Now, they’ve won four out of four at Chepauk by straitjacketing batsmen with spin.In 2011, R Ashwin, Shadab Jakati and Suraj Randiv did the job for Dhoni. Super Kings have a more potent spin attack this season, with Imran Tahir, Harbhajan Singh and Ravindra Jadeja leading the way. They’ve been so potent that Kedar Jadhav hasn’t bowled at all this season and Suresh Raina has bowled just one over, in the first match, against Royal Challengers.Last year, Super Kings were ready to let their spinners loose at Chepauk, but the Cauvery river water dispute forced their home matches to shift to Pune, where surfaces tend to aid the faster men more. There have been no such problems this season.They have lost Lungi Ngidi and David Willey altogether and Dwayne Bravo temporarily, but their vintage spin attack has more than made up for their absence, so much so their batting coach Mike Hussey reckoned that the spinners have it in them to bowl at the death.ESPNcricinfo LtdOn a tired Chepauk pitch – the one that was used for the game against Kings XI Punjab on Saturday – Harbhajan, Tahir, and Jadeja smothered Kolkata Knight Riders. This, after Deepak Chahar had carved up the top order. He, too, took pace off the ball and asked to batsmen to manufacture it.Sunil Narine smashes spin and is less comfortable against pace, but Dhoni and Stephen Fleming aren’t big fans of match-ups. More recently, Bravo revealed that Super Kings don’t do team meetings. Dhoni backed Harbhajan with the new ball, and the offspinner delivered with a delightful cocktail of flight, dip, and turn.Harbhajan lobbed one up outside off at 79kph and got it to dip, creating distance between the bat and the pitch of the ball. The turn then drew an outside edge that was snaffled at backward point.Jadeja found bigger turn, beat Dinesh Karthik’s outside edge, and then found it, but the ball dribbled away past first slip. In all, Jadeja give away only nine runs off eight balls to Karthik. So the Knight Riders captain went searching for runs elsewhere and wound up hitting Tahir across the line to short midwicket, where Harbhajan clung on to a sharp catch.Tahir set off on a celebratory run and even whistled looking at the stands, where the fans acknowledged his wristwork as well as his footwork with tumultuous cheers.Soon, 44 for 5 became 47 for 6 when Tahir stormed through the defences of Shubman Gill with a wrong’un. Harbhajan then returned and had Chawla stumped with old-fashioned dip and turn. In the next over, Jadeja added his name in the wickets column when he had Prasidh Krishna chipping a catch to short midwicket. Krishna was the fifth Knight Riders batsmen to be out hitting across the line.All of this was down to the pressure exerted by the spinners from both ends. Tahir, Harbhajan and Jadeja bowled 15 dots each and finished with combined figures of 12-0-53-5. In fact, Tahir could have dismissed Andre Russell on 8 had Harbhajan not misjudged a skier at midwicket. Russell was seemingly troubled by cramps in his left hand, but he rallied to an unbeaten 50 off 44 balls to haul his side past 100.Despite the lapse, there wasn’t any such trouble for Super Kings’ spin trio. If the Chepauk pitch continues to turn big and the spinners continue to expertly exploit it, Super Kings will be invincible here.

England ride their World Cup luck for perfect day that may yet save tomorrow

With nothing less than the future of English cricket at stake, an extraordinary final helped reconnect the masses with the country’s summer sport

Andrew Miller15-Jul-2019Cricket, bloody hellAt cricket clubs up and down the country – most of which endured a peculiar bout of “cricket stopped play” interruptions at about 5pm on an extraordinary Sunday evening – there’s a motto that gets trotted out with wearying familiarity after every duck, every defeat, every jobbing spell of ropey seam-up that contributes to another fabulous waste of a weekend afternoon.”There’s always next week…”And there always is. For cricketers of pretty much any ability, from the local park to St John’s Wood, it’s a fact of this extraordinarily time-consuming sport that there’s always another contest looming in the fixture list – another chance to make up for your day-to-day blunders, to keep coming back for more, to keep dreaming of that one perfect day that will make it all worthwhile.But what happens when there really is no tomorrow? When all your yesterdays have been heaped up into a single turn of pitch-and-toss, and it’s not merely that you know it, you know that everyone who knows you knows it too?ALSO READ: Final tied, Super Over tied, England win on boundariesWelcome to the state of English cricket on the eve of a tournament that simply had to be a success. Welcome to the state of the World Cup final in a contest that simply refused to go quietly into the night.First, the shock and awe. What scenes! What tension! What bedlam! What sustained waves of hope and despair. What triumphs, what disasters … and what on earth were those two imposters doing, time and time again, in the very same passage of play? Ben Stokes’ swipe to the long-on boundary … a six! A catch! A six again as Trent Boult’s footing failed him in the most critical of moments … then Stokes’ extraordinary quirk of fate with three balls remaining, as a scuffed pull to midwicket was trebled in value by a pinball-style deflection off his own desperate, flailing bat.These are the details that will be dissected for years to come. Details that leave poor Jimmy Neesham – mere inches from heroism with first ball and then bat – joking (one assumes…) on Twitter that he wishes he’d taken up baking rather than cricket so that he could die fat and happy at the age of 60. Instead, he is condemned to look back in devastation for the rest of a tortured decade, on a match that simply delivered everything but justice to the vanquished.England players converge on Jos Buttler after he runs out Martin Guptill•Getty ImagesBut after all that disbelief has ebbed away, or hardened in Neesham’s case, like scar tissue, into a less painful reminder of the occasion … for the victors, the sweet relief! The shuddering sense of liberation for England, the hosts and, until this edition of the tournament, the most hopeless of World Cup combatants.Relief on the field, and in the stands. Relief in Trafalgar Square and other public parks around the land, where the masses gathered to be reunited with a summer sport that has forgotten at times in the past 15 years that it belongs to everyone, not just the paying few. And perhaps, most of all, relief in the boardroom at the ECB – roughly in the direction that Neesham’s Super Over six would have been heading had the Mound Stand not got in its way, and where the challenge will now be to make good on an extraordinary day when the sport got unquestionably its biggest break in a generation.For there were two competing narratives squabbling for attention as this summer’s main event bubbled to its crescendo. The desire, heartfelt for the most part, that the finest one-day team ever assembled in this country should end those 44 years of hurt and lift the World Cup at the 12th time of asking. But there was also the imperative – urgent and at times overbearing – that, no matter what happened in the final analysis, those very same players had to put on a show to remember.Well, bingo. Morgan’s men have fulfilled their brief with a heroism to which the mere lifting of a trophy cannot fully do justice. Have you been entertained? How could you not be, in the final for the ages, surely the greatest world title decider that has ever been contested, in any sport and any era?

If England got lucky, the ECB got luckier still … of that there is no doubt – just as they got lucky on this same ground two years ago, when England’s women transformed the horizons of their sport with what, until Sunday, appeared to be the most stunning World Cup final win imaginable. But we may not know quite how lucky they got until Channel 4 releases its viewing figures from its first day of terrestrial TV coverage since the 2005 Ashes …***”Just stop what you’re doing and watch this.””No, really, sod the tennis, and sod your parents’ obsession with the tennis, please watch this.””Please tell me you’re watching this…””Please…?”***

The whole day had been a confluence of circumstance from dawn until dusk. Everything came up roses in the end, but it didn’t half get a bit thorny along the way

That’s not an exact transcript of the texts I exchanged with my wife from about the moment that Stokes and Jos Buttler began to up England’s ante – but it’s a pretty decent approximation, give or take the odd rolling eye emoji (which still don’t translate too well to ESPNcricinfo’s written pages).I’m not proud of coming across as so needy, but in the second decade of the 21st century, being an English cricket lover has long since evolved from casual fandom, to something more akin to Seventh Day Adventism. It’s no longer enough simply to be a believer in the sport’s supreme virtues – those who know its glories have a duty to proselytise at every opportunity, to assume that those who profess no love for the game are merely lost souls waiting to be converted.And lo! Somehow, those prayers were answered in the most extraordinary fluke of timing since Stokes’ bat-deflected four. At almost the exact moment that the World Cup final was sent to a Super Over, a barely less epic Wimbledon final between Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer came to an end after nearly five hours. Suddenly, a wave of adrenalin-fuelled sports-affiliated channel surfers were freed to roam the listings and alight on the most extraordinary climax of an extraordinary sporting day.The whole day had been a confluence of circumstance from dawn until dusk, from the early morning rain that sheeted down the Lord’s slope to be mopped up in a puddle on the Tavern Stand rope, before evaporating into the most glorious of summer days. Everything’s come up roses in the end, but it didn’t half get a bit thorny along the way.For there’s been an undercurrent of angst throughout this World Cup. Of course, cricket is well used to feeling sorry for itself and fearful of its place in the public’s affections, but the helicopter dread has been something else for the past six weeks, like an over-attentive relative by one’s sick-bed. Is there too much rain? (“No.”) Is the format too boring? (“No.”) Have England blown it? (“Nearly, but emphatically no!”) Does anyone care? (“Maybe not as many as you’d hoped, but suddenly, more than you think!”)One wonders to what extent the near-suffocating importance of the bigger picture contributed to England’s mid-campaign wobble, when their back-to-back defeats to Sri Lanka and Australia left them staring into the abyss? For even in his moment of ultimate triumph, as he joined Bobby Moore and Martin Johnson in England’s captaincy pantheon, Eoin Morgan found himself using the phrase “participation levels” in only the second answer of his post-match press conference.Think about that for a second. There was barely any time for small-talk, no invitation to expand on the day’s “amazing scenes”, no “cricket, bloody hell”, not even a specific reference to the hero of the hour, Ben Stokes. Just a dry-as-toast but achingly valid enquiry as to the health of a sport that has been desperate for attention for a generation, and has now – thanks to his team’s efforts – captured the front and back pages of every newspaper in the land.

The enduring pity of this summer’s World Cup is that it never had the chance to be the shared occasion that the 2005 Ashes was

That was the World Cup final that soared – a game which started, dare we admit it, with England assuming they’d lucked out on a more pliant opponent than India or Australia would have proved to be, and with the World Cup organisers no doubt ruing the absence of a bigger name to share top billing. But those expectations were swiftly confounded. Suddenly, there were no more tomorrows. All the planning, and plotting, and praying came down to a question of human frailties in the clutch moments – as two nations held their breath.But what would it have meant for England to fall at the last, to have dribbled out of contention to a chastening 20-run defeat, which seemed entirely plausible in the latter stages of the chase. There’s only one frame of reference that can do the occasion justice, and coincidentally, it came on the very last occasion that cricket in the UK was visible beyond its usual confines of the tried, tested and converted.The final day of the 2005 Ashes at The Oval, of course – then as now a coronation waiting to happen, then as now, a collective freeze on the big stage, as England’s top-order was vaporised in a surge of aggression from a pumped-up Antipodean attack.Journalists can be a cynical bunch at the best of times, let alone the worst of them. But I recall vividly the chat inside the press room at lunch that day, as England – level-pegging on first innings, limped to 127 for 5, with two sessions of the series yawning before them like the mouths of Avernus.”If we lose this now,” said one seasoned hack, “it’s going to trigger the greatest public outpouring of grief since Princess Diana’s funeral.”Reader. England didn’t fail then, and nor did they now – thanks to a clutch of combatants who are surely about to become cricket’s first household names since Kevin Pietersen and his ilk all those years ago. But would the nation have genuinely mourned a loss on this occasion, or simply shrugged and walked away?Moeen Ali and Adil Rashid with the trophy•Getty ImagesThe enduring pity of this summer’s World Cup is that it never had the chance to be the shared occasion that the 2005 Ashes evolved into being. Those that knew of it enjoyed it, those that did not barely noticed. And those that have just been given the most succulent of tasters may find, just as was the case 15 years, that the very thing that has whet their appetite may be about to be whipped from under their noses.Fifty-over cricket, English cricket’s most obsessive priority for the past four years, is set to be relegated to the undercard from 2020 onwards, as the ECB clears the decks for the advent of The Hundred, and a more structured (if no less partial) return to terrestrial TV. But if two things are abundantly clear from Sunday’s gripping events at Lord’s, it is that cricket in a run-chase scenario is an extraordinarily compelling and accessible version of the sport. And if 12 balls of a Super Over can provide that much drama, there’s obviously scope for 200 to be amply satisfying.But it is also abundantly clear that English cricket just used up a lifetime’s supply of luck to lay claim to its one perfect day, and give itself the impetus with which to make a success of its new beginnings. Please, don’t mess up the legacy of this achievement, or next time, there really will be no more tomorrows.

Manish Pandey shows he is a level above in Vijay Hazare Trophy

It was not just the runs he scored – 525 – but how whenever he was at the crease the opposition wilted

Saurabh Somani26-Oct-2019″I’m sad I didn’t get to bat in the last couple of matches, where I was very eager to bat.” The twinkle in Manish Pandey’s eyes when he said that matched that in his footwork all through this season’s Vijay Hazare Trophy.Pandey is now the captain who has led Karnataka to a major domestic triumph on home ground, a privilege not given to many. He has also been the tournament’s best batsman. There may be four players above him on the run-scorers list – Devdutt Padikkal, Abhinav Mukund, KL Rahul and B Aparajith – but the only real rival he’s had over the past few weeks was Mumbai’s teenage double-centurion Yashasvi Jaiswal. And here’s why.The score Pandey has been dismissed for in the entire tournament was 48. It came against Hyderabad, the only game Karnataka lost in the whole Vijay Hazare Trophy. For a team that boasted a batting line-up of Rahul, Padikkal and Karun Nair besides Pandey, that Hyderabad match showed just how vital their captain was.It was not just the quantum of runs, of which Pandey scored 525 at an average of 105. It was not just his pace of scoring – a tournament strike-rate of 108.02 and 22 sixes, the third highest in the tournament. It was not just that after that Hyderabad game, Pandey ensured he stayed unbeaten in all subsequent chases. It was all this and the ability to look completely the master of the situation every time he batted.Karnataka had Rahul at the top of the order, and though he was coming off a poor tour of West Indies, he was facing bowlers who were a notch lower in pace and quality. Still, he played well within himself, always focused on seeing out the early spells, and opening up only when he was well entrenched. Padikkal was similar in his approach, while Nair – who had begun the season with a glut of runs in the Duleep Trophy – suddenly found them hard to come by in the Vijay Hazare Trophy.Manish Pandey takes on the short ball•Associated PressSo Karnataka turned to Pandey, who looked like he had more than one shot to every ball most times. His dismissals always came against the run of play. It wasn’t as if the bowlers had built up pressure, or started troubling him. When he stayed the course, as he did against Chhattisgarh in the league stages after coming in at 25 for 2 in eight overs, he ended up with 142* off 118 balls that completely shut the opposition out. He looked, in short, like a batsman who belonged to a higher level than the one he was playing at.”It was a good season for me,” Pandey said. “I thought, batting at No.4, I had to be there at the end, taking that extra responsibility for the team’s cause.”That Pandey can do it at the highest level, against tough opposition is not in doubt. His stunning century at Sydney in early 2016 to salvage a win for India was evidence of his batting chops. His ‘one step forwards, two steps back’ international career is more a product of bad luck combined with bad timing than a reflection of his skills.So perhaps he can take inspiration from his team-mate, who flew down specially to take part in the semi-final and final of the Vijay Hazare Trophy. That Pandey didn’t get to bat in those two games was also down to how well Mayank Agarwal played. In the semi-final against Chhattisgarh, he sauntered to 47 not out in 33 balls, almost casually dismantling the bowling attack. In the final, he was even better. A century seemed there for the taking, but rain meant he had to be content with 69* off 55, an innings that was almost exclusively composed of stunning shots one after another.”Oh look, when an Indian cricketer who has done so well against a nation like South Africa… and he’s played the top bowlers, he comes and plays at this level, obviously it looks far more easy than what actually is happening,” Tamil Nadu captain Dinesh Karthik said about Agarwal’s knock. “You can plan (for the batsman), but at the end of the day you’ve got to give credit where it’s due. He kept us at bay with whatever we could try and throw at him, and made sure he had answers for it.”Karthik could have well been describing any of Pandey’s innings through the tournament. Now all that remains for Pandey is to replicate how Agarwal has transitioned domestic dominance into sustained international success.

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