Phillies Fans Boo Closer Jhoan Duran’s Cinematic Entrance With Team Down Three Runs

Phillies fans weren't having it after watching their team get dominated by the Dodgers for two games of the National League Division Series.

On Monday night, Philadelphia fell to Los Angeles 4-3 after losing Game 1 by a score of 5-3 on Saturday. Things got so bad for the Philly faithful that they actually booed their own closer.

The Phillies trailed the Dodgers 4-1 entering the top of the ninth inning, and Jhoan Duran came out to his closer entrance, which features the stadium lights going off, flames, etc. It’s an entrance that exudes confidence and a sense of inevitability when Duran is entering a game with the lead and looking to close out a win. When his job is “keep the deficit to three runs,” the pyro is far less endearing.

The team's fans were not impressed or enthused, and booed as he entered the game.

Video is below.

That's rough.

Duran did his job. He allowed a double and a walk, but got out of the frame without allowing a run.

Philadelphia mounted a ninth-inning comeback, as Alec Bohm singled to lead off the inning, then J.T. Realmuto and Nick Castellanos followed with doubles to cut L.A.'s lead to 4-3.

Phillies manager Rob Thomson then called for Bryson Stott to bunt Castellanos over, but the veteran outfielder was thrown out going to third. Harrison Bader followed with a single, but Max Kepler and Trea Turner authored back-to-back groundouts to end the game with the tying and go-ahead runs on base.

One of MLB's best home-field advantages has now been squandered. The Phillies were 55-26 at home this season, and they lost the first two NLDS games in their own park. Now they'll have to win each of the next three games to advance. That's a tall order when facing the defending World Series champs.

Man vs. Wind? Cal Raleigh's Historic Home Run Pursuit Hindered by Nature

In the midst of what could amount to the greatest power-hitting season by a catcher in baseball history, Mariners backstop Cal Raleigh leads all of MLB with 46 home runs. He's just two homers away from tying the single-season record for the most long balls by a catcher in baseball history—and eight shy of tying the record for the most belted by a switch-hitter in a single campaign.

And yet, as difficult as it is to believe, Raleigh could have even more home runs this season were it not for one all-too-familiar obstacle that has altered the fates of many tasks: weather.

Raleigh has had seven home runs prevented by wind, including an eighth-inning double in Friday's 11-9 win over the Mets, according to Sarah Langs of MLB.com. Not only does he lead the majors in homers, he also leads the majors in would-be homers if not for the wind.

If you're thinking, The answer is yes. Since 2023, Statcast's wealth of technology has included Weather Applied Metrics, which has provided the capability of measuring the effects of wind in-game.

If not for wind, Raleigh would have already broken the catcher record, and would have been just two homers shy of clearing Mickey Mantle's mark for the most home runs hit by a switch-hitter in a season, 54, set in 1961.

As it stands, Raleigh is well on his way to at least owning the greatest slugging season by a catcher, as he still has 39 games remaining in the regular season to swing for the fences.

And hope the wind, which has been especially unkind to him, isn't blowing.

Phillies President Makes Feelings on Bryce Harper Trade Rumors Perfectly Clear

Bryce Harper just wrapped his seventh season with the Phillies and 14th MLB season overall, hitting .261/.357/.487 with 27 home runs and 75 RBIs. It was a strong season, but his 3.2 WAR was his lowest mark for a year in which he played at least 100 games since 2018.

It is reasonable to believe that Harper is on the downswing of his career, but even so, it was surprising to hear Phillies president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski appear to indicate that he no longer believes that Harper is an "elite" player.

"In Bryce's case, of course he's still a quality player. He's still an All-Star caliber player. He didn't have an elite season like he has had in the past," said Dombrowski last Thursday. "I guess we only find out if he becomes elite [again] or he continues to be good. You look around the league, you try to think Freddie Freeman. He's a really good player, he still is a good player. Is he elite like he was before? Probably not to the same extent so that's nothing negative. Freddie's still a tremendous player. That to me is Bryce."

Dombrowski's comments made waves within the world of Philly sports, even helping give rise to some rumors that Philadelphia could look to move the two-time National League MVP. Appearing on , he sought to clarify his Harper comments, while shooting down the bourgeoning trade rumors before they break contain.

"First of all, to me, Bryce Harper's one of the best players in the game of baseball. They asked me, 'What type of year do you think he had?' And I said, 'He had a very good year, I don't think he had an elite year.' And when I say that, when I think of Bryce Harper, it's a compliment, because the reality is there are eight, 10 players in the game of baseball every year, when they're not in the MVP consideration… it's not an elite year for them.

"So the reality is, he's a great player, he's a future Hall of Famer. … Now I've been reading that, . That couldn't be farther from the truth. We love him, we think he's a great player, he's a very important part of our team. I've seen him have better years.”

Dombrowski went on to riff about comments that Phillies legend Mike Schmidt made on the podcast about another of the team's 32-year-old stars, Kyle Schwarber, and the importance for players of that age to keep up a strong training regimen through the offseason. Dombrowski says he has no doubts that Harper will be one of the players who will age gracefully because of his talent and work ethic.

"I'll take my chances with Bryce more than most, because Bryce is an elite talent… I think it's a shame where this has gone. It wasn't meant to be a criticism."

Harper just crossed the midway point of the mammoth 13-year, $330 million deal he signed with Philadelphia, and is still owed nearly $153 million through 2031. Removing the human element from it, if the Phillies believe they'll get diminishing returns from Harper as he enters his mid-30s, it makes sense for them to consider a trade. It doesn't sound as if Dombrowski is near that point yet, however, despite how it may have sounded a week ago.

Ian Gould: 'Modern umpires have thrown away their egos because they understand DRS'

The former international umpire looks back at his career: the Ajmal lbw decision in the 2011 World Cup, two ball-tampering scandals, watching Steyn v Tendulkar, and more

Interview by Alan Gardner30-May-2020Ian Gould retired from the ICC’s panel of elite umpires in 2019, after standing in more than 250 international matches over a 13-year career. He has since written a book, My Life in Cricket, covering his time as a player for Middlesex, Sussex and England, his subsequent spell as a coach, and then the switch to umpiring. While on one of his regular walks along Hove seafront, he spoke about his experiences as an umpire, the importance of building relationships along the way, and his hopes for the season to come.You were set to be returning as an umpire on the county circuit this summer – but that must all be up in the air now?
I love umpiring. I really enjoy it and I owe it to the ECB because I’ve had 13-14 years swanning around the world and they’ve been looking after me. So I felt I deserved to come back and show my mettle that I want to carry on. Because whatever people talk about the Hundred, over the years I’ve been in the game, I’ve seen the 60-over game, the 50-over game, the 40-over game, and I remember doing the first T20 game at Bristol, and everyone said, “Well, this is just pub cricket.” Now we look back on that. It’s moved on very, very quickly.I was actually really looking forward to it [the Hundred] and I feel very sorry for the boys at the ECB that took some flak leading up to it. Now it’s wait until next year, but I’m sure it will take off.But you’re still keen to continue?
Oh yeah, without a doubt. I finished [as an international umpire] on July 6 and there was a big come-down. But then I went back to county cricket in the first week of August and I thought, hang on, I really do love this job and I really love the people involved in it. And it got me going again, so I’m not going to be sitting on me backside. I’m preparing for some cricket in late July. Whether that happens or not is two different matters.ALSO READ: Ian ‘Gunner’ Gould whistles his way into the sunsetDue to the Covid-19 situation, the ICC has signalled a “short-term” move to using local umpires in international cricket. Does that mean you could make a comeback, if the ECB succeeds in its plan to stage matches?
We’ve been warned it could happen. I think they’ll be looking at younger people than me. But I’d love to do that again. It was a proper stage and I thoroughly enjoyed it.But we’ve got a great group coming through. We’ve got the four boys [from England] at the elites – been strengthened now by Michael Gough replacing me. Michael is just going through the roof with his umpiring, and so are the other boys. Richard Illingworth, umpire of the year, Richard Kettleborough, three-times winner, Nigel Llong, very steady. I think they have appointed Martin Saggers, David Millns and Michael Burns, so if we do play any international cricket here, the game’s in real good hands.

“Umpires are not going to catch players [tampering with the ball]. Unless you do it right in front of my face, I’m not going to catch you. But cameramen will catch you”

In your book, you say that increased use of technology might lead to the end of neutral umpires. Do you think the ICC should look to make this a permanent change?
I have started to believe, probably in my last two years, that it might go down that road. Though I think the players would like it to stay neutral – that when everyone can travel again, we go back to where it was.I was lucky enough to go to the Under-19 World Cup this year, and I saw some outstanding umpires coming through. That was also at the same time as the Women’s T20 World Cup, so there’s another group of 12 there. The only difference will be that the guys that are here now have had 60-70 Test matches. Some of those other guys have maybe done two Test matches and 20 ODIs. But quite a number of those do the IPL with 80,000 screaming at you.I don’t think it’ll be a major problem, but the way the players are talking, from what I understand, they want to go back to how it was. I think there’s a fear factor. [The players] don’t know these other guys. People are saying there’s not four in South Africa. There are. There’s not four in Bangladesh. There are.I think they are talking now about six Test matches in nine weeks [as part of England’s reworked schedule], plus a few ODIs? So the four elite who are likely to do it, plus the three other lads, are going to have to be in lockdown for probably nine weeks. That is going to turn you stir-crazy.That also seems to be an argument for increasing the pool of eligible umpires.
The other side of it, not even in lockdown, was, we always thought it was a little unfair there was three Aussies and four English on the panel. It left five [who could officiate] when an Ashes series came, which is a massive series. I think three or four of those have done five or six [Ashes] series. Marais Erasmus, Aleem [Dar], Kumar [Dharmasena]. At the end of it, there’s just five of them. That makes it very, very difficult.I think the best umpires should umpire the biggest games. Whether it’s an Englishman at one end, say Richard Kettleborough, and Bruce Oxenford at the other end, or Rob Tucker, whatever way you want… because DRS now is not letting you go. If you’re making a mistake, you’re making a mistake. The only worry I think the boys would have is when you’ve got umpire’s call. You know, you can give an umpire’s call to England if you’re a Pom and not give it to Australia.You don’t want it going back to people saying, oh, this is biased. You can’t have that.Gould, a keeper-batsman, played 18 ODIs for England. Here, he bats against New South Wales in a tour game in 1982-83•Stuart William Macgladrie/Fairfax Media/Getty ImagesYou’ve written about the episode of burnout you suffered in 2016, in part due to the amount of travel and time away from home. Is that something the ICC should be taking into account?
I think it is. It was a very difficult time for me, and I pray that I don’t see [it happen to] anybody, but I do believe there’s been one or two that have not been their normal self. And there’s always this fear of [showing] weakness – “You shouldn’t be talking about this.”I’m listening to young Dominic Bess now. He’s a very bright, nice kid. And he’s openly saying: don’t have a fear of talking to people. If I bump into someone now, I say, “Are you are you okay? Look, mate, I’ve got an hour. Come on, let’s chat it out.” Whereas a year ago, I don’t think I would have said that.Putting your passport in the fridge after returning home was a sign to you that something was wrong. But how long did it take to confront the issue and talk about it?
Six weeks, eight weeks, maybe longer. Once I got on the field, I was integrated with some great players and really fantastic people. But it’s when you went back to your hotel room and you just thought, “Well, what am I doing?” Or a car comes to pick you up to take you to the airport. “Why am I doing this?'”ALSO READ: Which umpire fares the best when reviewed by DRS?I was going for a trip to the West Indies. St Lucia, Barbados, and somewhere else, somewhere beautiful. And I didn’t want to go. I’m looking at myself: “What you thinking here, Ian, you’ve got six weeks in the Caribbean. In February, when it’s freezing in London.” I didn’t want to do it. But once I got on that flight and got there, it was a different story.I was walking down through Hove and I was jumping into shops to avoid people. I didn’t want to hold a conversation because I knew someone would look at me and go, “What’s your problem?”I listened to Marcus Trescothick on a podcast talking about it. I spoke to Michael Yardy about it. Suddenly I was talking to people about it, and it was like, well, that’s me. The awareness now is much greater. We’re lucky that we have the ECB, who were outstanding when I sort of blurted it out. Chris Kelly [the ECB’s umpires’ manager] was unbelievable. He rang me every other day. Dennis Burns, my coach at the ICC, people that I really trust, just rang me and rang me and talked and talked, recommended books I should read and told me to stop drinking like a lunatic.

“I think the best umpires should umpire the biggest games, because DRS now is not letting you go. If you’re making a mistake, you’re making a mistake”

On the subject of scrapping neutral umpires, you would presumably have loved to umpire an Ashes Test?
I was speaking to Richard Kettleborough about it. Richard’s very quiet about things, but when we started talking, you could hear that little bit of joy in his voice. You could almost hear his mind ticking. “Well, how great would that be?” Immense amount of pressure, but he can turn around and say, “Look, I umpired a Test against Australia at Lord’s” – or Birmingham, or wherever.We’re lucky because we’ve got so much county cricket to gain experience, and that’s the biggest thing within the group now at ECB and international, is habit. England, April 1, the season starts and you just get in that routine.What do you think about adding an extra review, to deal with concerns from players about neutrality?
I don’t see any harm in it. I don’t think it’s going to make any difference. I think people now go along to watch Test cricket and they are waiting for a review to come – it’s a highlight of the day. People are putting pints down. I went last year to watch a game and there was a review. I even put my own pint down and watched the big screen. It’s now part of the game.What did you think the decision was going to be?
I got it wrong. I said it was out. It was missing by a foot. It was one of those things.Did you ever read what people wrote about your performances as an umpire?
I know one or two would read it, but I certainly didn’t. The daftest thing I ever did was write a book, because I didn’t like talking about cricket! There’s enough people around who text you or say, “You’d better go and have a check on Cricinfo.” But I’ve never minded journalists. All I’ve ever said is, say the truth and make it not personal.There’s some brilliant people around writing at the moment and some of it is very, very interesting to read. Some of the stuff – and I’ve been in the game for 40-odd years – some of it I didn’t even think of, and I think that’s well worth reading. But talk to the mental-health people and they say, “Don’t just read it when you’ve had a good day. You’ve got to read it when you’ve had a bad day too.”If you’re an international umpire, the one thing that’s going to tell you one way or the other is a 90ft screen at every ground. You’ve got to put your ego away. And I think this group of modern umpires have thrown it away because they understand DRS. They understand the one that just flicks the glove they’re never going to see. But if [the additional review] makes the game a better place, well, so be it.”You could walk into a restaurant and sit and chat with Kohli for hours. When you look at Virat, you’re thinking male model, pin-up boy, but he knows about the game, the past, history – lovely guy”•Cameron Spencer/Getty ImagesYou write in your book that you were “pretty hostile” towards DRS at the start.
Oh yeah, I kicked the stumps over in a West Indies-Zimbabwe game. Both teams had walked off the field. Straight ball by Dwayne Bravo, hit [Chris] Mpofu on the foot, he’s turned round, limped off. Everyone’s gone back. I’m standing there with my partner. There’s a review just because they had one left. We had to bring them all back.That was in the old days. Talking to Paul Hawkins [inventor of Hawk-Eye] about it – some of the things then weren’t as good as they are now. You can watch it now and there’ll be the odd one you go, “Hmm, wasn’t sure about that”, but a high percentage of it is spot on. I remember being told, “HotSpot can’t work because it’s too sunny, too hot.” What do you mean by that? But that was back in the dark ages. Now you don’t get any of that.Speaking of technology at the outset of DRS: your decision to give Sachin Tendulkar out lbw to Saeed Ajmal during the 2011 World Cup semi-final – subsequently overturned on review – is still subject of debate today.
Don’t go down that road. I get teased about that. People send me pictures of my reaction after I was told in my ear by Billy Bowden that it was missing leg stump. It makes me laugh. It didn’t make me laugh at the time, I can assure you. But I’d give it out again with my back to the wall. It was dead. I don’t know what happened.ALSO READ: Are umpires giving more lbws now than they did before the DRS?Given the level of support they attract, were India the hardest team to officiate?
It’s intimidating. Not the players. The players are outstanding people. I’ve done seven, eight India-Pakistan games and the guys are real good people. They get on with each other. If you allow a crowd to get to you, all that noise and Mexican waves, or whatever, can distract you. Then you start missing bits and pieces and it’s a difficult place to be. But, you know, a couple of lads, last year or two years ago, did Bangladesh-Sri Lanka and there wasn’t one seamer picked in both sides. That would have been pretty difficult.You write that turning pitches were the hardest to umpire on. Did you have to learn to pick spinners’ variations too?
Yeah, you just went to the nets. I think some of the younger generation are missing out on that. They don’t want to go to nets. One good thing about the four English guys is, they go as routine. We’ve always done that and it’s been brilliant. Suddenly there’s a guy making his debut. If you don’t go to the nets, you’re never going to have seen him, so you’re now guessing. I just think it’s a big part of being professional. It’s something we’ve learned from David Constant, David Shepherd, Peter Willey. They set such a high standard. We didn’t want to fall away.

” I’m looking at myself: ‘What you thinking here, Ian, you’ve got six weeks in the Caribbean, in February, when it’s freezing in London.’ I didn’t want to do it”Gould on struggling with mental-health issues

What were the hardest decisions to call on the field?
Left-arm over, pitching outside leg stump. Those are the ones you’ve got to try and get right. You had people like Mitchell Starc – if it was his day, it started off stump and swung – whoa, you knew you were in business. But then when he didn’t quite get his action right, you weren’t sure whether it pitched on or not. Same with Mitchell Johnson.Probably one of the most difficult is the legspinner in the subcontinent where it has pitched in line. But once you got used to Hawk-Eye, with seamers, you knew that with a certain part of the pad, it should be going over the top of the stumps.The ball pitching outside is probably the most disappointing, and the legspinner over the wicket to a right-hander. Has that pitched leg stump? Has it spun too much? Those are the ones that are difficult. If it clips the glove, you’ve got no chance. That’s not a problem. But once you see the ball-tracking on the 90ft screen and it pitches outside, that’s a little hard to take.Did umpires have to change the way they assessed lbw appeals after DRS came in?
Yeah, your mindset changed completely. And you go the other way also, thinking, don’t forget [the stumps] are only nine inches wide and you’ve got umpire’s call on leg stump. There’s probably times you’d give that out in the old days, but you say “not out” now. Come on, Hawk-Eye, prove me right. The standard rate of umpiring under DRS is in the 90s. That is phenomenal. If you went to a racetrack and got 90% of winners, you’d be doing handstands.You write about the importance of relationships with players. Did that come from experience?
If I walk into a pub, someone says hello to me, I say hello back. Don’t turn your back on them. I think that’s crept into the game where maybe one or two umpires are a little bit unsure of a player. The English guys, we go to the nets, we talk, we practise. I was obviously louder and more boisterous than the other three, but people knew who I was, they knew they could go and have a laugh and it would get to a certain level. But they knew when it went past that level, I would come down on them like a ton of bricks. Some very “nice” things were said about me afterwards and that shocked me a little bit, because all I was doing was my job.Virat Kohli was one you often shared a laugh with.
He’s a funny man. Yeah, he batted like me a couple of times. I had to tell him off for slogging it. He’s a charmer. He’s one of those guys who’s got, a bit like Sachin Tendulkar, the whole of India on his back, but you wouldn’t know. You could walk into a restaurant and sit and chat with him for hours. He’s a very worldly boy. When you look at Virat, you’re thinking male model, pin-up boy, but he knows about the game inside out, the past, history. Lovely guy.”The standard rate of umpiring under DRS is in the 90s. That is phenomenal. If you went to a racetrack and got 90% of winners, you’d be doing handstands”•Ryan Pierse/Getty ImagesHe had his run-ins with authority in the past.
I can see why. But he’s learned to be respectful. He could have continued his career like that and people could be talking totally the opposite about Virat. He’s a nice man and the India boys are very, very good people, very respectful.You were the third umpire in Cape Town in 2018 and have said that Australia had gotten out of control in the lead up to the sandpaper episode. What was wrong with their general behaviour?
Laddish. Jack the lads they were. Now they are a completely different team. It’s probably the greatest thing that happened to them. You know, they were going through these pay talks. That would have been grinding people down. But there was only a few of them that were getting a bit hostile and in your face. I have spoken to some of the players and they probably didn’t see it, like me with my mental illness. But if there’s a few of you doing the same things, part of you thinks, “Well, that’s all right.” It just got out of hand.ALSO READ: Umpire suspicions about Australia led to Newlands stingHad you seen anything like players bringing sandpaper on to the field before?
No, not even in my social life. Not even someone stealing food from the tuck shop. I’d love to meet Cameron [Bancroft] again. Justin Langer is good friend of mine. He’s a great bloke, and he says, you’ve just got to meet this kid. I met him for about five minutes [at Newlands]. It was horrible for him. But I’d just like to sit opposite him and have a beer and talk it through. Because he’s got a great story. But I think he won’t be saying it until his career’s finished.A few weeks later in the Caribbean, you were on the scene of another ball-tampering controversy. Dinesh Chandimal denied a charge of altering the condition of the ball – but was later found guilty – and his team refused to take the field on the third morning of the Test. Why did that incident blow up in the way it did?
St Lucia. It was crazy. We tried asking the question. The thing was, Javagal Srinath, a brilliant man and very good referee, spoke to both teams before, concerning what happened in South Africa. Umpires are not going to catch players. Unless you do it right in front of my face, I’m not going to catch you. I’ve said this a million times and people look at me stupidly. But cameramen will catch you, so if you think you’re not going to get caught, I can guarantee you are going to get caught, because one camera will be designated to watch where that ball’s going all the time. I didn’t get why Sri Lanka were so hostile.

“Umpiring is now a young man’s sport. The players are expecting a lot more of you, to be a lot fitter”

You say in the book that Sri Lanka “got away lightly” and that you would have abandoned the Test and awarded it to West Indies.
They disrupted two and a half hours of international cricket. If everybody looked back on that, then I think there would be different decisions made. But that’s life. Those were the decisions made, those sanctions [a one-match ban for Chandimal] were in place at the time. I still can’t get my head around why they were so hostile. The manager and the coach were as hostile as I can remember. Dinesh Chandimal I knew reasonably well, but they started to say he doesn’t speak good English. Well, we did well not to giggle because we’d just listened to a post-match interview that he’d done in broad, fantastic English. I just think that if we went back on that, a lot of things would have been done differently.One other high-profile umpiring incident of recent times came during the World Cup final, when Ben Stokes deflected Martin Guptill’s throw to the boundary and was awarded six runs. Did you know the exact wording of the law on overthrows?
I’d be lying to say that I knew that. I had no idea. I know about the law, but the problem is that you’re looking at getting into position for prospective run-outs. Rod Tucker was third umpire and I don’t think he would have had enough time to be thinking that way. Thank god I wasn’t there. I was sitting on Brighton beach watching it. It all blew up later in the evening. Just some clever clogs went through a law book and it all came out.I think it was unfair. At the end of it, it’s going to be hard work trying to sort that all out. It’s split-second, and it’s a World Cup final as well. I should imagine the fourth umpire was scrambling around trying to find the balls that would be bowled [in the Super Over]. I can only imagine it.That World Cup was your last involvement as an international umpire. Do you miss it?
I miss the buzz. God, I miss the buzz. It was great fun. I just met some fantastic people, and I was so, so damn lucky to meet these people, and they were so kind, I’m just very grateful.Since you were in possession of the best seat in the house, who were the three best batsmen to watch during your time?
Jacques Kallis. I loved watching Jacques. He was a very, very fine player. Sachin. And probably Virat. I was unlucky in some respects. I didn’t see the best of Ricky Ponting. He was an outstanding character, outstanding captain, such a proud Australian. But his career was just starting to wane as I came on the scene. But he was incredibly helpful, so I’m disappointed I have to leave him out. Jacques Kallis, I could sit and watch all day, Virat, the same. And Sachin, if you want someone to bat for your life, he was the man.Within the space of three months in 2018, Gould was involved in two Tests that were overshadowed by ball-tampering incidents, in Cape Town by Australia and in St Lucia by Sri Lanka•Randy Brooks/AFP/Getty ImagesAnd bowlers?
Mitchell Starc on his day. Mitchell Johnson on his day. He bowled some very, very quick balls. And probably the one who gave me the biggest heart attack throughout my years – Saeed Ajmal. Lovely man, but he bowled all sorts of balls. On wickets that spun – I think Saeed would tell you he wasn’t the biggest spinner of a ball, but when you could get it going both ways, that’s tough. So Saeed, yeah, he was a very fine bowler, very clever bowler.What was the best batsman-bowler duel that you stood for?
Steyn versus Tendulkar, Cape Town. That was fierce but fair. That was as good as it got. I was stood there with a brilliant umpire, Simon Taufel, and the two of us came off and said, “Wow, we’d pay for that.” Dale bowled very quickly and Sachin just had the railway sleeper in his hand and kept patting it back at him. Fantastic.Is umpiring something you would recommend to younger people take an interest in?
The job’s changed completely. I was talking to someone yesterday, about an old photo of Frank Chester – he had a trilby on, coat down to his ankles, and a pair of brogues. All he needed to do was take off his umpire’s coat, put on a blazer and go straight to the pub. He didn’t need to change.I think the more people get to read books like mine, listen to podcasts with Richard Illingworth and Richard Kettleborough, and what’s written by the press – umpiring’s a very good job now. It can be exciting, exhilarating. I found umpiring, the day went quicker than playing, because you’re always doing something. It is a worthwhile occupation. At the ECB, we’ve got James Tredwell and James Middlesbrook, both ex-players, coming through at the right age. Because it is now a young man’s sport. The players are expecting a lot more of you, to be a lot fitter. It’s not the sort of job [where you can] play county cricket till you’re 42 and think, “Do you know what, I’ll go and do a bit of umpiring.” You’d have missed ten years of fun. On my behalf it’s a must, something that people should really look into.

From Suzie Bates to Laura Wolvaardt – all the WBBL overseas players

A host of leading players from around the world will be in Sydney for the WBBL

Andrew McGlashan14-Oct-2020Suzie Bates (New Zealand/Adelaide Strikers)T20I record: Matches 122; Runs 3301; Avg 30.00; S/R 110.62 | Wickets 50; Avg 25.52; Econ 6.73
WBBL record: Matches 70; Runs 1710; Avg 28.50; S/R 104.07 | Wickets 35; Avg 28.08; Econ 6.83Formed the formidable Smash Sisters pairing at the Strikers with Sophie Devine, but has lost her national team-mate who has moved to the Perth Scorchers. There is some doubt over her fitness heading in the tournament after she picked up a shoulder injury against Australia in BrisbaneTammy Beaumont (England/Sydney Thunder)T20I record: Matches 88; Runs 1382; Avg 22.29; S/R 108.73
WBBL record: Matches 40; Runs 854; Avg 22.47; S/R 95.20The England opener hasn’t quite been able to translate her excellent ODI record into T20 but was the leading scorer in the recent series against West Indies and remains a dangerous option at the top of the order. She has had previous BBL stints with the Strikers and the RenegadesKatherine Brunt (England/Melbourne Stars)T20I record: Matches 87; Runs 493; Avg 17.00; S/R 113.85 | Wickets 89; Avg 19.39; Econ 5.49
WBBL record: Matches 44; Runs 447; Avg 17.88′ S/R 103.47 | Wickets 49; Avg 17.71; Econ 5.15An aggressive seamer and hard-hitting batter, Brunt has been a stalwart of the England side and will be tasked to bring a cutting edge to the Stars attack. She has the best economy rate in WBBL history (5.15) of anyone to have bowled at least 250 deliveries.Nadine de Klerk (South Africa/Brisbane Heat)T20I record: Matches 20; Runs 241; Avg 24.10; S/R 94.50 | Wickets 18; Avg 14.38; Econ 7.06
WBBL record: Yet to playThe bustling seamer made a mark when she came into the South Africa side during the T20 World Cup, claiming 3 for 19 in the semi-final against Australia. She was awarded a national contract shortly after the tournament.Sophie Devine (New Zealand/Perth Scorchers)T20I record: Matches 94; Runs 2447; Avg 30.97; S/R 125.42 | Wickets 91; Avg 17.07; Econ 6.26
WBBL record: Matches 66; Runs 2174; Avg 39.52; S/R 129.40 | Wickets 60; Avg 22.13; Econ 7.12The New Zealand captain has become one of the most dominant players in the format. She is the highest scoring overseas player in WBBL history (behind just Ellyse Perry and Beth Mooney) and was the Player of the Tournament last season. Her switch from the Strikers to Scorchers was one of the biggest off-season moves.Sarah Glenn has emerged as a formidable part of England’s spin attack•Nathan Stirk/Getty ImagesSarah Glenn (England/Perth Scorchers)T20I record: Matches 15; Wickets 22; Avg 12.63; Econ 5.34
WBBL record: Yet to playLegspinner Glenn is among the most promising emerging bowling talents in the game having impressed during the T20 World Cup and last month’s series against West Indies where she was named Player of the Series and was also awarded the PCA Player of the Year title.Maddy Green (New Zealand/Brisbane Heat)T20I record: Matches 51; Runs 385; Avg 11.66; S/R 86.32
WBBL record: Matches 16; Runs 309; Avg 20.60; S/R 112.36Green showed glimpses of her power in the matches against Australia and has also worked on developing her offspin. She could have an important part to play in compensating for the loss of Beth Mooney at the defending championsShabnim Ismail (South Africa/Sydney Thunder)T20I record: Matches 92; Wickets 99; Avg 18.65; Econ 5.73
WBBL record: Matches 15; Wickets 13; Avg 25.23; Econ 6.65Among the fastest bowlers in the world, it was Ismail’s economy that stood out last season as she conceded 5.88 but the Thunder will hope she can add further wicket-taking to the record.Hayley Jensen (New Zealand/ Hobart Hurricanes)T20I record: Matches 30; Wickets 24; Avg 24.91; Econ 6.74
WBBL record: Matches 36; Wickets 32; Avg 19.21, Econ 6.55The medium-pacer has joined the Hurricanes, her fourth WBBL club, as a replacement player and won’t immediately be available unless one of the three other overseas signings is injured. She had a good T20 World with three-wicket hauls against Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.Amelia Kerr celebrates a wicket•Getty ImagesAmy Jones (England/Perth Scorchers)T20I record: Matches 54; Runs 776; Avg 19.89; S/R 116.51
WBBL record: Matches 34; Runs 689; Avg 24.60; S/R 114.26Jones, the wicketkeeper-batter, is now in the middle-order for England it may be a role she plays for the Scorchers given they also have Mooney and Devine. She struck 55 off 37 balls in the fourth match of the series against West Indies.Marizanne Kapp (South Africa/Sydney Sixers)T20I record: Matches 78; Runs 946; Avg 19.30; S/R 96.23 | Wickets 58; Avg 20.65; Econ 5.42
WBBL record: Matches 70; Runs 637; Avg 18.20; S/R 101.11 | Wickets 77; Avg 17.67; Econ 5.18A fine allrounder, Kapp is the leading overseas wicket-taker in WBBL history after a long association with the Sixers and part of a formidable line-up. She started the T20 World Cup in excellent form but her tournament was curtailed by illness.Amelia Kerr (New Zealand/Brisbane Heat)T20I record: Matches 35; Wickets 37; Avg 19.89; Econ 5.75
WBBL record: Matches 16: Wickets 14; Avg 25.50; Econ 6.22Kerr, the legspinning allrounder, has just turned 20 but has already been around the international scene for four years. She will be a key weapon in the Heat attack and is also a very handy batter in the middle order, who could need to take on more responsibility this season. She took nine wickets across the six recent matches against Australia.Heather Knight (England/Sydney Thunder)T20I record: Matches 79; Runs 1256; Avg 22.83; S/R 119.96 | Wickets 20; Avg 25.00; Econ 5.71
WBBL record: Matches 55; Runs 1353; Avg 26.52; S/R 107.63 | Wickets 39; Avg 27.27; Econ 6.92The England captain, who has moved from the Hurricanes to the Thunder, has taken her T20 batting to a new level this year with 486 runs at 40.50 and a strike-rate of 135.75 which included a maiden century against Thailand in the T20 World Cup.Lizelle Lee’s power game will now be utilised by the Renegades•Getty ImagesLizelle Lee (South Africa/Melbourne Renegades)T20I record: Matches 74; Runs 1664; Avg 25.21; S/R 109.47
WBBL record: Matches 40; Runs 1100; Avg 29.72; S/R 125.57A thunderous striker of the ball, Lee has crossed town from the Stars to the Renegades and will be tasked with making the most of the Powerplay. In consecutive seasons she has produced the first century of the competition: 102 off 56 balls against the Sixers in 2018-19 and 103 off 65 balls against the Scorchers last summer.Hayley Matthews (West Indies/Hobart Hurricanes)T20I record: Matches 55; Runs 986; Avg 18.60; S/R 105.68 | Wickets 51; Avg 18.00; Econ 6.00
WBBL record: Matches 43; Runs 737; Avg 18.42; S/R 99.46 | Wickets 28; Avg 25.71; Econ 6.84Matthews will be looking to revive her credentials as one of the finest young players around after a lean run in T20Is where her top score in the last 14 innings is 23. Her talent suggests she should be averaging much better than 18Rachel Priest (New Zealand/Hobart Hurricanes)T20I record: Matches 75; Runs 873; Avg 16.77; S/R 104.42
WBBL record: Matches 69; Runs 1410; Avg 21.04; S/R 116.14After retiring from international cricket, wicketkeeper-batter Priest has set up her cricket base in Tasmania after previous WBBL spells with the Renegades and the Thunder. She will carry significant responsibility in what shapes as a potentially light Hurricanes top order.Amy Satterthwaite (New Zealand/Melbourne Renegades)T20I record: Matches 102; Runs 1595; Avg 21.26; S/R 96.02 | Wickets 24; Avg 22.00; Econ 7.07
WBBL record: Matches 53; Runs 1254; Avg 31.35; S/R 101.29 | Wickets 43; Avg 18.97; Econ 6.51Back as captain of the Renegades after maternity leave, Sattherthwaite will have a vital role at the top of the order which will be without Jess Duffin. She slotted back into international cricket impressively against AustraliaLaura Wolvaardt will be looking to bring these shots to the WBBL•Getty ImagesNat Sciver (England/Melbourne Stars)T20I record: Matches 80; Runs 1535; Avg 25.58; S/R 112.37 | Wickets 52; Avg 19.38; Econ 6.35
WBBL record: Matches 52; Runs 952; Avg 24.41; S/R 112.52 | Wickets 36; Avg 27.66; Econ 6.90A formidable allrounder, Sciver – one of the few players to have a shot named after them – joins team-mate Brunt at the Stars and is capable of match-changing performances with bat and ball. She had an outstanding T20 World Cup and made 82 off 61 balls against West Indies last monthLea Tahuhu (New Zealand/Melbourne Renegades)T20I record: Matches 60; Wickets 52; Avg 21.09; Econ 5.97
WBBL record: Matches 56; Wickets 49; Avg 24.61; Econ 5.96Continues to vie to be the fastest bowler in the game, Tahuhu is another injury concern heading into the tournament have suffering a back strain in the ODI series against Australia. If fit, she will be the pace-bowling strike weapon for the Renegades.Stafanie Taylor (West Indies/Adelaide Strikers)T20I record: Matches 108; Runs 3062; Avg 36.02 | Wickets 94; Avg 16.88; Econ 5.65
WBBL record: Matches 60; Runs 1074; Avg 26.19; S/R 101.41 | Wickets 49; Avg 18.51; Econ 6.55Taylor has an impressive T20 record and will be tasked with helping fill the void created by Devine’s departure after her 2019-2020 campaign was cut short by international duty and then injury.Chloe Tryon (South Africa/Hobart Hurricanes)T20I record: Matches 65; Runs 757; Avg 20.45; S/R 139.66 | Wickets 19; Avg 34.36; Econ 7.09
WBBL record: Matches 13; Runs 248; Avg 35.42; S/R 178.41
Few players in the world hit the ball as hard as Tryon – her WBBL strike-rate, albeit, from a small number of matches, is far and away the best in WBBL history (minimum 125 balls faced). The key for the Hurricanes will be finding the best spot in the order for her.Dane van Niekerk (South Africa/Sydney Sixers)T20I record: Matches 83; Runs 1839; Avg 28.73; S/R 94.79 | Wickets 63; Avg 21.06; Econ 5.45
WBBL record: Matches 63; Runs 795; Avg 21.48; S/R 105.67 | Wickets 64; Avg 20.00; Econ 6.35The South Africa captain is another of the leading allrounders in the game, although given the Sixers’ batting strength it is arguably her legspin that plays the more important role. She was Player of the Match in South Africa’s opening T20 World Cup victory over England earlier this year.Laura Wolvaardt (South Africa/Adelaide Strikers)T20I record: Matches 25; Runs 427; Avg 22.47; S/R 103.38
WBBL record: Matches 20; Runs 99; Avg 8.25; S/R 92.52It is best not to pay too much attention to Wolvaardt’s previous WBBL record which was two seasons with the Heat. The T20 World Cup felt like a breakthrough tournament for her in the format, with two dazzling unbeaten innings to highlight her as one of the most exciting emerging batting talents.

Hurricanes, Heat control own destiny; Stars and Strikers relying on others

Who needs what ahead of Tuesday’s triple-header, the final round of group games?

Gaurav Sundararaman25-Jan-2021Perth Scorchers –
: Brisbane HeatAn amazing second half of the season has put Perth Scorchers in pole position. The Scorchers have guaranteed themselves a top two-spot owing to their superior Net Run-Rate. The only team that can go past them is the Sixers. The Scorchers need to win their final game against Brisbane Heat to guarantee finishing top of the league stage. If the Scorchers lose and the Sixers win, then the Scorchers would finish second.The Sixers will play the Scorchers in the Qualifier•Getty ImagesSydney Sixers –
: Melbourne StarsSimilar to the Scorchers, the Sixers have also guaranteed themselves a top two-spot in the play-offs thanks to Adelaide Strikers’ loss against Sydney Thunder on Monday night. The Sixers can aim for top-of-the-table finish by beating the Stars and hoping the Scorchers lose their game against the Heat.ESPNcricinfo LtdHobart Hurricanes –
: Melbourne RenegadesHurricanes have their fate in their control. Although they cannot finish in the top two, all they need is a win against bottom-ranked team Melbourne Renegades to qualify for the play-offs. This would take the Hurricanes to 31 points and a spot in the final five. Even if they lose, they can still qualify if the Stars lose to the Sixers and the Heat lose to the Scorchers. However, if one among Heat or Stars win then the Hurricanes will find it hard to qualify even if they get a Bash Boost point due to their inferior Net Run-Rate.The Stars need other results to fall their way – and to win, preferably with a bonus point•Getty ImagesMelbourne Stars –
: Sydney SixersThe Stars do not have their fate in their control. The Stars play the Sixers in the last league game. The Stars could be eliminated by the time the game starts if the Heat and Hurricanes both win their last league match. However, if the Heat and the Hurricanes both lose then the Stars just need to win their last league game – possibly with a bonus point – to make the final five since they have a higher Net Run-Rate than Adelaide Strikers or Hobart Hurricanes.The Heat will need to win well against the Scorchers•Getty ImagesBrisbane Heat –
: Perth Scorchers The Heat need the full four points against the Scorchers to guarantee they reach final five. The maximum they can get is 29 points and that would put them ahead of both the Strikers and also the Stars. If the Heat fail to win the Bash Boost point and win with three points then they would finish with 28 points, and would need to hope that the Hurricanes lose to the Renegades and the Stars do not get four points against the Sixers since the Stars have a superior Net Run-Rate.Adelaide Strikers – The Strikers missed an opportunity to qualify for the play-offs of their own accord when they lost to Sydney Thunder on Monday. Their best chance is if Hurricanes lose their last league match against the Renegades, and the Stars and the Heat don’t get four points from their matches. This would mean that the Strikers would qualify in fourth with 28 points.However, if the Hurricanes do win their last league match, the Strikers need the Heat and Stars to win without a Bash Boost point (or lose). This would mean that Strikers will go past Heat in terms of Net Run-Rate while they will be ahead of the Stars by one point.

Gill or Shaw? Pant or Saha? Jadeja at No, 6?

Five tricky selection calls that India will ponder before the Boxing Day Test at the MCG

Nagraj Gollapudi24-Dec-2020Drop or retain Prithvi Shaw?From his backlift to his footwork, experts have picked holes in Shaw’s technique after the opener, playing only his first Test in Australia, was bowled twice in Adelaide in the space of six balls. Shaw has already made two ducks in the six innings he has batted in so far on this tour if you include the two warm-up matches the Indians played against Australia A. Still, Shaw would want to be judged after a longer trial. Should he get that?Pros: Shaw’s strength is the blistering pace at which he scores once he gets a start. A first-class average of 51.43 and strike rate of 80.96 and a century on Test debut support the idea that the 21-year-old Shaw is that rare talent that experts from around the world believe he is. Although Melbourne also has a drop-in pitch like Adelaide, the strip has tended to play quite flat in recent years, which could make life easier for Shaw. If he gets going he can help India set a strong platform quickly, and ease the burden on the middle order.Cons: Former India opener and captain Sunil Gavaskar believes Shaw plays too many shots too early and with hard hands. Dissecting his technique further on 7 Cricket, both Gavaskar and former Australia captain Ricky Ponting pointed out the yawning gap Shaw leaves between his bat and pad early against the new ball as well as the lateness of his front foot movement – he is often yet to plant his foot before he plays the ball. These are areas an expert Australia attack could continue to exploit relentlessly.Related

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Time to give Shubman Gill a Test debut?Shaw’s teammate in the Under-19 World Cup two years ago, Gill has been restless to make his Test debut ever since he got a maiden call-up to the squad around a year ago. If Shaw is dropped, Gill can open or bat in the middle order as a replacement for Kohli.Pros: Gill’s biggest strength is his classical technique and preference to play along the ground. Coaches who have worked with him point out that Gill has that extra time to play his shots, which is a key strength on fast and bouncy pitches. He also has a quiet temperament. Gill has tall first-class scores playing for India A overseas and at home including double centuries in the West Indies and New Zealand. Gill got good starts in the second warm-up match in Sydney against Australia A, scoring 43 and 65.Cons: Having started on a low note, will India be taking a risk by blooding an inexperienced batsman against a ruthless opponent at one of the most daunting cauldrons in cricket?Ravindra Jadeja would be extremely useful as a fifth bowler, but can he hold his own as a No. 6 batsman?•Associated PressCan KL Rahul take Kohli’s spot?Rahul is the most experienced batsman among the reserves to take the middle-order slot at No. 6 if Rahane and Hanuma Vihari move one spot higher than their regular positions in Kohli’s absence. A confidence player, Rahul came to Australia wearing the Orange Cap for the most runs this IPL season, which was played in the UAE.Pros: He knows Australian conditions and bowlers very well with this being his third tour. In 2014-15, he stroked a wonderful 110 in Sydney.Cons: The lack of first-class cricket. Rahul did not play in any of the two warm-up matches in Sydney, and his last Test was on the 2019 tour of the West Indies where he struggled to provide starts as an opener. He was subsequently dropped from the home Test series against South Africa and Bangladesh and not included for the two-Test series in New Zealand in February. Rahul’s struggles an opener have been longstanding. Having failed in England in 2018, he struggled once again in Australia later that year, opening, with a highest of 44 in three Tests.Should India play five bowlers?This would mean playing a second spinner in Ravindra Jadeja as an allrounder along with three fast bowlers and R Ashwin as the primary spinner.Pros: This would reduce the workload of a pace attack that is likely to include one debutant in either Mohammed Siraj or Navdeep Saini. Jadeja can provide plenty of control, as he showed while taking five wickets at the MCG on the 2018 tour, and play a holding role if need be. The other significant advantage of playing Jadeja is his experience and skill with the bat, with an improved defensive game to complement his ability to counterattack. Since the start of 2018, his average of 53.30 in Tests is the second-best among all India batsmen, and in this period he has scored six half-centuries – three of them away from home – and a maiden hundred against West Indies in Rajkot.Cons: It isn’t yet clear whether Jadeja has completely recovered from the hamstring injury that he picked up during the T20I leg of the tour, which ruled him out of the first Test. The other argument against Jadeja would be that a specialist batsman might be the need of India’s hour, given how brittle their batting proved during the first Test, and given the absence of Kohli.Is it time for India to add Rishabh Pant’s aggression to their lower middle order?•EPAShould Pant replace Saha?While Wriddhiman Saha battled injuries over the last two years, Rishabh Pant grabbed the opportunity with an impish smile, a motor mouth and let’s not forget his robust batting. After an eventful debut series in England, which included a fourth-innings hundred in the final Test at the Oval, Pant was an ever-present during India’s 2-1 triumph in Australia in 2018-19. He got starts in every innings and finished the tour hammering 159 in Sydney.Pros: In the absence of Kohli India will need solidity and big runs from at least one batsman in the lower order. Pant’s biggest strength is his intent to dominate, which Kohli said was missing when India folded inside an hour in the second innings in Adelaide last Friday. Overlooked in the white-ball segment of this tour, Pant hit a 73-ball 103 in the second innings of the second warm-up match the Indians played under lights.Cons: Before this tour, Saha was seen as India’s first-choice keeper in spin-friendly home conditions, and Pant as the preferred option away from home, where his prowess with the bat was seen as making up for any deficiencies he may have with the big gloves. But though Pant made a hundred in the warm-up game, Saha, who made two ducks and a half-century in those matches, was still preferred in Adelaide, suggesting India might see Pant’s glovework as a work-in-progress.

Neil Wagner: 'I pride myself in playing a role when things are tough'

The fast bowler talks about his evolution as a front-line quick for New Zealand, his legendary spell at the Bay Oval, and looks ahead to the WTC final

Deivarayan Muthu30-May-20213:37

Wagner: ‘It was about finding a different method to make the bowling unit effective’

Moving from South Africa to England to finally New Zealand, and now to No. 3 on ICC’s Test bowler rankings, Neil Wagner has come a long way. The left-arm quick spoke about his evolution from a swing bowler to a menacing first-change option, the spell at Mount Maunganui last summer, and the forthcoming World Test Championship final against India in Southampton. Even two broken toes didn’t stop you from bowling nearly 50 overs across both innings and setting up New Zealand’s victory against Pakistan at the Bay Oval. How did you break through the pain barrier?
Yeah, it’s a tough one. [It was] sort of in the moment and I guess adrenaline and playing for the team – wearing the black cap is the ultimate drive and it obviously motivates you to go through that. It’s [also] just everyone else around you encouraging you to do something like that, and trying to bite through as much pain as I could to try and deliver a job. Luckily it came off.Related

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Around the time of the 12th injection during that Test, you said that you were biting a towel…
Yeah, it wasn’t nice (). But it’s just one of those things. You have to try and dig deep and find a way. Test cricket and playing for New Zealand means a lot to me, so I wanted to be out there. We don’t get too many opportunities or too many Test matches sometimes – we had only four Tests that home summer. So, for me, every opportunity is pretty special, and I just wanted to be out there with the lads, give it my all, and try and find a way to contribute. In the end, it was all worth it.And you have a bit of fear of needles?
Yeah, I don’t like needles (). It was one of those things where you had to close your eyes and just sort of deal with it.Did you have to alter your action during that Test match because of the injury?
It was one of those moments where you try to not think about it too much and just get through it. But I felt like the action was changing to overcompensate for the foot a little bit. I started feeling that my back and shoulder were getting a bit sore and mentally it was sort of draining when it got to the back end of that Test – when the game finished, everything fell off the shoulders a little bit and felt a little bit like, “Yeah, it’s over now. I’m done with it.” You switch off and straightaway start feeling the pain.”To play with your close friends, with the black cap on your head and that fern on your chest, is a pretty special feeling”•Getty ImagesDid you enjoy bouncing out Fawad Alam in the second innings? You celebrated his wicket with a vicious high five that almost knocked out BJ Watling.
Yeah, I don’t like the way I sometimes celebrate (). It just sort of comes out. I remember seeing some footage, and poor Mitchell Santner probably tried to come in for a high five, and I went quite hard there. I think it’s maybe letting off the steam, and a bit of frustration comes out bowling through the pain and trying to get a wicket, and finally when you do, it’s a bit of a relief. Looking back afterwards it’s not the nicest sight. I don’t like the sight of my veins popping and things like that. But it’s the passion that I play with and the pride I take [in my performance]. The boys give me a bit of stick and we do have a couple of laughs about it as well.Yeah, maybe [I enjoyed the wicket of Alam more] because he was putting up a pretty good fight. He has been showing that he’s a good member of the Pakistan team, playing really well and making some valuable contributions. We found it really tough bowling to him during that Test match. He didn’t offer many shots or chances, so to finally have got a shot out of him and being able to get his wicket was pretty pleasing.Then there’s the version of Wagner who runs down to fine leg, flashes a big smile, and happily obliges young fans.
I think people who know me off the field know exactly who I am and how I am. Emotions do come out sometimes – I wear them on my sleeve – but I remember what it was like when I was a kid standing on the side of the field and asking for an autograph or wanting to talk to a player. To give that little back, it goes a long way in getting kids to fall in love with the game and getting them to see the way I saw it when I was a kid growing up. People off the field know me as a friendly guy who is a lot more approachable than the guy who is celebrating after a wicket, that’s for sure ().The bowling pack has forged a strong partnership with Watling over the years. You’ve also played with him for Northern Districts. What has your relationship with him been like?
He’s a top man and will be sorely missed in this team. He’s the glue and the gel of the team and has been around for a long time now. I’ve always appreciated his honesty. He’s one of the guys who puts me back in line if need be, but will also encourage you and pick you up on the tough days. He’s always been there for me, whether for plans or ideas. No matter how tired he is, he will sprint from the keeping side, run all the way to your mark to have a chat with you with a couple of plans. He’s been a class performer for this team and he’s always seen to be the guy that has done the nitty-gritty sort of stuff well and encourages people like myself and everyone around the team. Mount Maunganui 2020. Perth 2019. Kolkata 2016. Do trying conditions or circumstances tend to bring the best out of you?
Test cricket is tough and it’s never easy playing in different parts of the world, where it can be challenging. You get to test your skills and ability against the best players in the toughest situations. That’s where you want to stand up and make some sort of impact, and I pride myself in playing a role when things are tough. I want to put my hand up and have the ball in my hand.That’s his happy face: Fawad Alam gets a faceful of the other Wagner•Getty ImagesIt’s a special thing to be a part of and to represent your country. With my background and where I come from [South Africa], to be able to get that opportunity and the sacrifices that you had to make along the way… it means a lot to play for New Zealand. The guys around me are mates on and off the field, friends for life, so I’m doing it for them too. Seeing the satisfaction on their faces is extremely rewarding at the back end of it. So to play with your close friends, with the black cap on your head and that fern on your chest, is a pretty special feeling.What does your fitness routine look like?
We’re lucky to have a trainer like Chris Donaldson, who has been a huge part of the team, and not just the bowling unit. I’ve had him from my first year starting at Otago – he was our fitness trainer then and he later joined the Black Caps. Ever since I’ve started working with him since I moved over to New Zealand, he has been monumental in my success. The way he encourages us to train really hard and do the hard yards – you’ve got to motivate yourself on some cold winter days to get up and go to the gym and do some running outdoors. He has been a huge part of it all and obviously [I spend] a lot of time in the gym, running and doing fitness stuff. Bowling-wise as well, as a group we push each other to do the hard work. So I guess a huge thanks goes to those guys and we keep feeding and bouncing ideas off each other. How have the 100-200-300-400 metre runs under Donaldson benefited you?
We all do those runs. It’s one of our running sessions and it’s one that I enjoy the most. I sort of feel like it gets me going and I get a good rhythm out of that. We do have various other running sessions that we do.We sometimes sort of joke around and say it’s a love-hate relationship. Love them during the season, when you see the rewards for it. And at the time when the email comes about the fitness and training work that needs to be done, you don’t like it very much (). It’s one of those things where you clench your teeth a little bit and go, “Argh!” Coming through a Test match and being able to back it up the next game, that’s where you give Chris a big hug and say, ‘Thanks for making us push through’, because it goes a long way to bowl those long spells and back it up game after game.Are you among the fastest sprinters in the group?
No, I’m definitely not. I like to try and push myself to be there. I think Trent [Boult], Mitchell Santner, Henry Nicholls are the fastest guys and I try to keep up. Lockie Ferguson is a pretty good runner as well. But, yeah, I can’t say that I’m one of the fastest and strongest around, but I do have goals that I know I have achieved through the years and I try to improve on them or stay around the same.You trained with Colin de Grandhomme in Mount Maunganui during your recovery from the toe injuries. How is your body shaping up for the England tour?
Yeah, quite a few of us stay in the same area in Mount Maunganui, so it makes things easier, training-wise. Being able to train with Colin, who is also coming back from injury, has been quite beneficial and it’s nice to hit the ground running. We had some amazing facilities at the Bay Oval and to get some overs under the belt in the Plunket Shield was quite beneficial for me as well. To get some bowling fitness in that sense – it’s the first time in my career that I’ve been away for ten weeks after an injury. It was a bit of a change, but yeah, it was nice to get some overs and play for Northern Districts at that time and get some rhythm leading into these three Test matches [in England].”The guys around me are mates on and off the field, friends for life, so I’m doing it for them too”•Getty ImagesWhen you burst onto the scene in New Zealand and bagged five wickets in an over in first-class cricket, you were largely a swing bowler who could also reverse-swing the ball. How did you evolve into this first-change bowler for whom the top of off is the batter’s body?
Yeah, I obviously started as a swing bowler, as someone who pitched it up a lot more than I do now or what it looks like in Test cricket. It still comes down to the conditions and what’s in front of me and what the day requires. In New Zealand, the wickets tend to flatten out quite quickly, and if the ball doesn’t swing, I obviously try to bang it in and get different modes of dismissal or try and create some pressure with dot balls by doing that. Through the years, playing more cricket and getting more experience and sort of knowing that we have two of the best swing bowlers in the world in Tim [Southee] and Trent… Rather than trying to bowl the same as they do or trying to compete with them, for me it was about trying and finding a different method or a way that’s going to make them and us effective as a bowling unit. It sort of came off and worked out at that time, and I just ended up going with it.I do still try to pitch the ball up when it’s required and if it can swing. Like I’ve shown in the last season in New Zealand against West Indies and Pakistan, if it’s required to pitch it up, we go that route. If my role is to run in and pitch it short, we obviously change accordingly. It’s quite nice to have been able to develop different skills.It took a little while to find my role or my feet in the early stages of my career in the Test team. Once you get that, you grow some confidence, knowing what you need to do and knowing your role. It’s nice that we feed off each other and with Kyle Jamieson coming into the attack as well, he brings in a different dimension. It’s nice that we all offer something different.Sometimes people tend to stereotype you as a short-ball specialist, but you have developed a knuckleball and a three-quarter-seam ball along the way. Can you talk us through the change-ups?
I do play a bit of white-ball cricket for Northern Districts. And obviously, in white-ball cricket you’ve got to refer to the yorkers and slower balls for a few bits and pieces of that. Playing that has been nice for staying fresh and mentally training different skills and things you need to do. Sometimes they can come in handy in Test cricket too, and it makes the short ball more effective when you can swing the ball upfront, and to have a slower ball up the sleeve as well.It just comes down to summing up the conditions and what’s required on the day. Obviously in England, it will be a bit different with the Dukes ball. If the overhead conditions suit to pitch the ball up, look to swing the ball or use the seam. Then, when it’s required, when the sun is out and it’s flatter, you try to bang it in shorter and then that role comes into play. It comes down to knowing your role and whatever Kane [Williamson] and the team requires from me, and I try to do it to the best of my ability to take a wicket or bowl for someone else at the other end to get a breakthrough. We know that as a unit when it swings around, one day it will be one person’s day and on another it can be someone else’s. But if we keep chipping in, playing our roles, we will be successful as a group.”I remember what it was like as a kid, standing on the side of the field, wanting to talk to a player. To give that something back, it goes a long way in getting kids to fall in love with the game”•Getty ImagesHas Jamieson’s emergence helped ease the load off yourself, Southee and Boult?
We’ve been lucky to have quality bowlers over the years now. Matt Henry, Doug Bracewell, Mitchell Santner, Colin de Grandhomme and Daryl Mitchell – everybody has chipped in when they needed to. That’s the beauty of this team – when you come in, you know your role. Jamo has come in and seamlessly fit into the group. He has been nice and level-headed and wanting to learn. And he has played some amazing cricket. So his confidence will only grow and get better as he goes on in his career. It will be exciting to see where he can take it to. He has all the attributes and it’s amazing to see how he has fit into the bowling group.Outside of this Test squad on tour, there’s Lockie Ferguson, Adam Milne and Blair Tickner. Ben Wheeler has been around and Will Williams had a fine domestic season. Have New Zealand’s pace stocks ever been richer?
I don’t think it has, to be fair. Since I started, with guys like Mitchell McClenaghan who has played for New Zealand and now the names you’ve mentioned, there has been a healthy group of fast bowlers in New Zealand for a number of years. The good thing about it is that it keeps you working hard on your game to be able to get selected or play. These other guys will push you, which is pretty good, and it’s a healthy place for New Zealand cricket to be in. Sometimes it can be a coach’s or selector’s nightmare, but it’s a really good problem to have. To be able to pick through various groups of fast bowlers and to be able to rotate them as well… That sort of thing is also good if there are injuries or something like that – somebody can come in and fill those boots. R Ashwin, who plays just one format now for India, recently referred to the WTC final as a World Cup for him. You, too, play only Tests for New Zealand. What does the WTC final mean to you?
Yeah, it is like a World Cup final for me. The biggest disappointment, I guess, in my career is that I’ve never really played a white-ball game for New Zealand or never been able to crack into the T20 or the one-day game. That ship has probably sailed now and I don’t think the opportunity will ever come. For me now, it’s about putting all my focus and energy into Test cricket and to be able to play in a World Test Championship final is like a World Cup for me.I know this final is the first and there isn’t a lot of history around it, but it’s the start of something that’s pretty big. To play in a one-off Test final against India – one of the best teams in the world, if not the best team in the world – to be able to test yourself against the best on the highest and biggest stage, that’s what it’s about. It’s extremely exciting, but I don’t want to think too far ahead. Don’t want to let the occasion get to you, just treat it like another Test match and do the same things you do. It’s definitely going to be a special occasion. That’s for sure.

Nathan Lyon plays the long game in quest for 400 Test wickets

Spinner’s climb towards latest milestone has been arduous

Andrew McGlashan10-Dec-2021Nathan Lyon claimed his 390th Test wicket on January 6, 2020, when he removed BJ Watling to wrap up victory against New Zealand at the SCG. He claimed his 399th Test wicket on January 19, 2021 when he removed Washington Sundar on the final day of the thrilling series against India.By the time some of you read this the moment may have come, but as of December 10, 2021 Lyon is still waiting to be the third Australian to scale mount 400. It will come, but it’s not coming easily.Partly Australia’s paucity of Test cricket in recent years is at play. This is just their 10th Test match since the 2019 Ashes but, regardless of that, the climb towards the latest milestone has been arduous.In the first Test against India last year there wasn’t much needed from him with the visitors’ second innings amounting to 36 and in Melbourne there was barely a target to defend. However, India played him superbly in the second two matches. Lyon’s figures in those games were 5 for 351, although it might have been different if Tim Paine had not put down two chances at the SCG.Related

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Leading into this Test he had two Sheffield Shield matches for New South Wales where he bowled 106 overs and claimed four wickets. He bowled well, at times very well, on the third day at the Gabba but the wickets column remained at zero. There was only a centimetre or so in it, though, with one delivery.When Dawid Malan had 8 he shouldered arms to one that slid on with natural variation – Lyon was trying to turn it – and it barely cleared off stump. Hawkeye said it was 1.6cm between Malan surviving and not. He could be forgiven for the decision to leave; three overs earlier Lyon had made one grip and spin extravagantly from middle and leg to zip past the edge.”There’s a little bit of turn and I can see it turning more as the game goes on,” Malan said.It wasn’t the only near-miss for Lyon. Early in his innings, Joe Root nearly ballooned an attempted sweep to short leg and the ball before he went to fifty he missed another and was nearly bowled. Between those moments Lyon landed one perfectly which exploded from a length and ragged past Malan’s edge.There is, however, some evidence – beyond the bare number of wickets – that currently Lyon is perhaps not providing quite the threat that he has in the past.Analysis of ESPNcricinfo’s data showed how England were comfortable defending Lyon on the front foot. So far in the game they have done so 60 times but have not been in control to only seven of those shots. In the past Lyon has used drift, dip and overspin to deceive batters looking to get on their front foot in Australian conditions. Out of the 61 wickets Lyon has taken at home in the last four seasons, 21 have come when batters have been out playing forward defence. That has been his most productive mode of dismissing batters in Australia.However, numbers suggest that batters are getting more comfortable defending Lyon off the front foot: according to ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball data, in the summers of 2018 (vs India) and 2019 (vs Pakistan and New Zealand), Lyon took 19 wickets when batters were defending on the front foot – once every 47 balls.Since the last home season against India, batters have played the front foot defence to 328 balls from Lyon but have been dismissed only twice. From what remains a small sample size of three Tests, his current overall strike-rate for 2021 is 202.8.Nathan Lyon ponders a close call•CA/Cricket Australia/Getty ImagesThe contest with Root, one of the best players in the world, who is such a good judge of length and very adept at using the crease, was superb. Root took 37 runs off 54 balls against him; Malan, with the usual challenges of a left-hander to offspin, had 30 runs from 78 balls.”He [Root] batted really well, played Nathan Lyon very well,” Marnus Labuschagne said. “He’s obviously a beautiful player of spin bowling – and pace bowling – but it’s not my job to admire Joe Root’s innings, it’s my job to try and find holes in his game and help the team wherever I can to get him out.”Before the match, Pat Cummins indicated that captaining spin-bowling would be one area where he might be looking for advice. Towards the end of the day Ricky Ponting, commentating on Channel Seven, did question some of the field placements when there were no close catchers in front of the bat. At times during the Root-Malan partnership, Labuschagne and vice-captain Steven Smith could be seen chatting with Lyon.”I think it’s a wicket where you need to be crafty with your field and that’s what me and Nathan were discussing,” Labuschagne said. “Potentially where we could get another catcher, where we could use our short legs. Just trying to come up with ideas.”For Lyon, though, the wait goes on. In the penultimate over of the day Malan played and missed at a cut shot. Lyon’s hands were on his head. It’s been a familiar pose of late.

Sri Lanka desperately need Dimuth Karunaratne to lead the charge of their building

The reason why we expect Sri Lanka will make something of the Tests against India is because in his own unobtrusive way, Karunaratne has made it so

Andrew Fidel Fernando03-Mar-2022There is a stepdad-of-the-year vibe to Dimuth Karunaratne’s leadership. When he got the job in early 2019, the Sri Lanka captaincy – never not a theatre of high drama – was in a particularly toxic place. Dinesh Chandimal had not merely been replaced as captain, but also been dumped from the team entirely.In the previous four years, three others had led the side, on top of which Chandika Hathurusingha, the coach at the time, was not only facing serious heat from the board and the sports minister himself, but Sri Lanka’s most senior player Angelo Mathews was also at an open war with him.Karunaratne came like a light rain to tone down – if not quite extinguish – the fire. Just an affable guy. You know the type. A kind word here, an arm around the shoulder there. Not the fire-and-brimstone stepdad who will erupt when you tell him about the flunked exam. Instead, he’ll peer over his glasses past his gardening magazine, bend an ear, let you figure your own life yourself.Related

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What is clear is that Sri Lanka’s Test team desperately needs Karunaratne in the picture, because remember what happens when he isn’t? In January last year, he hit a terrific second-innings century in Johannesburg but picked up a nasty fracture in his hand during the course of that knock, and had to miss the upcoming England Tests at home because of it.Sri Lanka have had some bad old times in the past few years, but nothing was more embarrassing than series. On day one of the first Test in Galle, they were all out for 135, collapsing to some profoundly innocuous offspin from Dom Bess. It was like watching someone trip over their shoelaces before being gnawed to death by a hamster, which Bess is. In their last innings of that series, Sri Lanka failed even more abysmally – all out for 126, thus sealing a 2-0 series loss.So what happens when Karunaratne comes back? They draw two Tests in the West Indies, win a series at home against Bangladesh and then beat West Indies 2-0 at home. Not the most challenging assignments in Test cricket, sure, but when the alternative is shameful capitulation, you’ll take three wins and three draws from six Tests.The reverse-sweep to get out of jail when he hasn’t hit a conventional sweep all game: Karunaratne against India in 2017•Associated PressKarunaratne himself thinks – and his thoughts are not without merit – that Sri Lanka are building to something. Building. Not frantically keeping their noses above churning water; not lurching from disaster to elation. Building. Our guy has led the charge himself. Since 2019 – and in an era that has been notoriously unkind to opening batters – Sri Lanka have had seven century stands for the first wicket. No one else has had more than five. Lahiru Thirimanne has featured in five of those; Pathum Nissanka in two. Karunaratne in all.Which in a roundabout way brings us to India, because while Karunaratne has hit hundreds against all but two of the oppositions he has faced, his best innings came against India – on the filthiest of filthy turners in Sri Lanka, the spiritual home of the filthy turner. He barely swept R Ashwin or Ravindra Jadeja – they shared 14 wickets between them in that match – but in his own unobtrusive way, he clawed to 141.Whips through midwicket, cuts that look pretty good but somehow don’t quite get to the boundary, drives that don’t pierce the gap in the sense that a diving mid-off can get a hand to it but can’t stop it completely and the funny-looking reverse-sweep to get out of jail when he hasn’t hit a conventional sweep all game: this is the house Karunaratne has built.In the past year, it has looked like a half-decent house actually, because his own batting form has coincided with a happy stretch for the Test side. He cracked 902 Test runs from 13 innings at an average of 69.38 in 2021. But, okay, most of those runs came against West Indies and Bangladesh. Playing India in India is a big step up, which means that 2022 is starting with probably the toughest assignment in all of Test cricket. Here is what he had to say about that.”I have only played three Tests in India, and I wasn’t able to make a lot of runs. I’m very determined that this series will be my best series in India. It’s ok that this year starts with a really tough series. It’s from the tough starts that you learn things about yourself. I’ve left my good 2021 aside, and am focusing on getting a good start this year and making it as good as last year. Contributing to a team win is what’s important.”Read that quote again. Because it’s concentrated Karunaratne. There is an awareness of his failings. An acceptance of less-than-ideal circumstances. A grim determination. Stepdad of the year.There is some expectation now that Sri Lanka will make something of this Test series. Karunaratne knows that. And he expects it himself. And the big reason why he, and we, expect it is because in his own unobtrusive way, he has made it so.

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