IPL keeper-batter watch: Kishan, de Kock, Bairstow and more

Expect these six players to trigger fierce bidding wars on February 12 and 13

Gaurav Sundararaman and Nagraj Gollapudi01-Feb-20228:28

Newsroom: How has Ishan Kishan missed out on the marquee list?

Ishan KishanPower hitter, 10-year player, smashes spin, and can bat anywhere. Don’t be surprised if Kishan, at 23, ends up as one of the most expensive buys of the auction. In IPL 2020, Kishan hit an astounding 30 sixes, the most in that edition. Having been signed in 2018 by Mumbai Indians for INR 6.4 crore, Kishan provided a left-hand option in the Mumbai top order. Last year, he made his international debut, and, although Mumbai did not retain him, Kishan, who is from the eastern state of Jharkhand, has been confident about doing well at the auction and is understood to have even declined offers from the two new franchise – Lucknow Super Giants and Ahmedabad.Previous franchises: Gujarat Lions (2017), Mumbai Indians (2018-21)Potential destinations: Punjab Kings, Ahmedabad, Mumbai Indians, Sunrisers Hyderabad, Lucknow Super Giants.Quinton de Kock is comfortable against pace and spin alike•BCCI/IPLQuinton de KockHe has been one of the most impactful batters in the last three IPLs. After the 2018 season, Mumbai were desperate for an overseas opener and a quality wicketkeeper so they traded in de Kock from Royal Challengers Bangalore for INR 2.8 crore. It would prove to be a smart investment considering the left-hander emerged as Mumbai’s top run-getter in 2019 and second-highest in 2020. de Kock scored over 500 runs in back-to-back seasons, an uncommon feat in the IPL, and played a massive hand in Mumbai winning back-to-back trophies. During his three-season stay with Mumbai, de Kock amassed 1329 runs, which was most for his team in that period, and the sixth-highest overall in the IPL. de Kock is probably the world’s best wicketkeeper in white-ball cricket and has captained South Africa, and his ability to accelerate against both fast bowlers and spinners makes him particularly dangerous. Having retired from Test cricket, de Kock will be fresh and is likely to remain available for the whole season.Previous franchises: Sunrisers Hyderabad (2013), Delhi Daredevils (2014-17), Royal Challengers Bangalore (2018), Mumbai Indians (2019-21)Potential destinations: Punjab Kings, Mumbai Indians, Sunrisers Hyderabad, Royal Challengers BangaloreDinesh Karthik may be 36 but he is still a big asset•BCCIDinesh KarthikProven performer, former IPL captain at a title-winning franchise, and a successful finisher over the last few seasons, Karthik has always been a big buy at IPL auctions. He was sold for INR 12.5 crores in 2014, INR 10.5 crores a year later and INR 7.4 crores in 2018. While he can bat at any position, he has walked in mostly as a finisher over the past few seasons at Kolkata Knight Riders. Since IPL 2018, in the death overs (overs 17-20) Karthik’s strike rate is 184.01 – among Indians with at least 200 runs in that phase, only Virat Kohli, Rahul, Pant, Hardik Pandya, Samson and Dhoni have scored faster and all of them have been retained. Experience in dealing with pressure situations, reading the match from behind the wickets and leadership remain the key drivers that will once again make Karthik a potential big buy. He might be 36, but as Dhoni and Dwayne Bravo have proven already, that can be an asset.Previous franchises: Delhi Daredevils (2008 and 2014), Kings XI Punjab (2009-11), Mumbai Indians (2012-13), Royal Challengers Bangalore (2015), Gujarat Lions (2016-17), Kolkata Knight Riders (2018-21)Potential destinations: Punjab Kings, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Lucknow Super Giants, AhmedabadJonny Bairstow could even shed the gloves and make the team as a pure batter•BCCI/IPLJonny BairstowHe stands out as one of the few overseas batters who has been consistent over multiple IPL seasons. Sunrisers Hyderabad picked him at the 2019 auction for INR 2.2 crores and he repaid that faith by forging an exceptional opening partnership with David Warner. He has scored 1038 runs at an average of 41.52 and a strike rate of 142.19 in three seasons with Sunrisers. Bairstow is also that rare overseas batter who is comfortable against both pace and spin. One of the most athletic fielders in world cricket, he could even shed the gloves and get his name on the team sheet purely as as a batter.Previous franchises: Sunrisers Hyderabad (2019-21)Potential destinations: Ahmedabad, Punjab Kings, Mumbai Indians, Lucknow Super Giants, Kolkata Knight RidersNicholas Pooran can float up and down the batting order•BCCINicholas PooranWatching him can be both exhilarating and frustrating. In all T20s since 2019, Pooran has hit 198 sixes, the third-most by any batter in this period. This includes the 2020 IPL, when Pooran hit 25 sixes, the most by an overseas batter. Also, since 2019, Pooran’s IPL strike rate has been 154.98, the fourth-highest with a cut-off of 500 runs. Not only does he stand out as a power-hitter, Pooran can also float between the top and the middle order. At 26, he has a long road of ahead of him, and having been West indies vice-captain in white-ball cricket, franchises will look at him as a leadership option too.Previous franchises: Mumbai Indians (2017), Punjab Kings (2018-21)Potential destinations: Mumbai Indians, Sunrisers Hyderabad, Kolkata Knight Riders, AhmedabadSrikar Bharat hit a six off the last ball to win a game against Delhi Capitals in IPL 2021•BCCISrikar BharatThe moment he lofted Avesh Khan high over the long-on boundary to seal a last-ball victory for Royal Challengers Bangalore against Delhi Capitals last year, he would have known it was going to be a turning point in his career. Batting at No. 3 Bharat stunned Capitals with a knock Royal Challengers’ then captain Virat Kohli termed “incredible.” An opener for the first half of his T20 career, Bharat has since espoused the belief that where he bats does not matter to him. In the Vijay Hazare Trophy last December, he became only the second Indian batter after Prithvi Shaw to hit consecutive 150-plus scores in 50-overs cricket. Bharat, at 28, is also an attractive option because franchises always fancy an Indian keeper-batter to an overseas option as it helps them with team balance.Previous franchises: Delhi Daredevils (2015), Royal Challengers Bangalore (2021)Potential destinations: Royal Challengers Bangalore, Punjab Kings, Sunrisers Hyderabad

Buttler's challenge is to find his own voice, and continue England's evolution

New era began with a loss, and focus on bowlers than batting depth – Buttler will have to learn quickly ahead of T20 World Cup

Matt Roller08-Jul-2022It was an incongruous handover. “Today, I start my new life as an England fan,” Eoin Morgan wrote in his programme notes for his old side’s T20I series against India. “I think for now it makes sense to detach myself from the England set-up a little bit, to give Jos [Buttler] and Motty [Matthew Mott, the white-ball coach] some room.”But it was hard to escape Morgan’s presence at the Ageas Bowl on Thursday night. Rather than relaxing at home with a glass of red wine in England’s first game since his international retirement, Morgan was on site in a crisp white shirt, watching on from the Sky Sports “pod” on the boundary edge.At the start of the 12th over, when Chris Jordan returned to bowl his second over, former England batter Nick Knight was thrown on commentary. “Morgan has gone to his most experienced bowler because he knows the importance of this partnership,” he said, before correcting himself: “Buttler, even…” The change of captaincy has loomed for some time, but it will take some getting used to.Related

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Buttler has led England before in white-ball cricket – five times in T20Is and nine times in ODIs – but this was his first game in full-time charge, and represented a reality check as to the scale of the role. He has a significant burden on his workload in this format in particular – opening the batting and keeping wicket as well as now captaining – and this was the first of a dozen games in a 25-day window which will be a significant test.The first obvious difference of the Buttler era was in selection. Morgan prioritised batting depth at all costs throughout his tenure, but under Buttler in the first T20I against India in Southampton, England fielded an extra bowling option compared to the sides they played throughout last year’s World Cup, with Tymal Mills unusually high at No. 9.”That will develop over time,” Morgan said of their balance. “There’s flexibility depending on how we see fit.”But the biggest change was simply his position behind the stumps, rather than in the field. Morgan would typically field at extra cover, giving him easy access to his bowlers throughout an over to discuss plans. “I always felt I wanted to give the bowler clear direction at the top of his mark,” he explained on air.Buttler attacked by using Moeen Ali in the powerplay, and got mixed results•PA Images via Getty ImagesButtler, by contrast, generally opted to leave his bowlers to the task at hand, delegating responsibility to two senior players in Moeen Ali and Jordan when he felt a message needed to be relayed. At times, bowlers appeared isolated: during Matt Parkinson’s second over when deep extra cover, long-off and long-on were in place, there were no red shirts within 20 yards of the bowler.”If you need to talk, it’s easy to just to do the legwork as a wicketkeeper and touch base at the start of overs,” Buttler said. “A lot of the time either Chris Jordan or Moeen Ali is at mid-off or mid-on relaying messages as well. But I like the bowlers to take some ownership; I like them to try and lead that as much as they can.”And of course, doing that legwork, we can have good conversations as to what we’re trying to achieve.”Buttler made several attacking moves, not least opting to dangle the carrot to India in the powerplay by giving the third and fifth overs to Moeen. It was a qualified success: Moeen removed Rohit Sharma with an arm ball which took his outside edge, and had Ishan Kishan caught top-edging a sweep to short fine leg. However, he returned 2 for 26 in the powerplay, being swept for consecutive fours by Rohit and launched over long-on by Deepak Hooda for back-to-back sixes.Buttler had spoken in the build-up about looking to solve England’s death-bowling problems by taking early wickets, and was successful up to a point: the final six overs cost 48 runs as Jordan, in particular, thrived by bowling hard lengths, but India still managed 198 after putting England’s new-ball bowlers under pressure with their early intent.Buttler was bowled first ball as full-time England captain•Getty ImagesWith the bat, England fell a long way short, and Buttler conceded that India’s “fantastic new-ball spell” had changed the game. Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Arshdeep Singh both found prodigious swing with the new ball in stark contrast to England’s seamers; in typical Morgan style, Buttler suggested that might have been different if they had “hit one to the stands to reduce the swing”.Buttler himself is among the world’s most in-form white-ball batter after following up his MVP-winning IPL season with two stunning innings against Netherlands last month. But he could use a score in one of this weekend’s T20Is against India to remove any suggestion that his batting will suffer under the burden of his new role.There was not much he could have done about his first-ball duck on Thursday night at the hands of Bhuvneshwar, whose hooping inswinger tailed in sharply to crash into leg stump. It was his fourth duck in his last seven innings as captain, but there has been no kind of pattern to those dismissals, spread out across a four-year period.Morgan’s one-word description of Buttler’s captaincy at the innings break was “exceptional”, but it will take time for both of them to become used to their respective new roles. They are close friends, and live nearby too, but Buttler’s challenge is to find his own voice and continue England’s evolution; with just over three months until the World Cup, he will have to learn quickly.

Lyon shreds match-up theory, aces test against India's right-handers

Great bowlers will always find a way, even if conventional wisdom suggests otherwise

Alex Malcolm18-Feb-20232:52

Tait: Lyon found success by bowling good lines

One of the most notable scenes from the first season of the , Amazon’s documentary on the Australian team, is former coach Justin Langer’s rant at the ODI team during a difficult tour of England in 2018.”Some of you guys have got so many f***** theories,” Langer had said. “None of you are good enough to have that many theories.”Australia’s hierarchy has had a theory, a borderline obsession, with playing a left-arm orthodox to match up against India’s right-hand dominant batting line-up.Related

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Australia’s greatest-ever offspinner Nathan Lyon blew that theory out of the water in Delhi to bag five wickets on a fascinating second day to bowl the visitors into the ascendency before Axar Patel and R Ashwin dragged India back into the game.Australia’s concerns about having two offspinners in the same team have been unfounded as Lyon, with 297 right-handed Test scalps, put on a masterclass of offspin to prise out five of India’s six right-handers in their top seven as they were bowled out for 262, one run behind Australia’s first innings total. The visitors finished day two on 61 for 1.It was instructive that Lyon bowled just two of the first 15 overs of the innings despite Australia having to open the bowling with at least one of their three spinners. Australia were so beholden to the match-up of the left-arm orthodox against India’s right-handed openers that it wasn’t their senior man, the nation’s third-highest wicket-taker in Test history, entrusted with the new ball. It was debutant Matthew Kuhnemann, with one first-class game to his name in four months, who bowled unchanged for seven of the first 14 overs across the first evening and the second morning, with Lyon following Pat Cummins from the other end.While Kuhnemann actually bowled very tidily in his opening spell – justifying his selection over Ashton Agar and proving he is the best left-arm orthodox Australia has playing first-class cricket right now – Australia’s desperation to make the match-ups work saw them burn two reviews in the first six overs of the morning.All the while Lyon and Todd Murphy, who had knocked over KL Rahul and six other India batters including five other right-handers, were waiting to get their hands on the ball. The theory of left-arm finger spin to right-handers is sound, but recent first-class numbers suggest Lyon and Murphy are Australia’s best spinners no matter who they are bowling at.R Ashwin wasn’t the right match-up for the right-handed Marnus Labuschagne and Steven Smith on day one after Ravindra Jadeja had been that duo’s nemesis in Nagpur. But Ashwin found a way to get them both out, because he is a great bowler rather than a left-arm orthodox.Lyon proved he is still Australia’s best spinner and one of the best in the world. He picked up two more to complete a wonderful five-wicket haul, his second in Delhi 10 years after his first. His constant pressure caused batting mistakes from Shreyas Iyer and KS Bharat. Iyer tried to force a scoring shot off the back foot and Peter Handscomb held a sensational juggling reflex catch at short leg. Bharat tried to sweep and was caught off the glove at slip. Lyon could have had more. He had Axar and Ashwin missed at slip and leg slip respectively.It was his first five-wicket haul since Perth last year, where he did it in completely different conditions on a completely different pitch, knocking over right-handers spinning the ball back into the top of off with subtle changes of pace.Perth and Delhi are poles apart, yet he found a way. You can have all the theories in the world. But the best always find a way.

Switch Hit: Bangla wash-up

Alan is joined by Miller and Matt to reflect on England’s 3-0 T20I defeat in Bangladesh at the end of a long winter

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Mar-2023England’s men ended their long winter of touring commitments by slipping to a 3-0 defeat in the T20Is against Bangladesh, handing their hosts a memorable series win. But just how forgettable was it for England? In this week’s pod, Alan Gardner is joined by Andrew Miller and Matt Roller to discuss fixture bloat, the decline of bilateral cricket and planning for the 50-over World Cup – as well as what’s to come this summer, including the first shots fired in the Ashes phoney war.

How Parshavi Chopra ventured from skating to googlies and found her feet in WPL

At one point, she wanted to be a fast bowler. Now she is troubling the best batters in the world with her legspin

S Sudarshanan23-Mar-2023Young Parshavi Chopra was told a few things about legspin. That she will have to risk getting hit and only then the chances of picking up wickets will rise. That it is wickets that will earn her laurels and not the low economy rate.In UP Warriorz’s game against Gujarat Giants earlier this week, Ashleigh Gardner and D Hemalatha had added 93 to keep Giants on track for a tall score. Both had displayed their range of strokes against seam and spin, but Warriorz captain Alyssa Healy trusted Chopra to bowl at the death.Chopra was part of India’s squad that won the Under-19 T20 World Cup in January this year. There she had bowled Sri Lanka’s Vishmi Gunaratne with a googly. The batter had danced down towards the off side but the ball spun past her pads to hit the stumps. But a majority of her 11 wickets in the tournament came off legbreaks.Between that World Cup and the WPL, Chopra worked on the googly and grew confident to use it more frequently.Now, bowling the 17th over of the innings against Giants, Chopra went for wickets instead of trying to stop runs. She tossed the first ball up to Hemalatha outside off. It was the wrong’un and Hemalatha didn’t pick it, holing out to long-on. On the first ball of the 19th over, her last, she once again flighted the googly to entice Gardner out of her crease and got her stumped.It was just the second appearance for Chopra in the WPL and she already left a mark on those who hadn’t watched her at the World Cup.Vishal Bhatia, her coach at Yuvraj Singh Centre of Excellence (YSCE) in Greater Noida, just outside Delhi, credits Chopra’s increased use of the googly to the target bowling sessions they had ahead of the WPL.”Before the WPL, we were working on target bowling, bowling in [various] situations, and when to use the googly,” Bhatia tells ESPNcricinfo. “She didn’t bowl the googly much in the Under-19 Women’s T20 World Cup. But now she is confident in bowling the googly and reading the batter well.Parshavi Chopra was the second-highest wicket-taker at the U-19 T20 World Cup•ICC/Getty Images”You can be needed in the powerplay or the death overs. We worked on what ball to use when and how to read the batter by looking at her stance. I told her that you shouldn’t play the name, but play the batter – it so happens you bowl to someone looking at their reputation – and the situation.”Chopra pursued skating in her younger days, just like Yuvraj, but was drawn to cricket listening to her father, uncle and grandfather talk. She watched the 2017 Women’s ODI World Cup on TV and wanted to don the national colours after seeing India’s narrow, heart-breaking loss to England in the final. Her father, Gaurav, identified her interest and got her enrolled in the coaching centre where Bhatia and later JP Nautiyal coached her.”I never let her compromise with her cricket but I compromised on her studies,” Gaurav says. “She was very good in her studies. But to achieve a goal or target in life, you have to focus on just that one thing. If you try and do multiple things, you won’t get as much success.”At a YSCE summer camp in 2017-18, Bhatia came across Chopra who then wanted to be a fast bowler. But given her slight build, she was encouraged to bowl legspin. Her run-up and action had to be tweaked accordingly but once that was done, and she was able to generate spin, there was no looking back.In the 2019-20 season, she picked up 20 wickets in the Women’s Under-19 One Day Tournament playing for Uttar Pradesh. During the Covid-19 lockdown, her father left no stone unturned and prepared a pitch at home for single-wicket practice with assistance from Nautiyal and inputs over video calls from Bhatia.”Her body was very flexible because of the stretching, which is part of skating,” Nautiyal says. “Her wrist position comes naturally to her. We had to work on her lines and lengths. But she grasps things quickly and works really hard for hours together.”Chopra picked up eight wickets in the Under-19 T20 Trophy in October 2022, and was then selected for the T20 Challengers and the Quadrangular Under-19 series featuring West Indies and Sri Lanka. A good show at the Under-19 T20 World Cup in South Africa led her to be picked by Warriorz at her base price of INR 10 lakh.The only girl child in the family, Chopra was fascinated after watching videos of Australia legspinner Shane Warne’s bowling. She took an immediate liking to his action and was upset for a few days after he died last year. But through her steady rise and eye-catching outings in the WPL, she is keeping the flag of legspin flying high.

Stats – Netherlands' Super Over win in the highest-scoring tied ODI

Nidamanuru scores Netherlands’ fastest 100, van Beek cracks Super Over code

Sampath Bandarupalli26-Jun-20231 – The 374 by West Indies and Netherlands at the Takashinga Sports Club is the highest total for a tied ODI. The previous highest was 340 runs by New Zealand and England in Napier in 2008. This is also the highest total in List A cricket for a tied game, bettering the 343 by England Lions and India A in 2010.3 – Number of ODI totals while chasing that is higher than Netherlands’ 374 for 9 in Harare. Had Netherlands secured the win on the last ball of the chase, their effort would have led to the second-highest successful target chase in ODIs, only behind South Africa’s 435-run chase against Australia in 2006.Related

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374 for 9 – Netherlands’ total against West Indies is their highest in ODI cricket and the second highest by an Associate nation, behind Namibia’s 381 for 8 against Papua New Guinea in March this year. Scotland’s 371 for 5 against England in 2018 was the highest ODI total by an Associate against a Full Member before Netherlands’ effort on Monday.748 – Total runs scored by West Indies and Netherlands in Harare. It is the sixth-highest match aggregate in ODI cricket and by far the highest for an ODI hosted by Zimbabwe, surpassing the 659 runs between Sri Lanka and West Indies in Bulawayo in 2016.Teja Nidamanuru registered the fastest ton by a Netherlands batter•ICC via Getty Images30 – Runs scored by Logan van Beek in the Super Over. It is the most runs scored by a team in a Super Over in international cricket by a distance. The previous highest was 25 runs by West Indies against New Zealand in a men’s T20I in 2008, while West Indies women also scored 25 runs in the Super Over in an ODI against South Africa last year.2 – ODI hundreds for Netherlands since 2015, both by Teja Nidamanuru in 2023. His maiden ODI hundred came against Zimbabwe at the Harare Sports Club earlier this March. He is only the second batter with multiple ODI hundreds for Netherlands, after Ryan ten Doeschate (5). Nidamanuru’s 67-ball hundred against West Indies is the fastest of the 12 ODI hundreds for Netherlands.63 – Number of balls Nicholas Pooran needed to complete his century. It is the third-fastest century for West Indies in men’s ODIs, behind Brian Lara’s 45-ball ton against Bangladesh in 1999 and Chris Gayle’s hundred off 55 balls against England in 2019.

Time marches on at the Antigua ground where history stands still

The ghosts of the legendary ARG are everywhere, 15 years after its final match

Cameron Ponsonby04-Dec-2023The Rude Boy stand has been taken down at the ARG. The once-famous double-decker terrace that housed Antigua’s greatest music entertainers is gone. Replaced instead with two shipping containers and a lorry trailer. The prison watchtower that stands over the road, where the legend goes that Viv Richards’s dad would stand and watch his son bat in the middle whilst keeping one eye on the prisoners under his guard, has had its view improved immeasurably. Nothing now in its way, but nothing now to see either.”You had music from morning to night,” says James Stevens, Head of the Antiguan Umpire’s Association for the last 24 years and chance interviewee after he saw two English lads stumbling around the famous and dilapidated Antigua Recreation Ground”We had Gravy and Mayfield and the music,” Stevens recalls, reflecting on the famous names of those who performed outside the boundary rope of the ARG, as much as he does those that performed within it. “As a matter of fact, DJ Chickie the music master got man of the match in an India v West Indies game. You had three days rained out and he kept the crowd lively throughout the days.”For someone who doesn’t believe in ghosts, a trip to The Rec is to have a go on a Ouija board for a laugh, only to feel your stomach jolt when the thing moves. The place is dense with history and with signs of life everywhere you look aside from the one place it matters. A shop within the grounds has three men sitting drinking a beer and eating some lunch, while the pavilion itself still operates in an administrative capacity. In fact, as England and West Indies were playing their first ODI on Sunday, the latest set of aspiring Level 3 umpires in the region were taking their final exams there. Something that Stevens himself would be overseeing, adding that that’s why he wouldn’t be in attendance at the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium himself.The watchtower of the prison in St John’s, Antigua, from where Viv Richards’ father is said to have watched him bat at the ARG•Cameron PonsonbyEven Stevens, a measured man who grew up in the countryside of Antigua, fails to avoid hyperbole when talking about the ground.”ARG as a cricket venue in the universe, probably has the most history.”And he’s not wrong, in spite of the fact that that history lasted for just 22 Tests and 11 ODIs, spanning 31 years. Brian Lara’s 375. Brian Lara’s 400. Viv’s fastest ever Test ton and the highest successful run-chase in Test cricket all happened on the same patch of grass of one tiny Caribbean island that boasts a population of just 90,000 people.The reason for the stadium’s demise is well-known. The 2007 World Cup was hosted in the West Indies, and Chinese money was used to build new stadiums across the Caribbean. The Sir Viv Richards stadium went up four-and-a-half miles down the road, and as a result, the ARG became second-choice. A few miles in the other direction and you also have the Coolidge Cricket Ground, where the Stanford T20s took place and which is now the headquarters of Cricket West Indies. Meanwhile, the ARG sits decaying. A once-iconic cricketing institution that is now a shadow of its former self. As an analogy for the state of West Indies cricket, it is almost too on the nose.You still see cricket whilst travelling around the island. Kids playing at lunchtime, club players playing in the evening. The difference, Stevens explains, is that there was a time when you didn’t even have to look.The consensus is that there are fewer people playing, but the exact reason why is less tangible. The myth that the Caribbean has fallen into the grip of basketball is exactly that. The two main sports listed by taxi drivers are football and cricket, and whilst basketball does, occasionally, get a mention, so do Playstations.Brian Lara drives during his 375, the first of his two world records against England at the ARG•PA PhotosTo an Englishman visiting, the activity on the island contradicts the narrative that the game here is dying. Cricket in the Caribbean is said to be in a worse state than it is back at home, but if you saw as much cricket in London as you did when wandering around Antigua, you’d consider the game to be in rude health. Perhaps it is merely the difference between something that was once a national pastime instead now being a national hobby. And when you only have 90,000 people to play with rather than 70 million, that makes a difference. The game is here. But as Stevens says, you just have to look.It’s been 15 years since ARG last hosted a match, when the Windies held on to a thrilling draw nine-down against England. And beer bottles (presumably not from that same day, but you can’t be sure) are still scattered around the stands, which gape where randomly selected blocks of seating have been ripped out.The history of the ground is more tangible than you could ever expect. And the gap that The Rude Boy Stand leaves provides a tangible reminder of what once was, in a ground that otherwise has an intangible aura.”It was always a pleasure to come to ARG and watch the cricket,” concluded Stevens. And you wouldn’t doubt him for a second.

'Precious' Jewel Andrew fulfills promise to mother as he lives his dream

Having started to play from when he was four years old and inspired by Shai Hope, Jewel Andrew finally has a chance to make his name

Firdose Moonda23-Jan-2024Jewel Andrew was four years old when his future was put in his hands, literally.He was sitting boundary-side at the Young Masters Sports Club in Antigua, watching his brother Hillroy play but unable to join in because he was too young for a team of six-year-olds. “But one of the boys hit a six and Jewel collected the ball and threw it in. The coach said he could join the next day,” Veronique Hill, Jewel’s mother, told ESPNcricinfo.That was exactly what Hill, a single mom, hoped would happen when she took her sons to the club. “We were living in a bad neighbourhood so I didn’t want them to get into trouble,” she said. “And I grew up watching cricket with my father on a black and white television so I knew I wanted my kids to play this sport.”Related

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All you need to know about the men's Under-19 World Cup 2024

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Hill was raised on the triumphs of West Indies’ attack and grew to admire Courtney Walsh and Curtly Ambrose but not for the obvious reasons. “They bowled very well but couldn’t bat to save their lives. Especially Walsh. He was so clumsy with the bat and I quite enjoyed that.”Her sons turned out to be the complete opposite. They prided themselves on run-scoring and spent their time determined to outdo each other. “If one scored runs on one day, the other would say, ‘wait until tomorrow and I will show you what I can do’,” she recalled, laughing. “They were so competitive as young kids and they still spend all day talking about cricket.”Not just talking. Analysing. Strategising. Experimenting. And of course, playing. For that to happen, they needed equipment. “That was really hard for me,” Hill said. “Cricket gear is expensive.”Hill’s income from a store she runs that sells bags and was not enough to afford everything the boys needed. Instead, they relied on support from well-wishers, including donations given to the sports club from former players and found a way. The more exposure they got, the clearer it became that Jewel “was really good.”The little hands that threw the ball when he was four years old ended up being used both to bat and to keep wicket. He rose through the age group structures in Antigua, scored five successive centuries in a schools’ league, captained the Leeward Islands under-15 side and played in the Cool & Smooth T20 tournament, a local event intended to assist in the development of players in the region. He also found someone to model his game on in Shai Hope. “He would watch videos of Shai Hope and every shot that he played and then try to copy that. Soon, I started to see a little Shai Hope in him,” Hill said.Veronique Hill always wanted her sons, including Jewel Andrew, to play cricket•Veronique HillLate last year, Jewel had the opportunity to meet his hero when he was selected as the flag bearer for the start of the ODI series between West Indies and England. “That was really special and he could feel one step closer to someone like Shai.”But just when it seemed everything was aligning for young Jewel, he suffered a setback. “They had a tournament to select the Under-19 squad and he just wasn’t getting off. He was scoring 30s and 40s and crying himself to sleep,” Hill said. “And then before the last day, he said to me that he was not going to worry about anything or what anyone said, he was just going to play his own game and see if that could get him in. I send him a bible verse every morning to help him believe in himself and I did it that day as well. He scored 126 and that was how he got selected for the Under-19 side.”When Jewel called his mom to tell her the news, he was filled with emotion. “He cried and I cried along with him,” she said. “He said to me, ‘Mom, I am living my dream. I will give you something to watch’.”And he kept his word. In their first game of the tournament, West Indies found themselves in pursuit of 285. Jewel kept West Indies in the fight and Hill awake from 2 am, with a 96-ball 130, that ultimately went in vain and left her with mixed feelings. “I am happy for him but I was a little disappointed too. I could see his disappointment too.”There’s time to turn that around. West Indies have two more group matches against Scotland and England this week and victory in at least one of them will give them a chance of advancing to the Super Sixes. And for Jewel personally, there is a chance to establish himself as among the top batters in the competition, secure a spot for the next tournament and even earn a regular place in the Leeward Islands’ team.”He is still young and can play another Under-19 World Cup but he also wants to make the step up to the regional side. Jewel is all about Leeward and West Indies cricket,” she said. “He is very focused and doesn’t have time to do anything besides cricket. He runs every morning for 45 minutes and then he works on his game. He knows he has made all of us in Antigua very, very proud.”So Jewel is living up to his name but why was he given it in the first place? “I had a difficult time having him. He was two weeks overdue and wouldn’t come out,” Hill said. “When he eventually did, he was so loving and I just thought to myself that he was a special baby, a precious baby. That’s why I called him Jewel.”

Want to win a T20 league? Take wickets

The IPL might still be a batter’s game, but elsewhere it’s bowlers who are winning teams T20 league titles

Matt Roller29-Apr-2024It was the break-up that stunned the Big Bash. For 11 seasons, Chris Lynn embodied Brisbane Heat: born and bred in the city, Lynn was the team’s final link back to the squad that won them their only title in 2012-13. Along with Brendon McCullum, he was one half of the Bash Brothers, the six-hitting partnership that formed the basis of Heat’s marketing and on-field strategy.But two years ago a Queensland Cricket committee chaired by the former Australia wicketkeeper Ian Healy decided that with Lynn’s five-year, million-dollar contract at an end, so was his time with Heat. Healy denied that “behavioural or cultural” issues were a factor and said plainly: “This is a sign that Brisbane Heat are going more to winning than entertaining.”It was not that Lynn’s record for Heat – 3005 runs, then the most in BBL history for a single club, at an average of 34.54 and a strike rate of 148.83 – was not exceptional. But in a league with a salary cap, Heat were pouring a significant proportion of their resources into Lynn’s wages; every year they found themselves relying on his runs to dig them out of holes.”People came to the consensus that Brisbane, as a city, loves a winner,” says Charles Evans, Heat’s performance strategist. “The market dynamics are batter-heavy in the T20 industry. Look at the drafts and auctions around the world and it’s blokes that whack it and bowl a little bit going for unbelievable numbers, and only the occasional bowler.”No one really blinks at the batter that’s making a huge splash in your contract list. They just think, ‘Well, they have to: they’re the opener, they’re the No. 3.’ Whereas people aren’t probably thinking the same way with a bowler, who can only bowl a fifth of your overs…Related

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“It’s not that our bowling was neglected, but it certainly wasn’t viewed in the light of being so important to win championships.”Heat’s decision to reshape their squad to prioritise their bowling attack brought immediate success. After shifting away from big-name batters and investing heavily in a varied bowling line-up, they reached two consecutive finals. In the second of those, this January, after topping the league phase, they won their second BBL title – and their first without Lynn.Heat fit the global trend: in 2023 and 2023-24, in seven of the top ten global T20 leagues*, the team with the best bowling strike rate went on to win the title; every winning team ranked in at least the top three for bowling strike rate. T20 is often said to have skewed the game in batters’ favour – yet teams that take wickets most regularly tend to emerge as champions.*classified as: IPL (India), Blast, Hundred (both England), CPL (West Indies), LPL (Sri Lanka), BBL (Australia), ILT20 (UAE), SA20 (South Africa), BPL (Bangladesh), PSL (Pakistan)

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In the mid-2010s a trend emerged from T20’s first data boom: captains started to give the new ball to spinners, daring opening batters to take an early risk and attempting to “burn” an over at the start of an innings. Samuel Badree, the West Indies legspinner, had done it for years but increasingly teams used part-time spinners with the new ball.

The idea, recalls Tom Moody, whose Sunrisers Hyderabad team won the IPL in 2016, and who now coaches Oval Invincibles in the Hundred, was “to give them that extra flexibility as the overs unfold, and to help manage their [bowling] resources”. But the trade-off was inherently defensive: new white balls rarely swing for more than two or three overs, so opening the bowling with spin meant reducing your seamers’ chances of finding early assistance.In T20, teams are relatively unlikely to be bowled out: on a rough average, most completed innings finish with teams six wickets down. That general rule prompted many bowling teams to focus primarily on defence: with batters placing a much lower value on their wicket than in other formats, bowlers were evaluated on their dot-ball percentages and economy rates.Somerset, in England’s T20 Blast, were among the many teams to follow the trend: Max Waller, the legspinner, became their most common opening bowler between 2017 and 2020. It was fundamentally a defensive move, in keeping with most decisions that Somerset made with their bowlers: the tiny boundaries at their home ground in Taunton were seen to necessitate that.”You can be quite fearful in white-ball cricket,” says Jason Kerr, their head coach, who cites the fact that Taunton is “the highest-scoring T20 ground in the world” – beating even the M Chinnaswamy Stadium in Bengaluru. “Often a lot of language is around the defensive, and how you can stop people scoring.Matt Henry was the star of Somerset’s retooled bowling strategy in the 2023 T20 Blast, which they won. Henry took 31 wickets, topping the tournament table, and his team-mate Ben Green was second, with 30•Getty ImagesSince Waller’s retirement, though, Somerset’s bowling strategy has transformed. In 2023, Craig Overton bowled three powerplay overs in each of the 14 matches he played and took 12 wickets in that phase; only his team-mate Matt Henry, signed as an overseas player, took more – 17. Both are traditional right-arm seamers who were empowered to attack with the new ball.”Our mantra is that you’re constantly trying to take wickets,” Kerr says. “We wanted to be really clear on the roles that the bowlers were going to fulfil. We were really clear on who was taking the new ball and what we were asking them to do with it… we had two world-class bowlers at the top of the order and they executed brilliantly.”In a 17-match Blast season, Somerset bowled their opponents out ten times and took 151 wickets out of a possible 170. It was – by some distance – the most wickets that a bowling team has taken in a single T20 tournament; fittingly, they defended a below-par 145 all out in the final by reducing Essex to 44 for 4 in the powerplay and eventually bowling them out for 131, with nine balls unused.Somerset’s success speaks to a broader trend in T20 bowling strategy. Almost every batter in the world scores at a quicker rate as their innings progresses and once they are accustomed to conditions, so bowling defensively comes with its risks. It might be a good short-term ploy, but it is likely to cause major problems at the end of an innings when you are bowling a set batter.Henry’s attacking prowess earned him his first IPL contract in seven years, at the age of 32. “Historically, we have looked at dot balls as being the key measure when it comes to restricting batting sides,” Moody says. “That balance has slowly shifted until the point we are now, where we put more value on the importance of taking wickets and then dot balls come in at second priority.”Tom Moody of Oval Invincibles (and formerly Sunrisers Hyderabad): “History will show that bowling-strong sides have a higher win ratio than batting-strong sides”•ECB via Getty ImagesConsider Sam Curran. At the men’s T20 World Cup in 2022, Curran became England’s designated death bowler and performed so well that he was named player of the tournament: his 10.4 overs at the death brought him nine wickets, and cost only 70 runs. Clearly he played a significant role in England’s eventual success.But Curran was also the beneficiary of his team-mates’ ability to take wickets regularly throughout an innings: more than half of the balls that he bowled at the death were to batters who had come in at No. 7 or below, and none were to top-three batters. In keeping with the worldwide trend, England’s bowling strike rate was the second best at that World Cup, behind only South Africa and New Zealand, who were tied at No. 1.Perhaps this is not a huge surprise. It is hardly revelatory that teams that take lots of wickets are successful. However, as Heat’s Evans says, “If you just picked the five bowlers in world cricket with the lowest strike rates, you wouldn’t win that many tournaments. They will all be seamers and they will all bowl regularly at the death.”Instead, the best teams recruit with specific phases in mind: when Sunrisers Eastern Cape lost Overton to injury after his fine Blast with Somerset put him on their radar, they replaced him with another new-ball specialist, Daniel Worrall, who had thrived in the powerplay in the Hundred. Worrall was an unheralded T20 bowler, but he finished as the third-highest wicket-taker in the SA20 earlier this year.Heat largely opted to pick six specialist bowlers, giving them flexibility and enabling them to pick a varied attack: they had a legspinner and a left-arm spinner in Mitchell Swepson and Matt Kuhnemann; two right-arm seamers, Xavier Bartlett and Michael Neser; and two tall left-armers, Paul Walter and Spencer Johnson, whose average speeds varied by around 15kph.Sam Curran was player of the tournament in the 2022 T20 World Cup, but would he have been as much of a death-overs success story as he was if his team-mates hadn’t prised out opposition top orders?•Cameron Spencer/Getty Images”It means you can cater with whatever gets thrown at you,” Evans explains. “That’s what a good bowling attack does: it gives you options. And a good bowling attack is a balanced one. Nobody can really set up a batting line-up that can actually hit you out of the park or go extended periods without a wicket, because there’s always [a bowler] available to the captain at any given moment.”A T20 bowling innings does not exist in a vacuum. The approach that a batting team takes depends on a number of different variables: are they setting a target or chasing one? Will the pitch enable them to hit through the line? Do they need to go hard because of the opposition’s imposing batting line-up, or can they be more cautious because they are facing a team whose strength is in their bowling?In the men’s Hundred, Manchester Originals have reached two successive finals without lifting the trophy. They have been prolific wicket-takers in both seasons, in part because their bowlers have often been defending huge totals thanks to Jos Buttler and Phil Salt’s prolific opening partnerships. “We’ve had times where we put big scores on the board, and that pressure then works in the bowlers’ favour,” Simon Katich, their coach, says.Last year, Katich’s Originals lost out to Moody’s Oval Invincibles in the final. Invincibles were by far the highest wicket-takers in the tournament. “I’ve always had, front of mind, the management of the 120 balls as a bowling and fielding unit, as opposed to the batting side of it,” Moody says. “History will show that bowling-strong sides have a higher win ratio than batting-strong sides.”And yet, countless franchises around the world continue to invest significantly more in their batting resources than their bowlers, suggesting inefficiencies in the market. When Royal Challengers Bengaluru conceded a record 287 against Sunrisers Hyderabad this season, the six bowlers they used cost a combined Rs 13.25 crore out of their Rs 100 crore salary cap.Arshdeep Singh and Harshal Patel of Punjab Kings, who have a fine bowling attack but are up against the fact that the IPL is now a 12-a-side league and bowlers are at the receiving end•Associated Press”You have to consider supply and demand,” Moody says. “If I’m looking for opening batters on the global market, you could cast the net out and argue the toss over about 20 players, but if I was to do that for match-winning specialist spinners or specialist new-ball bowlers or specialist death bowlers, that net is a very small one by comparison.” This might help explain the high prices Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins and Alzarri Joseph fetched in the last auction.The Impact Player rule has changed the dynamics of the IPL, with scoring rates shooting up by nearly one run per over since its introduction in 2023. “Five [wickets] in 15 [overs] used to give you an open end,” Mike Hesson said last year, when he was RCB’s director of cricket. “Now you’ve got to probably get at least one more… you have to continue to attack, not just defend.”In 2023, Chennai Super Kings’ title win owed as much to their destructive batting line-up as their bowling unit, while the early signs in 2024 are that wicket-taking might not be such a clear driver of success in a 12-a-side league: after their first eight matches, Punjab Kings ranked second on bowling strike rate but had only managed two wins.As soon as one trend becomes apparent, another starts. “It’s funny: you almost have to check yourself,” Evans says. “You get really excited because something seems to work really well, but then you’re like, ‘Woah, let’s just make sure we’re maintaining an even keel.'”Not long after we speak, Heat’s coach Wade Seccombe loses his job due to Queensland’s poor performances in other formats, and their leading run-scorer, Josh Brown, signs for Melbourne Renegades. In the T20 world, change is the only constant.

Tactics board: Rashid, de Kock, Gurbaz-Ibrahim and Maharaj – the key factors

Can South Africa break the Gurbaz-Ibrahim alliance quickly? How crucial will Maharaj’s role against Afghanistan’s right-hand batters be?

Nagraj Gollapudi26-Jun-20242:15

Fleming: Afghanistan need more from their batters against SA

The toss factor: make Afghanistan chaseFour of Afghanistan’s five wins at the T20 World Cup 2024 have come batting first.On three of those occasions, the opposition put them in. Uganda, New Zealand and Australia all opted to chase. And Afghanistan elected to bat against Bangladesh on Tuesday in Kingstown.Related

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But Afghanistan have lost two matches where they have fielded first: against West Indies after winning the toss, and against India, who elected to bat.The solitary match they won fielding first came against Papua New Guinea, which, incidentally, was played in Tarouba, the venue for the semi-final.South Africa, the only team apart from India to be undefeated at the World Cup so far, have won four times batting first and three times chasing. Don’t be surprised if Afghanistan are asked to chase if South Africa win the toss.South Africa can’t let Gurbaz-Ibrahim flourishNo opening pair at this World Cup has scored more runs than Rahmanullah Gurbaz and Ibrahim Zadran, who are also first and third, respectively, on the list of leading run-scorers in the tournament. The two 22-year-olds, friends from their Under-19 days, have aggregated 442 runs at an average of nearly 74, which is the highest among all teams for the opening wicket – Jos Buttler and Phil Salt, who have compiled 286 runs at an average of 57.20, come a distant second.The Afghanistan openers have stitched together three 100-plus stands and a fifty-plus partnership, and between them have scored nearly half (46.3%) the runs (954) Afghanistan have scored in this World Cup.Gurbaz usually does the power-hitting early on, while Ibrahim provides stability at the other end. Gurbaz, though, hurt his left knee while keeping against Bangladesh and limped out. If he misses out, South Africa’s job might become easier. And if he does recover in time, South Africa will have to find a way to break Afghanistan’s batting spine quickly.ESPNcricinfo LtdCan Afghanistan stop de Kock?Quinton de Kock is South Africa’s in-form batter and the enforcer, a role he played to perfection against England in their Super Eight contest. Since 2022, though, de Kock averages 21.60 against offspin at a strike rate of 105.88. Rashid has asked his senior team-mate Mohammed Nabi to bowl in the powerplay frequently, and against de Kock, he could be deployed as a favourable match-up. While Nabi hasn’t got the better of de Kock yet in T20 cricket, he has given away only 32 runs in 28 balls.South Africa’s batting numbers in the powerplay are among the poorest this tournament: not only have they lost the most wickets (15) in the phase, their run rate of 6.73 is nearly three points behind England’s 9.49. Their average of 18.76 is also among the lowest. Afghanistan will look to mount pressure from both ends, combining Nabi with Fazalhaq Farooqi, the tournament’s leading wicket-taker who also has the most powerplay wickets in all T20s in 2024.Alternate route to get de Kock: go aroundJofra Archer and Tanzim Hasan Sakib went around the wicket to force mistakes from de Kock. Against England, he was caught behind trying to play at a delivery wide outside off, while against Bangladesh he played on.As the graphic below shows, since 2022, de Kock has been susceptible against the around-the-wicket line of attack, often lured into playing away from his body and/or falling when trying to slash hard.His problem becomes glaring if you look at the first ten balls of his innings. In the same period and same matches, in 30 innings, de Kock has been dismissed six times in 82 balls bowled from around the stumps, and has scored just 77 runs at a strike rate of 93.90 and an average of just under 13.In the same period, in the first ten balls he has faced bowled from over the wicket, he has been dismissed 12 times in 64 innings but has scored 436 runs in 313 balls at a strike rate of 139.30 and an average of 36.33.ESPNcricinfo LtdIncidentally, Dwayne Bravo, who is Afghanistan’s consultant, has had success against de Kock bowling around the wicket. So, don’t be surprised if you see Naveen-ul-Haq, who had dismissed Travis Head using the same line, attacking de Kock from around the stumps.How will South Africa counter Rashid?Most of South Africa’s top-order batters – de Kock, Markram, Heinrich Klaasen, David Miller and Tristan Stubbs – have not managed to dominate Rashid in T20Is. Barring Stubbs, whose sample size is low – he has faced nine deliveries and taken 22 runs at a strike rate of 244.44 – no other South Africa batter has a strike rate of over 130 against Rashid in T20Is.The significant duel will be between Miller and Rashid. Miller, South Africa’s second-highest run-scorer in the tournament, ranks among the top finishers in T20 cricket and has been striking at nearly 150 since the start of 2022 against legspin. However, Rashid, who is Miller’s team-mate at Gujarat Titans in the IPL since 2022, has had a significant upper hand against him. Miller has scored just 50 runs off 42 balls against Rashid in all T20s while striking at 119.04 and has been dismissed four times.Rashid will be on the prowl along with Nabi and Noor Ahmad with the trio bowling a majority of the overs in the middle phase.ESPNcricinfo LtdMaharaj, South Africa’s X-factorKeshav Maharaj scripted one of the moments of this World Cup when he defended ten runs off the final over of the match against Bangladesh in New York. Even though he got lucky, going unpunished despite slipping consecutive full tosses of the last two balls of the over, Maharaj was resolute and courageous, picking two wickets. Both batters – Jaker Ali and Mahmudullah – were right-handers. In fact, all nine wickets South Africa’s lead spinner has taken this tournament have been of right-hand batters.Maharaj will look forward to bowling against Afghanistan, whose batting is made up almost entirely of right-hand batters – Hazratullah Zazai played just one game, against India, while Najibullah Zadran played the group-stage matches but hasn’t featured since the India game.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

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