New and improved Shafali has brought method to her madness

“I didn’t know what consistency was earlier. Now I understand it’s very important,” says Capitals opener after hitting her third fifty of this WPL

Shashank Kishore14-Mar-20241:49

Shafali Verma: ‘If Meg Lanning can still be so consistent, why can’t we?’

There are some shots that get a batter going. It’s like an assurance that bursts to life the moment they execute it. For Shafali Verma, that shot is a bottom-handed shovel down the ground. She clubs the ball with ferocity. It isn’t as much a shot but a switch that flicks her game on and moves it to the next level.It was first on display in the fifth over of the Delhi Capitals chase against Gujarat Giants. The target was a mere 127, and the team had lost two quick wickets. Shafali had a role to play in Meg Lanning’s run out and needed to bat through to see her team home. Here was an opportunity to rediscover her “hitting touch” ahead of the final, after four games of being unable to kick on.Shafali could have had a few sighters if she wished to. But she decided to go after Meghna Singh and walloped a six down the ground. It was hit hard, flat, and with plenty of bottom-hand, laced with an element of wrist. It was magic.Related

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If you have watched Shafali bat for a length of time now, you would have noticed the propensity to move around the crease. This movement isn’t as much to throw the bowler off, as it is to try and manufacture something. Bowlers the world over – especially Katherine Sciver-Brunt – have found workarounds by attacking her body and hitting hard lengths that cramp her.Over time, coaches have worked around limiting these premeditated movements with varying degrees of success. The focus hasn’t been to eliminate her attacking mindset. There have been chats to help her access different areas of the ground to the same ball.At the WPL, with games coming thick and fast, the onus is also on the player to learn on the job. And Shafali appears to have taken those suggestions on board and has based her power game not as much around her movements, but on picking lengths, her bat swing, and the follow through.The method brought her a 37-ball 71 on Wednesday. The movement wasn’t within the crease but outside it. Like when she stepped out to clobber Ash Gardner three balls after she had shovelled Meghna. This one went even further, 91 metres and deep into the stands.

“If you look at my batting closely, I’ve changed a few things. I feel more stable at the crease. You can see I’m more stable. I’m able to hit my shots clearly, I’m able to find gaps”Shafali Verma

In the same over, Shafali went even straighter and cleared the ropes comfortably when mid-on went back. A trigger movement towards off stump to get close to the pitch followed by a free swing of the arms made it possible for her to hit it down the ground.In a small chase, blows like these can quickly increase the pressure on the opponents. It certainly dissipated any relief Giants may have had after dismissing Lanning and Alice Capsey in the space of four deliveries in the fourth over.”If you look at my batting closely, I’ve changed a few things,” Shafali said afterwards. “I feel more stable at the crease. You can see I’m more stable. I’m able to hit my shots clearly, I’m able to find gaps.” Shafali didn’t elaborate on how she has been able to achieve that. But the proof’s right there.What Shafali was willing to give away, though, was the crux of her chats with Lanning. “We share a good bond. She wants to teach me. I used to struggle with consistency, get out in the 20s and 30s. I learnt from her, on days when you’re in good touch, it’s about how long you can play. The bad days teach you to score better [on good days when you’re in]. I’m able to score better, and build my innings better. I talk to her when I need to and she is always happy to help me.”Shafali Verma after her 71: ‘I feel more stable at the crease’•BCCIShafali’s discussions with Lanning have revolved largely around discovering methods that work, fine-tuning things like knowing when to temper down the hitting to try and bat long, and how to maximise your strengths.”I didn’t know what consistency was,” Shafali said. “Now I understand it’s very important. Not just now, even if you go back to 2020, from the time I played the T20 World Cup, I didn’t know what consistency was. As you play, you learn about your shortcomings and what you can do better. Training and playing with big players like Meg has shown [me]. She hit two fifties. She’s so experienced, even now she’s still doing it, so why can’t I achieve it?”There was brute force on display when Shafali became a teenage wonder girl, when she broke through at the Women’s T20 Challenge in 2019. That competition aimed to test the depth of women’s cricket in India. There’s little doubt that the tournament accelerated Shafali’s journey to the India cap.Now, five years on, Shafali is beginning to channel that brute force better and marry it with consistency. She’s still a work in progress, but one can say with certainty her career graph is back on track and on its way up.

'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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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.”

Spirited South Africa escape dreaded C-word tag (for now)

Some unpleasant labels might have resurfaced had they lost to West Indies, but the team withstood the pressure and got over the line

Melinda Farrell24-Jun-20241:39

Shamsi: ‘New Proteas team’ always gets over the line

They’re tricky things, those key moments.They come without warning and are decided by a choice, a reflex or a moment of sheer brilliance. They turn on calmness of mind as much as the execution of skill, and in must-win matches, they arrive with the burden of intense expectation and pressure.The hackneyed adage in cricket is that South Africa lose key moments when their World Cup campaigns are on the line. You know the word, they know the word. It hovers around South Africa’s throat until it ultimately cho… – sorry, my bad – until it ultimately throttles them.South Africa have scrapped their way through to the semi-finals undefeated. They have not been convincing, they haven’t produced anything approaching a complete performance, and yet they sit atop Group 2 in the Super Eight.Related

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Needing to defeat West Indies in order to clinch a place in the tournament’s knockout phase, an early key moment turned South Africa’s way. Marco Jansen had removed Shai Hope in the first over, but a one-two punch would knock the wind out of West Indies’ powerplay sails.Suspecting the pitch was ripe for turn, Aiden Markram brought himself on to bowl, something he is often reluctant to do. It turned out to be an inspired decision, netting the wicket of Nicholas Pooran, who went on the attack only to hole out to long-on. Buoyed by success, Markram bowled his four overs in a single spell as part of a spinning onslaught; South Africa’s quicks only bowled three overs in the first half of the innings.”I think strategically he’s been excellent,” Rob Walter, South Africa’s head coach, said after the match. “Tonight, there was some really smart captaincy and strategic plays that we know can go either way in T20 cricket. We had a good idea that the wicket was going to turn, and we knew if it did turn, what the match-ups would look like.”The match-ups worked pretty well for us, and I’m just stoked that he actually backed himself to bowl four overs. I’m pretty much begging him every week to bowl more. He really did it today.”A pattern was repeated. Each time West Indies approached a crucial juncture of the match that could propel them in front, South Africa dragged them back. The introduction of Tabraiz Shamsi into the attack in the tenth over was critical. It wasn’t just that he took three wickets, but it was also the way he responded to each attempt to take him down, absorbing the blows before counter-punching.”One thing you know: with the West Indian boys, you don’t have to guess what their intent is going to be” – Tabraiz Shamsi•Associated Press”Fortunately, I’ve been able to play CPL for the last five or six years,” Shamsi said. “And one thing you know, with the West Indian boys, you don’t have to guess what their intent is going to be. It helps you formulate a plan or expect what you’re going to be coming up against, and then it’s about trying to utilise the different variations you have.”Everything sort of goes into slow motion with the outcome in the middle. It’s just about doing the job for the team, and at times, the captain will ask me to strike – or at times he’s asking to bowl it tight, so it’s about trying to do that as best as I could.”The key fielding moment belonged to Anrich Nortje, just as Andre Russell threatened a trademark explosion. Russell had belted Nortje for consecutive sixes, but in the following over, he chanced the quick bowler’s arm at short third, and the direct hit stalled West Indies’ momentum.In the rain-affected chase, South Africa went hard too early on a pitch that still had its demons, and lost their first three wickets early as a result; they were still on top, but the pendulum was deciding which way to swing.Enter Heinrich Klaasen in the pivotal seventh over. A mighty mow of Gudakesh Movie down the ground for six was followed by three boundaries in a 20-run blitz.”Chasing a score like that, normally it just takes one over that you can change the game [in], and make life a little bit easier for yourself,” Klaasen said. “I’ve played with Motie before, and I know that he misses a little bit full. He’s not a bowler that really misses short. I just decided anything full is going, hopefully, rooftops. That was the idea, and luckily, the first ball went nice and full.Aiden Markram and Marco Jansen embrace after an emotional victory over West Indies•ICC via Getty Images”That was what my mind suggested, just taking on the first one. Anything full was going for six. That was the first over that I really wanted to go at, to put at least one of their spinners under pressure. And it just takes one over on a score like that to get it nicely under a run a ball, and then all the pressure’s off. And then we made life difficult for ourselves once again.”South Africa kept stumbling, losing further wickets and entering the final over needing five for victory before Jansen hammered the winning six. If West Indies had pulled off a remarkable victory, this South Africa side would have worn the dreaded tag that screams of intergenerational trauma.”Choke is losing a game we should have won, or being in a position of strength and then losing it,” Walter said. “We said if we can’t get over the line tonight, there would be commentary that that was a choke, and to be fair, it would have been because we just didn’t make a decision under pressure.”But there were enough good decisions made under pressure. We continue to work on it to play the pressurised moments a little bit better. We don’t answer for the people who came before us. That was their journey. For us, it’s about running our own race, and we’ve pretty much done that this campaign. It would have been a bitter pill to swallow losing only one game and not making a semi-final having won six in a row. We don’t have to think about that now, fortunately.”There will be more key moments in the next game, and possibly, the game after that too. But Shamsi believes South Africa are now embracing life on the tipping point.”The amazing thing is that this new Proteas team always seems to get over the line,” Shamsi said. “We’ve been put under huge pressure basically in every single game that we’ve played. And the boys have managed to find a way to win no matter what the situation is, no matter how close the game. So that’s really easy for us to do. In a funny way, we’re looking forward to it.”

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.

Harshal Patel: 'I've proven over and over that when I execute my deliveries, most batters can't hit them'

The Punjab Kings seamer on how he has approached bowling in this runs-heavy season

Interview by Shashank Kishore and Himanshu Agrawal09-May-2024After a challenging start to IPL 2024, Harshal Patel has come into his own in the last few matches. His upturn in form has mirrored the fortunes of Punjab Kings, his new team, who are still in contention for the playoffs. Currently after 56 matches, only Jasprit Bumrah is ahead of Harshal on the list of top wicket-takers this season . In this interview, Harshal discusses his processes, how perspective is important in analysing bowlers in T20, and what he has done differently of late.How would you define your season so far?
There are still certain aspects that I could have done better in, but overall, if I look at the number of wickets I’ve picked up, and the situations I’ve picked them in and the batters I’ve gotten out, they’ve made an impact on the game. This season, especially, looking purely at numbers is probably not a smart thing to do. So I would still call it an above-average season.Can you pick out an instance from this season where you may have not started well, but your finish gave you a lot of joy?
The 20th over against MI. They were on course to get 210-215, and I bowled I think a five-six run over [seven runs] and picked up two wickets; four of those were byes. That’s just one instance.Even against KKR, where I conceded 48 in three overs, I got Rinku [Singh] out at the right time, which meant there was going to be a new batter. That didn’t make much of a difference because he [Ramandeep Singh] came out and hit a six first ball. But the way the T20 game is evolving, picking up wickets is probably the only way you’re going to make an impact on the game, because you could bowl a brilliant over and if two batters are settled, they will make it up in the next over. I think consistently getting wickets at the right time is very important.Related

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Has taking wickets been a lot more challenging this season?
Purely from a wicket-taking point of view, if I have certain deliveries that are working for me, if they’re coming out of my hand well, if I’m bowling them well, and if I’m confident about those deliveries, especially the slower balls, I know I can pick up two or three wickets in an over. For me, it’s all about setting those slower balls up in the right way and executing them when I know the batter could make a mistake and I have a higher chance of forcing an error. So it has not been difficult to pick up wickets. The difficulty comes when I have to contain, because my USP has always been picking up wickets, and that’s an aspect of the game that I’ve been working on.How do you work on it?
I have sort of figured out what I need to do to be able to shut batters down when I need to, and there’s a lot of skill aspects involved in that as well. I’ve been working on those skills consistently from even before the season. I’ve not been able to consistently do it in the game, but I’m on the right path and when it all comes together, I want to be as good as someone like Jasprit [Bumrah], because we keep talking about bowlers going at nine or ten an over and throughout this IPL, there has been one fast bowler [Bumrah] who goes for less than six most of the time. I challenge myself to be as good as him.The slow, dipping yorker is one of your specialties. You mentioned after the CSK game that you weren’t confident of executing it earlier in the season. What changed?
That particular delivery is so difficult to bowl that there’s no real technique to it. It’s all about the feel, so the more you bowl it, the better you get at it. There is a certain conditional aspect to it as well. When the ball starts reversing and I bowl the delivery, it tends to drift away and that makes it even more challenging for the batter to see and hit that. It also allows me to bowl it with a bigger angle into the batter, so it forces them to go through the leg side. And when it drifts away, it almost always misses the bat.If you remember the wicket I got of Shahrukh [Khan] in the Gujarat Titans game, it drifted away quite a bit, so there are conditional aspects to it, but once you get the feel that you are going to execute it, it becomes a lot easier.Harshal on his conversations with Kagiso Rabada: “KG said: ‘You’re executing most of the deliveries. It’s just that one over you’re getting wrong, so just think about how you can get better at that.’ To have that validation is good”•AFP/Getty ImagesIf you look at CSK game, in the 19th over, I probably bowled four of those back to back, and I executed almost every one of them. When it doesn’t come out, I have to go back to the nets and just keep bowling it. I know that when I start executing those deliveries, I will pick up wickets, because I know how to set that delivery up. And when I’m confident about executing it, I know what I need to bowl before that delivery to make it even more effective.You’re at the top of your mark, bowling to MS Dhoni, who has been in terrific hitting form. You get him with the dipping yorker. Did you plan that dismissal?
Before the innings I had planned to go around the stumps to him and bowl a wide yorker, but the way the ball was coming out of my hand and the way it was drifting, I thought, “Okay I’m going to take a chance here.” And if I get him out, the 20th over becomes a lot easier for us. I was pretty confident with my execution. I thought, even if he sees it out of the hand, there’s very little probability of him hitting that for six.Largely, do you feel batters are better prepared against your slower ones these days?
It again comes down to execution, right? Because I’ve proven this over and over: that when I execute [my deliveries successfully], most of the batters can’t hit it. When I’m executing, I know I can bowl six in a row and they still won’t be able to hit. They might get away with one, but they still might not be able to hit more than one. So for me, that delivery is all about execution. And when the conditions allow me to bowl six slower balls, I will bowl six slower balls. I have no shame in being called a spinner who runs fast and bowls offspin, which people have said multiple times – which is absolutely fine.Pat Cummins said earlier this season that if you’re conceding below ten an over, it feels like a job well done.
For sure. The benchmark that you set for bowlers in how you judge them has to be based on context, right? If there’s a bowler who’s bowling two overs upfront in the powerplay and two at the death, you can’t expect him to bowl his four overs for 24 runs. That’s just not practical. The way this season has gone, very high run rates, especially in the powerplay and in the death overs, I would still consider nine to ten an over to be a brilliant spell if you have picked up a couple of wickets at the right time and made sure that instead of getting 220-230, they end up being on 205-210. So making the difference of 10-15 runs in the innings is all that you’re looking for.Harshal dismissed Shahrukh Khan of Gujarat Titans with his trademark slow dipping yorker•Surjeet Yadav/Associated PressLike I’ve said before, how I want to judge my performances is how much impact have I made on the game and the eventual outcome of the game, which is again dictated by a lot of variables. But if I had not picked up that wicket [of Rinku Singh in the KKR game], could [the Punjab Kings batters] have gone on to make 20 more in the chase, even though they got 263 or whatever/ So it’s all about making an impact. When you see the number ten against your economy, it does feel a little weird, but the way the game is evolving, I think the benchmark also has to evolve.So essentially you debrief differently? Let’s say you’ve conceded 48 in three overs but bowled a tight final over and conceded only two runs and picked up a couple of wickets. Traditionally 4-0-50-2 would “look” bad.
Right. When you’ve conceded 48 in three overs, you have made some mistakes, so you still want to look at it and try and get better at it. Could you have conceded, say 38, instead of 48? So it’s all about looking at those small areas where you can get better, but at the same time, you have to be a little brave and say that even though that I may have conceded 48 in four overs, I know that I’ve made an impact on the game.How different has it been being a part of the Punjab Kings set-up as opposed to RCB?
It’s not been that different because I’ve always been someone who keeps to himself. For me, it’s all about my process, how I prepare, whether it’s in practice or when we turn up for the game. Even after the game I have my routines: a preliminary review of what I was able to do and what I was not able to do. For me, it’s a very internal process. The external environment doesn’t really make much of a difference to me, so the transition [of teams] was never very difficult for me.Of course, when you spend three-four seasons with the same players, they know how you like to go about things, so there’s more understanding and empathy if you’ve had a bad day. But even at Punjab, like the first four games I was conceding ten or 11 an over every game and I wasn’t bowling well, but there was the same kind of empathy from my team-mates and the environment was very calm and free. There was no significant change coming from the RCB dressing room to the Punjab dressing room.”When you see the number ten against your economy, it does feel a little weird, but the way the game is evolving, I think the benchmark also has to evolve”•Indranil Mukherjee/AFP/Getty ImagesWhat have you picked up from bowling alongside someone like Kagiso Rabada?
Our fast-bowling unit is pretty tight. Me, KG, Arsh [Arshdeep Singh], Nathan Ellis. Woaksey [Chris Woakes] is again someone whom I have really looked up to in terms of his skills to swing the ball both ways, his ability to land the ball on the right area over and over again. I’ve had a lot of conversations with Woaksey about what he does when things are not going his way. Like, there are days when you turn up on the field and you know you can’t land the ball where you want to land it. I’ve had a great relationship with KG for a while I was with him for three years [at Delhi Capitals].Before and after a game, there’s always some conversation happening around how we can get better as individuals and as a unit. There’s a lot of value in just being able to have those open conversation in the team. And you have that confidence that if I make a constructive criticism, I’m not going be taken out of context and they’re not going to feel bad or take it personally. The same applies to me. That is the camaraderie we have in the bowling unit and it’s a very valuable thing to have.Can you pick out an instance of receiving this constructive feedback about an aspect of your game that you worked on?
KG and I were having a conversation after the third game or fourth game, where I was conceding runs at a high economy. And he said to me, “You are bowling really well, your energy is great on the ground, and you’re executing most of the deliveries that you want to execute. It’s just about that one over that you’re getting wrong, which is reflecting on the scoreboard. So just think about how you can get better at that and not think about anything else.” To have that validation is good, because sometimes you feel, “Yeah, I’m bowling well, but the scorecard doesn’t reflect it, so is it just me who’s thinking that I’m bowling well or am I actually bowling well?” When the validation comes from your peers or your coaches, it’s very valuable in reinforcing the fact that you are actually bowling well and you just need to tighten up a little bit.

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

Ireland, South Africa seek fresh start in T20Is in Abu Dhabi heat

Mining the talent pool is top of mind for both teams with an eye out for the T20 World Cup in 2026

Firdose Moonda26-Sep-2024It’s time for a fresh start in the shortest format for both Ireland and South Africa after they experienced contrasting fortunes at this year’s T20 World Cup. While Ireland (admittedly in a tough pool) lost all three matches they played – including one to Canada, South Africa went where they have never gone before and reached the final, only to fall agonisingly short of the trophy.Their snatching-victories-from-the-jaws-of-defeat run lasted eight matches and proved they can step up when the moment calls for it, but maybe not always otherwise. They were blanked 3-nil by West Indies either side of the tournament and while those defeats could be explained by South Africa not having their first-choice squads available, they also pose worrying questions about their depth.Mining the talent pool is top of mind for both teams as they look ahead to the 2026 edition of the T20 World Cup, which means there are certain boxes they’ll hope to tick in this two-match series.Related

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Ireland to host South Africa in Abu Dhabi

By the way, if you’re wondering why these matches are taking place in the UAE, and not in either of the two countries playing, it is because Ireland were due to host this series and had to come up with what their CEO Warren Deutrom called a “creative way to overcome infrastructure constraints,” which is another way of saying it’s more affordable to play in the UAE. If that sounds difficult to believe, consider that Ireland do not have a permanent home stadium and have to pay rent and bring in temporary facilities every time they play at home, and it’ll all add up. While Ireland are building a new stadium that will be functioning by 2028, the fact that Abu Dhabi is more economical as a venue currently tells you something.Will conditions be the great leveller?The almost-40 degree heat and slow, dry surfaces are foreign to both South Africa and Ireland, and could bring the sides closer together. As things stand, they are as far apart as two teams could on the T20I competitive scale as South Africa have won all five of the games they’ve played against each other. They also have the advantage of having been in the UAE for an extra week so the heat feels “a little bit more normal,” according to captain Aiden Markram.For their part, Ireland are not complaining about the lack of home comforts, as they see the importance of experience in conditions they will come across at the next T20 World Cup, hosted by Sri Lanka and India, in particular.”It helps for a number of reasons. We play a lot away from home now, so it’s getting used to new conditions again and we’re playing a lot on the subcontinent where huge competitions are going to happen in the future, and the next T20 World Cup is the main one,” Paul Stirling, Ireland’s captain said. “It has its advantages and I think as an organisation we need to get that balance right. You want to play in front of your home supporters and your home crowd but I think it’s okay if you occasionally play the odd away game, which is your home series.”Ireland exploring top-order options – and South Africa should tooAndy Balbirnie is Ireland’s leading run-scorer in T20 cricket this year, with 298 runs from 12 matches, but has been left out of these matches as Ireland focus on “introducing a new dynamic,” according to national selector Andrew White. Balbirnie’s strike rate of 113.74 from his 12 matches in 2024 suggests Ireland want more firepower upfront. Heinrich Malan confirmed that Lorcan Tucker, with a T20I strike rate of 123.32, will open the batting for the first time with Harry Tector, Curtis Campher and Neil Rock to come in at No.3, 4 and 5.Likewise, South Africa may find themselves at a crossroads with Reeza Hendricks, who has struggled through much of this year. He has only gone past 20 five times in fifteen T20Is and faces competition from Matthew Breetzke and Ryan Rickelton. The problem is neither Breetzke nor Rickelton, who have dominated run-charts at domestic level, have made the most of his international opportunities. Breetzke has a top score of 19 from six T20Is and Rickelton a top score of 27 from six T20Is. This is the series for at least two of three to make the opening spot their own.Some relief from spin for South Africa (or maybe not) Just last week, South Africa registered their second-worst performance against spin in any bilateral series where at least 40 overs of spin were bowled at them. Afghanistan’s Rashid Khan, AM Ghazanfar, Nangeyalia Kharote and Mohammad Nabi took 16 South African wickets between them in three ODIs. What was clear from the way the South African batters were dismissed was their struggles in reading the turn, especially against Ghazanfar, a mystery offspinner, who coach Rob Walter said they had not seen before.They won’t want to use the same excuse against Ireland and to a large extent, they can’t. South Africa have played against George Dockrell and Ben White and the other spinner Gareth Delaney, has not made the trip after suffering what captain Stirling called an “unfortunate accident,” in the last week. That leaves left-arm spinner Matthew Humphreys, who has one T20I cap, and Gavin Hoey, who has flown in for the T20Is, as an unknown. And, no disrespect to Ireland, but this quartet is not expected to pose quite the same challenge as Afghanistan, even in what could be favourable conditions. This may be South Africa’s opportunity to re-find their confidence against spin and show that things are not quite as bad as they seemed against Afghanistan.Who’s got the variations?Seamers have been seen to suffer on surfaces in the UAE unless they have an adequate number of variations, and it will be interesting to see how they approach things in this series. Lungi Ngidi set the tone in the series against Afghanistan, in Sharjah, where he delivered a selection of offcutters and proved difficult to get away. South Africa didn’t use either of Ottneil Baartman or Lizaad Williams in those matches, but both are capable of doing the same and should be given a run in these games.Ireland are without left-armer Josh Little, who is at the CPL, and will lean on Craig Young and Fionn Hand, both swing bowlers who may be able to make things happen under lights but all eyes will be on Mark Adair. He enjoys the challenge of the death overs, has a wide range of deliveries in his arsenal and is a genuine wicket-taker, who last year became the sixth-fastest to 100 in T20Is. Expect some fireworks.

Could more crushing ODI failure be just what England need?

Pain of defeat should help invigorate England’s thinking around a format they have ignored

Cameron Ponsonby21-Sep-2024It’s not fun anymore. Another one-day international and another defeat for England. Of the last 14 ODIs they’ve played, they have lost ten.In truth, England haven’t been very good at this for a while. Since Eoin Morgan stepped down just over two years ago, they have won three of their eight ODI series and are now 2-0 down in their ninth. There was also the disaster-class of their World Cup defence.England used to rock up and win and now they don’t, and as they sank to a 68-run defeat at a sold-out Headingley the crowd became sparser and sparser as people voted with their feet. They’d seen enough.Related

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But that’s okay. Mediocrity breeds apathy, but failure creates feeling. There is only one thing in life worse than England’s defeat in the second Metro Bank One-Day International against Australia being talked about, and that is England’s defeat in the second Metro Bank One-Day International against Australia not being talked about. In the modern day, where every series and league is framed by the question, “what does this actually mean?” some professional pride taking a bruising and an angry fan or two is a good thing.”We care deeply if we get it wrong and we care deeply if we lose games,” interim head coach Marcus Trescothick said after the match. Which from this hyper-positive England camp felt refreshing.In elite sport, losing should hurt and winning should be great. It has become a problem that such is the number of matches, players often realise that cricket is just a game before the fans do. Which, on the one hand, is healthy for them. But on the other, breaks the illusion of sport really mattering.Two comprehensive defeats have snapped England out of that cruise. Stand-in skipper Harry Brook has risen to every challenge that he has been presented with in his career so far – so losing his first two matches as captain, the second of which came on his home ground in front of an adoring crowd, will rankle. Twenty-year-old prodigy Jacob Bethell has been told for years that international cricket is the best thing he could ever imagine, and now he’s here, losing one-dayers in the cold of September. Brydon Carse spent most of the afternoon going at 10s; Will Jacks got a golden duck and bowled two overs for 19; Liam Livingstone also got a first-baller to go with two overs for 23. International cricket. Best job in the world.Failure, however, can be the foundation for success. Had England bossed this series, cracks would have been papered and the general shrug of the shoulders towards bilateral ODI series would’ve continued.But blow it up, fail and fail spectacularly, and we have context. It was only after the ignominious 2015 World Cup campaign that England got their act together and it led to four years of one-day cricket with meaning. A team was being built and fans were invested. The thrilling 3-2 win over New Zealand in the first series under Morgan’s captaincy captured imaginations and the 5-0 hammering of Australia in 2018 confirmed it. This was a team and a journey worth being on.

“We’ll continue to play in the fashion we want to because that’s what we’re going to be doing when we finally make the change and Brendon comes in January. Nothing will be different”Marcus Trescothick

England know that change is needed and know that it’s not fun anymore. At his unveiling as the new white-ball coach, Brendon McCullum cited one of his main tasks as putting a smile back on Jos Buttler’s face. “He’s been a little bit miserable at times,” he said of Buttler.The difficulty is that this change has yet to arrive. With McCullum’s January start date and Trescothick and Brook currently operating in stand-in roles, England have decided that they must absolutely go on a life-changing diet… starting Monday. Brook said ahead of the series that he had hardly spoken to McCullum, with the fingerprints of the man who’s set to take on the role yet to be seen on this team.Trescothick, who is a trusted ally of McCullum, disputes that (in part because he has to, he can hardly say it’s all a waste of time). After the match, he said that rather than this series being a holding pattern, it was a chance to “make an impact and set the gameplan in place”.”The language we’re using, the process of what we’re trying to do within the group is going to be exactly the same going forward,” he said. “We’ll continue to play in the fashion we want to because that’s what we’re going to be doing when we finally make the change and Brendon comes in January. Nothing will be different.”McCullum didn’t want the white-ball job in 2022 because the team was cruising and he was after a challenge. Well now he’s got one. With the Test team, he transformed their fortunes from one win in 17 to the Bazball-infused carnage that we live with today. And with the one-day team, he is tasked with taking a group of young players who hardly play 50-over cricket and turning them into world-beaters. As Brook pointed out after the match: “We’re a young side, Adil Rashid is the highest run-scorer in ODI cricket for us.”For inspiration, they need not look further than their opponents. Current world champions, Australia have won 14 ODIs in a row. Against an England team at the start of their latest regeneration, they fielded a team with eight of their XI from the World Cup final and nine players with more than 100 international appearances. England had one.”It hits different when you play for your country,” Adam Zampa said ahead of this series and his 100th ODI. “When you win World Cups, I’ve still got that drive to win many more. I never thought I’d play this much for Australia.”McCullum has a chance to breed that culture in a fresh group of players ready to grow and win again. England’s last two great rebuilds, white-ball in 2015 and red-ball in 2022, started from rock bottom. With a few more losses, it could be third time lucky.

Stats – Pakistan's first 350-plus chase, Rizwan-Salman's record partnership

All the stats and records broken in the third ODI of the tri-series

Shubh Agarwal13-Feb-2025353 – Pakistan’s chase against South Africa is their first successful 350-plus chase in ODIs. In 2022, they had chased down 349 against Australia in Lahore, which was previously the highest target they had successfully chased in ODIs.ESPNcricinfo LtdIt took Pakistan their 16th attempt to win an ODI chasing a 350-plus total. They are the fifth side in ODIs to chase down over 350. It is also the highest target chased in a multi-nation tournament.For South Africa, it is the highest target they have conceded in ODI cricket. Previously, they had lost after scoring 326 against Australia in 2002.260 – The captain Mohammad Rizwan and Salman Agha added 260 runs to race Pakistan to the finish line after a dodgy start. It is Pakistan’s third-highest partnership in ODIs, their highest against South Africa and their highest in a chase.!function(){“use strict”;window.addEventListener(“message”,(function(a){if(void 0!==a.data[“datawrapper-height”]){var e=document.querySelectorAll(“iframe”);for(var t in a.data[“datawrapper-height”])for(var r=0;r<e.length;r++)if(e[r].contentWindow===a.source){var i=a.data["datawrapper-height"][t]+"px";e[r].style.height=i}}}))}();

This is also the highest partnership conceded by South Africa, surpassing the previous stand of 257, also by Pakistan, between Saleem Elahi and Abdul Razzaq in 2002.1 – This is the first occasion of two players scoring a hundred for Pakistan in the same innings while batting at No. 4 or lower.425 – Rizwan now has the most runs for Pakistan in successful ODI chases of more than 300. He scored his second hundred on this metric, leveling him with Babar Azam and Younis Khan.!function(){“use strict”;window.addEventListener(“message”,(function(a){if(void 0!==a.data[“datawrapper-height”]){var e=document.querySelectorAll(“iframe”);for(var t in a.data[“datawrapper-height”])for(var r=0;r<e.length;r++)if(e[r].contentWindow===a.source){var i=a.data["datawrapper-height"][t]+"px";e[r].style.height=i}}}))}();

134 – Salman scored his first ODI hundred, 134 off 103 deliveries. He now holds the record for the highest individual score by a Pakistani batter playing at No. 5 or below. The record earlier belonged to Basit Ali, who scored 127* against West Indies in 1993.233 – With scores of 150 and 83 in this series, Matthew Breetzke has 233 runs in his first two ODIs. He has gone past Desmond Haynes’ figure of 195 runs for the most runs in the first two matches in this format.707 – Runs scored in this contest, beating the previous record (of 665 runs) of the most runs scored in an ODI between these two sides.5 – Batters who scored 80 or above – Temba Bavuma (82), Breetzke (83) and Heinrich Klaasen (87) for South Africa and Rizwan (122*) and Salman for Pakistan. It is only the third instance of five batters scoring more than 80 runs in a men’s ODI.2 – Only twice a team has chased down 350-plus in ODIs after losing their first three wickets for less than 100. India chased down 351 against England in Pune in 2017 after losing their third wicket for 56. Pakistan were 91 for 3 in this chase before Rizwan and Salman revived the chase.

Lauren Winfield-Hill: 'Good fielding shows how much you're willing to commit'

Yorkshire captain on fitness and longevity in the professional women’s game

Valkerie Baynes05-May-2025Fitness never fails to land as a touchy topic in sport.Charlotte Edwards doesn’t even like saying it anymore, instead referring to “the F-word” as new head coach of an England Women’s squad who found this side of their game called into question after repeated failures on the big stage.Lauren Winfield-Hill – a veteran of 104 England caps, most recently in 2022, and the picture of a professional athlete still going strong on the domestic circuit at the age of 34 – believes “sometimes you’ve got to be careful with your language of what is fitness in cricket”.”I think the biggest thing is the physicality and the athleticism,” she tells ESPNcricinfo. “Can you hold long spells as a bowler? Can you get up and down for twos as a batter? And how good’s your fielding; are you cutting twos, are you taking catches?”If that falls under the banner of fitness, Winfield-Hill says “yeah, there’s some big improvements to be made” in the England Women’s squad.”I sort of prefer the athleticism and the physicality piece,” she adds. “Sometimes we can get skewed with fitness: ‘Can you run for a long time? Do you look athletic?’ and all this sort of stuff and that’s irrelevant.”At the T20 World Cup in Dubai in October, two straightforward catches went down amid a rash of fielding errors as West Indies raced to a powerplay of 67 without loss in pursuit of 142. A further three catches went down and England found themselves scrambling in the field as their opponents romped to a six-wicket win with two overs to spare, knocking them out of the tournament at the group stage.”The fielding was poor at times, very, very poor, and the movement and the cutting twos and things like that,” Winfield-Hill says. “And that’s not a blanket thing for every single player. There’s some players that can certainly make strides in that area, there’s some players that are great athletes.Winfield-Hill hasn’t given up on her England ambitions but accepts her opportunities may be elsewhere•Getty Images”Across the board, I feel like the physical stuff, it’s almost like your commitment to everyone else. Batting and scoring runs, that piece is quite selfish, you can just look after yourself. Bowling is quite similar. But the fielding is the bit that you do for everyone else. If you are fielding a square leg for Lauren Bell, it’s not really for you, it’s for Lauren Bell. It’s captivating this bit where we’re all in and we’re willing to work really damn hard for each other and go through it a bit, get in there and get some tough sessions in, get down and dirty and show how much you’re willing to commit to each other.”Winfield-Hill points out that a relentless schedule, including ever-expanding franchise leagues which disperse players for extended periods of time, adds to the challenge, but says a willingness to work harder and commit to one another as team-mates is crucial.She is well-qualified to comment, based on her experience, longevity and performance.

The physical stuff, it’s almost like your commitment to everyone else. Batting and scoring runs, that piece is quite selfish. But the fielding is the bit that you do for everyone elseWinfield-Hill on the need for basic standards in the field

For two years running, in 2022 and 2023, she was the leading run-scorer in the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy with 470 runs at 78.33 and 663 at 51.00. She is a gun fielder and handy wicketkeeper, having assumed the latter role throughout her four seasons in The Hundred to date.Plus, she looks like one of the fittest players in the country. But is it okay to say that?If so, why is it that when professional athletes are paid to engage in physical activity, there is a squeamishness about the word, fitness?Boiled down, a lack of fitness is often seen as a euphemism for being fat because no one calls anyone fat in the media any more, for good reason. It wasn’t so long ago that they did, with devastating consequences.At the premier of his Disney+ documentary last month, Andrew Flintoff spoke of how the media still hadn’t apologised for brutally fat-shaming him 25 years ago. In 2020, he revealed that the criticism had driven him to bulimia.That episode involved a cruel takedown of Flintoff’s physical appearance amid leaked information over his off-field behaviour when what he really needed was help.Winfield-Hill has a four-year deal with Yorkshire but sees no reason to retire when it expires•Royal LondonSo by the time Ollie Robinson was told privately and via the media that he needed to get fitter by Jon Lewis, the then England men’s bowling coach who would go on to become England Women’s head coach, during a dire Ashes campaign in 2021-22, was that a comment on his appearance, conduct or the fact he had broken down a number of times during the tour?When Alex Hartley, the former England spinner turned commentator first criticised the women’s team following their T20 World Cup exit she said: “I’m not going to name names, but if you look at them, you know. You know who’s blowing a gasket and who isn’t. About 80% of the England team are fit and athletic enough, but there are girls in that side who are letting the team down when it comes to fitness.”She then drew comparisons with the 15 or 16 “genuine athletes” in the Australia squad so the issue inevitably blew up again when England lost the Ashes 16-0.What it all comes down to is performance – players being able to execute the skills required to win games.Dane van Niekerk and Lizelle Lee would argue they didn’t get the chance to prove themselves in that respect at the end of their international careers. Van Niekerk never played for South Africa again after failing to run 2km in the prescribed time for selected for the T20 World Cup in 2023 and Lee retired from international cricket amid a dispute over a weigh-in the previous year.Cricket South Africa subsequently relaxed fitness requirements for men and women, allowing for more discretionary selection.For England, an increased focus on performance as a selection tool has begun with Edwards calling on all centrally contracted players to be available for the first seven rounds of the domestic 50-over competition.”I love that domestic cricket has been really valued,” Winfield-Hill says. “For a few years it’s sort of been like, ‘oh, don’t play if you don’t want to’, and volume of runs or wickets within the domestic structure is not really necessarily being considered.”Asking the players to play and to dominate and to perform because it’s an open forum and it’s a bit of a trial for everyone, it’s a great thing. You need players who are currently in possession to be kept on their toes and you’ll see who the best players in the country are. It is the performance world and it should be about who performs. It’s a stats driven game. You’re there to score runs and take wickets, and whoever’s doing that should have a good opportunity of wearing an English shirt… it is the fairest way to do it, and then there’s no questions about selections.”Again, the Australians are held up as an example.England’s players look on as Australia celebrate their Women’s Ashes whitewash•Getty Images”I hate banging on about the Aussies, I think our domestic structure is better,” says Winfield-Hill. “I feel like I’m a good judge because I’ve played in both countries for the last two years. Domestically we play a much larger volume of cricket and the only way you get good at cricket is by playing a lot of cricket.”But one thing they do do is they’re very rigid on their selections and if you absolutely don’t tear up domestic cricket and you’re not a good athlete and you’re not a good team person, you won’t be playing for Australia. It’s not just like, ‘oh, you’ve performed in domestic levels, so we’ll give you a go.’ It’s like, ‘no, you need to knock these people off their perch.’ I’d love to see that in England.”England hopefuls have no shortage of opportunities to show what they can do under the new county-based domestic structure.Edwards has frequented the grounds throughout the opening rounds of the Metro Bank One Day Cup, where Winfield-Hill captains Yorkshire in Tier 2.The Vitality T20 Women’s County Cup also gets underway on Monday, featuring teams from all three tiers of domestic cricket in a knockout competition over the next three weeks.Related

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Winfield-Hill hasn’t retired from international cricket. But while she has agreed a loan deal to play for Tier 1 team Essex in the T20 blast starting later this month, she says that while her best playing years lay ahead, “I just don’t necessarily realistically think that’s in an England shirt”.The move to Essex seems more about testing herself by playing at the highest level possible which, with her 35th birthday approaching in August, should stand as an inspiration for players younger and older.”I’ve obviously got a four-year contract at Yorkshire and I’m like, I don’t have to retire in four years,” she says. “Touch wood, I feel like I’m somebody that physically looks after myself, but I am looking around at Faf du Plessis, Wayne Madsen, they’re in their forties and they’re still great athletes going really well. Why do you have to stop? We put limitations on things just because it’s not been done before and it’s like, well, it can be done and you can play till you’re 40 if you want to play till you’re 40.”The way the game is now, the way women’s sport is now, people can play for a lot longer. The sports medicine is way better in terms of the support that you get, how you can look after yourself and the actual money means that you can keep playing without having to get ‘a real job’.”I’ve always said I am going to play until either my body’s buggered or it’s not fun anymore, whichever comes first. If it’s fun, then you’re obviously performing. If you’re not performing, it’s not fun.”Performances that make cricket fun? Now there’s an F-word the England team might be happy to say in full.

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