Chennai to host IPL 2024 final on May 26

Ahmedabad has been named as the venue for the first qualifier on May 21 and the eliminator on May 22, and the other qualifier will be played in Chennai

Nagraj Gollapudi25-Mar-2024Chennai is set to host its first IPL final in 12 years, with Chepauk named as the venue for the IPL 2024 title match, to be played on May 26. The MA Chidambaram Stadium, or the Chepauk, the home venue of defending IPL champions Chennai Super Kings, has hosted two previous IPL finals, in 2011 and 2012.Chennai will also host the second qualifier on May 24, with the first qualifier on May 21 and the eliminator on May 22 set to take place in Ahmedabad.The second part of the IPL schedule, comprising 52 matches including the playoffs, will begin on April 8, with CSK hosting Kolkata Knight Riders in Chennai. All playoff matches will be evening games, as usual.ESPNcricinfo LtdAs in 2023, the ten teams have been divided across two groups of five each. Each team plays the other four teams in their group twice and four teams in the other group once while playing the remaining team from the other group – picked via a draw – twice.CSK are grouped with 2022 IPL champions Gujarat Titans, Royal Challengers Bengaluru, Sunrisers Hyderabad and Punjab Kings. The second group comprises five-time IPL champions Mumbai Indians along with KKR, Royals, Delhi Capitals and Lucknow Super Giants.In all, the 2024 league phase will include 11 double-header days, two of which took place on the opening weekend.On February 22, the IPL had released a partial schedule of an initial set of 21 matches from March 22 to April 7. A complete schedule could not be put out since, at the time, the IPL was waiting for the Election Commission of India to announce the dates for the country’s general elections, which have since been made public. They will take place in seven phases from April 19 to June 1.Apart from the main home grounds of the ten teams, the tournament will also travel to Visakhapatnam, Dharamsala and Guwahati, which will host two games each as the respective second home grounds of Delhi Capitals, Punjab Kings and Rajasthan Royals respectively. Guwahati will host the final league game of the season on May 19, between Royals and KKR.

Root to make Yorkshire red-ball return after almost two years

The return of Root, as well as Harry Brook, will boost Yorkshire as they look to get back to Division One of the County Championship

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Apr-2024Joe Root is set to make his first red-ball appearance for Yorkshire in almost two years as he prepares to line up against Gloucestershire this week in the second round of the County Championship.Root, whose only domestic cricket last year came in the Hundred for Trent Rockets following the Ashes, was announced in Yorkshire’s 13-man squad for the trip to Bristol. After missing the opening fixture against Leicestershire following the two-month tour of India, Root will play the next four rounds, followed by a trip away to Northamptonshire for the seventh round which begins on May 24. The 33-year-old last played first-class cricket for his home county in May 2022 against Warwickshire, a month after stepping down as Test captain, before playing three times in the T20 Blast up to June.It is a further boost to Yorkshire’s promotion hopes after they welcomed back Harry Brook for the first of his five-game stint last week. Brook, who had not played since England’s white-ball tour of the West Indies in December after withdrawing from the India series following the death of his grandmother Pauline, returned to action with a crisp unbeaten 100 off just 69 deliveries. Brook’s last fixture will be against Glamorgan at home, starting May 3, before taking a break ahead of England’s T20 series against Pakistan that leads into the T20 World Cup.Following an indifferent tour of the subcontinent, during which he scored 320 runs at 35.55, with just one century coming in the fourth Test as India triumphed 4-1, Root will use the next month to tune up ahead of a bumper six months. England welcome West Indies and Sri Lanka for three-Test series this season, the first of which begins at Lord’s on July 10. They then travel to Pakistan and New Zealand before the end of the year.Yorkshire will hope to make the most of the availability of both their stars as they look to return to Division One, having suffered relegation in 2022. They were hamstrung last summer by a 48-point deduction that decimated any hopes of an immediate return but are considered favourites to re-emerge from Division Two this time around.

The numbers point England's way

Why the numbers suggest that England should go on to win the Ashes

S Rajesh and Arun Gopalakrishnan22-Aug-2005Can England go ahead and convert their momentum in the ongoing series into their first Ashes victory since 1986-87? Comparing the current series stats with historical data provides some interesting pointers, and most of them suggest that England might finally break Australia’s stranglehold on the Ashes.The rate at which England’s bowlers have taken wickets and scored their runs speak of a confident, aggressive team – adjectives which could not have suited England teams of the past. In the three Tests so far, England have scored at 4.01 runs per over. It’s easily their highest scoring rate against Australia, and is in fact the fourth-best in all Ashes clashes.

Best run-rates in Ashes series

TeamYear and hostRun-rateSeries winner

Australia2001, England4.27AustraliaAustralia

2002-03, Australia4.10AustraliaAustralia1946-47, Australia4.05AustraliaEngland

2005, England4.01?Australia2005, England3.87?(excludes one-off Tests)England’s run-rate is also easily the best among all teams which have played Australia since 1999-2000, when the Australians began their 16-match winning streak. England take the second spot as well, their 2001 effort nudging just ahead of India’s display in that memorable series in 2003-04.

Run-rates v Aus since 1999-2000

TeamYearRun-rate

England20054.01England

20013.51India2003-043.50Pakistan

1999-20003.30New Zealand2001-023.29This is also the first time England have scored their runs quicker than Australia since 1986-87, which was the last time England secured the Ashes. In the last 19 years, the team scoring faster has also been winning the Ashes. It certainly suggests that if England continue to outscore the Aussies, they’ll have the Ashes in their grasp in a couple of week’s time.

Run-rates in recent Ashes series

Year and hostEng run-rateAus run-rateSeries winner

1989, England2.963.13Australia1990-91, Australia

2.842.91Australia1993, England2.563.08Australia1994-95, Australia

2.753.02Australia1997, England3.033.40Australia1998-99, Australia

2.883.17Australia2001, England3.514.28Australia2002-03, Australia

3.03 4.10Australia2005, England4.013.87?Meanwhile, England’s bowlers have been doing their job splendidly too. They’ve been taking a wicket every 49.66 balls, which is their best against Australia since 1912. Even more surprisingly, has done better than this in the last 93 years (excluding one-off Tests).

England’s best strike-rates v Australia

YearStrike rate

188823.001886-87

38.33188640.521902

41.50190542.731896

42.96189044.031893

44.221903-0447.541912

48.59200549.66(excludes one-off Tests)Australia’s problems have largely been with their batting, and it has started at the top of their order: Matthew Hayden and Justin Langer have only been averaging 30.33 for the opening wicket in this series; over their entire career (before the current series), the corresponding number was an extremely impressive 55.81. The lack of a substantial opening stand has gone a long way in ensuring that Australia haven’t dominated with the bat like they normally do.Along with their openers, the middle order has struggled too. Their top seven batsmen have, on an average, scored only 224 runs per innings. That effort ranks No. 30 in Australia’s all-time list in series against England. The last time the two sides played – in 2002-03 – the contribution from the first seven batsmen was a healthy 312, which ranked No. 4 in that list.Despite an almost non-existent third seamer, Australia’s bowlers have still managed to take a wicket every 45.38 balls, that’s even better than England’s effort. However, the rate at which England have scored has almost completely offset that advantage. Australia’s batsmen still edge the runs per wicket stat 31.08 to 29.43, but gap has narrowed significantly since the first Test.

A new low for Gibbs

Stats highlights from the third day’s play between South Africa and India at Johannesburg

S Rajesh17-Dec-2006

Zaheer Khan: one of the few Indian batsmen who averages more abroad than at home © AFP
0 & 0 – Herschelle Gibbs’s score in the innings at Johannesburg. It’s the first time he has bagged a pair in 80 Tests.39 – Jacques Kallis’s aggregate in this match. It’s his lowest in a Test against India, against whom his average has now dropped from 82.71 to 68.67.8 for 87 – Sreesanth’s match figures so far. The only Indian bowler to take more than eight wickets in a Test in South Africa is Venkatesh Prasad, who took 10 for 153 at Durban in 1996.54* – Ashwell Prince’s score at the end of the third day. All his three previous half-centuries in Tests have been in matches South Africa have lost. Of his four hundreds, though, South Africa have won one, drawn two and lost one.5 – The total of the first-wicket stand in two innings for South Africa. India were marginally better with the openers adding 14 and 20 in the two innings.37 – Zaheer Khan’s contribution with the bat, which is his fourth Test score of more than 35, all of which have come overseas. Zaheer averages 15.11 when batting abroad; at home his average drops to 9.28.48.50 – VVS Laxman’s Test average in South Africa. His 73 at Johannesburg was his second half-century there in eight innings.

Continental rift

A look at the east-west divide in cricket, which is borne out of double standards, racism and reverse racism, prejudices, stereotypes, or all of them and more working together

Ashok Malik03-Apr-2007

Gavaskar’s salvo against Ponting may have been a bit of pre-World Cup sledging in the time-honoured Aussie tradition © Getty Images
It appeared the ultimate contrived controversy. As the 2007 World Cup began, Sunil Gavaskar and Ricky Ponting got into a slanging match. Gavaskar accused the Australians of being a badly behaved bunch, and contrasted them with the West Indies team of the 1980s, apparently fair-playing “popular winners”. What took things a trifle too far was Gavaskar’s remark that Australian players were so foul-mouthed they were a walking invitation to bar-room brawls. He referred to the late David Hookes, a cricketer who died after a fracas outside a bar.The Hookes allusion was decidedly tasteless. It left Gavaskar open to charges of (reverse) racism, and of taking his baiting of Anglo-Australian cricketers to an extreme. How would Indians have reacted if, for instance, Allan Border had told the media that he was worried Indian cricketers would get carried away after an on-field argument, given what road rage had pushed Navjot Sidhu towards?In the event, Gavaskar eventually apologised after an outcry from former Australian players. But just what was he getting at? How much of what he said was genuinely heartfelt, how much was just plain pre-tournament gamesmanship and needling, and how much actually indicated the undercurrents of racism in international sport? Most important – or perhaps least important – was he right in exonerating Clive Lloyd’s brigade as good sports who shone in comparison to the “Ugly Australians”: Caribbean Tom Brown versus antipodean Flashman?Take one issue at a time, beginning with Gavaskar’s never-ending, and frankly tiresome, war with the Anglo-Australian cricket world.Sunny bays
Justifiably or otherwise, the former Indian captain carries a number of chips on his shoulder. In some ways he hasn’t forgotten umpire Rex Whitehead ruling him out leg-before at Melbourne in 1981, or forgiven Dennis Lillee for pointing a finger, calling him a four-letter word, and asking him to get going to the pavilion.There are other slights, too, that refuse to rest in peace. Gavaskar still pokes fun at the stuffy nature of the English establishment and the MCC, possibly because he was once refused entry to Lord’s by an official who didn’t recognise him.In 2001 when the English team came to India, Gavaskar accused them of playing “boring” cricket to avoid defeat. This again seemed odd, given the man’s own history. Was this the captain who, having won the first Test against Keith Fletcher’s England side on a minefield of a wicket, relentlessly pursued dull draws for the rest of the series? In one Test, Gavaskar took nearly 12 hours to reach 172. Wasn’t he being “boring” and playing for a draw?So what’s driving Gavaskar? Obviously the effect is more important to him than the content. As he has often told associates, he is alert – over-alert, some would suggest – to the mental games played by the Australians especially. These usually begin with, a co-commentator recalls Gavaskar describing almost avidly, a senior player or even a former star – but rarely the current captain – making some gratuitous statement or the other about how weak or pitiful the opposition is. This needles the rival team or puts pressure on a key player, and furthers the process of what Steve Waugh so eloquently termed “mental disintegration”.Was Gavaskar trying to do the same thing to the Australians, an ageing side with a patchy recent record in one-day cricket, just before the biggest limited-overs tournament of them all? At least Glenn McGrath thought so, in a remarkably mature assessment that essentially said: If he thinks we’re badly behaved, that’s his problem. Just keep David Hookes out of it.Is old gold?
Second, move to the comparison between the Waugh-Ponting Australian team and the Lloyd-Viv Richards era West Indians. Nostalgia has a strange way of dulling emotions, but it would be sobering to recall that Lloyd’s team were often criticised by their opponents for slow over-rates; for a cynical, bouncer-happy approach; for aiming at the tailender’s cheek bone; for sheer intimidation.In the 1983 Prudential Cup final, Balwinder Sandhu, batting courageously at No. 11 after a middle-order collapse, was hit on the helmet by Malcolm Marshall. “Bouncing the No. 11… not on,” said an English commentator, shaking his head. It would be sobering to recall that Lloyd’s team were often criticised for slow over-rates; for a cynical, bouncer-happy approach; for aiming at the tailender’s cheek bone It was a more virulent manifestation of this impulse that left India with half their batting order injured at Kingston in 1976, and no one to bat after the fifth wicket fell. This had a certain Sunil Gavaskar tearing into the West Indies – team, spectators, and society – in his book .Go back to another story from the winter of 1983. Played on a breaking wicket, the Ahmedabad Test was evenly poised till Lloyd took “extra-constitutional” measures. In his newspaper column Lloyd lit into the umpires, calling them biased, prejudiced, disgraceful, and worse. It worked. When play resumed, the gentlemen in white coats were clearly nervous, and prone to giving the visitors more benefits than there were doubts.Was Lloyd being unsportsmanlike or uncivil? By one reckoning, he was doing nothing wrong at all. In sport, teams and individuals play to win, not be recognised as honourable schoolboys. A lot of people like Vijay Amritraj, a far greater number remember John McEnroe. That is why, even if Indians may have brushed it aside as irrelevant, Ponting’s cutting remark that Gavaskar may want to consider the Indian team’s recent record told a story of its own.Cricket, colour-coded
Was Douglas Jardine racist? If you do a pop quiz among Indian cricket buffs, the overwhelming verdict, nine to one, would be, “Yes, yes, of course.” Jardine, protagonist of Bodyline, famously hated Australians and once called them an “uneducated and… unruly mob”. Perhaps he was classist too: an Oxford-educated patrician who thought nothing of using a strongly-built coal miner, Harold Larwood, to implement his grotesque “leg theory”, and then let that hapless bowler carry the burden of guilt.Yet what was India’s experience with Jardine in 1933-34, when he came here for a series in the winter following Bodyline? In Bombay, the city of his birth, Jardine made an effort to trace and visit his parents’ old and ailing butler – a small but touching gesture that no Australian, certainly, would have expected of the MCC captain.Next, read what Lala Amarnath has to say about the captain of the fielding side when he hit India’s first Test century at the Bombay Gymkhana. This extract from is illustrative: “When I completed the single to reach my century, CK Nayudu touched his bat at the crease and walked down the pitch to shake hands and congratulate me. Since the ball was still in play, the throw landed in the wicketkeeper’s gloves with CK out of the crease. The wicketkeeper, Elliot, looked at his captain for his approval to run the Indian skipper out, but the English captain disapproved with a gesture. It was a wonderful display of true sporting spirit.”

Muralitharan and Ranatunga discuss the definition of a no-ball with umpire Ross Emerson at Adelaide in 1999 © Getty Images
Race, nationalism, parochialism, identity – no area of human endeavour is free of conflicts devolving around these, and there is no reason why cricket should be the singular exception. Yet it would be important to note that for every determined and proven theory of racism, there is an equal and opposite theory.Indian cricket fans often argue that the Australians and the South Africans – consistently, the two best white teams in the world – don’t understand or appreciate subcontinental social niceties; that they can’t figure out why the prototypical Indian or Pakistani or Sri Lankan cricketer is so strait-laced, mild-mannered, and diffident, rather than a matey pub-hopper with a redoubtable vocabulary of cuss words. They are nonplussed that somebody like Muttiah Muralitharan has taken Australian sledging to heart.Yet there is the other side of the story. So used are cricket’s “traditional” cultures to the deferential, goody two-shoes demeanour of subcontinental cricketers that when an Arjuna Ranatunga stands up for his beleaguered spinner and fights the umpires and the Australian media, when Sourav Ganguly writes a little script of his own and keeps Steve Waugh waiting for the toss, when Imran Khan says he has no patience for Ian Botham and Allan Lamb because they are not in his class, there are howls of protest; it is not laughed away or grudgingly appreciated as clever gamesmanship.Sometimes there are overt double standards too. In 1996 the Australians famously boycotted the Sri Lanka leg of the World Cup, claiming to be worried about Tamil Tiger violence. After 9/11, with greater reason perhaps, they opted out of a tour of Pakistan and played instead in “neutral” Colombo and Sharjah. Yet in July 2005, when terrorist bombings shook London, there was no question or serious talk of not playing the first Ashes Test at Lord’s two weeks later.Having said that, how much do “coloured” cricket societies do to keep the stereotypes alive? It is easy to admonish Australian aggression as overdone, but name the cricket journalist in India who has not written long essays bemoaning India’s lack of Aussie-style steel. As Indian coach, Greg Chappell has been asked by a dozen interviewers as to how he plans to inculcate “Australian aggro” into the Indian team. To be fair to him, he has not taken the question seriously.The fact that it is asked, however, does point to the obverse side of excessive sensitivity to racism – that it sometimes betrays an inferiority complex. That’s another pitch, to be tackled another day.

Strength in depth

Batting strength down the order will be West Indies’ trump card, but they will be coming into the tournament cold. By Andrew McGlashan

Andrew McGlashan04-Sep-2007

Bravo is a potential match-winner in all three departments of the game © Getty Images
The shorter the game the more competitive West Indies are; and by that reckoning they should be real contenders in Twenty20.Ramnaresh Sarwan is back at the helm after injury and the selectors have largely stuck with the players who took the one-day series against England. Pedro Collins – earning a recall not before time – and Narsingh Deonarine are the two new faces but neither has been called up because of particular success in Twenty20.West Indies showed they can adapt to the format, piling up 208 in the first game at The Oval and sharing the series 1-1. There was a new verve about their play during the latter part of the England tour as the team responded to Chris Gayle’s captaincy. However, they are one of the teams coming into the tournament cold, and will have to hit the ground running in a tough group that includes South Africa and Bangladesh.Home truths
There is no Twenty20 competition in the proper domestic season in the West Indies, but the game has taken the Caribbean by storm thanks to Allen Stanford. His multi-million dollar Stanford 20-20 has breathed new life into cricket in the region, although most of the players in the West Indies World Championship squad haven’t participated to any great level. Stanford, though, has big plans to go with his big pockets. He wants to take his game international. Last year he tried to entice South Africa for a big-money showdown with an all-star XI, while Australia have also been approached.Strengths
The depth of their batting means they will be able to go hard throughout the 20 overs. There is no shortage of powerful strikers and the boundaries won’t be big enough for Chris Gayle, Marlon Samuels (Twenty20 strike-rate: 190) and Dwayne Smith if they get going.Those three and Dwayne Bravo are all capable of bowling their four-over spells, which allows West Indies to pick a top-heavy team. Potentially they could have Denesh Ramdin down at No. 8 or No. 9, and there is a great flexibility about the order.Even in Twenty20, having wicket-taking bowlers is vital, and Collins will form a potent attack with Daren Powell and Fidel Edwards. Unless Gayle has a monster tournament, and Shivnarine Chanderpaul’s golden string of scores continues, West Indies will be short of runs to trouble the top sides Ian ChappellWeaknesses
A couple of poor overs in either innings can lose a side a match. Twenty20 is a game where it is imperative for a team to keep their focus, and West Indian sides have been known to let their minds wander, especially when on tour. If they enter the tournament with an attitude that it is just a hit-about and a bit of fun, they could rapidly come unstuck.Although they ended the England tour in fine spirit under Gayle’s captaincy, now they must readjust to having Sarwan back in charge. Rumours of unrest between players and the coach, David Moore, have the potential to undermine the squad. And though it’s a young side, fielding can also be an issue; the teams that go the furthest will be those that save the most runs.Players to watch
He might be a limpet in Test matches, but stick him in coloured clothing and he finds a new gear. In his one Twenty20 outing against England he went from blocker to basher, hitting 41 off 26 balls. Although 20 overs doesn’t sound very long, there is value in having someone who can anchor the innings at the top. Chanderpaul’s flexibility lends itself perfectly to that role, especially if the ball zips around in early-season South Africa. If West Indies are performing well, Bravo is usually at the centre of it. He provides a constant heartbeat to the team, even when others appear disinterested and distant. In all three areas of the game he can be a match-winner. His fielding is inspirational, he strikes the ball cleanly, and his bowling at the death has won one-day matches.Dark horse
Sammy burst onto the Test scene with 7 for 66 at Old Trafford before picking up an untimely hamstring injury, but he – like Bravo – is another multi-dimensional cricketer who gives his all and always appears to be enjoying the battle. While not express pace, his hit-the-deck seam bowling could be well-suited to South African conditions, and his presence in the side will enhance the fielding.

Shivnarine Chanderpaul has the flexibility to flay and block as required – a handy skill at the top of the order in Twenty20 © Getty Images
Ian Chappell’s take
West Indies didn’t perform well in the World Cup, playing at home andled by Brian Lara, and they’re unlikely to do well in unfamiliar conditions andwithout their star batsman as captain.However the West Indies players have an advantage over all but their English counterparts in that they haveperformed, under pressure and on a regular basis, in their domestic Twenty20tournaments. The Stanford competition is a big-money affair, and WestIndies are more used to serious Twenty20 cricket than most other countrieswhere the game was treated more as entertainment until the announcement ofthis high-profile ICC tournament.On paper West Indies have most of the ingredients for a strong Twenty20side. They have a big-hitting opener to take advantage of the fieldingrestrictions in the first six overs; they have a couple of very talentedallrounders in Dwayne Bravo and Marlon Samuels to add depth in batting andbowling; and they have a pacy new-ballbowler who can strike early.However Chris Gayle’s poor footwork has madehim highly inconsistent of late, and Samuels has flattered to deceive for a longtime. As for Dwayne Smith, he no longer deceives – he always hits a six overmidwicket and then promptly gets out.Fidel Edwards, on the other hand, seemsto have come of age in England, where he bowled with pace and fire. IfDaren Powell and Pedro Collins give him good support, West Indies might atlast have something resembling a potent attack.However, unless Gayle has amonster tournament, and Shivnarine Chanderpaul’s golden string of scorescontinues, West Indies will be short of runs to trouble the topsides.West Indies will need to be at their best to get past Bangladesh in thepreliminary round, but even if they do get past that hurdle, I don’t expectthem to reach the semi-finals. Rating: 6/10

'Harsh, but he had it coming'

Has the PCB saved cricket from Shoaib or deprived it of him for the next five years?

04-Apr-2008

Is this the end of the long and turbulent road for Shoaib? © AFP
“Tell me how many players in world cricket have been banned for five years on discipline charges? Previous incidents of indiscipline should have been dealt with at the time instead of being allowed to accumulate.”
“Disappointing is no word to describe Akhtar’s ban, I would call it pathetic and request the new political government to sack the Nasim Ashraf-led PCB.”
“I don’t think the board has done anything wrong by banning Shoaib Akhtar. I am sure the PCB has taken his past record into consideration before banning him … It’s not right on Shoaib’s part to approach the media.”
“Personally, I wouldn’t have banned him. I’d have made him earn his international place back by playing domestic cricket.”
Pakistan coach “The PCB should have supported Akhtar more because there have been characters like Akhtar – there was John McEnroe in tennis and our own Aamer Sohail – who were temperamental yet talented and gave sports a lot to cheer.”
“I can tell you with all honesty that there was no ulterior motive involved in the ban. It was a situation where we had to decide how much longer could we allow Shoaib Akhtar to keep on violating discipline and work ethic.”
“Shoaib shot himself in the foot and there’s nobody else to blame. Something like this was waiting to happen and there’s a very clear sequence to Shoaib’s self-destruction.”
“Just like a child, Shoaib too has a very low tolerance level. He should first think before saying or doing stuff. Shoaib needs to be mature and get married too.”
“I feel sorry for Shoaib, but it is also true he has been involved in many disciplinary cases. However, I would like to add here that it is the result of the PCB’s leniency towards Shoaib’s past blunders. His [latest] offence is not that grave, as several Pakistan Test cricketers in the past have done this type of wrong act repeatedly and got away with it.”
“I think after me now the board has targeted Shoaib Akhtar. Their next targets are Mohammad Yousuf and Shahid Afridi.”
“I think the matter has gone too far. This whole issue is damaging for Pakistancricket so I hope that a compromise is reached.”
“His USP is his aggression. All these things keep on happening. We should take things in the right spirit.

Harbhajan rides his luck

Harbhajan Singh has scored five Test fifties since the start of 2008 and India have lost only one of those games. Four of those have come against Australia. Coming in at 204 for 6 today after a good start had been wasted on the first day of a series-decid

Sidharth Monga in Wellington03-Apr-2009Harbhajan Singh has scored five Test fifties since the start of 2008 and India have lost only one of those games. Four of those have come against Australia. Coming in at 204 for 6 today after a good start had been wasted on the first day of a series-decider, Harbhajan could not have chosen a better time to score another half-century. He would admit he was lucky, given that many edges found the gaps and a couple of catches were dropped. But his thinking was clear – hitting out was the only option and with New Zealand setting attacking fields, he was aware that most of the powerful hits would fetch good runs.Apart from the edged boundaries, Harbhajan also had a wristy straight drive, a clean slog sweep, a trademark paddle sweep, pull through midwicket, and a lusty blow off Daniel Vettori to show. He also ran remarkably well between the wickets with MS Dhoni. That he ran 26 of his 60 runs is an impressive stat for what was largely a hit-and-miss effort.”Today was again a very good chance for me to deliver under pressure,” Harbhajan said. “Good for the team. Thank God I have done well. Dhoni and I had a great partnership. Those were crucial runs and obviously it will help us in the game.”The enormity of the situation, with India chasing an elusive series win in New Zealand, wasn’t lost on Harbhajan. “Obviously it was crucial to contribute lower down the order,” he said. “Now if we look at the scoreboard we have got decent runs on it. When I went in to bat probably it wasn’t the same. Thankfully, me, Dhoni and Zaheer [Khan], Munaf [Patel] and Ishant [Sharma], got 180-odd runs in the last session. It was fantastic, good effort.”Even when India were battling to avoid the follow-on in Napier, Harbhajan had come out and tried to break the shackles. He hit two boundaries off the first five balls he faced then and died by the sword. He was prepared to take similar risks today. “That’s the way I play,” Harbhajan said. It helped that the bowlers rarely attacked the stumps, often going for the short-pitched stuff or followed his exaggerated movements before the ball was delivered.”They bowled short to me,” he said. “On these kind of wickets it is easy to score runs when they bowl short.”Harbhajan’s boisterous methods with the bat also translated into obvious confidence when he came for the post-match press conference. After joking that he had missed out on a century, he put his role in perspective. “I am improving as a batman and making an effort to score a hundred some day,” Harbhajan said. “But at this point in time I think I am not good enough yet to make it happen. But, as and when the team needs me, as at Nagpur, Sydney and Bangalore, I have scored runs. It was important for me, Zaheer and Ishant to stay at the wicket with the batsmen and score those crucial runs. It will definitely help us.”But he also tried to silence those who’ve criticised his bowling away from home. “Most of the wickets in New Zealand don’t seem to be spinner-friendly,” he said. “I will just go out there and give my best shot. I have bowled well in the one-day series and in the Test series so far, though many people have been writing… that I am only good enough in India. Whatever. I know what I have been doing, what is important for the team, what matters to the country. I will go out there and give my best shot. If I hit the right sort of areas, I should be able to pick those crucial wickets for the team. It might not be five or six, but it could be one or two. If it can help the team win, I will be happy with that.”His chance with the ball will come soon.

How the Championship was won

Durham retained the County Championship title with two matches remaining. Cricinfo looks back at how they did it

Andrew McGlashan13-Sep-2009April 22-25 v Yorkshire, Chester-le-Street. Match Drawn
From the moment Ian Blackwell and Phil Mustard steadied the first innings it looked as though Durham would start their defence with victory. However, they couldn’t dismiss Yorkshire on the final day despite Graham Onions’ 5 for 56 which included the wicket of Michael Vaughan. Onions finished with eight wickets in the match and Steve Harmison five. It was a sign of things to come and a warning shot to the rest of the division.April 28-May 1 v Somerset, Taunton. Match Drawn
Onions celebrated his England Test call-up as he took 6 for 31 to skittle Somerset for 69 on the second day. He bowled full and straight, beginning with the wicket of Marcus Trescothick, as the home side folded in 28 overs. Dale Benkenstein had made 181 in the first innings to set up Durham’s position on a typically flat Taunton surface, and after Somerset’s aberration the game reverted to type. With more than two days to take another 10 wickets, Durham were thwarted by the weather (which impacted the third day) and centuries from Trescothick, Justin Langer and Craig Kieswetter.May 6-9 v Sussex, Hove. Match Drawn
It became three draws in a row as Durham couldn’t quite force the pace in friendly batting conditions on the south coast. Another hundred for Benkenstein laid a decent first innings, but Sussex were almost level thanks to a century from Andrew Hodd. Michael Di Venuto and Gordon Muchall than racked up three figures, but there wasn’t enough time to dismiss the home side again, although Durham’s quick bowlers created some nervous moments on the final afternoon. It only felt like a matter of time before the first victory arrived.June 6-8 v Hampshire, Chester-le-Street. Won by an innings and 110 runs
When Durham opened their account for the season they did so in style. Following a break for one-day action, they took advantage of favourable first-day conditions to roll Hampshire for a paltry 105. Onions and Harmison did the bulk of the damage with seven first-innings wickets between them and 15 in the match. As would become a hallmark for Durham’s campaign, they scored runs in tough conditions when it mattered and important innings from Will Smith and Ian Blackwell built a substantial lead. Then it was over to Onions again, who ripped out Hampshire for just 96 with 6 for 58. The game was over barely an hour into the third day.June 11-13 v Lancashire, Chester-le-Street. Won by 138 runs
The well-oiled Durham machine was hitting top gear and they comfortably secured a low-scoring contest. The opening day was overshadowed by Andrew Flintoff’s return to action as he claimed 4 for 47 to help dismiss Durham for 244. But by the time Onions and Harmison got to work, that looked a massive total as Lancashire folded for 116 – Harmison winning the duel with his great mate Flintoff. On an action-packed second day, Durham then crashed to 10 for 4, but their first-innings lead of 128 gave them a considerable cushion and Blackwell hit a priceless 74. A target to 274 in the conditions was always out of reach, especially with Harmison blowing away the top order as he took 5 for 46.Dale Benkenstein’s runs were vital to Durham’s success, the season after he handed over the captaincy to Will Smith•Getty ImagesJune 16-19 v Warwickshire, Edgbaston. Won by 10 wickets
Edgbaston was a bowler’s graveyard for most of the season – except when Durham came to town. Onions continued his outstanding form with 7 for 38 in the second innings to follow up Harmison’s haul of 5 for 44 in what Geoff Cook called “one of Durham’s best wins.” They had been an uncertain 120 for 4 on the first day when Blackwell played his most important innings of the season with 158. Even the loss of much of the second day to rain didn’t halt Durham, as Harmison found hostile form and struck three Warwickshire batsmen painful blows. “It’s the worst thing in the world when you hit somebody,” he said. “I really don’t like it at all.” After Onions’ second-innings show, Durham were back at the topJune 30-July 3 v Worcestershire, Chester-le-Street. Won by five wickets
Another low-scoring contest in the North East, and Durham were again too strong despite the absence of Onions and Harmison and a fine spell from Kabir Ali. Liam Plunkett took career-best innings and match figures (11 for 123), but the home side were under real pressure in their first effort when Kabir and Matt Mason reduced them to 59 for 6. However, once again, the lower order came to the rescue as Mustard made crucial runs to edge a one-run lead. Plunkett, down in the role of fourth seamer, then led the destruction again to leave a target of 179. That could have been testing, but Di Venuto hit an unbeaten 100.July 10-13 v Yorkshire, Headingley. Match Drawn
Perhaps the closest Durham came to defeat, but such was their strength and confidence they overturned a first-innings deficit of 135 to end the game in the stronger position. Harmison took another five-wicket haul, but the crucial performances came from Mustard (85) and Plunkett (65) as they added 147 for the eighth wicket after Durham had been 268 for 7 – a lead of 133. It was becoming very hard to see any team beating the defending champions.July 15-18 v Nottinghamshire, Trent Bridge. Won by an innings and 102 runs
Nottinghamshire didn’t get near denting Durham’s position as they were blown away for 171 and 83. Harmison was again lethal, having joined the match following his omission from the Lord’s Test, and blew away the second innings with 6 for 20. The depth of Durham’s options were on show in the first innings as Plunkett and Blackwell took seven wickets between them. Benkenstein again showed his value on the opening day with a battling hundred along with a hard-fought 87 from captain Will Smith.Steve Harmison wasn’t required by England very often during the summer, but he was a constant threat for Durham•Getty ImagesJuly 31-August 3 v Sussex, Chester-le-Street. Won by nine wickets
This was a victory set up by Durham’s batsmen as Di Venuto hit a career-best 254, adding 231 with Smith who made 101 and 173 with Benkenstein. But while conditions looked flat when Sussex bowled, Durham’s attack found more help. This time it was Callum Thorp’s turn to take the honours with a five-wicket haul and Sussex were asked to bat again. A three-day victory was on the cards before Luke Wright provided some resistance, but there was no denying Durham as Harmison cleaned up the tail.August 11-14 v Lancashire, Old Trafford. Match Drawn
A pitch offering some turn – albeit that got slower during the match – made for a tight contest over the first couple of days until Durham pulled away before the surface had the final say. Durham managed 270 on the first day with plenty of contributions but no major innings, then on the second Blackwell worked through Lancashire with a career-best 7 for 85. Di Venuto’s 84 then led a grinding second innings before a declaration left a target of 326. That was never entertained and Onions’ three wickets created a few flutters before Mark Chilton secured the draw. Still, no one had come close to beating DurhamAugust 19-21 v Warwickshire, Chester-le-Street. Won by eight wickets
The title came ever nearer with another dominant display based on Thorp’s first innings haul of 5 for 49, which skittled Warwickshire for 135 while Benkenstein’s three scalps were the surprise package. A workmanlike batting display built a lead of 138 with Blackwell playing another useful innings. Jim Troughton produced an impressive, battling century but Blackwell, Mark Davies and Mitchell Claydon took three wickets each and a target of 101 was knocked off with ease.September 1-4 v Somerset, Chester-le-Street. Match Drawn
Two days of rain prevented Durham from pressing for another win against one of two teams with an outside chance of catching them in the title race. Somerset slumped dramatically in the first innings from 89 without loss to 174 all out as Blackwell took an incredible 5 for 7. Batting wasn’t easy at any stage and Shivnarine Chanderpaul showed his class with an unbeaten 117 before the weather condemned the match to a damp end…and left Durham within touching distance of the main prize.September 9-12 v Nottinghamshire, Chester-le-Street. Won by an innings and 52 runs
When Harmison bowled Mark Ealham on the final evening Durham had officially defended their title with two games remaining, but the outcome had long since been known. They did it in style with a record-breaking total of 648 for 5, following a record opening stand of 317 – their biggest in Championship cricket – as four batsmen registered hundreds, led by Di Venuto’s 219 which all came on the opening day. With Nottinghamshire, the side in second place and Durham’s last challengers, having only collected one bowling point ,Durham needed just six wickets and a draw to take the title. Plunkett struck the decisive blow when he had Ali Brown caught behind, but Durham didn’t let up and crowned their magnificent defence with a crushing victory.

This sporting life

Football, tennis, baseball on screen, and some cricket – there’s a welter of games on offer in England in the summer

Nagraj Gollapudi17-Jun-2009May 27
Warming up has never done any harm. Off to London a week before the main event. Players like to talk about acclimatising in foreign environs. Press people can do it too.Reach the airport about two hours before the flight, brooding about events at the Stadio Olimpico, the venue for the 2009 Champions League final between Manchester United and Barcelona. Didn’t expect TVs at Mumbai airport to telecast the game. Minutes later, am proved wrong. As luck would have it, even get to watch that slippery Cameroon cat Samuel Eto’o sneak through porous Manchester United and open the account with a neat finish. Cristiano Ronaldo stares glumly, chewing gum. Sometimes you are in the right place, at the right time. It just takes effort. And, of course, luck. Isn’t that what sport is all about – making luck?May 28
Newspapers on the tube scream “Barcelona 2-0”. (I missed Lionel Messi’s stunning header).Something doesn’t seem right: after a tube ride lasting a football game, which needs me to change lines three times (there are more train lines here than fingers on both hands) I’m yet to see a sign, placard, poster, advertisement, something, anything, that will tell me that the world’s best cricketers will be here to play in the World Twenty20. The ICC turns 100 in less than a month’s time, but it is truly behind the times when it comes to marketing such a high-profile event.May 29
“Vegetarian – Indian word for ‘lousy hunter’ ” reads a black t-shirt worn by a big, burly, Englishman. I can’t help but agree and smile. Wait for my London office colleagues to pick me up. Turns out one of them is meeting Fidel Edwards. I go along, and once there I ask Fidel to do his John Cena celebration. He obliges without much fuss.May 30
One of the advantages of attending team training sessions is being able to watch and listen to the players have a nice time. The Indian squad, which arrived the previous evening, is still in IPL mode. Dhoni and Co. stream around, taking catches hit by their fielding coach, Robin Singh. Robin hits one past the ring and Ishant Sharma takes off in chase. RP Singh, part of the victorious Deccan Chargers, says to him, “Your fate is bad even here, just like your team’s [Kolkata Knight Riders].” When RP’s Hyderabad team-mate Rohit Sharma scampers to take a high catch, Dhoni chants the Deccan theme song, “Go, Chargers, go, Chargers, go.”Murali Kartik, Ishant’s Kolkata team-mate, who plays for Middlesex, pays the team a visit. Yuvraj Singh, on a high after his two hat-tricks in the IPL, playfully instructs Kartik on how to bowl perfect left-arm spin, and more importantly, how to take a hat-trick.May 31
A day filled with the captains’ press conferences (11 in all). The best moment comes courtesy the cool dude from Jamaica, Chris Gayle. At the end of the press briefing the captains are supposed to pose with the trophy for pictures. As Gayle poses, he says: “Controversy! West Indies beat India.”June 1
On the sidelines of India’s first game, a warm-up against New Zealand which they lose, Lalit Modi blows his trumpet once again. This one to announce a charity game at Lord’s on July 6 between inaugural IPL champions Rajasthan Royals and England’s domestic Twenty20 Cup winners Middlesex. The game is also being marketed as Shane Warne’s final appearance at Lord’s. Former England and Middlesex spinner John Emburey, too, is around, looking dejected after the virtual fall of the ICL, for whom he was a coach. He says he is looking for a job, but before that he plans to go on a sailing trip. Nice.Now you see him, now you don’t: Fidel Edwards does his John Cena impression•Nagraj Gollapudi/ESPNcricinfo LtdJune 2
Travel to Southgate, one of the training grounds for Middlesex, to watch a Pakistan training session. An old English couple are enjoying the sight of Shahid Afridi and gang hit the ball into the car park. The rest of the car owners rush up to check if their bonnets have dents. The husband, who could easily pass for an older, bigger version of Laurel from Laurel and Hardy, reminisces about a certain Glenn McGrath, who “never could do much on his own without the support of Shane Warne”. The Ashes are coming.June 3
Pakistan are handed a nine-wicket defeat by Dhoni’s men. Younis Khan had this to say on the eve of the game “Will it make a difference if we win or they lose?”June 4
Andrew Symonds is back in the news. He is apparently being sent back by Cricket Australia for breaching his customised code of conduct. All plans for the day go for a toss as I set off on a wild goose chase to Heathrow. The most significant piece of information after a six-hour wait comes from a tabloid photographer, who tells a couple of the other media men that this is the second time in the week he has got the airport beat; the first one was snapping Dannii Minogue. June 5
Say hello to Dirk Nannes, who is on his way to Lord’s for the tournament opener. Three hours later he will be seen dancing around with his Dutch mates after pulling the rug out from under England’s feet at the home of cricket.June 6
The view from the press box for the print media at The Oval, located in the Jack Hobbs Stand, is diagonal with respect to the main pitch. So you don’t get a clear picture of the live action and rely on the TV, or go upstairs into the stands, where the views are much better and one is also kept alive by the buzz of the crowds. Scyld Berry, the ‘s cricket writer and current editor of the , informs that Edgbaston has the best press box in England.June 7
Once upon a time, before Facebook and Twitter, in the days when the mind was free, June 7 was marked in the memory as Anna Kournikova’s birthday. She may have had the ability to unleash lethal groundstrokes, but she became more famous as the world’s favourite pin-up. To this day she has the sort of fan following people like Gordon Brown would die for. Anyway, it was Roger Federer I missed seeing as he scripted his 14th Grand Slam while I watched Pakistan lose their way against England. I still have some time left in England. Who knows, I may just run into the genteel Swiss somewhere round the corner.June 8
No games in London, my base, so I go to see this lovely film called , the story of an aspiring baseball star from the Dominican Republic who travels to the USA, where his family wants him to be, though it isn’t what he himself really wants. Life is sometimes about following what one’s heart says. At least that’s what I got out of the movie. Check it out.Tendulkar has a DNA sample taken•Nagraj Gollapudi/ESPNcricinfo LtdJune 9
Am brought face to face with Lord’s notorious etiquette book. Andrew Hall, the former South Africa cricketer, who played in the ICL and will be playing for Worcestershire, is hanging around below the dressing room, waiting for his former mates to board the bus. The stewards politely ask him, and the rest of us, to vacate the area for safety reasons. Hall puts his head down and walks away without a word.June 11
Turn up at a gig where Sachin Tendulkar is promoting a forthcoming book on himself that will weigh more than an airline’s permitted baggage limit (30kg) and will cost a price (3000 pounds) that you could buy a Nano, the world’s cheapest car, with and still have some left over. The book, a collector’s item, has a first to its credit: it will have Tendulkar’s DNA profile mapped and then reproduced in a diagram. Tendulkar recently unveiled a waxwork of him on display in Madame Tussauds, and now this – a perfect immortal.June 12
One image that will always stay from Gideon Haigh’s – his magnificent account of how Kerry Packer changed the face of cricket in the 1970s – is of Ian Chappell’s first meeting with Packer. Chappell arrives in jeans and a country-and-western singer’s shirt. Packer’s first words: “What are you, a f***ing cowboy? Well, who do you want in this team of yours?” Chappell reminds Packer he is no longer captain of Australia. “What do you think this is, son, a f***ing democracy? You’re the f***ing captain.” To this day Chappelli, as Chappell is popularly known, remains a master storyteller himself. I overhear him telling Colin Craft, the menacing former West Indies fast bowler, about who Keith Miller thought was the best batsman in the world. Don Bradman, of course.June 13
A not-so-amused Daniel Vettori, after his team’s defeat to Pakistan at The Oval, wonders how Umar Gul, the match-winner, who lit up the evening with record bowling figures, could get reverse swing as early as the 12th over. He repeats the statement thrice. It is impossible to ignore. Surely, this is not the end of the matter.June 15
Tours are mini adventures. There are bound to be occasional clutch-your-head moments. Mine arrived today. Distracted as I speak to the New Zealand media manager on the mobile phone about Vettori approaching the match officials after the Pakistan game, I get off a train on my way to the game. Little do I realise I’ve left my bag on the train. The rest of the afternoon is spent in futile attempts at getting it back. I’m holding Vettori responsible.

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