The complicated case of Temba Bavuma, and non-performing captains

How important are captains in cricket? But also, what happens when a World-Cup endangering slump in form meets complex socio-political nuances?

Sidharth Monga28-Oct-202213:35

How do teams deal with underperforming captains?

The weight on Temba Bavuma’s shoulder is unlike what any other player carries in this tournament. And it’s built up to such levels thanks to a perfect storm of cricket’s archaic power structures and the complex socio-political realities of South Africa.We will get to the scope of captaincy in due course, but first, its roots, which can be traced back to when the amateurs – often batters of varying skill levels – would almost always lead the professionals. The upper classes used this construct to maintain their superiority over the rest, who dared to ask for money for their time. The horror. How could such people be entrusted with the spirit of the game?Related

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Times have changed: while captains are still the face of their team and in many teams still get a suite while others board in standard rooms, the primacy of a captain is now questioned more often than it used to be. Especially when the said captain is not pulling their weight with their cricketing skill. There will never be another Mike Brearley.However, do you aggressively challenge the originally upper-class English construct of the supreme captain when, for a change, the person probably benefitting from it is the first Black African man to lead South Africa in international cricket?Let’s get one thing clear first. Bavuma did not get the captaincy because he is a Black man. In fact he took a thorny crown when leadership in the sinking ship of South African cricket was scarce. He shepherded the team with firmness and with grace when Quinton de Kock refused to take the knee at the last Men’s T20 World Cup. He then welcomed de Kock back into the fold. He was an accomplished leader at domestic levels. As for his current competitors for a spot in the XI, Rilee Rossouw had gone Kolpak back then, and Reeza Hendricks was yet to have his best year in T20 cricket.Bavuma may not have got the captaincy because of his race, but race becomes an important consideration when deciding his future as a T20 player and captain. Admittedly, Bavuma is not the only T20I captain struggling at the moment, but Aaron Finch definitely and Kane Williamson arguably have better T20 pedigree and can be backed to bounce back. Bavuma’s T20I strike rate is 115, and he is keeping out another player of colour in Hendricks, who is having a cracker of a year in T20s with an average of 42 and a strike rate of 144.

Bavuma may not have got the captaincy because of his race, but race becomes an important consideration when deciding his future as a T20 player and captain

Then again, cricket has always been weird when it comes to dealing with non-performing captains. Once the XV is selected and the reins have been handed over to the captain, it is really up to them to drop themselves. Coaches know better than to be forceful. More so in Bavuma’s case. It is not unimaginable that there will be extra motivation for selectors to stick with him and for him to fight on because there is a stereotype to be beaten that Black Africans are not natural leaders.Not that any leader wants to second-guess themselves. They don’t make it all the way to international cricket by doubting their prowess. You wonder, though, if one or more of Bavuma, Finch and Williamson doesn’t quietly wish that the decision was taken out of his hands. The bigger matches of this T20 World Cup are yet to come, and they don’t want to get stuck in the middle where they can neither hit out nor get out in order for other hitters to maximise their time at the wicket.It can be a lonely place trying to decide whether you should be playing yourself. Bavuma is hopefully keeping good counsel. Dropping yourself can be a sign of weakness, the opposite of elite competitors’ instinct. At the same time, you have to think of the player sitting out and what he can bring to the team.Some say that this pruning of the XV to XI is the most important job of a captain, but the job itself doesn’t come properly described. At modern amateur levels, the captain creates a WhatsApp group, finds fixtures, gets enough players to commit, follows up with them on team dues, and only then thinks of batting orders and bowling changes. They often don’t have to select an XI because frequently only that many turn up even when more have confirmed in.The role definition of the captain at professional levels is less clear. Some teams tend to hand over full control to them – selectors listen to them when picking the XV, they also pick the XI and run the game – while some only give them the control on the field. At the elite level of the modern game though, plans on the field are mostly pre-decided, the longer the format the more the team’s fate depends on the fitness and depth of its bowling attack, players have become more and more responsible for themselves, and coaches and support staff are playing a bigger role in running T20s.Is the impact a captain has on his team overstated in cricket?•Getty ImagesThere remain the hollow parts of the job description such as maintaining good body language, shaping the team in their own image et cetera, but leaving all of it aside, the fact remains we still like the idea of one boss with whom the buck stops. In cricket, this is the captain: they front up when the team loses, and take credit for the wins. It possibly makes sense too, because the coach doesn’t really experience the conditions out in the middle, and that feel for the game is important to make crucial decisions. In it lies the assumption that say a Keshav Maharaj, as vice-captain, cannot make those decisions, but if Maharaj is made the captain, the next person in line can’t make these decisions. And in it lies the assumption that those decisions are more crucial than runs and wickets.It might not be ideal – perhaps it’s too disruptive – to do this in the middle of a big tournament, but this is a conversation cricket needs to have: how important is captaincy? There is no data to measure the impact of captaincy. To attribute a team’s win-loss record to a captain is cricket’s oldest problem: it doesn’t take into account the strength of the team or the opposition, and leaves undue credit and criticism at the captain’s door.If it feels outlandish – if anything feels outlandish – always think, ‘What would Sri Lanka have done?’ They had a leadership group – Sangakkara, Jayawardene, and then Mathews was added into the mix – and who actually captained didn’t matter that much. They once changed captains mid-tournament to avoid an over-rate penalty. They won a T20 World Cup with Lasith Malinga as captain, and he was handed the reins in the first place because the regular captain Dinesh Chandimal was done in by a slow over-rate penalty and then couldn’t regain his place in the side.Now that the ICC has discontinued the old tradition of banning captains because of over rates, here’s another thought: what would that canny Sri Lankan side have done if they had an under-performing captain keeping a better option out of the XI?

Allan Donald: Bangladesh fast bowlers 'have established the pack mentality'

The bowling coach has overseen a surge in fortunes for Bangladesh’s quicks – “they have given themselves the best possible chance of succeeding”

Mohammad Isam18-Dec-2022During the course of the Chattogram Test, Bangladesh’s fast bowlers reached the mark of 167 wickets for the year, their best collection across formats in a calendar year in over two decades of playing international cricket. Those are good numbers but, more importantly, indicate that Bangladesh, a spin-bowling country for so long, are now also finding match-winners among the quicks. Allan Donald has played a big part in the transformation, and he calls the change “significant”.Donald, who joined Bangladesh in March this year, found a conservative group of boys who were fearful of trying to be aggressive. There was a bit of success in New Zealand before Donald came into the picture, when Taskin Ahmed, Ebadot Hossain and Shoriful Islam scripted a famous win in Mount Maunganui. Still, they had to prove it wasn’t a fluke.Related

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“The growth we have shown in less than one year is so significant,” Donald tells ESPNcricinfo. “It is a great statistic. I always look at strike rates very closely. When I took over as the South Africa fast-bowling coach [in 2011], I was blown out of my boots to see that South Africa was dead last in the powerplay strike rate. They were striking at 52 in ODIs. They were completely conservative. So I had to break the shackles, change perceptions and mindsets.”It was the same here [in Bangladesh]. Conservative, scared of making mistakes. Not being ruthless enough. Just reluctant to try to do something a bit more aggressive. I am hoping to see this group get bigger and grow more. This group is mingling really well. We call it dovetail. If one guy doesn’t succeed, another does the cleaning up. We have established the pack mentality. We all buy into the same mindset. There has to be a leader if we want people to talk about the attack. There needs to be other men to help each other. This attack has dovetailed well.”Bangladesh’s pacers’ strike rate in Test cricket this year is currently their second best since 2013, while they have their biggest annual haul in Test cricket ever and their joint-second highest in T20Is. The numbers in their favourite format, ODIs, might not be as impressive but, all the same, in all three of Bangladesh’s major victories this year, fast bowling has played a vital hand.Ebadot’s six-wicket haul led to the team’s Test win in Mount Maunganui. Taskin won the Player-of-the-Series award in Bangladesh’s ODI series win in South Africa. Ebadot and Mustafizur Rahman bowled key spells during their ODI series win against India at home earlier this month. Khaled Ahmed, Hasan Mahmud and Shoriful provide options, giving the bowling group its depth.Together, they form the most improved aspect of Bangladesh cricket of the last two years.

“I coach mindset. I can be technical if I want to, but at this level, you can have the best plans in the world, but you must have the desire and the mongrel in your belly, you won’t get past anyone. I think slowly but surely we are starting to see this growing in this group. This excites me”Allan Donald

‘The players have bought into the business plan’
Donald gelled with the boys quickly; you can’t tell you are around one of the greats of the game when you see him helping out in almost every aspect of the training and match preparation.In the time the ODI and Test series against India, he requested the BCB to send a group of promising fast bowlers and spinners to Chattogram. He oversaw sessions with them and worked with them in the nets alongside spin-bowling coach Rangana Herath.”I coach mindset. I can be technical if I want to, but at this level, you can have the best plans in the world, but you must have the desire and the mongrel in your belly, you won’t get past anyone,” Donald says. “I think slowly but surely we are starting to see this growing in this group. This excites me.”Donald is most excited at how the senior team’s fast-bowling group agreed to do it his way. On his first tour with Bangladesh, Donald posed an uncomfortable question to the players…”Fortunately, most of the fast-bowling group said that they will give a crack at this plan in all formats: ‘we will change our way we approach things, to give ourselves the best chance of succeeding’,” Donald says. “I asked all the seamers in South Africa: ‘what makes you the most fragile?’ One thing that came out was that, ‘we don’t bowl too many bumpers; we are not aggressive enough, we are very wary of going for runs’. We changed that thought-process completely.”It makes me proud that they all talk the same language. It is across formats. It shows that the players have bought into the business plan. They have given themselves the best possible chance of succeeding.”Allan Donald on Ebadot Hossain: “He has come from nowhere and has taken the international stage by storm”•AFP/Getty Images‘Ebadot loves the stage; I love the salute’
With the plans and the roadmap in place, the fast bowlers had to produce the goods. They formed a WhatsApp group with Donald, where the first message was to make it the tightest fast-bowling group in Bangladesh’s history.The numbers prove that they are on the right path.Two factors have stood out: how others stepped up when one was injured or out of form, and the overall improvement across formats. Taskin has improved as a Test and T20I bowler, while Ebadot’s first foray in white-ball cricket has gone well.”We missed Taskin in the two ODIs against India. Ebadot just jumps in with both feet. We want guys to break the house down at every opportunity,” Donald says. “He has made things happen all the time. He just seems to mow the house down. He loves the stage; I love the salute.”I saw Ebadot’s six-for in New Zealand, and heard his story of winning a fast-bowling prize. I think he has the knack of being a partnership breaker, a possible match-winner. An exciting young tearaway who is passionate about what he does. Ebadot keeps putting his hand up.”He has come from nowhere and has taken the international stage by storm. He listens well. He practices his boots off. I gave him time off [before the first Test against India] to get him off the training paddock. He felt a bit tired after the third ODI so I didn’t want to see him bowl for a couple of days.””Taskin is extremely passionate, a magnificent fast bowler”•AFP/Getty Images‘Taskin is a magnificent fast bowler’
As noted before on ESPNcricinfo, Bangladesh’s most noticeably improved fast bowler is Taskin. The story of his comeback has been inspiring, particularly how he became a fitter and better bowler after shaking off depression during the pandemic. After three years in the wilderness, he came back, and in the second year of Taskin 2.0, he opened up to Donald about his ultimate goal.”Taskin’s words were: ‘I don’t want to be recognised as average, I want to be one of the greats’. He has all the qualities. He leads from the front. Talks really well. He is extremely passionate, a magnificent fast bowler,” Donald says. “He has a natural outswinger, bowls a heavy ball; He gets stuck in the contest. He didn’t hesitate to take over the leadership of the fast bowling group when I asked him for the first time nine months ago. I need people like that.”The most experienced of the group is Mustafizur, but he has also been under pressure the most of late. But he did seem to move his game up a notch during the India series, and Donald said it was down to T20 coach Sridharan Sriram and Shrinivas Chandrasekaran, the performance analyst, working with him.”Sriram and Shrinivas spotted that in his release point of his slower ball, his palm was facing the batter,” Donald says. “It needed to be more side-on so that the palm was facing the off side on his point of release. He bowled a lot of overs to get that ball to come out softer and with a bit more bite. He worked really hard on nailing yorkers.On Mustafizur Rahman: “You write him off at your own peril”•AFP/Getty Images”He is a class act. When we needed a guy to step up against a world-class player in Rohit Sharma, Fizz came to the party and produced a great yorker to win the series for us. I love working with him. Mustafiz has been around the world. You write him off at your own peril. I know how hard he is working right now.”Fast bowling stopped being a topic of discussion in Bangladesh cricket six years ago when the team management decided to prepare raging turners in Dhaka. It made fast bowlers almost redundant – they already bowled very little in domestic cricket.Courtney Walsh, the fast-bowling coach at the time, had to sit through a few Tests with no quick bowling on view. After Walsh, Ottis Gibson had an impact with the players connecting with his methods, but Donald has taken it to the next level.”I have taken out the fear factor of making mistakes,” he says. “I say it almost every day: don’t worry about what I think sitting in the stands. I have been there. I have experienced your heartaches and mistakes. It is absolutely okay to make mistakes, as long as we give it a 100% crack out there. It doesn’t matter if you go for six.”Donald is now hoping to expand the pool, so replacements are around at all times. It won’t be easy, but Bangladesh have moved from nothing to a place where they have six or seven good quicks. The curve is certainly going in the right direction.

How Harry Brook aimed big, failed, and took off like a rocket

England’s new wunderkind makes batting look like a blast, but it wasn’t always easy for him

Jonathan Doidge29-Mar-2023For young Harry Brook, the last 12 months have been beyond the most wild of dreams. A T20 World Cup winner’s medal; Player of the Series awards for his exploits on England’s Test tours of Pakistan and New Zealand; and an IPL deal with Sunrisers Hyderabad for a whopping US$1.6 million, the third-highest fee paid by an IPL franchise for any England player, after Sam Curran and Ben Stokes.Like so many overnight successes, however, Brook’s route to the top has been far from plain sailing. In 2019, when his audacious bid to fast-track himself into contention as a Test opener failed, he was dropped from the Yorkshire first team and made to fight his way back in by scoring second-team runs.It was a rude awakening. He began that season opening the innings alongside former Test centurion Adam Lyth; he thought it might be a route to the elite arena. Instead, a string of starts ended in him requesting a move down the order.Related

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His coach then, Andrew Gale, was not about to bend over backwards to work the team around Brook, and left him out for a month or so before letting him back into the fold. It was all part of Brook’s education.”I learned a lot from 2019,” he reflects, when we spoke in Leeds this January about his story so far: “I put my hand up to open. Galey wanted me to open as well, and I said I definitely want to do it because there was so much uncertainty around England’s opening batters at the time.”I was only 20. The reality of me actually getting picked for England was very slim but I thought if I scored a few hundreds in the first few games, I might get a chance at Test cricket.”It completely threw me off. I didn’t stay in the moment. I wasn’t thinking about the next game, I was just thinking about if I could play for England. So over the last few years I’ve worked on trying to stay in the moment, concentrate on the next game and prepare for the next game.”Back then, Brook had already made a partial declaration of his abilities with a match-winning maiden first-class hundred in a bizarre championship game in 2018, when Essex bowled a stellar Yorkshire line-up out for just 50 in their first innings, only to go on and lose. That hundred came from No. 3, to where he had been dropped after opening in the first innings.Brook bats in a 2018 county game with Adam Lyth. “To me, he’s playing a different game [than] most people at the moment. Test cricket is not easy and he’s making it look pretty easy,” Lyth says of Brook•Gareth Copley/Getty ImagesFirst-class cricketing life didn’t get off to the best of starts for Brook, who learned his game at the Airedale and Wharfedale League club Burley in Wharfedale. He played just the one match in his first season, 2016, in which he was out for a golden duck against Pakistan A. The following year he averaged 13.66 from six innings in red-ball cricket.Even after the 124 at Chelmsford in 2018, he didn’t really kick on. A first-class average of 25 that year, and 21.76 in 2019, was not delivering the substance that his talent, fostered by many hours of childhood throwdowns by his grandfather Tony, had promised.In Brook’s story, 2020 was the lightbulb moment. There was a greater reliability about him as he took the first steps towards consistency in Yorkshire’s Bob Willis Trophy campaign. Despite no three-figure score, he averaged 43.He mentions a T20 innings at Headingley, where both he and Joe Root made half-centuries, as a turning point. “I used to try and power the bowlers and hit it wherever I wanted to and premeditate a lot of things,” he says. “I can remember Rooty coming down to me every over and telling me to watch the ball, to play it on instinct, and we ended up chasing a total down.”The gradient to his upward curve got somewhat steeper in 2021, when he made two hundreds in a season for the first time and finished with 797 runs. In T20s that year, he racked up 695 runs, striking at over 140. That and his 189 runs from five games for Northern Superchargers in the inaugural season of the Hundred piqued the interest of franchises worldwide. Spells in the PSL and the BBL followed, and this year he will no doubt debut in the IPL.Brook acknowledges the applause for his 48-ball hundred, the second-fastest in PSL history, against Islamabad United•PSLMartin Speight, Brook’s coach at his school, Sedbergh, in Cumbria, himself a former county wicketkeeper-batter with Sussex and Durham, thinks the way Brook has overcome several life challenges has stood him in good stead in building towards success at the highest level.He speaks of a conversation with James Bell, the England team psychologist, who called him to talk about Brook. “They’ve been working with the players,” says Speight. “They’ve been writing down lots of things, looking at what has created him [Harry] and two or three other young players, and then almost looking at [making them] futureproof.”They were looking at a mixture of upbringing, young age, love of the game, a family that are obviously cricket-mad – the fact that he could walk out of his Nan’s back door and straight onto the pitch.”As for the challenges, leaving Ilkley Grammar School, in the shadow of Ilkley Moor, was a real eye-opener for the teenager: “Sedbergh was not easy for him,” says Speight. “He wasn’t a natural athlete. Academically he found it hard, and he was forced at school to do his work. He was doing things he didn’t want to do.”He knew that if he wanted to make it, he’d have to stay there and board. He found that hard. He was a very quiet, shy lad when he first started. Although he was clearly a good cricketer, it’s all the challenges he had to face outside cricket as much as anything that have shaped him.”

Speight cites Brook’s failures with Young England as an 18-year-old and his poor second full season in county cricket as reasons for his current success.”He went away after those disappointments and decided he had to work it out. He made the decision to start again himself. I didn’t ring him. He phoned me and asked me to help. He was determined enough to do that and he wanted to succeed.”Although he has worked with the likes of Gale, Paul Grayson, Ottis Gibson and Ali Maiden in his time with Yorkshire, Brook continues to go and see Speight from time to time.”They’ve got a wonderful understanding and a connection, which I think is really healthy,” says Lyth, Brook’s Yorkshire opening partner, “and Speighty probably knows his game as well as Harry does.”Opening the batting has actually probably made him a better player and more equipped for him to go into the middle order.”He trusts his defence a lot more now. He’s got such a solid defence and you need that to play first-class cricket, let alone Test cricket, but then what he also has got is the attacking game and a natural flair, which comes out a hell of a lot when he’s batting.”Nortje who? Brook pulls the South Africa quick bowler during his 80 in his second ODI, in Bloemfontein earlier this year•Marco Longari/AFP/Getty ImagesThe fruits of Brook’s labours during his early years in the first-class game began to ripen in 2022. It now appears to have been foreordained that just when England’s Test fortunes were entrusted to Brendon McCullum and Ben Stokes, Brook would have jaws dropping with his own exploits.His profile looked ideal for the new style, and he had all the shots of a high-class white-ball game to call upon. He made 967 championship runs at 107.44, hammering three hundreds and six fifties in his 13 innings in Yorkshire’s ill-fated campaign last year.”I think I probably fit the script fairly well,” Brook suggests. “Just the way I play positive cricket, trying to always put the bowler under pressure.”Even so, he was made to wait until his county colleague Jonny Bairstow’s freak golfing injury allowed him a first opportunity.His Test debut, against South Africa, was all about the experience rather than the runs. “I think the goosebump moment was actually walking out to do the national anthem,” he says.”Because the Queen had died, we walked out and I’ve never felt or heard anything so silent. You could hear a pin drop. Then, obviously, as soon as we started the national anthem, it erupted.”Annus horribilis: Brook made a hundred in the 2019 county season but ended up averaging just 22, with 12 scores of under 20 in his 17 innings•Alex Davidson/Getty ImagesThat England won inside two days is now part of Bazball folklore. That Brook went on to score four sumptuous centuries in the space of eight Test innings may, in time, become part of his legend.His magnificent Test-best 186 from just 176 balls in the first innings of the Wellington Test this year was followed by his first Test wicket (New Zealand’s greatest Test run-scorer, Kane Williamson), before the cricketing gods reminded him of the Ts and Cs of the sport with a diamond duck – he was run out without facing a ball in the second innings.It’s hard to believe this is a man who averaged just 28 in first-class cricket prior to 2022 and only had an average of 36 runs per innings from 56 first-class matches as recently as when he made his England debut last September.”It’s been a bit of a stellar year,” he says. “I don’t know if I’m ever going to be able to top it, to be honest. The last few months have been like a dream come true. The main thing was to come home with a medal and be a world champion.”Having seen his influential input at international level thus far, few now doubt Brook’s ability, least of all Speight.”Back in school days, he’d come in on a morning, before lessons, and have an hour and 40 or an hour and 50 minutes, every day. He loves the game. He loves batting.With Yorkshire team-mate Joe Root in a Blast game against Worcestershire last year, where they sealed a win with a partnership of 87 off 44 balls•Getty Images”His whole mindset is that if it’s not right, he’ll work and work and work to get his basics right before he goes on and does anything else. When he came to see me [in January] before he went to South Africa, he spent 20 minutes at the start just getting everything right. Then he wanted to work on pulling and whacking over wide mid-on, midwicket, back-of-a-length balls, which we worked on.”Then he went back, had a couple of chats, then he had another 20 minutes going right back to the basics again.”Those basics have changed since Brook began to put his front foot forward in first-class cricket. “When he was at school Harry stood still,” says Speight, who also works with other Yorkshire players.”He didn’t trigger or have a pre-delivery movement. I made sure that his alignment was perfect and he didn’t twist out towards midwicket. We didn’t want his bat coming across the line of the ball. We did that every day for four years.”If you look at his innings at Lord’s in 2017, against the likes of Steven Finn, he was fine [Brook made 38 in Yorkshire’s first innings against Middlesex] but over the next year or so he started coming out of alignment. His hips would open up and his shoulders would open more. A bit like a piece of fusilli pasta. His bat ended up sliding across third, fourth or fifth slip, and anything moving, he ended up nicking it or missing it. Even a straight ball on occasions.”If you’re a fraction early, you’re going to end up nicking it. If you’re a fraction late, it’s going to go through the gate.”In 2018, Brook called Speight for help. Grabs from some of the messages exchanged between the pair provide fascinating insight, both visual and verbal, into those technical changes”He sent me the videos from earlier in the year. We looked at that and decided he’d try using a trigger movement.”Brook’s stance in 2018, at the time of delivery and immediately after it, with his shoulders and hips opening up and bat coming down from slipBrook had already done some research and found a video of AB de Villiers talking about his triggers. He decided he’d take a page out of the AB book.”We started work on that and continued all the way through Covid,” Speight says.
“By putting a trigger in, it loaded his core up ready to move and helped to align his body properly so that his bat could come down in a straight path.”It worked, in part: “Then in Covid year they played four of five games [in the Bob Willis Trophy]. He did well at Durham and got runs against Nottinghamshire but then he didn’t kick on.”He was opening his hips up too much, so we fine-tuned that. Once we sorted that trigger out and got his weight 60-40 to his front foot, we got his head over the top of his body instead of drifting outside off stump. We worked hard on that on an ongoing basis.Brook in 2019 (left) and a year after”He realised that if his head was in the right position and his trigger was right, he shouldn’t miss it, and that’s still the basis of his game.”I watched the dismissal in the first one-day international in South Africa and his toe had gone an inch too far outside off stump. As a result his head got slightly out of line and of course, he played round it rather than hitting through it.”And of his innings in the Wellington Test, Speight says: “All that happened there was that he and Joe [Root, who also got a hundred] worked out that if they stood still where you normally would, one foot either side of the crease, there would be a ball with their name on it.”So Brooky tried to move outside the crease. He was all over the place in terms of his starting point but his movement remained the same from whatever starting position he set himself and he was able to master them.”It gave the New Zealand bowlers little margin for error, because when there was any width through the off side, he was so well balanced, he was able to deal with both back-foot and front-foot shots with equal precision.”Ultimately Brook’s desire and willingness to work hard at his game, and his belief in Speight’s methods and his eye for detail, have brought him rewards.”He’s just got an all-round game for both red and white that is absolutely perfect,” says Lyth, himself a superb exponent at the top of the order in all formats. “I’m sure he’ll be an all-format cricketer for England for a long time. He’s got everything. The only things he can’t do are bowl and play football.”It doesn’t take long for comparisons to surface where players enjoying success are concerned. Both Lyth and Speight separately suggest that Brook is showing a Kevin Pietersen-like aptitude for his batting.”To me, he’s playing a different game [than] most people at the moment. Test cricket is not easy and he’s making it look pretty easy,” Lyth says.He also thinks Brook will face his biggest challenge yet this summer. “Ashes cricket is different, but knowing Harry like I do, he will relish that challenge. He plays pace bowling really well and he plays spin well, so it will come down to him making good decisions for long periods of time.”In Test cricket he’s already done that, so for me it’s just a case of him carrying on playing as he is and he’ll be fine.”Elite sport demands more than just ability and hard work. It also requires a good temperament to ride the inevitable troughs that punctuate the peaks. Speight says Brook is well equipped on that front. “He has an innate self-belief. He doesn’t look nervous when he walks out to bat, does he?Take cover: Brook lashes one square in the Karachi Test, where he made 111 and England won the series 3-0•Matthew Lewis/Getty Images”So whether he is or he isn’t nervous, he trusts himself from ball one. To be successful, you have to have that. It’s what separates the best few players from the rest.”When you look at Kevin Pietersen, how many times did people question his temperament? Yet look at what he produced. Harry will make mistakes, lots of them but if you look at his temperament, he doesn’t seem to have too much trouble getting in. If he gets in, he will score runs just like [Pietersen] did.”In the dressing room, Brook says his former team-mate Gary Ballance was someone he particularly looked up to and who helped him most of all. “I used to spend quite a lot of time with Gaz. We had loads of conversations. Stats don’t lie and his stats are probably some of the best you’ll see in county cricket ever.”Just talking to him about how to score runs, how to convert those twenties and thirties into sixties and seventies and then trying to kick on and get big hundreds – I just picked his brains really, and tried to learn how he scored runs.”Taken across individual scores, Brook’s personal manhattan might have begun as a series of single-storey buildings with an occasional landmark structure popping up, but now the skyscrapers are beginning to cluster.The personal hiatus before his country came calling looks to have been perfect for him. As his game was changing, so too was England’s, and particularly in Test cricket. “They’re making us feel like we can do anything when we go out there,” Brook says. “We’re trying to put the bowlers under pressure but we’re not being reckless. We’re trying to soak up pressure in the pressure situations.”There’ll doubtless be a few of those when Australia come over in the summer and it will be fascinating to see how Brook and England handle them. It’s a pretty safe bet that there are unlikely to be any dull moments.

Taskin Ahmed: 'I told myself, whether I break or I die, I will wear the red and green jersey again'

The Bangladesh fast bowler talks about his comeback to the national side, and being in the vanguard of his team’s pace attack

Interview by Mohammad Isam17-Mar-2023Since his comeback in 2021, Taskin Ahmed has gone from cautionary tale to leader of Bangladesh’s fast-bowling attack, having played a part in several of Bangladesh’s most momentous wins, including most recently their 3-0 sweep of England in T20Is at home. In this interview he spoke about his comeback and the improvement that made to his mental health, and how he wants to be among the best fast bowlers in the world.Since your last interview with us, shortly after you played your comeback game for Bangladesh, it has been a remarkable time in your international career.
I have always wanted to be a complete team man since I made a comeback during Covid – as a bowler, batter and fielder. I want to give my best, but of course, it won’t happen all the time. I have a strong belief that if my process is in place, I can take on any opposition. Everything is decided on those 22 yards, regardless of who you are playing against, so whoever the opposition batter, I want to properly execute my strength. When that happens, life won’t be easy for the batter.Related

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  • Player rotation, trying out fringe players on Hathurusingha's agenda before ODI World Cup

  • Bangladesh reaping rewards of Taskin and Litton's changed mindsets in ODIs

  • Bangladesh's fast bowlers: from invisibles to match-winners

Mark Wood said recently that you impressed the England team and that their bowlers picked their lengths from you, and you kept their batters under pressure.
He is no doubt one of the best in the business. I want to be right up there. I appreciate what he said, but what he talked about is essentially my duty.One of your best spells recently came in the T20 World Cup game against India. No wickets, but you stuck to your guns in those four overs.
Wickets aren’t really the measure of good bowling. Sometimes you don’t bowl well but end up with three or four wickets. It is all about execution. End of the day, I have to ask myself if I have given my 110% in the field – how my execution was, what areas I can improve on. These are personal check boxes. When these three fields are ticked, I am not too bothered about wickets. That was a spell that went according to the team’s requirement in those conditions. It is a team game, so if you can execute the team’s plan, you are a good player.

“When your process is in place, your self-belief eclipses any worry you have about the opposition. You know you are honest off the field with your preparations. Homework done, I am well prepared, so why won’t I do well?”

Three years ago, did you think you could become the leader of the Bangladesh bowling attack?
Whoever has the ball in hand is the bowling leader. I am not competing with my team-mates. We are family. If a group of us are improving together, we will become a threat to opponents. We are around 60-70% there. I want to compete with the top fast bowlers in the world. I am preparing myself physically, mentally and skill-wise.All the steps you took three years ago, at the start of the pandemic, have helped, would you say?
When I started [to train] at the start of the pandemic, I wasn’t in the national team. I tried to find what I was lacking. I had below-average fitness. I wasn’t there skill-wise. I wasn’t fielding or batting well. It was hard to comprehend how I was going to play for Bangladesh again. But I had the belief that I could play – I didn’t just think about it, I turned it into action.It was [during] Covid, so it wasn’t possible to take coaching, but [physical trainer] Debu opened up his gym for me. I remember he and I used to be in the gym alone after .After a few months my fitness was developing, but what about my depression, anxiety, negativity? Those weren’t going away. I went to mind-trainer Sabit Raihan. I am still working with him. I am trying to develop my mentality. I am still fearful of being left out of the team, but I am working on how to get rid of the fear of failure. You can never win if you fear losing before the contest even starts.I want to be positive in every aspect of my life. Negative company, negative words, really irritate me. My system has changed, so when someone is being negative, I either change the topic or leave. Working with Sabit and Debu was really enriching. I had phone conversations with [BCB director Khaled Mahmud] Sujon sir and [former bowling coach Mahbub Ali] Zaki sir.I used places like the garage and the staircase of my house for training. I took gym equipment from the BCB. I did bowling drills, wristwork. Those were the small steps. I ran in the sand after early morning prayers. I had insane gym sessions after fasting the whole day [during Ramadan]. The trainer used to push me to the point where I thought I would break, but I didn’t give up. I thought to myself, I am dead inside seeing the team play on TV. I thought this is it – whether I break or I die, whatever happens, I will wear the red and green jersey again. I have come to believe that if someone really wants something from the heart, it can turn into his strength.In July 2021, Taskin and Mahmudullah put together a stand of 191, the second- highest Test partnership for the ninth wicket, in a win against Zimbabwe•Zimbabwe CricketI don’t think logic applies to everything. [They say] you are not supposed to train hard after fasting all day – you are hungry and dehydrated. But it is your desire. You have to get out of your comfort zone. My main target was to get back in the Bangladesh team after proper training. Now the target is to slowly rise in the rankings. When you are below 100, it doesn’t show [on the ICC rankings]. I was out of the top 100 in all formats. Now I am coming into the 50s, and if Allah wants, I will be in the top ten. Or No. 1. It will happen, Inshallah.There are two ways of asking Allah for what you want. Firstly, when you are not prepared for the exam, you can ask Him to save you. The other way is [to say], Allah I have prepared myself really well. You be with me. When your process is in place, your self-belief eclipses any worry you have about the opposition. You know you are honest off the field with your preparations. It is a huge gut feeling for a player. Homework done, I am well prepared, so why won’t I do well?Mental health comes from off-field preparations. Honesty and hard work are my main weapons. If the self-belief is in the right place, my skills will keep improving. Mental health is very important.Commentators and opponents these days talks about how you are a threat. Do you see batters viewing you as a threat?
Out in the field, I back myself fully. When I am executing properly, I see the batter, regardless of how good he is, questioning himself. They will have days when they will play great shots. Some days will be bad. But I try to keep up my end of the bargain, which is executing my skills properly.What do you think are the highlights from these two years since the comeback?
Winning Player-of-the-Match awards in two World Cup games and the Player-of-the-Series award in South Africa.The Test win against New Zealand.My 191-run stand with [Mahmudullah] Riyad bhai in Zimbabwe. The close game against India in the T20 World Cup was another highlight.

“Bowlers like Shaheen Shah Afridi, Kagiso Rabada, Jasprit Bumrah and Josh Hazlewood, these guys will become legends by the end of their careers. I want to be regarded how they are regarded”

About that Test win against New Zealand – you seemed to enjoy Ebadot’s wickets in that Mount Maunganui Test.
My comeback raised my love for playing for Bangladesh. Representing the nation is a matter of huge pride. Having team feelings automatically means you enjoy team-mates’ success. His performance is helping the team win.I still remember Ebadot bowling after tea. I was standing at third man, making some calculations looking at the scoreboard. I thought, if we can bowl them out by lunch tomorrow [the fifth day], we can create a chance. If we can’t, then we have to find a way to draw this game. Suddenly he takes three wickets. I was like, what is happening?He took three more the next morning. I took three wickets. We shared nine wickets in the second innings. That’s it. We won. Beating New Zealand in their backyard is a massive achievement.Tell us the story of the five-wicket haul against South Africa.
I got a call from Lucknow Super Giants during that ODI series – I was denied the NOC [for the IPL]. We had Tests against South Africa at the time. Everyone dreams of playing in the IPL. I was a little sad about missing the opportunity. I told myself that I have to keep my focus on playing for the national team.I was overthinking the night before the third ODI, the series-deciding match. I kept thinking, if I play badly in the third game, the public will think that I played badly because of not getting the NOC. If I did well, I would be satisfied that I did well in this situation. On the field, you can pretend that you are confident with body language and reaction. You can pretend your way into genuine confidence. Everyone feels pressure before a big match.On the morning of the match, I was a little upset with a family matter. It happens to everyone on a long tour. Just imagine, I had to say no to the IPL. Then this family thing. The team bus leaves in half an hour. On my way to the ground, I thought I was going to put my emotions aside, bowl with all my heart. Whether I get hit for 80 in ten overs, or take five wickets, I will mean every ball. I did my warm-up, measured my run-up before everyone. Then I bowled the first ball, wide. Second ball, wide. I was questioning myself whether I was overexcited or not. I still told myself that I was going to mean every ball. A little later, it happened. Five wickets. We won. Everything worked out in the end.On being conscientious about his training: “I don’t think logic applies to everything. You are not supposed to train hard after fasting all day, but it is your desire. You have to get out of your comfort zone”•Associated PressYour mind and body won’t be 110% every day. But your desire, whether you are pretending or it’s coming for real, helps a lot. I try to give it my all every day. I am not the best fielder, but I try to take a catch. I try to bowl my best ball. I try to contribute with the bat. I want to have an impact as a team player.Talking about dropped catches, there have been plenty off your bowling. You don’t often react, do you?
A man can react maybe once or twice out of a hundred times ().Nobody drops a catch willingly. It is about luck. [Yasir Ali] Rabbi took a good catch in the slips in the World Cup. [Najmul Hossain] Shanto took two good catches in the slips against England.In a way, it is a positive that you are creating so many chances.
Yes, the main thing is creating the chances. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t. Some days I will get whacked. It is about consistency. Chances are created due to proper execution, movement and extra bounce. I bowl according to the field.You are rested from time to time, too. You didn’t play the third ODI against England. The team management wants you to be fit for the big games.
It is the body, you know. I want to play every game. I wanted to play the third ODI too but the coach and captain thought there’s a lot of cricket ahead. I played the first two ODIs with a groin niggle and back soreness. Fast bowlers will always have these things. Physios, trainers and coaches try to maintain the workload.There’s no point asking you what your favourite format is.
You are right. I really can’t pick a favourite format. It is slightly difficult to adjust between formats. Lengths vary. You have to go through the delivery variations. If you perform in all three formats, then you have done something. I want to be a player of that class.Who are the world-class bowlers that you aspire to being like?
Legends like Glenn McGrath, Brett Lee and Wasim Akram are my heroes. Bowlers like Shaheen Shah Afridi, Kagiso Rabada, Jasprit Bumrah and Josh Hazlewood, these guys will become legends by the end of their careers. I want to be regarded how they are regarded. There’s no point in working hard if I can’t reach that level. I have to take myself to their level.

“On the field, you can pretend that you are confident with body language and reaction. You can pretend your way into genuine confidence. Everyone feels pressure before a big match”

How have fast bowling coaches like Ottis Gibson and Allan Donald influenced you during your comeback years?
They have definitely been influential. They both had roles to play. Our local bowling coaches are good too. I speak a lot to Sujon sir about my bowling. Ottis Gibson helped me in certain areas. Allan Donald is a well-known coach. He talks to us. But at this level, you have to know what you must do yourself. A coach helps you fine-tune, but you have to do the rest of the work.Chandika Hathurusingha is back as our coach. He thinks differently than the other coaches. I like his style of coaching. His game awareness is going to help our players. The team management, in general, is really helpful towards me. They want me to keep doing well.Your comeback story in a way is a catalyst for the improvement of fast bowlers, and specifically why Bangladesh is now relying more on fast bowling. There was a time when they didn’t even pick a single fast bowler in a home Test. Now fast bowlers are match-winners. In this pack of fast bowlers, how do you see yourself?
It is a matter of pride. I want to carry it for a long time. I want to set the trend of fast bowling. How to come back and maintain it. I have more responsibility now. I have been able to inspire people, so I want to finish my career in a way that everyone remembers me. I hope I can help build a proper fast bowling culture. I want more fast bowlers to come through. Fast bowlers have to be built from the Under-15s. I had to reach this stage after a lot of ups and downs.We have the Bangladesh Tigers programme now. There will be fast-bowling camps in the future. Things will get easier. I did it on my own during the Covid pandemic. But now if someone wants to start from a young age, the path will be smooth. I want a fast bowler to know about proper discipline. He should be aware of his diet and training pattern. He must be aware of his own body, how it behaves in different situations. He will get help from the coaches, so when he can build all this into his system, he will be a better player.I want to take myself to a different level as a fast bowler, to give more to my country. I want to be more skillful and fit. I want to finish my career as a legendary player.

Bas de Leede shoots his shot to ignite Netherlands party

Just when their qualification hopes appeared dicey, he came to life with an ODI knock for the ages

Danyal Rasool06-Jul-2023The ball was pitched short, and Bas de Leede looked ready for it. He had got the basics right – his feet were in line and backlift poised to pull it away over midwicket. But this was Perth, where short balls tend to keep on rising. Netherlands don’t get too many opportunities to play in Perth, and, on the international circuit anyway, de Leede doesn’t get many chances to face pace of the kind Haris Rauf had just sent cannoning his way.The ball rose just a little too high, just a little too quick. There was that dreadful moment where it looked to have pierced the uncomfortably large gap between the helmet and the grill with a sickening clunk as it hit de Leede in the face and floored him. The medics rushed to gauge the extent of the damage and de Leede walked off with a cut underneath his right eye. He then met Rauf after the game where the fast bowler told him, “You’ll come back stronger and hit sixes. Go well.” They embraced briefly before heading separate ways. Two men representing two nations that sit far apart at the table in cricket’s pecking order.The sentiment from Rauf was heartfelt, but there was nowhere for de Leede to go. Between that T20 World Cup in October 2022 and the ongoing Men’s World Cup Qualifier, de Leede played no internationals*, missing the ODIs against Zimbabwe and South Africa due to injury. And now between the Qualifier and the upcoming 50-over World Cup, Netherlands have no matches in any format scheduled.Related

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  • Bas de Leede's five-for and 92-ball 123 take Netherlands to the ODI World Cup

Netherlands were in a must-win against Scotland, who broke local hearts in Bulawayo just two days earlier. They needed to chase 278 in 44 overs to leapfrog Scotland on net run rate and assure themselves of a spot at the World Cup. Both Netherlands and Scotland are two hugely improved sides denuded of the opportunities they merit, so financially hamstrung that they can’t even select first-choice squads for a tournament of this value because the English domestic system provides better financial reward.So, de Leede arrives at the crease after a steady start for Netherlands. The last time a de Leede played an ODI World Cup match was in 2007 when his father, Tim, took on this very opposition in the West Indies. But that was 16 years ago, in the heady days when a World Cup comprised 16 teams. It was Tim’s 29th, and last, ODI. De Leede has already played 30 ODIs and is far from done.For most of the innings, de Leede does what any quality batter in this position would do. He rotates the strike with his captain Scott Edwards, picks off the poor deliveries and sets his side on course for the chase. There’s little sign of the late surge that will sideswipe Scotland in an hour’s time, but despite being 23 and getting few opportunities to play this format, he knows they’re likelier to lose the game taking low-percentage chances than win it at this point.Bas de Leede struck with the new ball and at the death during his maiden ODI five-for•ICC/Getty Images”We had a look at the target where we wanted to be at the halfway point and I think from there comes the point where you stop talking about it, and actually do it,” de Leede said after the game. “Max [O’Dowd] and Vikram [Vikramjit Singh] setting up the platform and then the rest of us to come in and finish it off.”But Edwards falls and the asking rate rises; the Dutch now need 102 in ten overs to qualify. Hoping to make a career playing cricket for the Netherlands is a low-percentage shot in itself. So it’s a bit late to start worrying about taking too many chances now. And when Mark Watt drops one in slightly short, de Leede shoots his shot; he hits his first six of the innings.With Saqib Zulfiqar helping out from the other end, victory looks assured, but qualification is still up in the air with four meaningful overs left and 45 still to get. De Leede then demonstrates his six-hitting ability and goes 6,6,1,6,2,2,6,2 in his next eight balls. Somewhere in there, he gets to his first ODI hundred. It’s a moment most never forget, but de Leede might barely remember it as a happy side note to the euphoria that awaits him around the corner.”It is amazing,” an overwhelmed de Leede said after Netherlands were India-bound. “I can’t describe the feeling. It is going to be one big party tonight I can tell you that.”It was 10 or 11 an over at the death, so for us it was almost like going into T20 mode. We had to try and get as many runs as we could every over and see where we ended up.”They have ended up on the flight to India, where they will dine at the big table with teams that appeared to have locked teams like Netherlands out. As Rauf might put it, de Leede is indeed going well.*Jul 7, 2023, 9:08 GMT: The article mistakenly mentioned that Netherlands had no international fixtures between the 2022 T20 World Cup and the 2023 ODI World Cup Qualifier. This has been corrected.

Venkatesh Iyer: 'I'm thinking about dominating through my bowling too'

With the Ranji Trophy season kicking off, the MP allrounder is eager to show the world how he has improved

Vishal Dikshit04-Jan-2024Venkatesh Iyer thought he was having a pretty good 2022. An ODI debut, a few quickfire knocks at No. 6 in T20Is in the absence of Hardik Pandya, and he says he was at his fittest in the IPL that year, even though he didn’t score that many runs in the tournament. But when he was turning his T20 form around with blazing knocks in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy (SMAT) for Madhya Pradesh, he fell down the stairs in the team hotel and broke his ankle.After a disappointing IPL for Kolkata Knight Riders in 2022 in which he managed just 182 runs in 12 innings and averaged under 17, Iyer’s next T20 series to get some runs under his belt was the SMAT. He started by blasting an unbeaten 62 off 31 at No. 3 against Rajasthan and grabbed a career-best 6 for 20, followed it with a 57 off 35 at No. 4 opposite Mumbai, then a 42 off 29 at No. 5 against Uttarakhand and a 28 off 22 facing Railways. With an average of 63 and strike rate of 161.53 after just four innings, Iyer heard that he was going to be picked for the New Zealand T20Is in November, before he dislocated his ankle which required surgery.It took him four months to get back on the field, in February 2023, when he was cleared for one Ranji Trophy game only as a batter, and then for IPL 2023 also purely as a batter, and another five months until he could start bowling again in domestic cricket.”I’ve always wanted to contribute in all three departments,” he tells ESPNcricinfo before the 2023-24 Ranji Trophy season. “When there’s a problem with one, it feels like I’m not completely committed to my team. Obviously, there was an injury but when I can contribute in all three, the magnitude of contribution can differ, I think I’ll sleep peacefully. That’s what I was missing for a long time. Now that I’m bowling, I’m bowling long spells, bowling with the new ball, in SMAT [2023] also I bowled with the new ball. I’m seeing new dimensions of my bowling and batting, so it feels good.”The 2023 IPL was his first full series back from injury, and the pressure was mounting after a poor campaign the previous year, because he couldn’t bowl yet, and because being an India player now, he was being seen as Pandya’s back-up in the middle order. But even before he picked up the bat that IPL, he had benefited from two major factors. One was the introduction of the Impact Player rule, so he could be swapped in and out just for his batting. And the second was KKR had roped in Chandrakant Pandit, the MP coach, as their head coach. Iyer had the rather rare benefit of having the same coach in his domestic side and in his IPL team.

When I can contribute in all three (disciplines), the magnitude of contribution can differ, I think I’ll sleep peacefully. That’s what I was missing for a long time.Venkatesh Iyer on the frustrations that his ankle injury caused in 2022 and 2023

Pandit and KKR assistant coach Abhishek Nayar decided to bat Iyer at No. 3 because their regular No. 3 and captain Shreyas Iyer was out with an injury.”It meant I would play multiple roles,” Iyer says. “If we’re batting first, I can anchor. If we’re chasing around 200, I have to go for it from ball one. The role was communicated properly and this season I did a lot of following rather than thinking myself. I did a lot of what Abhishek Nayar told me to do and that worked for me. Even if it didn’t, I was really happy with that because he was able to justify why I need to do and that gave me a lot of clarity to go out there and make decisions. It was very challenging but good fun.”Iyer repaid that faith and the backing he got with his most prolific IPL season: 404 runs from 14 outings, striking at nearly 146, and a scintillating century against Mumbai Indians. He revealed the seeds for a successful 2023 season were sown in 2022, first with Nayar in the IPL and then with Pandit during the domestic season.Venkatesh Iyer credits Abhishek Nayar seen here working with Rahul Tripathi for helping him understand cricket and life•kkr.in”I’ve never measured the game with respect to the runs I’ve scored or wickets I’ve taken,” he says. “I think 2022 was my best [IPL] in terms of the discipline I showed towards myself. Despite the failures that I had, I never missed a single practice session, I would always spend hours with Abhishek Nayar to work on my batting skills, bowling, fielding, fitness, diet as well. That was a phase that I didn’t cheat with even 1% with my diet. I was trying my best, but it was not happening, the runs weren’t coming. During IPL 2022 he identified that my batting wasn’t going well despite my hard work.”The instance that kicked off the camaraderie between them was when Nayar spotted Iyer batting waywardly in the nets and felt the need to interrupt. “This is not how we’re going to approach…” Iyer recalls being told by Nayar, “that’s how it started. And I was constantly in touch with him when I was injured before the last IPL. To start from there, to give mental strength. I spent a lot of time with him in Mumbai – from my gym to training to basic cricket practice, he covered multiple facets of the game. Obviously with this injury I couldn’t play certain shots because the ankle wasn’t so free. So how to cover for that, how to prepare for different conditions and grounds…he helped a lot with mental strength and the key to his coaching is communication.”In the 2022 IPL there was bio-bubble also, so it was all the more depressing. Abhishek Nayar played a very important role at that time to bring us together. Not just cricket, but his life traits are also sharp. Just the way he looked at life in general was something amazing for me. He has an answer for almost everything. I used to have deep conversations with him at the time in his room because we couldn’t leave the hotel. Good food, good discussions, watching some inspirational movies, it was tough but as long as you’re understanding that you’re not shifting away from the game, you’ll be fine.”

Rather than just running in to bowl, now I’m thinking about how to pick wickets, dominating through my bowling, so I feel I’m ready back to 100%.Venkatesh Iyer on his continuing evolution as an allrounder

A few months after the 2022 IPL, Iyer joined the MP squad for the SMAT, and Pandit said he wanted to make Iyer a more “versatile” batter by batting him at different positions.”I played just three-four games in Mushtaq Ali last year,” Iyer recalls. “I was batting at No. 4 and 3, and I was supposed to open the next day, but I had that injury. So I was going to bat in all positions in that tournament. This was Chandu sir’s calculative decision, it would be better for the team also. I was very happy when he had said, ‘I’ll provide multiple roles to you, just want to see how you respond in all of them’. That’s what you want as a batsman, how you are maturing in these kinds of situations.”Call it Pandit’s foresight so that Iyer was better prepared for a middle-order role in his next India series, or another one of the astute coach’s strategies for both MP and KKR.Compared to when he made his T20I debut in late 2021 and had to play the finisher’s role while he was originally a top-order batter in domestic cricket, Iyer feels he is much better equipped for the middle order now. He not only has more experience and runs under his belt at different positions now, he has also started bowling full time and is back to being a proper allrounder.KKR coach Chandrakant Pandit (L) has been instrumental in making Venkatesh Iyer more versatile•BCCI”Now I know what it takes to go there (the Indian team), it’s just a matter of time before I make my comeback,” he says confidently. “One good IPL I’ll be there, one good domestic season I’ll be there provided I keep bowling. Once you score a lot of runs in domestic and in IPL, to go back to the Indian team and play any role is…you will get that acceptance. Say, if I score a lot of runs while opening in the IPL, and I go to the Indian team and I know I’m going to play No. 6, that preparation will start there. But for that to happen I need to score runs here and to score big runs I feel batting at the top is extremely important to get maximum balls. Now I know what it is like to prepare to bat at No. 6, 5 or 4. So it doesn’t really matter to me, all I want to do is score big runs so that when I go there, I have the confidence of runs in my arsenal.”Two months after a cracking IPL in 2023, Iyer gradually increased his bowling workload in the nets and was named the Central Zone captain for the Deodhar Trophy. In the sapping heat and humidity of Puducherry, he returned to bowling in competitive cricket after a long wait and took advantage of being the captain to manage his bowling workload. In October he bowled in all five SMAT T20s and in the subsequent 50-over Vijay Hazare Trophy, he started getting close to the full quota of 10 overs. Iyer feels he is now ready to bowl long spells along with some variations in the Ranji Trophy that begins on January 5.”I think I can bowl around 15-20 overs a day,” he says. “NCA had a huge role in my workload management. I worked with Troy Cooley there on my bowling, even Sairaj Bahutule sir was there. They and the trainers paid a lot of attention on my workload. They managed it very well – like heavy bowling on one day, light bowling and training the next day. I think I’m good to bowl long spells in days cricket.”[Full bowling fitness] will come with the volume, as much as I get to bowl in games. But I’m extremely happy with the way I’m approaching my bowling right now. Rather than just running in to bowl, now I’m thinking about how to pick wickets, dominating through my bowling, so I feel I’m ready back to 100%.”I am adding a couple of variations to my bowling. For a player like me it’s very important to be accurate, even if I have two or three variations. I need to ensure that they are landing where I want them to land. I’m really happy that the red-ball season is coming now because red-ball bowling will give you a lot of consistency. With the white ball, you have to bowl a yorker, you might go for a bouncer or a cutter…things like that. Red-ball bowling is about discipline, the muscle memory will work, I’ll be able to land the ball in the right areas. Once I’m confident with the basic ball, then I can play around with it – same line, same length but from a different angle or from a different spot on the crease, just a little slower or faster, things like that. I feel I’m on the right track now.”This red-ball season I want to enjoy and explore my game, I want to bat for long hours. I really want to contribute in terms of batting, bowling, and fielding this season. So, let’s see, this Ranji Trophy wherever I get to bat maybe top of the order, you never know with Chandu sir. He’s very unpredictable, suddenly he’ll call you up in the evening and tell you, ‘Venkatesh, you’re opening tomorrow’. And he’ll give you the proper backing, he’ll give you the confidence to go out there and do it. He knows that if you have the skills, you’ll do it. He always likes to challenge players and I feel when you’re challenged, you’ll always get better.”The last time Iyer played an entire Ranji season was back in 2019-20. It was before his IPL debut, before he burst onto the international scene and before he had turned 25. With seven league games ahead of him, Iyer will hope he climbs the ladder towards another India call-up instead of slipping down the pecking order. Or the stairs.

Finn Allen equals world record with 16 sixes

All the records the New Zealand batter smashed during his 137 off 62 balls against Pakistan

Sampath Bandarupalli17-Jan-202416 Sixes in Finn Allen’s 137 off 62 balls in the third T20I against Pakistan in Dunedin, equalling the record for most sixes by a batter in a T20I innings.137 Allen’s score is the highest in T20Is for New Zealand , and the joint-fifth highest overall.6 Sixes Allen hit in 14 balls from Haris Rauf. Only three other batters have hit six sixes off a bowler in a T20I: Yuvraj Singh off Stuart Broad in 2007, Kieron Pollard off Akila Dananjaya in 2021, and Josh Inglis off Ravi Bishnoi in 2023 (where ball-by-ball data is available).611 Number of balls Allen took to complete 1000 runs in T20Is – the third fastest to the milestone behind Suryakumar Yadav (573) and Glenn Maxwell (604).135.39 The cumulative strike rate of all the other batters in the match, apart from Allen, who scored at 220.96. The other New Zealand batters scored at a strike rate of only 127.58 (74 off 58 balls).

60 Runs conceded by Rauf in four overs, the most expensive spell of his T20 career.16-0 New Zealand’s win-loss record in 21 men’s internationals at the University Oval in Dunedin (five Tests were drawn) – the most matches played by a team at a venue without a defeat.8 Fifty-plus scores for Babar Azam in T20Is against New Zealand, the joint highest for a batter against a team in men’s T20Is. He’s scored 723 runs in 18 innings against New Zealand with a century and seven fifties, the second-highest aggregate against an opponent. Virat Kohli also has eight half-centuries against Australia, while his 794 runs in 21 innings is the highest aggregate against a team.

South Africa's batting options for T20 World Cup: de Kock? Hendricks? Du Plessis?

Here are South Africa’s top six batting candidates who could be in consideration for the T20 World Cup

Firdose Moonda29-Apr-2024Quinton de Kock

BBL: 104 runs at 17.33 average in six innings, SR: 120.93
SA20: 213 runs at 19.36, 50s: 1,SR:123.12 in 12 innings
IPL: 236 runs at 26.22 in nine innings, SR: 136.41 (as of April 28)

In most cases, de Kock is likely one of the first names on the team sheet, except perhaps this time because he is out of form. Since last year’s MLC, where he finished as the second-highest run-scorer, de Kock has circled through a poor BBL and SA20 and only a slightly improved IPL. Compared with the numbers of some of the players that follow, it’s hard to make a case for de Kock on form but that may not be the only criteria. He signed off from ODI cricket with four phenomenal centuries at last year’s World Cup and with this T20 World Cup due to be his final international assignment, he may want to have one more big say on South Africa’s trophy ambitions.ESPNcricinfo LtdFaf du Plessis

SA20: 239 runs at 29.87 average in 11 innings, SR: 141.42
IPL: 288 runs @ 28.80 in 10 innings, SR: 159.11 (as of April 28)

The latter parts of du Plessis’ career have been dominated by whether he will make an international return after his Test retirement in 2020 and snub from international white-ball cricket since then. His runs have always suggested he should. Since he last played for South Africa, du Plessis has become something of a T20 must-have, scoring big runs at the IPL and CPL. He brings the experience of having played in several high-pressure events in the past too. At 39, he’s fit, and age should not count against him though if he is going to make an international return, this does seem to be his last chance and even that is slim. Du Plessis was the second-highest run-scorer at last year’s IPL, where he struck eight fifties at a strike rate over 150 so the argument to include him might have been stronger if the T20 World Cup had happened last year. Reeza Hendricks

SA20: 172 runs at 24.57 average in nine innings, SR:110.96
CSA T20: 440 runs at 36.66 with four fifties in 15 innings, SR: 140.12

If all was fair between the last T20 World Cup and this one, Hendricks would be de Kock’s opening partner for 2024. He was benched for the 2022 tournament, despite being in a purple patch where he had scored four successive T20I fifties, because of the presence of captain Temba Bavuma. Hendricks did not quit the national team and look to further his career abroad but kept plugging away, racking up runs and biding his time. The problem? He hasn’t quite scored the runs where they will be noticed most. Though Hendricks dominates the domestic T20 competition, he has not had the same impact at the SA20 – arguably of a higher standard – which may count against him because some of his competitors have racked up big numbers there.ESPNcricinfo Ltd Rassie van der Dussen

SA20: 328 runs at 32.80 average in 10 innings, SR: 147.74
CSA T20: 331 runs at 36.77 in 13 innings, SR: 136.77

Though often associated with being reliable and stable, Van der Dussen is much more than an anchor and his attacking game has been on display in the last few years. He is among South Africa’s best ODI performers, has done well in both the SA20 and CSA T20 and like Faf du Plessis, has tournaments under his belt. However, during the SA20, van der Dussen spoke about not shooting the lights in T20Is and admitted he was “realistic” about his chances of making the squad.Ryan Rickelton

SA20: 530 runs at 58.88 average with five fifties in 10 innings, SR: 173.77
CSA T20: 441 runs at 40.09 with four fifties in 15 innings, SR: 144.11

On form, it would be impossible to ignore Rickelton. He has been the most consistent South African top-order batter of 2024, with nine fifties across the SA20 and CSA T20 and maintains a strike rate above 140 in both. Rickelton does not have the reputation of a de Kock and has not travelled the same road as Hendricks but neither of those things should rule him out. South Africa have long been guilty of taking tried-and-trusted players instead of those who seem to be peaking at the right time so selecting Rickelton would also represent a more innovative selection policy which rewards players at the right times.ESPNcricinfo LtdMatthew Breetzke

SA20: 416 runs at 40.63 average in 13 innings, SR: 135.50
CSA T20: 467 runs at 35.92 in 15 innings, SR: 131.17

The same can be said of Breetzke, who did better in the domestic competition and was one of the stars of the SA20 and Durban’s Super Giants run to the final. When DSG captain Keshav Maharaj spoke to ESPNcricinfo ahead of the SA20 playoffs, he called Breetzke a “proper fighter” on the field and a “fierce competitor,” who is “set for a long career in international cricket,” and all indications are that Walter thinks the same. Breetkze has been part of South Africa’s last two T20I series – albeit without making a strong first impression – and what remains to be seen is whether Walter is brave enough to include him now or prefers to keep him in the wings for the future.

Pooran bursts on to the T20 World Cup, pedal to the metal

He started his innings in fifth gear, slipped back into second through the middle overs and then slammed his foot on the accelerator at the death

Matt Roller18-Jun-2024Nicholas Pooran lay prone on the turf. His full-stretch dive onto his front might easily have been enough to take him to 99 not out with two balls left in West Indies’ innings. Instead, Azmatullah Omarzai’s direct hit from the deep extra boundary found him short of his ground as his body crumpled. The crowd went deathly quiet, and coach Daren Sammy put his hands on his head in the dugout.But as Pooran eventually got to his feet, brushing the dry dirt off his shirt, the airhorns started to blare again. Even if he had fallen two runs short of his first T20I hundred, his innings of 98 off 53 balls marked Pooran’s long-awaited arrival at the T20 World Cup. It was the highest score of the tournament to date, and an innings which showcased a batter who is entering his peak years.This is Pooran’s third T20 World Cup and his record before this cool, breezy night in St Lucia did not befit a player of his skill: 194 runs in 11 innings, with a quick 40 against Bangladesh in Sharjah his only innings of real note. In 2022, he captained West Indies’ worst-ever campaign, which saw them eliminated from a first-round group that featured Ireland, Scotland and Zimbabwe.Related

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He started this World Cup with two real grinds: a run-a-ball 27 against Papua New Guinea and 22 off 19 against Uganda. It was enough for a scathing editorial piece in the before they played New Zealand: “Too often though, Pooran becomes overconfident and a bit arrogant and gives away his wicket,” it read. Perhaps his 12-ball 17 against New Zealand on home soil proved their point.But West Indies’ batters had long ear-marked their arrival in St Lucia as a moment to look forward to and Pooran showed why. This was a flat, hard pitch which offered something for the spinners and his assessment of conditions was spot on. He started his innings in fifth gear, slipped back into second through the middle overs and then slammed his foot on the accelerator at the death.Pooran had faced two balls when he faced up to Omarzai and what followed was one of the most brutal assaults by a batter on a bowler in World Cup history. The first ball was outside-edged for six over the short third boundary; he violently pulled the second, a front-foot no-ball, through midwicket. When Omarzai’s bouncer sailed over the keeper’s head for five wides, he had bowled a single legal ball which had cost him 16.The free hit was an inch-perfect yorker, which crashed into the base of Pooran’s stumps, and he smiled wryly as square-leg umpire Allahuddien Paleker put the bails back on. The next four balls cost 20: four leg byes, a slice over point, another violent pull into the Johnson Charles Stand and a straight six into the sightscreen. The over cost 36, which somehow felt like a recovery.Pooran hit Rashid Khan for two boundaries in his first over, one over long-off and then a wristy late cut, but after the powerplay he eased up completely. He quickly recognised that Noor Ahmad was Afghanistan’s main threat: in the IPL, he has been dismissed by him twice in eight balls and clearly struggles to read his variations. He took his medicine, scoring nine off the 14 balls he faced from Noor.”Noor Ahmad has bowled well to me in the past,” Pooran explained. “Some people might criticise me for not putting him under some pressure but T20 is a game where you have to be smart as well: you can’t bat for an entire innings at a 180 strike rate. It just doesn’t work like that. I still feel like we have to play the game the right way: respect the game, and respect the opposition.”Nicholas Pooran stands at No. 1 among West Indies’ six hitters in men’s T20I cricket•ESPNcricinfo LtdBut Rashid was a different proposition. Pooran has played with him extensively for Reliance-owned franchises in the past 18 months and decided that his final over, the 18th, had to go. He tried to hit all six balls in the arc between midwicket and long-on, and connected with five of them. The over went dot, six, four, six, two, six.West Indies’ great T20 batting line-ups were characterised by their muscular six-hitter, glued together by the touch-play of the man who top-scored in both of their World Cup finals, Marlon Samuels. On nights like this, Pooran can marry the two together: immense power for a lean, lithe man combined with the maturity and intelligence to swallow his ego.He surpassed Chris Gayle as West Indies’ leading T20I run-scorer during his cameo against New Zealand, then went ahead of him as their leading six-hitter tonight. “It’s a proud feeling,” Pooran said. “What is happening now is only because of my hard work and my belief in myself. [Gayle] set the platform for us… I’m just really happy that I can continue to entertain people and take over where he has left.”Pooran added 18 off 26 balls in the middle overs, then smoked 44 off 14 at the death. By the time he had hit back-to-back sixes off Naveen-ul-Haq, he was batting with the confident self-assurance of a man realising just what he could achieve over the next two weeks. Aged 28, with a World Cup on home soil, Pooran has a chance to write his name into West Indies folklore.”It feels really good,” he said. “I think it’s a really good opportunity for us: not only for myself, but everyone is in the prime of their career and everyone is doing well. Hopefully, in the next two or three weeks, we’ll be smiling.”

Gloucestershire's T20 Blast glory goes beyond the game

Uplifting story proves once again that Finals Day has a special place in the calendar

Alan Gardner15-Sep-2024″We’re all with him, with what he’s been going through. Hopefully that can give him a little bit of happiness today, knowing that the club that he has been a part of his whole life has… That was for him as much as it is for us.”If Gloucestershire’s indomitable spirit needed physical representation on T20 Finals Day, there could be no better candidate than the figure of David “Syd” Lawrence, the former England fast bowler who is now the club’s president. Lawrence watched both games at Edgbaston from his wheelchair, the debilitating effects of motor neurone disease (MND) already beginning to take hold. Jack Taylor, Gloucestershire’s captain, dedicated their success to him and there were tears amid the triumph when James Bracey climbed up to Lawrence’s box in the Wyatt Stand to present him with the Blast trophy.Gloucestershire’s appearance at Finals Day for only the fourth time in the competition’s 21-year history had been accompanied by an appeal from the Cricketers’ Trust, the charity which supports past and present players in need. Lawrence was in attendance alongside Shaun Udal, the former England spinner who is suffering from Parkinson’s disease. Having previously received aid from the trust after suffering a career-ending knee injury in the 1990s, Lawrence spoke movingly in a video about his MND diagnosis earlier this year.”Whatever the disease is, it can’t take my fighting spirit,” Lawrence said. “That will always be with me. I don’t know what I’ve done to upset the big man upstairs but he ended my career early and he’s given me this disease now. He’s obviously not a Gloucester fan.”

But Gloucestershire were not short of support as they ripped through the opposition at Edgbaston, back-to-back eight-wicket victories securing a maiden T20 title that could be celebrated throughout the shires – perhaps, even, across the county border in Somerset. The beaten champions do, after all, have two more chances to secure silverware this season. West Country cricket may yet sweep the board.Never mind the favour of the gods, Gloucestershire had a demon bowling attack perfectly suited to the conditions, as well as an in-form batting group to help control their destiny. Despite going into the day as the least-fancied of the four South Group teams to have reached this point, they were utterly dominant, taking all 20 wickets in games against Sussex and Somerset and losing just four of their own in getting the job done (two in the final after the result had already become a formality).The same could not be said of Gloucestershire’s run to the knockouts, after winning just one of their first five games and edging out Essex on net run rate. But in a disjointed Blast, which began in May and ended in mid-September, they peaked at the perfect time, ousting the North Group winners, Birmingham Bears, on their own patch in the quarter-final – a game that served as a perfect recce for what to expect on Finals Day.In the success of their bowlers, there was a nod to Somerset’s dominant 2023 campaign. Where Matt Henry and Ben Green took 31 and 30 wickets respectively, as Somerset followed a blueprint of ruthless attack with the ball, David Payne (33) and Matt Taylor (29) combined to similar effect. Payne’s three-for in the final meant that he equalled a record for wickets in a season that had been held by Somerset’s Alfonso Thomas since 2010 – a season in which the teams played 16 group games rather than 14.Payne may never get the opportunity to add to his one England cap, but his performances more than vindicated the decision late last year to sign a white-ball contract with Gloucestershire, resulting in a first trophy since the 2015 Royal London Cup. “For the club, this is going to mean everything to them,” he said. “Those fans, I remember it felt like we celebrated the one-day win in 2015 for about a whole year. I’m sure it will be similar this time.”Gloucestershire supporters have needed reasons to celebrate in recent times. The joy of returning to Division One of the County Championship for the 2022 season was swiftly followed by relegation and a winless campaign that resulted in a first wooden spoon since 2012. Earlier this year, the club announced losses of £1.2m in their annual report, while discussions around potentially selling their historic Nevil Road ground have proved controversial – to the point of becoming Brexit adjacent, after businessman Arron Banks tried to get involved in the decision-making process.Related

Such existential issues are often the lot of the smaller counties that don’t host regular international cricket (although, it should be noted, three of the four teams at Finals Day do not have men’s Test venues). They make those rare days in the sun something to savour.”It almost lets you know that we’re still there, we’re not just people making up the numbers,” Payne said. “It feels like you’re fighting the uphill battle, that we’re not a favoured county, that sort of vibe. So it will make it that much more special.”It matters, too, that Gloucestershire is genuinely a family club. Two pairs of brothers – Jack and Matt Taylor, Ollie and Tom Price – were part of the XI; Ben Charlesworth’s younger brother, Luke, is also on the books. While Jack Taylor was Player of the Match at Lord’s nine years ago, Matt took the accolade this time around. Eight of the team came through the pathway, and the coach, Mark Alleyne, is a club legend, an integral member of the “Glorious Glosters” that dominated limited-overs competition in the late ’90s and early noughties.”Obviously, a few of us have had a bit to do with Mark over the years,” Jack Taylor said. “He’s been a really calming influence. He’s freed up the guys to go out and express themselves, and we want to enjoy our cricket. I think there’s no limit on what this group can do. We’ve got a great blend of youth and experience now. It’s just reward for how well we’ve played this year.”Despite the arrival of the Hundred, Blast Finals Day still feels like the biggest day out in the English domestic calendar. It is the closest cricket gets to channelling football’s mass appeal – complete with wizards, butchers and characters getting absolutely leathered in the stands. But while the “magic of the cup” is largely a thing of the past in the Premier League era, the Blast still offers a genuine route for all the counties to taste success.In the last ten years alone, Northamptonshire, Worcestershire, Essex, Kent and Somerset – clubs at the less-affluent end of the spectrum – have all lifted the trophy. Gloucestershire adding their name to the list means that now only four teams have yet to win the T20 title. The beauty of the Blast is that fans of Derbyshire, Durham, Glamorgan and Yorkshire can dream next year will be theirs.

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